History
Buffalo County is one of only two
counties in Nebraska that derived its name from an animal. Years before
this area along the Platte River would become a county, large herds of
buffalo grazed the river valley and the rolling plains to the north.
When it came time to organize the county, it seemed fitting to name it
after the animal that once roamed the area freely.
The boundaries of Buffalo County
were established by the Territorial Legislature in 1855. The county was
officially organized in 1864, three years before Nebraska was admitted
to the Union.
Two transportation lines can be
credited with the early development of the area -- the Mormon Trail and
the Union Pacific Railroad.
The first settlers in this area
were said to be Mormons who had headed west along the trail in 1858. But
a fierce war between the Cheyenne and Sioux tribes forced these early
settlers to temporarily abandon the area. When the fighting subsided,
the settlers gradually returned. In time, more and more settlers came to
the area because of the rich Platte River Valley and the fertile soil
that could be found in the surrounding hills.
With the coming of the railroad in
the 1860s, Buffalo County would continue to develop. One of the stations
that sprang up was Kearney, the county seat. Originally named Fort
Childs, it was later renamed Kearney Junction and finally shortened to
Kearney. Moses H. Sydenham, one of the early pioneers in the county,
founded a newspaper in this young settlement and used the publication to
promote his idea that Kearney, with its central location, should become
the capital of the United States.
Hardships such as hot, dry weather
and severe blizzards were not uncommon for the early residents of the
county. But the most serious challenge faced by those who worked the
land was the damage done by waves of grasshoppers that swarmed over the
area in the mid 1870s.
More than 115 years later, Buffalo
County is a thriving agricultural and industrial area. It also plays an
important role in the state's higher education system, with the
University of Nebraska-Kearney located in the county seat.
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