Nebraska, United States
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Grand Island, city, seat of Hall county, south-central Nebraska, U.S., about 90 miles (145 km) west of Lincoln. The city’s name comes from an island in the nearby Platte River called La Grande Île (French: “Big Island”) by 18th-century French fur traders. Pawnee peoples were living in the area when the first Europeans arrived in the late 1700s. The island was a landmark for westward travelers on the Oregon, California, and Mormon trails in the mid-1800s. A German settlement was established near the river in 1857, but it was moved to the present site, a few miles north, in 1866, in order to be on the Union Pacific Railroad, which was subsequently crossed by what is now the Burlington Northern Santa Fe line.

The city of Grand Island has developed as a trade, transportation, commercial, and health care centre for an agricultural area producing corn (maize), soybeans, alfalfa (lucerne), sorghum, cattle, and hogs. One of the first beet-sugar plants in the country was located there (1890–1964). Food processing, especially meatpacking, is a primary industry. Manufactures include agricultural equipment, prefabricated buildings, electronic signs, garage doors, home decorating accessories, automotive repair equipment, and ammunition. Financial services and tourism are also important. The city has a campus of Central Community College, and College Park provides distance-learning opportunities through a consortium of schools.

The Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer is situated at the edge of the city and has a reconstructed railroad town of the 1880s on its 200-acre (80-hectare) grounds. Grand Island is a centre of crane migration along the Platte, and each spring the Wings over the Platte bird-watching festival brings thousands of visitors to see some 500,000 sandhill cranes. The Crane Meadows Nature Center preserves wetland, river, and prairie habitats and wildlife. Horse racing is held at Fonner Park. Annual events include the Central Nebraska Ethnic Festival (July) and Husker Harvest Days, an agricultural show (September). Cheyenne and Mormon Island state recreation areas are nearby. Inc. 1873. Pop. (2000) 42,940; (2010) 48,520.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.