Herboldsheimer, Daniel & Sarah, Ranch - United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places
Name of Property
historic name-
Herboldsheimer, Daniel & Sarah, Ranch
c.1888-1921
Location
street & number city, town-
Potter, Nebraska, NE, county Chevenne, zip code 69156
1 building(s)
1 object
Number of Resources within Property
Contributing
6
Noncontributing
2 buildings, sites
6, structures objects
8.
Other-
Stone
Materials-
foundation
walls limestone
limestone, log
roof shingle
Describe present and historic physical appearance.
The Daniel and Sarah Herboldsheimer Ranch, located in Cheyenne
County, represents an excellent example of an early Nebraska ranch
utilizing stone building material and technology in the High Plains
region of the state. The ranch still retains the majority of
representative buildings and structures used in the stock raising
and wheat growing operations of the Herboldsheimer family beginning
in the 1880's. The ranch includes two dwellings, the c. 1905
limestone house, and the c. 1888-1900 log and limestone house.
The large stone barn is situated east of the main dwelling and the
remaining outbuildings are arranged in an ell-shaped manner. The
property also includes a stone corral built by Herboldsheimer in
1900. The nomination consists of eight contributing resources:
six buildings, one structure, and one object; and eight noncontributing
resources: two buildings and six structures.
Structural and historical integrity is uniformly high for all
contributing resources.
The property continues to be occupied and
operated for agricultural purposes.
The Herboldsheimer Ranch is located approximately nine miles
northeast of Potter, a small town (1989 population: 369) in
Cheyenne County. Cheyenne County is located in the High Plains
region in the extreme western part of Nebraska, which geographically
supports grain and livestock production. The region is
characterized by flat-lying land which is composed of sandstone of
stream-deposited silt, sand, clay and gravel overlain with loess.
Native vegetation is Buffalo grass (short grass) prairie.
Lodgepole Creek and the South Platte River transect the region from
west to east. Cheyenne County, one of the largest counties in the
state, boasted a huge cattle industry for many years until it
experienced a collapse of that business in favor of wheat farming.
The Herboldsheimer Ranch is a striking assemblage of late
nineteenth and early twentieth century agricultural architecture,
noted for its use of limestone in the construction of the majority
of buildings in the ranch group.
The ranch is a relatively compact group of buildings efficiently
arranged in an ell-shaped manner. Located north of the
public road and oriented south and east, the ranch is divided into
domestic and agricultural areas by a lane which runs north-south.
The domestic functions are located west of the lane, and to the
south is the front yard. Agricultural storage and animal facility
areas are situated east of the lane in a north-to-south pattern,
with the stone milk house serving as the north terminus and the
large stone barn serving as the major south terminus. The
waterworks area, directly east of the lane, originally included the
reservoir, windmill, and well (see site plan). Only the well
remains today. Landscape features on the property include only a
small number of deciduous trees along the lane (see site plan), and
shrub plantings around the main dwelling.
The main ranch group is situated on the original 160 acre
homestead obtained by Daniel Herboldsheimer in September 1888 from
the Union Pacific Railway Company.
This nomination comprises a
four acre tract of land that contains all of the representative
buildings and structures in the ranch complex. Because the
property is being submitted under Criterion "C", only that parcel
of land that contains the architecturally significant resources is
being nominated. The inventory of principal buildings, structures
and objects follows, beginning with those resources that contribute,
and followed by those that do not, with their numbers
corresponding to the accompanying site plan.
Contributing Buildings
1. Stone house (photos 1, 4, 5) built c. 1905, one story with
loft, square, 11 x 11.5 meters (36' x 37'G"), native limestone,
rock faced ashlar, wood shingled truncated hip roof with gabled
wall dormers, cellar, double hung windows with one-over-one pane
arrangement, stone lintel hoods and lugsills, porch addition on
east facade, main level consists of four rooms, loft contains four
rooms, presently serves as main dwelling house.
2. Log and stone house (photos 1, 2, 3) built c. 1888-1900, one
story, rectangular, 9 x 12.5 meters (29'6" x 41'), wood shingle
gable roof with rear shed addition, house built in various
construction stages, original dwelling hewn log with chinks, one-half dovetail notching (c. 1888), with second construction
episode utilizing smooth-faced rubble stone, single-pen addition,
east side of log (1895), date stone inscribed with "HA 1895 R9" is
set above main entry door, and third construction episode utilizing
rock-faced ashlar stone wrap-around addition, three room, shed wing
and west gable extension (c.1900), square window openings on all
facades, frame window surrounds, stone lintels, additional entry
on east facade, house converted to carriage shed after 1905 stone
house built, now used for agricultural storage.
