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Omaha Official
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Omaha on
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Omaha
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History of Omaha, per Wikipedia.
Omaha is the largest city in the state of Nebraska, United States,
and is the county seat of Douglas County.[3] It is located in the Midwestern
United States on the Missouri River, about 20 miles (30 km) north of the mouth
of the Platte River. Omaha is the anchor of the Omaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan
area, with Council Bluffs, Iowa sitting adjacent to Omaha across the Missouri
River. According to the 2008 estimate by the United States Census Bureau,
Omaha's population was 432,921. Omaha and its suburbs formed the 60th-largest
metropolitan area in the United States in 2000, with an estimated population
of 829,890 residing in eight counties or about 1.2 million within a 50 mile
(80 km) radius.[4] [5]
Omaha grew on the Missouri River, with the first settlement extending
from the Lone Tree Ferry crossing from Kanesville, Iowa in the early 1850s.[6]
Omaha earned its nickname, the "Gateway to the West", because of
its central location as a transportation hub for the United States in the
mid-1800s.[7] Along with transportation and jobbing, early industries that
were important to Omaha through the mid-20th century were its railroads,
breweries, stockyards and meatpacking plants.
Today the economy of Omaha is diverse and built on the knowledge economy.
Omaha is the home to five Fortune 500 companies: ConAgra Foods; Union Pacific
Corporation; Peter Kiewit and Sons, Inc.; Mutual of Omaha Companies; and Berkshire
Hathaway, the investment vehicle of legendary investor and so-called "Oracle
of Omaha" Warren Buffett. In 2001 Newsweek identified Omaha as one of
the Top 10 high-tech havens in the nation.[8] Six national fiber optic networks
converge in Omaha.[9] The Gallup Organization, TD Ameritrade, PayPal and LinkedIn
all have major operations or headquarters in Omaha. Omaha also is the home
to three of the top 30 architectural and engineering firms in the world: Leo
A. Daly Co., HDR, Inc. and DLR Group.[10] Tourism in Omaha benefits Omaha's
economy greatly, with the annual College World Series providing important
revenue[11] and Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo serving as the top attraction
in Nebraska.[12]
The rich cultural background of Omaha includes the Joslyn Art Museum, the
Durham Museum, the Holland Performing Arts Center, and the Omaha Community
Playhouse, the country's largest. Omaha's historical and cultural attractions
have been lauded by numerous national newspapers, including the Boston Globe[13]
and The New York Times.[14] Music in Omaha has always been important to Omaha, with North Omaha's music scene being historically significant and in
modern times, the "Omaha Sound" defining an important trend across
the nation.[15] In 2008 Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine ranked Omaha
the No. 3 best city in the United States to "live, work and play."


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