ANSLEY – 1886-1986

Picture 12652 of the Butcher collection, date 1886, The Burlington and Missouri River Route’s first engine in to Broken Bow, Custer County Nebraska. Today as part of the BNSF that route up through Wyoming carries a lot of the coal for the US [3]
Ansley was the first Nebraska town west of Grand Island to own a power plant and water system. The Ansley Electric Light and Power Company, built by C. J. Stevens, was incorporated September 20, 1892. Destroyed by fire in 1904, it was replaced by another power plant, which burned in 1910. The Municipal Light and Power System was completed in 1911. Ansley’s waterworks company was organized and its facilities completed in 1893.
Ansley reached its peak population of 817 in 1930. In its centennial year of 1986 the town’s more than 600 inhabitants continued to use the slogan applied to Ansley in 1916 by merchant William S. Mattley–“Push, that’s Ansley.”
Ansley Centennial Committee
Nebraska State Historical Society
City Park, Ansley
Custer County
Marker 308
- RootsWeb / Ancestry.com, http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/ANSLEY/1998-05/0894234646
- Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burlington_and_Missouri_River_Railroad
- CasCity.com. http://www.cascity.com/forumhall/index.php?topic=36061.0