3. Stone barn (photos 6, 7, 8) built 1898, rectangular, 10 x 20
meters (32'9" x 65'6"), native limestone, smooth ashlar walls,
present wood shingle gambrel roof rebuilt in 1921 with frame
cupola, one-story extension built c. 1921, square, 8.5 x 8.5 meters
(27'9" x 27'9"), west smooth-faced rubble stone wall originally
part of the stone corral, stuccoed, east and south walls frame,
wood shingle gable roof.
4. Stone milk house (photos 1, 6, 10) built 1888, one-story,
rectangular, 3.5 x 4 meters (11'6" x 13'), native limestone, north
wall is rubble stone, east, south, west walls are smooth ashlar,
wood shingle gable roof with stepped parapet wall on south facade,
gable entry.
5. Stone granary (photos 1, 6, 7, 9) built c. 1900, one-story,
square, 4x4 meters (13' x 13'), native limestone, rock-faced
ashlar, wood shingle gable roof with parapet walls.
6. Chicken house (photos 1, 11) built c. 1920, frame, rectangular,
3x5 meters (9'9" x 16'4"), shed roof.
Contributing Structure
7. Stone corral (photos 1, 6, 9, 12, 13) built 1900, native
limestone, smooth-faced rubble stone, walls approximately 2' thick,
8' high, wooden gate, loading chute. Stone hitching post (photo 3), built 1890's, limestone.
Non-Contributing Buildings and Structures
9. Machine shed (photo 11, background) large metal quonset
building.
10-15. Granaries (photos 1, 3, 4, 6, 12) contemporary metal
granaries.
16. Shed (photos 1 , 4) small frame storage building, rectangular
plan, gable roof.
The Herboldsheimer's first house was constructed of sod (no
longer extant). The majority of stone buildings originally
utilized pole and sod material for roof construction. In 1898,
Herboldsheimer excavated a reservoir eight feet deep and lined it
with the limestone. Originally located west of the windmill (see
site plan), the stone walls were demolished and the reservoir was
filled in around 1946. Building remnants of a farrowing house (see
site plan) are included on the property, but are not counted in
this nomination due to loss of integrity.
Integrity is uniformly high for all contributing buildings and
structures. Although minor modifications have been made to the
dwellings, especially in the interior spaces, structural and
historical integrity of the ranch complex, as a whole, is preserved
.
The property, although no longer occupied by descendents of
the Herboldsheimers, continues to be occupied and operated for
agricultural purposes.
Period of Significance Significant Dates
Architecture
c.1888-1921
Significant Person Architect/Builder
Herboldsheimer, Daniel
The Daniel and Sarah Herboldsheimer Ranch is architecturally
significant (Criterion "C") on a state-wide level, as a well preserved
example of an early Nebraska ranch. The property is
important for its associations with folk building traditions in
that it reflects the availability of materials and technology
utilized by an early settler in the establishment and development
of a ranch in the High Plains region of western Nebraska.
Herboldsheimer, the son of German immigrants, utilized locally
available materials, namely stone, to construct the majority of
buildings in the ranch complex. The period of significance is
derived from the original construction date of the earliest ranch
building (1888), through significant later additions (1921),
inclusive of all construction dates for contributing ranch
buildings and structures.
Daniel Herboldsheimer, son of German immigrants Barthalamews
Sabastian Herboldsheimer and Barbara Pfieghardt Herboldshiemer, was
born in Cookstown, Pennsylvania on November 2, 1857. Daniel was
known to family and friends as Dan Heimer, using his full name only
on legal transactions. His family later moved to Guttenburg, Iowa.
In 1878, Herboldsheimer homesteaded near Kenesaw, west of Hastings,
Nebraska and married Sarah Alice Segraves on January 1, 1880.
In
September 1888 Herboldsheimer purchased a quarter section of land
northeast of Potter in Cheyenne County from the Union Pacific
Railway Company for the sum of $402.00. The 1900 census listed his
occupation as a farmer. According to local histories, he raised
livestock in the early years of the ranch operation, but later
turned to wheat growing. Herboldsheimer died November 27, 1945 and
was buried in the Potter cemetery.
