City Park:
| The main park in Hemingford covers two square blocks on the west side of town . Facilities include modern playground equipment,
picnic tables, shelters, rest rooms, swimming pool, and tennis courts. The Hemingford Baseball Complex
with two fields was built in 1995. Programs are offered in swimming, volleyball, soccer, softball, and tennis. A mini park is located at the main intersection of town. You will find benches and a fountain at this location. For
more information contact Margaret (Peggy) Sheldon at (308) 487-3465 or e-mail: peggyr@bbc.net. |
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Area facilities include:
 | Boating -- Excellent boating at Box Butte
Reservoir, 10 miles |
 | Fishing -- Excellent fishing at the Box Butte Reservoir, 10 miles, offers bass, northern pike, perch, catfish, and walleye fishing as well as swimming, camping, and boating |
 | Golf -- One public 9-hole sand greens golf course with clubhouse |
 | Hunting -- Excellent hunting for duck, geese, deer, pheasant, grouse, and dove |
 | Swimming -- Municipal pool in the park |
 | Tennis -- One hard-surfaced and lighted tennis court |
 | Theaters -- Complex with three theaters and one drive-in theater within 20 miles |
Box Butte County Fair:
Hemingford is the site of the annual Box Butte County Fair the second week in August. This fair is deemed to
be one of the top county fairs in the state of Nebraska. It was the first Panhandle County Fair to feature top
country music stars. Some of the numerous activities include a Saturday night concert, teen dance, demolition
derby, livestock auction, 4-H animal shows, carnival, kids games night, local queen contest, and parade.
Christmas Diorama:
The Christmas Diorama in Hemingford is one of the most spectacular and unique Christmas displays in the
United States. The Diorama is a pictorial story of Christmas painted on wood panels covering more than two
and one-half football fields. More than 114 wooden cutouts of people, angels, and animals depict 16 Christmas
scenes. Spotlights make all scenes and written explanations clearly visible from your car. A loudspeaker
system creates the proper mood by playing six hours of continuous religious Christmas songs. The Christmas
Diorama opens shortly after Thanksgiving thru New Years.
State Park:
Chadron State Park, established by the State Legislature in 1921, consists of 1,500 acres of buttes and
wooded hills in the Pine Ridge area. The entrance to the park is adjacent to U.S. Highway 385, approximately
30 miles north of Hemingford. The park, one of Nebraska's most beautiful, was developed to a large degree, by
Civilian Conservation Corporation (CCC) forces; and the State Game and Parks Commission has since
maintained and added improvements annually. The park facilities include administration and maintenance
buildings, 22 fully equipped rental cabins, numerous camping facilities, supervised swimming pool, 3½-acre
lake, rental rowboats, bridle paths and trails, and trout streams.
Nebraska's largest state park is located at Fort
Robinson, 40 miles northwest of Hemingford. This park serves as a tourist center and vacation headquarters for an average of 354,000 persons each season (April 15 to
November 15). Here Nebraska's most famous military outpost stands almost as it was 90 years ago. The old
double veranda brick barracks building now houses a hotel and cafe. The former adobe and brick officers'
quarters have been converted to rental cabins complete with modern housekeeping facilities and appliances.
The park also has trailer and camping facilities, live theatre nightly (summer season), swimming pool, concrete
tennis courts, horseback riding facilities, and fast-running cold water streams for trout fishing. Buffalo and
long-horn cattle roam the pastures of Fort Robinson. Bighorn sheep can also be seen in the area around Fort
Robinson. The old post headquarters building was dedicated in 1956 as a State Historical Society museum.
This area is also known for its World Class Fossil, a geological find. Many artifacts are on display at the
University of Nebraska Trailside Museum at Fort Robinson. Included in the many displays is a Columbian
Mammoth skeleton.
A short distance away is the Agate Fossil Beds National
Monument, known for its world class Miocene mammal fossils.
Toadstool Park is located two miles west of State Highway 2 about 60 miles north of Hemingford. The rock
formations in the park show the result of thousands of years of erosion. The area is a rock hound paradise
where hunters find fairburn agate and Nebraska's gem stone, the blue agate.
The memorable surrender site of Red Cloud, famous Sioux Indian Chief, is located just 75 miles north of
Hemingford. Also located in the area, just north of Chadron on the Sioux Indian Reservation, is the famous
Wounded Knee Battlefield. Among the many historic sites in the region are
Breakneck Hill, the 1875 Treaty Tree, Cody-Yellowhand
Battlefield, Camp Sheridan and Spotted Tail Agency, and James Bordeaux's
Restored Fur Trade Post (the Museum of the Fur
Trade).

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