Antioch, Nebraska

Antioch, Nebraska
—  Ghost town  —
Ruins of potash plant near Antioch
Antioch, Nebraska
Location within the state of Nebraska
Coordinates: [1]
Country United States
State Nebraska
County Sheridan
Elevation[1] 3,881 ft (1,183 m)
Time zone Central (CST) (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
Area code(s) 308
GNIS feature ID 834979

Antioch is a ghost town in Sheridan County, Nebraska, United States. Located approximately 15 miles east of Alliance on Nebraska Highway 2, the town was once nicknamed "the potash capitol of Nebraska."

The location of the town near several major alkali lakes among the Sand Hills of Western Nebraska made Antioch the logical home of five potash reduction factories: the American, Nebraska, Alliance, National, and Western potash companies.[2] All these companies were major suppliers of potash during World War I.

As a late boomtown, Antioch sprang out of the war-driven needs. According to one historian, the year before the United States became involved in WWI, the town only had one schoolhouse, a church, and a store. With the advent of a method to distill potash from western Nebraska's alkali lakes by University of Nebraska scientists, by 1917 Antioch was "a small city."[3] Antioch quickly had five large-scale potash plants, and within months the town had more than 5,000 residents. Following the war the population left again.[4]

When Germany resumed trade with the United States in 1921, the potash trade was decimated. The factory immediately closed, and within years the town was virtually dead.[5] Today the town has fewer than 25 residents.

References

  1. ^ a b Geographic Names Information System Feature Detail Report. Geographic Names Information System. 2000-01-01. Retrieved 2010-10-03.
  2. ^ "The Great WWI Potash Industry of Southern Sheridan County, Nebraska" Sheridan County Historical Society. p. 2. Retrieved Sept. 25, 2010.
  3. ^ (1919) The American Missionary. Volume 73. Congregational Home Missionary Society, American Missionary Association.
  4. ^ "Antioch: Potash boom town". Nebraska State Historical Society. Retrieved Sept. 25, 2010.
  5. ^ Hickey, D.R., Wunder, S.A. and Wunder, J.R. (2007) Nebraska Moments. University of Nebraska Press. p. 165.

External links