Major Bibliographical References-
Cook, A.S., "Heimer of Nebraska Built for the Years", The Western Farm Life,
April'15, 1942.
Herboldsheimer,
Mrs. Wesley, Danial Herboldsheimer Ranch, Nebraska Historic
Buildings Survey Form, September, 1984, on File, Nebraska State Historical
Society, Lincoln, NE
Mathewson, Kate, "Daniel Herboldsheimer Family",
History of Cheyenne County
Nebraska 1986, Cheyenne County History Book Committee, Curtis'Media'
Corporation, Copyright 1987.
McAlester, Virginia & Lee, A Field Guide to American Houses, Alfred A. Knopf,
Inc., New York, Copyright 1984.
Geographical Data
Acreage of property, 4 acres-
The property is described as a square tract.of land commencing at a point at the
extreme southwest corner of the southwest quarter of Section 7, Township 15 North,
Range 51 West, thence running North 417.5 feet, thence east 417.5 feet, thence
south 417.5 feet, thence west 417.5 to the point of beginning, a rural legal
description in Cheyenne County, Nebraska.
Because of the scarcity of timber in "treeless" counties such
as Cheyenne, the most readily available construction material was
sod. Its use was widespread by early settlers who set up homesteads
on the prairie lands, and needed basic shelter. As families
became better established, some of them desired more substantial
dwelling houses constructed of permanent materials, such as log or
stone. Limestone outcroppings, located along Lodgepole Creek and
its tributaries, provided a source of building material and found
favor with settlers in Cheyenne County.
The Herboldsheimer ranch house illustrates the chronology of
this housing pattern: their first home, a soddy, was replaced
following construction of the log dwelling (c. 1888). That same
year, Herboldsheimer began building with the locally available
limestone. The closest source was over five miles south at Point
of Rocks, so the burdensome task of quarrying and hauling the stone
was necessary before he could begin construction. The stone was
also used in later additions to the log dwelling and in construction
of the main dwelling house. Stone was also used in constructing
the barn, most of the outbuildings, and the corral.
Architecturally significant, the Herboldsheimer Ranch
represents an excellent example of a Nebraska ranch, retaining the
majority of buildings used in the stock raising and wheat farming
operations of the Herboldsheimer family beginning in the 1880's.
The ranch buildings are important for their associations with folk
building traditions. Herboldsheimer, the son of German immigrants,
utilized his own masonry skills and readily available materials,
namely limestone, to construct his buildings. The most notable
building on the ranch is the one-story log and stone dwelling. The
house was built in various construction stages.
The original house
was log (c. 1888), with later construction episodes utilizing
smooth-faced rubble stone (1895) and rock-faced ashlar stone (c.
1900).
In Nebraska the house stands as an important product of folk
architecture. These folk houses were strongly influenced by
geography, and constructed of materials found in the proximity of
the building site. In many cases, the native materials were quarried and prepared by the builders themselves. Because of the
availability of building materials from one locale to another, as
well as building traditions settlers brought with them, the
structure and form of these folk houses varies from region to
region (McAlester, 1984, p. 63). The Herboldsheimer house remains
today as a product of folk building traditions in Nebraska; it
reflects the availability of native limestone as building material
in the High Plains region, and illustrates the building skills used
by an early settler in the preparation and treatment of the stone.
The 1984 Nebraska Historic Buildings Survey (NEHBS) of
Cheyenne County identified five similar ranch properties which
utilized stone construction for the majority of buildings. They
include the Gunderson Homestead (NEHBS # CN00-5), the William
Kidney Homestead (CN00-13), the F.W.'Krueger, Jr. Ranch (CN00-31),
the Adams Ranch (CN00-32), and the Herboldsheimer Ranch. For the
most part, stone construction was found in the valley area along
the major stream, Lodgepole Creek, which runs east-west through the
county. At the time of the survey, the integrity of these ranch
groupings, for the most part, was poor, with many buildings
abandoned and in deteriorated condition.
The Herboldsheimer Ranch
exhibits a high degree of integrity and in comparison to other
surveyed ranch properties, contains a concentration of stone
buildings and structures in its agricultural group.
