'''BROWNVILLE'''
is a village in
Nemaha County,
Nebraska,
United States. The population was 146 at the
2000 census.
HISTORY
Established in 1854 and incorporated in 1856, Brownville was the largest town in the
Nebraska Territory, with a population of 1,309 by 1880. Bordering
slave-holding Missouri, the town became an important
port on the
Missouri River.
Daniel Freeman, the first
homesteader to file a claim under the
Homestead Act of 1862, staked his claim at a
New Year's Eve party in Brownville.
The rise of the
railroad was ultimately Brownville's undoing. The railroads siphoned traffic away from the Missouri River's
steamboats. Brownville's attempt to secure a railroad of its own was severely botched and led to immense
tax increases to pay the
bonds for the failed venture. This drove most of the population away and led to the county seat being transferred to
Auburn in 1885.
[[http://www.yourcountryneighbor.com/YCN/BHS150.pdf BrownvilleÂ’'s 150th Anniversary 1854 - 2004: The Village of Firsts Remains on the Frontier Edge]. Captain Meriwether Lewis Museum. Retrieved 12/13/08.]
In 1856
Thomas Weston Tipton moved to the town to serve as a minister. He later became a longtime
U.S. Senator, and ran an unsuccessful campaign for
Governor of Nebraska. Omaha land magnates
Herman and
Augustus Kountze held large holdings in the early town.
After the
Civil War David Mercer established a law practice in the town. Mercer later served as a long-time
U.S. Representative from Nebraska. The
Nebraska State Fair was held in the town in 1870 and 71. That year
Eugene Gilmore, the future acting
Governor-General of the Philippines, was born in the town.
The
Brownville Bridge was built over the Missouri River in 1939. Today it is on the
National Register of Historic Places. Owing to its place in Nebraska history, Brownville is primarily a
tourist attraction with several old
houses opened for tours or converted into
museums.
Art galleries and
wineries in and near Brownville have also helped to make the town an increasingly attractive getaway for residents of the region's larger cities.
Omaha's
River City Star was built in the town in 1967, and was originally named the
Belle of Brownville. The
Governor Furnas Arboretum was planted in the city in 1992. The arboretum is named in honor of Nebraska's second governor,
Robert W. Furnas, the signer of the first declaration of
Arbor Day. The
Cooper Nuclear Station is south of the city. In 1995 a
mild tornado blew through the town.
GEOGRAPHY
According to the
United States Census Bureau, Brownville has a total area of Interwiki: convert » 0.6|sqmi|km2, all of it land.
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