
Boone County Ladies 1907
My name is Bob
Jenkins and I am the
Boone county coordinator.
We have
many genealogical resources available here.
We
would appreciate any contributions you would like to
make to this site.
Types of materials we are looking to
include on this website are:
family histories, biographies, photos,
obituaries, tombstone photos
& inscriptions, cemetery lists, etc.
If you have any the above items please
contact me by clicking on my name.
Boone County, Nebraska
Boone County was organized in 1871, carved from the rolling prairie of northeastern Nebraska during the height of the homesteading era. The county takes its name from the frontier legend Daniel Boone, reflecting the pioneer spirit of the families who settled here. Early settlers arrived in the late 1860s, drawn by fertile soil, open grasslands, and access to the Cedar and Beaver Creek valleys.
The first towns—Albion, St. Edward, and Petersburg—grew around stage routes, trading points, and later the arrival of the railroads, which brought new residents, commerce, and agricultural expansion. Farming and livestock quickly became the backbone of the local economy, shaping the rural communities that still define the county today.
Boone County’s population reflects a strong mix of German, Irish, Czech, and Scandinavian immigrant families whose names appear throughout early land records, church registers, and cemetery listings. These communities built schools, churches, and newspapers that preserved the stories of the county’s early decades.
Today, Boone County remains a landscape of family farms, small towns, and deep generational roots—an important region for researchers tracing Nebraska homesteaders and prairie settlement history.