On a regional level, the Herboldsheimer property represents
one of the best examples of a stone ranch complex. Cheyenne
county, in comparison to other counties in the High Plains region,
contains a large number of agricultural complexes utilizing stone
construction for the majority of buildings. Although stone
construction was identified in other counties, these properties
were generally cases in which only single stone buildings were
recorded, either as part of a larger ranch complex or as the only
surviving structure of a rural grouping. The Herboldsheimer ranch
gains further importance due to the survival of the stone corral.
Constructed of smooth-faced rubblestone, the corral represents an
excellent example of a stone wall system found in a ranch complex.
Although remnants of stone corrals have been identified through the
NEHBS, none compare to the nature and condition of the Herboldsheimer
corral.
To date., twelve Nebraska farms or ranches have been listed in
the National Register: the Thomas Majors Farmstead (NEHBS #NH09~
10), the Retzlaff Farmstead (LC00-22), the Peter Peterson Farmstead
(LC00-21) and the Kehlbeck Farmstead (CC00-36), all located in the
Southeast Region of the state; the Knoell-Bang Farmstead (DD00-50)
and the Zavadil Farmstead (CD00-9), Northeast region; the Jeffery
Farmstead (YK00-2), and the Pisar Farmstead (SA00-3), Central
Plains region; the George Gather Farmstead (WT00-13) and the
Pavelka Farmstead (WT00-104), Republican Valley region, the VJarner
Ranch (BN00-29), Scotts Bluff region; and the Spade Ranch (SH00-
30), Pine Ridge region.
The Herboldsheimer Ranch is the first
agricultural property to be nominated in the High Plans region of
Nebraslca.
Today, the property represents an important Nebraska ranch
type in that it reflects the availability of materials and
technology utilized by an early settler in the establishment and
development of a ranch in the High Plains region of western
Nebraska. The ranch type is associated with the agricultural
context: High Plains Cash Grain and Livestock Production.
PDF- download Original Document-
http://focus.nps.gov/nrhp/GetAsset?assetID=b41debfd-cee8-44f2-8449-0266314d993d
Friday, 1 January 2016
Hubert Hilton Herboldsheimer 1912-2008 obit.
Hubert Hilton Herboldsheimer 1912-2008 obit.
Hubert Hilton Herboldsheimer |
Hubert Hilton Herboldsheimer Memorial Photos Birth: Mar. 10, 1912 Sidney Cheyenne County Nebraska, USA Death: Sep. 22, 2008 Peetz Logan County Colorado, USA Hubert Hilton Herboldsheimer, 96, of Peetz, CO died Monday, September 22 after enjoying a long, happy, blessed life. Hubert, the eldest child of Charles Philip Herboldsheimer and Anna Margaret (Larson) Herboldsheimer was born on March 10, 1912 near Sidney Nebraska. He grew up in Potter Nebraska and farmed with his parents until his marriage to Luella Eveline McKinney on October 1, 1936. Hubert and Luella lived south of Potter until the spring of 1939 when they moved to an unimproved farm which they had purchased fifteen miles northwest of Peetz. They continued to build and improve their farm and lived there until 2006 when Hubert moved to Devonshire Acres in Sterling. Being an advocate of soil conservation, his goal as a farmer was to leave the land in better shape than he found it. In 1983, Hubert and son Craig received the Soil Conservationist Award of the year from the Centennial Soil Conservation District. Hubert served for several years on the Board of Appeals of his Soil Conservation District and also as a member of the Board of Supervisors of the Logan County Weed Control District when it was first formed. Hubert has always been interested in education and was a member of the school board of his neighborhood school district #70 which was consolidated later with the Peetz school district. In the early sixties he served on a committee of Logan County citizens in charge of reorganizing the school districts of Logan County. After a year of meetings and hearings this committee formed the new districts as they exist today. In 1968, he was appointed to fill the vacancy on the Northeastern Junior College Governing Board and was re elected and served in that position for nine years. He was also appointed as a member of the Board of Trustees of the