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Saunders County
Nebraska
Our new website was
brought online in
August 2008 with the
help of MIPS Inc.
MIPS Inc is the
Technology Services
Division of the Nebraska
Association of County
Officials (NACO). NACO's website address
is
www.nacone.org
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Saunders
Courthouse
Address
433 N
Chestnut
Wahoo,
NE
68066
Hours
8:00-5:00
Location
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Our online
forms and documents are in PDF
format. If you do not have
the latest Adobe's PDF reader installed,
click on the Adobe PDF image
below.
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Hits since September 9, 2008
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Welcome to Saunders County
SAUNDERS COUNTY is named for Alvin Saunders, governor of Nebraska Territory during the tumultuous years of 1861-1867. Born
to a Kentucky family that later moved to Illinois, Saunders continued west to Mount Pleasant, Iowa, in 1836 at age nineteen.
He went into business, studied the law, and became involved in politics. In 1860 he chaired the Iowa delegation to the
Republican national convention and successfully worked for Abraham Lincoln’s nomination for president. On March 26, 1861,
President Lincoln appointed Saunders as territorial governor, a position he held until Nebraska’s statehood. Saunders was
elected to the United States Senate a decade later and served one term. He actively promoted the Trans-Mississippi
Exposition in Omaha, whose success he proudly witnessed before his death in 1899.
On March 26, 1861,
President Lincoln appointed Saunders as
territorial governor, a position he held
until Nebraska’s statehood. Saunders was
elected to the United States Senate a
decade later and served one term.
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He actively
promoted the Trans-Mississippi Exposition in
Omaha, whose success he proudly witnessed
before his death in 1899.
Originally named for John Calhoun, the surveyor general of Kansas and Nebraska, the territorial legislature changed the
county’s name to Saunders on January 8, 1862. The first general election of county officers was not held until October 8,
1966.
Governor Alvin Saunders faced issues relating to the Civil War, Indian conflicts on the plains, the organization of the first
transcontinental railroad, and the establishment of a new capital.
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 Alvin Saunders
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