The Sutton Museum is the home of the Sutton Historical Society and is dedicated to the collection and preservation of historic artifacts and information about the Sutton, Nebraska community.
Saturday, December 10, 2022
1922 Citizenship Applications for 20 County Men
The Clay County Sun newspaper of November 30, 1922 listed these gentlemen as candidates for citizenship in Clay County.
Sunday, December 4, 2022
1997 Sandy Creek Volleyball Champs
The Sandy Creek Lady Cougars won the Class C-2 State Volleyball Championship in November 1997.
This article appeared in the Clay County News on November 20, 1997, page B2.
Thursday, November 24, 2022
1947 Black Face Minstrel Show in Fairfield
Sign of the times, 1947.
The folks of Fairfield performed a black face minstrel show at the Fairfield Auditorium in 1947. Such performances were common and seen as a form of comedy.
My country school, District #16, did a black face minstrel show as a Christmas program when I was in kindergarten. The youngest of us in the school sang "Mammy's Little Baby Loves Shortin' Bread"
That was 1948. It was a sign of the times, and the place. It is one of my few memories from being five years old. I like to think it was the awkwardness of the situation, at least, that imbedded the memory.
Monday, November 21, 2022
1897 History of Clay County from The Harvard Courier Newspaper
This major history of Harvard and Clay County was published by The Harvard Courier newspaper on November 20, 1897.
Sutton's 1922 Aid Reaches Russia
Germans from Russia in Sutton organized relief efforts for people in Russia who were facing starvation conditions after World War I. Many residents of Northeast Clay County were immigrants from, or one generation removed from the villages of Rohrbach, Worms, and Johannesthal in South Russia.
This area of 1920's South Russia is now in the nation of Ukraine and in the area near Odessa that has been in contention this year from the Russian occupation of Ukrainian territory.
This article appeared on Page 1 of The Sutton News on November 17, 1922.
Tuesday, November 1, 2022
Sutton Ads in The Advertiser-News
The Advertiser-News was an early Sutton newspaper. This collage of local ads appeared in that paper in November 1897.
Monday, October 31, 2022
The Ong Methodist Church Centennial was in November 1972
The Ong Methodist Church celebrated its centennial 50 years ago.
The article about the occasion included a brief history of the church.
This article appeared in The Clay County News on November 2, 1972, page 2.
1922 Sutton Golf Club Tournament
100 Years Ago - The Sutton Golf Club held their second golf tournament.
Notice that the winning lady receives a box of bon-bons for a prize while all the other prizes are golf balls. Question: Is that a good thing or a bad thing?
This item appeared in The Sutton News on November 3, 1922.
1947 Fairfield Neighborhood Corn Picking Crew
Neighborhood crews helping in harvest and other farm work for neighbors in some kind of stress was a common story throughout the history of the county.
This item, a reprint from the Hastings Tribune, appeared in The Fairfield Auxiliary newspaper on November 11, 1947.
Friday, October 28, 2022
Clay County Cotton Crop - 1947
The Sutton News of November 6, 1947 spread the word that a farmer south of Sutton had grown a cotton crop that year.
As predicted by the reporter in his last sentence, cotton did not develop into a big money crop.
Though, wait a minute. The average climate conditions have tempered measurably and obviously even just in the last 75 years. Could it be that our local growing season has become more like, say, Oklahoma and Texas or the southeast. Could it be that we may see someone make another attempt to grow cotton in Clay County, and, what if it works?
Just sayin'
Thursday, October 6, 2022
Friday, September 30, 2022
Australian Hiking Family Visited Sutton - 1922
This news item in The Sutton News of 6 October 1922 caught our eye while researching our column this week. Seems to need sharing:
Ong Methodist Church 75th Anniversary - 1947
The Ong Methodist Church celebrated its 75th anniversary in October 1947. This article appeared in The Edgar Sun newspaper.
Thursday, August 25, 2022
Gibson's bought the Lyric Theater in 1947
This article in The Sutton News on September 4, 1947 tells when the Gibson's purchased the Lyric Theater, but not the name of the prior owner. Need to research that....
Thursday, August 11, 2022
1972 County Fair 4-H Winners
The 1972 4-H winners were listed in The Clay County News on August 10, 1972.
Friday, August 5, 2022
Harvard Banker Visited Inflation-Plagued Germany in 1922
Herman Wellensiek, Harvard banker, visited relatives in Germany in 1922 and observed the economic climate in the early months of Germany's inflation crisis. About a year after this article appeared in The Harvard Courier, the U.S. dollar was worth more than 4 trillion marks. Prices were doubling in less than every four days.
This article was in The Harvard Courier on August 10, 1922.
Monday, August 1, 2022
Clay County Teachers in 1897
The annual Clay County teachers institution received a full story in the Edgar Post on July 30, 1897. The article lists teachers who attended, which likely is a list of the teachers of Clay County in 1897, or at least nearly all of them.
The article about the institute follows our list.
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
Elmer Plettner Jr. Sold his Sutton TV Center in 1972
This is from early August 1972 when Elmer Jr. sold his Sutton TV Center after selling and servicing TVs since DAY ONE of TVs in Sutton.
The store was on the south end, west side of downtown in the building recently taken over by Judy Barnes and her State Farm business.
Wednesday, July 20, 2022
Grocery Deliveries in 1947 by Lohmeier Dray Line
This ad in The Sutton News on July 31, 1947 announced that Merele Lohmeier would be delivering groceries in Sutton from all four of the town's grocery stores.
The First Sutton School Bus - 1947
As we interpret this story, this was the purchase of the first school bus for the Sutton schools. It happened in the summer of 1947 when a used Burlington Trailways bus came to town.
The story appeared in The Sutton News on July 31, 1947.
Thursday, July 7, 2022
1947 Problems with Long Distance Telephone Service
Issues with phones in 1947 did not involve display resolution, apps, camera quality, etc. Lincoln Telephone & Telegraph was busy beefing up circuits between numerous towns to increase their capacity for long distance calls.
And remember, young folk, long distance calls, those out of town, were metered and you paid based on distance and time connected. A half hour call to an uncle in California might impact your monthly budget. Birthdays could be handled with a card and a three cent stamp. People cringed when told they had a long distance call. A high percentage of long distance calls involved death notices.
LT&T posted this notice in newspapers in July 1947.
Friday, July 1, 2022
Flying Saucers Over Sutton - 1947
Sutton did not miss out on the huge Flying Saucer stories of 1947
Henry Fuehrer stepped up first in town to report seeing stuff in the air. By the next week, two more Sutton men came forward to tell their story - Marshal Henry Trautman and Doc Ochsner, one of the two dentists in town.
This article ran the same week in The York Daily News
The hotbed of flying saucers was in New Mexico, Roswell for instance. This article made the Albuquerque newspaper.
And here is the report in the Hastings Daily Tribune.
Friday, June 17, 2022
Tuesday, May 31, 2022
Sutton Memorial Day 1947 inc. Veterans Listed
This is how Sutton observed Memorial day 75 years ago in 1947. The article included the list of the town's veterans, women's relief corps, and auxiliaries.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)