Loyal Seward


On July 4, 1868, settlers celebrated by delivering patriotic orations from a dirt mound.


Story by Christopher Amundson

Photography by Bobbi and Steve Olson and Christopher Amundson

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Seward Slideshow
Click on the above image for a slide show of more images from Seward


Greene County, Neb., was named after a well known Missouri senator, but when the Civil War erupted and Greene was identified with the Confederacy, they promptly renamed it Seward County after William H. Seward, secretary of state for Abraham Lincoln. They were loyal Americans, a trait that must be genetic because everywhere you turn in Seward today you find it.

Chanting Catholic
Click here to listen to the afternoon prayer at St. Gregory the Great Seminary.

The sound of trombones, trumpets, drums and cymbals of the 120-year-old city band can still be heard coming from the city band shell every summer Sunday evening. Vendors sell vegetables, pies and pastries at a farmer’s market on the courthouse square on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Residents of Seward genuinely enjoy their community.

This is a town, after all, that knows how to celebrate. They’ve been gathering to honor America’s birthday almost continuously since 1868 when early settlers stood on a mound on the town square to deliver patriotic orations. Now, an estimated 30,000-plus people come to this community of 6,500 each year to celebrate Independence Day with a flag-raising ceremony, anvil firing, hot air balloons, quilt shows, air show, antique tractor and car show, ethnic dancers, art, essays, concerts, movies, national pole vaulting competition, parade, food and fireworks.

From 6:30 a.m. until fireworks at 10 p.m. the town of Seward is Nebraska’s Fourth of July City.

Today’s version of the Seward Fourth of July celebration came from the “Whiz Bang Kids,” the Seward High School class of 1969. In 1967, Clark Kolterman, his twin brother Mark and other classmates decided that Seward needed a modern Fourth of July celebration for Seward’s centennial. They organized the students and began a tradition of youth involvement. Since then, there’s always been a youth chairman as well as an adult chairman of the committee, and the celebration has been organized in large part by young people. In keeping the youth involved, Seward hopes it is grooming future leaders.

“We had a lot of overachievers in our graduating class,” said Mark Kolterman, who married his high school sweetheart (Suzanne, also of the class of ’69) and now runs an insurance and investment business with her in Seward. “There was a competition to excel and we had good role models in Seward. We had parents who said, ‘You have to give back.’ ”

The Omaha World-Herald’s Tom Allen first coined the term Whiz Bang Kids. Local community supporter, historian and business owner Harold Davisson picked up on the term and made it stick. In 1973 Governor Exon designated Seward “Nebraska’s Official 4th of July City.” A State of Nebraska Historic marker stands on the courthouse lawn.

Some in the class of ’69 moved away, but many stayed – including Rick Endicott, Trish Davisson-Johnson, Marilyn Hladky, Beth Peterson and others. And some are moving back after decades of being away.

“They’re moving back because the quality of life in Seward endures,” Kolterman said. “There’s a lot of community pride in this small burg.”

“Seward is a neat town. It takes care of its old streets and old buildings. We don’t have a bad area,” said Becky Vahle of Cattle National Bank and Trust, who gave us a town tour.

A decade ago, Cattle National, one of two locally-owned banks in town, built a new main bank on the east side of the town square and sparked a revitalization project that overhauled the 1880s-era downtown. The town added new street lights and upgraded all the curbs and sidewalks. Rather than losing their brick streets first laid in 1909, volunteers and city employees took up the bricks by hand and laid them back down at the end of the construction project. It was hard work but worth it, they figured.

Seward residents are proud of their downtown and have worked hard to preserve it and to keep the local businesses in business.

“Our biggest attraction is our historical town square,” said chamber director Pat Coldiron.

(The complete story appears in the July/August 2007 issue of Nebraska Life Magazine.)

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