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She votes for herself, becomes mayor and approves her own liquor licence: Inside America’s town of one

She votes for herself, becomes mayor and approves her own liquor licence: Inside America’s town of one

In the far northeastern corner of Nebraska lies Monowi, a legally incorporated American village with a distinction unmatched anywhere else in the world. Its population stands at exactly one. The sole resident is Elsie Eiler, who has lived there for decades and today carries the full weight of local government on her shoulders.Monowi is not an abandoned ghost town or an unincorporated settlement. It exists fully on the books, recognised by the state, bound by laws and regulations, and required to follow the same administrative processes as any other municipality. With no other residents to share the responsibility, Eiler has become the town’s entire democratic structure.

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She votes in elections, wins them unanimously and then governs herself, not as a novelty, but as a legal necessity.

How Monowi became America’s smallest town of one person

Monowi was once home to several dozen residents, supported by agriculture, a railway line and small-town commerce. Like many rural communities across the Great Plains, it steadily declined as economic opportunities shifted and younger generations moved to larger cities. By the late 20th century, the population had dwindled to just a handful. After the death of Eiler’s husband in 2004, she became the village’s only remaining resident. Rather than dissolve the town or relocate, she chose to stay. Census records later confirmed Monowi’s status as a one-person municipality, turning it into an international curiosity while also highlighting the reality of rural depopulation in the US.

A functioning one-person democracy

Because Monowi remains incorporated under Nebraska law, it must still conduct elections and maintain civic offices. Eiler therefore serves as mayor, clerk and treasurer, roles that require record-keeping, financial reporting and compliance with state rules. Every municipal election sees 100 percent voter turnout and a unanimous result, since Eiler is the only eligible voter.This arrangement is unusual but lawful. Nebraska statutes do not require a minimum population for incorporation once a town already exists. As a result, Monowi continues to function as a municipality, even if its democratic process is reduced to a single ballot.

Monowi, Nebraska

The liquor licence paradox

Eiler also runs the Monowi Tavern, the only business in town and a well-known stop for travellers passing through Boyd County. Like any bar owner in Nebraska, she must apply annually for a liquor licence. The application process includes local approval, which in most towns would be handled by a council or mayor.In Monowi, that approval comes from Eiler herself. She completes the paperwork as the applicant, then reviews and signs it in her official capacity as mayor. The licence is ultimately regulated at the state level, but the local sign-off highlights the unique overlap between private enterprise and public authority in a town of one.

Paperwork that keeps the town alive

Beyond licences and elections, Monowi must also submit routine municipal documents. One of the most important is the annual road plan filed with the state of Nebraska. This paperwork allows the village to remain eligible for small amounts of state funding, which help cover basic infrastructure costs such as street lighting.Even with no roads to repair and almost no traffic, the filings are mandatory. If they stop, Monowi risks losing its legal standing. Eiler’s commitment to completing this paperwork each year is one of the main reasons the town continues to exist in any official sense.As long as Elsie Eiler keeps voting, filing forms and opening the tavern, Monowi remains a town. In a country built on layers of government and bureaucracy, it may be the purest example of civic responsibility reduced to its simplest form. Go to Source

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