newly formed Northeastern Junior College Foundation where he served three terms. In later years a dorm was named honoring Hubert for his service. Hubert was community minded and served in many ways. He was a member of the Peetz Cooperative Telephone board and served for a number of years as a member of the board of directors of the Peetz Farmers Cooperative elevator. In 2002 Hubert and Luella were honored as Pioneers of Logan County and then also as parade marshals of "For Peetz Sake Days". An important part of his life was being an active member of the Peetz United Methodist church. Hubert loved to fly. He held a private pilot's license for 25 years. Taking passengers on their first ride in his Cessna 170 as well as checking the cows and looking over the farm was a joy for him. He and Luella enjoyed traveling in their RV and over the years had visited every state and nearly every province of Canada. Hubert is survived by his beloved wife, Luella, of nearly 72 years; son Richard (Evelyn Herboldsheimer of Sidney NE; daughter Deanna (David) Ross of Peetz CO; son Craig (Rece Ann) Herboldsheimer and wife of Peetz CO; daughter Candice (Dick) Kahl of Powell WY; 10 grandchildren, 14 great grandchildren and 3 great-great-grandchildren; siblings: Kinley Herboldsheimer of Acton MA and Vivian Willoughby of Cheyenne, WY. Preceding Hubert in death were one sister, five brothers and one great-grandchild. Family links: Parents: Charles Phillip Herboldsheimer (1887 - 1972) Anna M Larson Herboldsheimer (1893 - 1984) Spouse: Luella E. McKinney Herboldsheimer (1918 - 2010) Siblings: Hubert Hilton Herboldsheimer (1912 - 2008) Wesley Waverly Herboldsheimer (1913 - 2008)* Vivian Marjorie Herboldsheimer Willoughby (1915 - 2014)* Clifford Clayton Herboldsheimer (1917 - 1979)* Dale Delyn Herboldsheimer (1921 - 1971)* Bennie Blaine Herboldsheimer (1923 - 2001)* Merle Marius Herboldsheimer (1927 - 1930)* *Calculated relationship Burial: Potter Community Cemetery Potter Cheyenne County Nebraska, USA Maintained by: Find A Grave Originally Created by: Emerald Vert Record added: Oct 12, 2008 Find A Grave Memorial# 30521928
ddr 2016
|
Beekeeper Laurie "Ramona" Herboldsheimer
Golden Rule Honey
www.beeuntoothers.com/
This is an audio recording of Laurie "Ramona" Herboldsheimer's November 2008 talk at the Nebraska State Beekeeping Association meeting. Of note is that this ...
Book by Laurie "Ramona" Herboldsheimer-
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Beekeeping (Idiot's Guides ...
www.amazon.com › ... › Animals › Insects & Spiders
Expert beekeepers Dean Stiglitz and Laurie Herboldsheimer. ... 3rd Edition: An Absolute Beginner's Guide to Keeping Bees… by Kim Flottum Paperback $18.48.
Beekeeping 101: How to Buy Bees | Buying Bees | Idiot's ...
www.idiotsguides.com › Home & Garden › Sustainable Living
Get information on buying bees and where to buy honey bees from. ... to Beekeeping by Dean Stiglitz and Laurie Herboldsheimer and is not available for editing.
www.beeuntoothers.com/
ddr 2016
www.beeuntoothers.com/
This is an audio recording of Laurie "Ramona" Herboldsheimer's November 2008 talk at the Nebraska State Beekeeping Association meeting. Of note is that this ...
Book by Laurie "Ramona" Herboldsheimer-
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Beekeeping (Idiot's Guides ...
www.amazon.com › ... › Animals › Insects & Spiders
Expert beekeepers Dean Stiglitz and Laurie Herboldsheimer. ... 3rd Edition: An Absolute Beginner's Guide to Keeping Bees… by Kim Flottum Paperback $18.48.
Beekeeping 101: How to Buy Bees | Buying Bees | Idiot's ...
www.idiotsguides.com › Home & Garden › Sustainable Living
Videos-
Laurie Herboldsheimer - Microbes and Honey Bees ...
▶ 1:13:27
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQvzIH016tc
Feb 20, 2014 - Uploaded by PhiladelphiaBeesLaurie Herboldsheimer speaking at the Philadelphia Beekeepers Guild's Natural Beekeeping Symposium ...
Laurie Herboldsheimer - Honey Bee Family Values ...
▶ 17:14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSNztAv5crI
Feb 20, 2014 - Uploaded by PhiladelphiaBeesLaurie Herboldsheimer and Dean Stiglitz came to Philadelphia to speak at the Philadelphia Beekeepers ...
Laurie Herboldsheimer - Microbes and Honey Bees ...
