By TYLER ELLYSON, UNK Communications
University of Nebraska at Kearney associate history professor Nathan Tye stood at the front of a classroom inside Copeland Hall.
Behind him, a giant image of a Nebraska fast-food icon appeared on the digital projector screen.
โToday weโre going to do a really robust, serious exercise,โ Tye told the class of 33 students. โWeโre going to consider the Runza.โ
Thatโs right. He planned to use this popular bread pocket filled with seasoned beef, cabbage and onion to teach students about Nebraska history and the stateโs global connections.
โEven in the smallest towns, thereโs a Runza franchise, so itโs something most students are familiar with,โ Tye explained. โMaybe itโs even been shot at them from a T-shirt cannon during a football game. But theyโve almost certainly never thought about a Runza on a deeper level. Why would you?โ
The UNK faculty member wins over his audience by bringing them free food for the lesson โ โItโs the best day of class for students,โ Tye admits โ then takes them on a journey spanning four centuries.
โAs with all fast-food stories, it begins with Catherine the Great, the empress of Russia,โ Tye notes. โBecause that totally makes sense.โ
THEY BROUGHT BIEROCKS
Born a virtually penniless Prussian princess, Catherine the Great became the ruler of Russia in 1762 after overthrowing her husband. She championed education and the arts and focused on expanding and modernizing her empire.
One of her early strategies encouraged people to leave the Holy Roman Empire and settle in the Volga River region of Russia, a sparsely populated area that resembles the Great Plains. Enticed by incentives such as free land, no taxes, exemption from military service, freedom of religion and self-governance, many ethnic Germans accepted the offer.
โIn a continent that has been rife with religious warfare since the Reformation, this is an incredible opportunity,โ Tye told his class.
These immigrants thrived in the Volga region for many years, until Alexander II became emperor in 1855 and revoked their privileges. That led to another mass migration, this time to the United States.
The Volga Germans began arriving in Nebraska in the 1870s, with communities such as Sutton serving as hubs for this population.
โAll of the things that they received from Catherine the Great were available in Nebraska and the Midwest,โ Tye said. โThe landscape looks the same. The weather is the same. They had freedom of religion and freedom of speech. And land was easy to obtain through the Homestead Act.โ
Recognized as excellent farmers with a strong work ethic, the German Russians brought hard winter wheat with them, along with the recipe for that savory pastry pocket, known outside Nebraska as a bierock.
โWhen people come to the United States, theyโre bringing things with them. Theyโre bringing their language, their beliefs, their culture,โ Tye said during his lecture. โWhat youโre eating right now is something that was baked at a fast-food restaurant down by the interstate about an hour ago. But itโs something that came out of the Volga region.โ
WEโRE NOT BORING
So why does the history of the Runza matter?
Itโs a quintessential Nebraska thing, Tye said, but it also represents our ties to a global society.
Tye started teaching his Nebraska in the World class in fall 2021 to get students thinking about the state in a new way. He aims to โintentionally upendโ the misconception that Nebraska and its history are boring.
โPeople think weโre in flyover country, right? Weโre in the middle of nowhere. Nothing happens here. And nothing is further from the truth,โ he said. โI want students to look at the place where theyโre going to spend, or have spent, four or more years and have a deeper appreciation for it. They might come from a small town or rural community, but theyโre connected to everyone else in the world.โ
With a focus on transnational history, Tye takes a local topic and looks beyond our borders to tell the rest of the story.
For example, everyone learns about World War II during high school. But did you know the planes that dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, were built in Bellevue?
The Glenn L. Martin Company produced more than 500 Boeing B-29 Superfortress bombers, including the Enola Gay and Bockscar, at its assembly plant at Fort Crook, which is now Offutt Air Force Base.
โThose are globally important events,โ Tye said. โThe most devastating weapons ever used in warfare were built by largely young women โ Rosie the Riveters โ in Bellevue.โ
Tye also talks about Ben Kuroki, the only Japanese American to serve in air combat missions in the Pacific theater. A Hershey native, Kuroki enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps and flew on a total of 58 missions in the European and Pacific theaters as a turret gunner on B-24 and B-29 bombers.
Students in the class learn about the Louisiana Purchase โ from the perspective of Napoleon โ and Buffalo Billโs Wild West Show when it was performed for Queen Victoria in England.
โWeโre not talking about Buffalo Bill as the guy who has a big house in North Platte,โ Tye said. โWeโre talking about Buffalo Bill international celebrity.โ
Other topics include the Oregon and Mormon Trails, Omaha-born suffragist and womenโs rights advocate Doris Stevens and Nebraskaโs national defense role during the Cold War and today.
YOUโLL HAVE FUN
Part of UNKโs general education curriculum, Nebraska in the World is offered during the fall and spring semesters, drawing interest from undergraduate students across all grade levels and numerous academic programs.
โItโs a history class thatโs really designed for non-majors,โ Tye explained. โThat makes it fun because thereโs a broad range of students.โ
In addition to the free food and interesting stories, the course includes a research component and trips to the G.W. Frank Museum of History and Culture on campus and Trails and Rails Museum in Kearney.
Logan Osmera took the class last semester while completing a bachelorโs degree in history with minors in international relations and public history. He called it a โdifferent take on Nebraska history.โ
โA lot of times when you take Nebraska history courses, itโs the Oregon Trail and cowboys, then you might get to World War I and it kind of stops there,โ he said. โWith this course, thereโs a larger context and more focus on what this all means. Why were there cowboys in Nebraska? Why did the Oregon Trail exist?โ
The Big Springs native gives Tye credit for bringing excitement and intrigue to these topics.
โHeโs very enthusiastic. Thatโs probably the best way to put it,โ Osmera said. โHeโs from Kearney. Heโs from Nebraska. Heโs probably the best person to teach a Nebraska history course because not only does he know the material like the back of his hand, he also cares. And you can tell he cares and heโs passionate about it through his lectures.โ
Osmera has worked at the G.W. Frank Museum and Ash Hollow State Historical Park. Heโs currently pursuing a masterโs degree in public history through UNK, so the course aligns with his professional interests.
But he believes itโs a great choice for any UNK student.
โThis is not going to be your average, boring history lecture course,โ Osmera said. โYouโre going to have fun, and youโre going to learn something in the process.โ