Facts About Norfolk, Nebraska
Location
Norfolk is located in northeast Nebraska in the Elkhorn River Valley of Madison County. U.S. Highways 81 and 275 and Nebraska Highways 24 and 35 intersect in Norfolk. Norfolk is 112 miles northwest of Omaha, 121 miles north of Lincoln, and 75 miles southwest of Sioux City, Iowa.
General Information
Norfolk, Nebraska, population 24,210 (2010 U.S. Census Figures)
Topography
Norfolk sits in the heart of the Elkhorn Valley, with the Sand Hills lying to the west and farmland to the east. The surrounding land is gently rolling. The land is mainly Marshall and Shelby series soils of good absorptive quality, retaining moisture yet providing good drainage.
Hospitals
Emergency Room
2700 W. Norfolk Ave., Norfolk, NE
402-371-4880
Faith Regional
2700 W. Norfolk Ave., Norfolk, NE
402-371-4880
Police
Madison County Sheriff
1313 North Main Street, Madison, NE
402-454-2110
Norfolk City Police
202 N. 7th, Norfolk, NE, Norfolk, NE
402-644-8700
Demographics
POPULATION
Area | Last Census (2000) | Latest Year (2004) | % Change |
---|---|---|---|
Norfolk | 23,516 | 24,072 | 2.4 |
Madison County | 35,226 | 35,752 | 1.5 |
Labor Market Population | 104,762 | 103,365 | -1.3 |
Labor market population is the county population plus the contiguous county population. (Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Estimates of the Population, Released August 11, 2005.)
County Age Distribution (2004)
Age | Male | Female | Total |
---|---|---|---|
0-17 | 4,681 | 4,443 | 9,124 |
18-24 | 2,340 | 2,088 | 4,428 |
25-44 | 4,629 | 4,354 | 8,983 |
45-64 | 4,071 | 4,109 | 8,180 |
65+ | 2,030 | 3,007 | 5,037 |
85+ | 263 | 668 | 931 |
Total | 17,751 | 18,001 | |
% Split | 49.7 | 50.3 |
Median Age (2004)
State 35.9 years, County 35.4 years
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division, County Population Estimates by Selected Age and Gender: July 1, 2005.)
History
On July 17, 1866, a three-train caravan of prairie schooners carrying 44 German families from Ixonia and Watertown, Wisconsin, arrived at the junction of Elkhorn and North Fork Valleys where they were attracted by the rich land open for settlement. These pioneers were joined by others from Wisconsin and formed the community which later became Norfolk. Others, some from New England, soon came to the new settlement and established a grist mill which was operated by water from the North Fork River. A mill store was opened, and this structure determined the location of the town.
How Norfolk Was Named
In 1881, the village of Norfolk was organized. The settlers proclaimed “North Fork” to be their permanent post office address, named after the river, but suggested “Norfork” as the name because it was the simplest compounding of “North Fork.” Postal authorities, thinking the word had been misspelled, changed the spelling to “Norfolk”.