Scotts Bluff County, Nebraska | |
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Scotts Bluff County Courthouse in Gering
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Location in the U.S. state of Nebraska |
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Nebraska's location in the U.S. |
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Founded | 1888 |
Seat | Gering |
Largest city | Scottsbluff |
Area | |
• Total | 745 sq mi (1,930 km2) |
• Land | 739 sq mi (1,914 km2) |
• Water | 6.0 sq mi (16 km2), 0.8% |
Population | |
• (2010) | 36,970 |
• Density | 50/sq mi (19/km²) |
Congressional district | 3rd |
Time zone | Mountain: UTC-7/-6 |
Website | www |
Scotts Bluff County is a county on the western border of the U.S. state of Nebraska. As of the 2010 census, the population was 36,970. Its county seat is Gering, and its largest city is Scottsbluff.
Scotts Bluff County is included in the Scottsbluff, NE Micropolitan Statistical Area.
In the Nebraska license plate system, Scotts Bluff County is represented by the prefix 21, since the county had the twenty-first-largest number of registered vehicles registered when the state's license-plate system was established in 1922.
The county is named after a prominent bluff that served as a landmark for 19th-century pioneers traveling along the Oregon Trail. Scotts Bluff was named after Hiram Scott, a Rocky Mountain Fur Company trapper who died nearby around 1828.Washington Irving claimed after being injured and abandoned Scott had crawled sixty miles only to perish near the bluff that now bears his name. The bluff is now managed by the National Park Service as Scotts Bluff National Monument.
The town of Gering was founded at the base of the bluff in 1887, and the city of Scottsbluff was founded across the North Platte River in 1900. Joined by the river, the former transportation highway, the two cities now form Nebraska's 7th-largest urban area.
Scotts Bluff County Airport (BFF) is Nebraska's third-busiest airport in terms of passenger boardings.