FOX News

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Funk, Nebraska

Beautiful certificate from the Funk State Bank issued in 1909. This historic document was printed by Goes and has an ornate border around it with a vignette of an eagle. This item has the signatures of the Company's President, S. C. Stewart and Cashier, L. A. Franzen and is over 97 years old.





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Certificate Vignette


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Funky Bank Advertisement 1915




FUNK, NEBRASKA

Population (year 2000): 204, Est. population in July 2004: 197 (-3.4% change) Males: 101 (49.5%), Females: 103 (50.5%)

Elevation: 2245 feet

Civil War veteran P. C. Funk came to Divide Township in Phelps County in 1877 and purchased 160 acres of land two miles north of the present town. By 1883 the Nebraska-Colorado Railroad, now the Burlington Northern, had extended its line as far west as Holdrege. Through the efforts of P. C. Funk, railroad officials were persuaded to establish the Funk townsite along the railroad between Axtell and holdrege.

The village was platted in May 1887 on land purchased from August Anderson for $2,500. A townsite committee consisted of J. S. Johnson, William Johnson, Frank Johnson, George Johnson, P. C. Funk, Alfred Johnson, Charles Skallberg, Swan M. Milner, and C. F. Franzen.

The first grain elevator and house were built by L. T. Brooking, who later became the town's first postmaster and editor of the newspaper, the Funk Enterprise. In 1910 the Fridhem Lutheran Church moved to Funk. The town survived three serious fires and faced difficult times during the drouth and depression of the 1930s. Irrigation came to the area in 1938 and improved the life of farmers and villagers.


funk n 1: a state of nervous depression; "he was in a funk" [syn: blue funk]

a. A state of cowardly fright; a panic. b. A state of severe depression.

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