▶ 1:13:27
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQvzIH016tc
Feb 20, 2014 - Uploaded by PhiladelphiaBeesLaurie Herboldsheimer speaking at the Philadelphia Beekeepers Guild's Natural Beekeeping Symposium ...
Laurie Herboldsheimer - Honey Bee Family Values ...
▶ 17:14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSNztAv5crI
Feb 20, 2014 - Uploaded by PhiladelphiaBeesLaurie Herboldsheimer and Dean Stiglitz came to Philadelphia to speak at the Philadelphia Beekeepers ...
Website-
Golden Rule Honeywww.beeuntoothers.com/
ddr 2016
Hubert H. Herboldsheimer Honored by Northeastern Jr. College, Sterling Co.
HERBOLDSHEIMER HALL, NJC, Sterling, Co Dedicated to Herbert Herboldsheimer, Peetz, CO. |
March 19, 2007
At the recent 13th Annual Hoops Homecoming hosted by Northeastern Junior College, Hubert Herboldsheimer and Judy Giacomini were honored by receiving the Service Award presented by the Alumni Association. This award is given to an active member of the Alumni Association each year who has demonstrated outstanding service toward the goals and accomplishments of the Association through significant contributions of time and work. ...
Hubert Herboldsheimer was born on March 10, 1912 and raised near Potter, Nebraska. He graduated from high school in 1929 and attended Nebraska Westlyn College in Lincoln, Nebraska for one year. He then returned home and began farming. He and his wife Luella were married in 1936 and celebrated their 70th wedding anniversary last October. They have two sons, two daughters, ten grandchildren, 14 great grandchildren and two great great grandchildren.
In 1939 they bought two sections of land Northeast of Peetz, Colorado. There were no fences or improvements on the land. They bought an old house for $260 and moved it 35 miles with two tractors and a truck. They drilled a water well that pumped three quarts a minute. Their first wheat crop made seven bushels per acre and brought 50 cents a bushel. They bought 600 ewes and the lambs eventually paid for the farm. Hubert and Luella sold the sheep and started a cow-calf operation in 1958. Hubert was the first farmer in the area to utilize diagonal strip cropping on his wheat land.
Over the years, the Herboldsheimers have enjoyed traveling. They have visited all 50 states and all but two of the provinces in Canada. They are active members of the Peetz Methodist Church. Hubert was named a member of the first Pest Control District when it was formed.
Hubert has many fond memories of the years when he was associated with Northeastern Junior College and counts them as what he says “were the best time of my life! I worked with so many wonderful people that I never would have met otherwise.” Hubert served nine years as a member of the NJC Foundation. He was also elected to serve on the College Board of Trustees from 1968 to 1977.
Shortly after he completed his term on the Board, North Residence Hall was renamed Herboldsheimer Hall. Over the years, the building has been affectionately referred to as “Herbie Hall” by students and others.
In the past few years, Hubert has attended an annual spring fling event on campus at his hall called “Herbie Goes Bananas!” The event includes the building and eating of a 20 feet long banana split. Each year he is presented with a special “Herbie Goes Bananas” shirt and he’s given an opportunity to share with some of the students what his responsibilities were at the college when he was a trustee. He has given these later generations an appreciation for what his volunteer leadership has meant to NJC. ...
original source link- http://www.njc.edu/News-and-Events/Releases/2007/March/19/Herboldsheimer-and-Giacomini-honored-by-NJC/
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Photos of HERBOLDSHEIMER HALL | Facebook
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Living on Campus - Northeastern Junior College
www.njc.edu/Living-on-Campus
Blue Spruce Hall. Blue Spruce Hall · Dowis Hall · GRB Hall Guenzi-Read-BreidenbachHall · Herbie Hall · Herboldsheimer (Herbie) Hall · Williams Hall
Hall Residents Donate to Herboldsheimer Nursing ...
www.njc.edu › News and Events › Releases
Hall Residents Donate to Herboldsheimer Nursing Scholarship. November 11, 2008. Residents living in “Herbie” Hall on the campus of Northeastern Junior ...
NJC students deliver happiness to the Herboldsheimers
www.njc.edu › News and Events › Releases
Oct 27, 2006 - More than 50 student residents who live in Herboldsheimer Hall, fondly referred to as “Herbie Hall” signed an anniversary card and then .
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