SUTTON HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The Sutton Historical Society is a local community
organization dedicated to the reservation of artifacts and information of the
culture and history of the Sutton area.
The society is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization founded in
2005. Society members are involved in
several programs related to the Sutton area.
SUTTON
MUSEUM

The Sutton
Museum is located in the
historic home of John and Emma Gray, Sutton pioneers. This home was built in 1908 by the Gray’s as
their retirement home and was located between their original 1879 home and
their business, one of the first lumberyards in the area. The home was restored to its original state
by the previous owners who operated a tea house in the building for nine years.
The Historical Society is developing specific specialized
areas of interest including veterans’ histories, family histories – especially
from the Germans from Russia
who settled in the Sutton area in the late 19th Century and
artifacts from many of the founding families of the community. Plans are relocate the museum to a separate
building in the near future to make this building a restored home depicting
furnishings of approximately 1900.
COUNTRY
SCHOOL MUSEUM

The Clay County Fair Board generously donated a one-room
country school building to the Sutton Historical Society. The building was originally located near Fairfield, Nebraska as
the Wolfe School, District #55. There were about 80 country schools in Clay County
serving the education needs of rural school children for most of the first 100
years of the history of the area. The
school building will house a museum to preserve and display artifacts and
information from this important educational system in our history.
ROUTE 6 VISITOR CENTER
The Sutton
Museum houses a growing
section associated with the US Route 6 Tourism Association. The Sutton Route 6 Visitor Center is one of
several planned along Historic Route 6, the Grand Army of the Republic Highway. U.S. Route 6 was the longest highway in the
nation connecting Long Beach, California
with the Provincetown, Massachusetts
at the end of Cape Cod. A section of the California
route has been decommissioned and today’s Route 6 originates in the town of Bishop, California. The Tourism Association is marking the
historic route including the California
section.
OTHER PROJECTS:
The Sutton
Museum has plans to
preserve the historic brick factory and blacksmith shop located at the
Northeast edge of Sutton. These
facilities date from the earliest days of Sutton and were important in the
economic development of our community.
The historical society has initiated an Oral History program
to record the memories of the citizens of the area. The objective is to not only collect the
recollections of our friends and neighbors, but to capture the stories our
grandparents told us.
MEMBERSHIP
Individual memberships in the Sutton Historical Society are
$25 per year, family memberships are $40.
Lifetime memberships are available for $200.
For information about the Sutton Historical Society and
related programs contact:
Sutton Historical Society
P. O. Box
92
Sutton, NE 68979
Or,
Jerry Johnson
402-773-0222
jjhnsn@windstream.net