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Wilber is a city in and the county seat of Saline County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 1,855 at the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Saline County. [3] Wilber is the official "Czech Capital of the USA" and hosts an annual Czech festival in August. Wilber's school is the Wilber-Clatonia High School.
Location of Saline County in Nebraska. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Saline County, Nebraska. It is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Saline County, Nebraska, United States. The locations of National Register properties and ...
Charles Dana Wilber (July 4, 1830, in Auburn, Ohio – December 20, 1891, in Aurora, Illinois) [1] was a land speculator, journalist, writer, and a noted booster of the American West as a site of agricultural development. He founded the town of Wilber, Nebraska in 1873. [1]
Its county seat is Wilber. [ 2 ] In the Nebraska license plate system , Saline County is represented by the prefix 22 (it had the twenty-second-largest number of vehicles registered in the state when the license plate system was established in 1922).
The Saline County Courthouse is a historic three-story building in Wilber, Nebraska, and the courthouse of Saline County, Nebraska. It is the second county courthouse built in Wilber; the first courthouse was built in 1878. [2] The current courthouse was built in 1927, with Bedford limestone. [2]
The Mann-Zwonecek House is a historic house in Wilber, Nebraska. It was built in 1881 for businessman William H. Mann, and designed in the Italianate and Second Empire architectural styles. [2] It belonged to the Zwonecek family from 1894 to 1968. [2] By the 1970s, it was "the only extant home of imposing grandeur in Wilber dating to the early ...
Hotel Wilber is a historic hotel in Wilber, Nebraska. It was built in 1895 as a hotel and gathering place for social events. [2] The builders were Isaac Hickman, Charles Whipple, G. D. Coe, and George Smith. [2] Cultural historian Janet Jeffries Spencer of the Nebraska State Historical Society and architect D. Murphy add,
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