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Cedar County News is a weekly newspaper serving Hartington, Nebraska and surrounding communities of Cedar County, Nebraska. [2] It is published on Wednesdays and has an estimated circulation of 1,483. The Cedar County News is owned by Northeast Nebraska News and published and edited by Rob Dump and Peggy Year. [2] [3] [4]
This is a list of newspapers in the U.S. state of Nebraska. The list is divided between papers currently being produced and those produced in the past and ...
Hartington includes a number of historic buildings. These include three brick structures on the National Register of Historic Places : the Prairie School Hartington City Hall and Auditorium (1921-1923), the Romanesque Revival Cedar County Courthouse (1890-1891), and the Colonial Revival Hartington Hotel (1917).
The county seat is Hartington. [2] The county was formed in 1857, and was named for the Cedar tree groves in the area. [3] [4] [5] In the Nebraska license plate system, Cedar County is represented by the prefix 13 (it had the 13th-largest number of vehicles registered in the county when the license plate system was established in 1922).
He was a member of the Nebraska House of Representatives as a member of the Republican Party. Burney was a Congregationalist. [1] Burney married Julia A. Jones in 1880 and they had six children. Their son, Dwight, served as the 30th Governor of Nebraska. [2]
Services had been conducted in homes, the school, and Hartington until 1904. [1] [6] Paragon Lutheran was located ¼ mile south of the cemetery. [5] It closed in 1944 and the building was sold and moved to Hartington in 1953. [1] [5] Paragon Cemetery, established in 1876, is a Nebraska State Historical Society site today. [5]
5701 Center Street, Omaha, Nebraska Westlawn-Hillcrest Funeral Home and Memorial Park is a funeral home , cemetery and crematory located at 5701 Center Street in Omaha , Nebraska . [ 1 ]
The Hartington City Hall and Auditorium, also known as the Hartington Municipal Building, is a city-owned, brick-clad, 2-story center in Hartington, Nebraska. It was designed between 1921 and 1923 in the Prairie School style by architect William L. Steele (1875–1949).