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Early history of Carlton Town : Kewaunee County, WI PDF

86 Pages·2009·14.539 MB·English
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Preview Early history of Carlton Town : Kewaunee County, WI

.. Y IIIS'l'f)llY l~1llll f) .. 'l'C) N 'l'f)1 \1N I~ C~lllll by Jill Dopke ..Y IIIS'l1f)llY 1~1\lll .. 'l ()N 'l N 1 1()l\7 ()I~ (~1\lll by Jill Dopke Front cover - Remnants of Dean's Pier in Carlton Town The settlement of Dean's Pier was located on a bluff on the lakeshore in Section 7E of Carlton Town in Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. It was known by many names - Dean, Dean's Store, Dean's Mill, The Dean Settlement, Carlton, Carlton Store, Carlton Pier(s), Forest Hill, and Forest View. Today, only the remnants of the pilings remain to provide proof that this small town in northeastern Wisconsin ever existed. (Photograph by author.) Funded and published by the Kewaunee County Historical Society (KCHS) ©April 2009 2009004200 Produced and edited by Susan K. Slik.kers ISBN: 978-1-61539-553-8 $IZ.9S ISBH 978-\-61S39r-SS3·-,8, .J IJ.ll. Early History of Carlton Tov.rn (Kewaunee WI) Historical information about town's beginnings. Includes bibliographical references and index. Available for purchase at the Kewaunee County Historical Society Research Center, 219 Steele Street, Algoma WI 54201, or visit the website: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/-wikchs/. For phone orders, call 920-487-2516. II ..Y IIIS'I1C)llY l~1llll ..' l,C) N 'l,C) l\rN ()I~ C~illll Table of Contents Page Acknowledgements ................................................................................................ v Introduction ........................................................................................................ vii Prehistoric People ................................................................................................. 1 Black Earth and the Pottawatomie ........................................................................ 3 Formation of Carlton Town .................................................................................... 6 Carlton Plat ( 1838-1860) Landowners (plat legend) Settlements ......................................................................................................... 12 Sandy Bay West Sandy Bay Carlton Woodard Comers Tisch Mills Norm.an West N01man/ Koller's Comers Zavis Sipple's Comers Cheese Factories ................................................................................................. 33 School Districts ................................................................................................... 36 Wayside Norm.an East Twin River Carlton Graded Thornapple Sandy Bay Churches, Cemeteries, and Burials ..................................................................... 43 St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Methodist Episcopal St. Joseph's Catholic St. Peter's Lutheran St. Mmy's Catholic Norwegian Lutheran Volunteer Cemetery Private Burials Indian Burial Grounds iii Table of Contents continued Page Post Offices ......................................................................................................... 51 Sandy Bay Sandy Bay II Norman Zavis Carlton Mills; renamed Tisch Mills Servicemen of Carlton Town ................................................................................ 54 War of 1812 Crimean War Civil War 1890 Veterans' Schedule .................................................................................... 57 Justices of the Peace ........................................................................................... 58 Century Farms .................................................................................................... 59 Carlton Town Plat (1876) .................................................................................... 60 Carlton Town Plat (1895) ..................................................................................... 61 Bibliography ....................................................................................................... 62 Index .................................................................................................................. 66 IV Special Thanks and Acknowledgments I want to acknowledge and thank all those who contributed to and assisted in the gath ering of historical information, illustrations, and photographs as well as the production of The Early History of Carlton Town, as follows: Jerry Abitz; Julie Bloor; Carl Braun; Marsha Brown; June Cherveny; Dana Gruetz macher; Louise lhlenfeldt; Virginia Johnson; C.R. Kannerwurf; Arden Koehler; Judith Leanna; Sheila Maynor; Ben Pelishek; Mary Reckelberg; Patricia Sharpe; Susan K. Slikkers, staff members of the Algoma Public Library - Mary Bohman, Rita Schieser, Alyce Sutter, and Lisa VanAlstine; staff members of the Kewaunee Public Library staff - Kathy Decker, Susan Grosshuesch, Bonnie Joski, and Linda Vogel; and Jane Zimmerman. And a special thank you to my husband, Gene, for his encouragement, his advice, and his patience. Note: The history of the town of Carlton continues to be a "work in progress." If you have additional facts, photographs, and/ or corrections to the information as presented, or know of stories and/ or information handed down orally or available in publications that are not included in this book that you would like to share, please feel free to contact the Kewaunee County Historical Society. v VI .. Y IIIS'J1f)llY l~1llll ()I~ (~illll. .' I'() N 'I'()1 \7N INTRODUCTION The following history focuses on the early history of Carlton Town from prehis toric times to about 1900 A.O., and was gathered from numerous sources - land, vital, and court records, newspaper and local historical accounts, family histories, and maps. Because records were not always kept in the early days or have been lost, some information may be missing, and the dates and spellings of names may A vary depending on the source. I have tried to sort through and present the most ac curate information with the records available to me to date. Although I have included references to some of the early saloons, there are few written records. I have also included a list of cheese factories, but no definitive list exists. Names and locations of saloons and cheese factories were not always re corded, and their names changed over time as did ownership; many were referred to simply as saloons or cheese factories in early accounts. By way of information, it is important to note that the spellings of Bohemian names, especially, vary widely. Although it can be confusing, I have tried to pre serve the integrity of the original document by utilizing the same spelling as the source. In addition, occasionally names of individuals have been used even when no first names could be definitively attached to the surname. Obviously, some of the early settlers were also women. In an effort to both honor and respect them, I have tried to include the names of the wives, when avail able, of the early settlers. These women worked alongside their husbands and were important - often crucial - to their family's survival on the frontier. vii viii PREHISTORIC PEOPLE The human story of Wisconsin begins about 12,000 years ago after the last ice age. The timeline below traces the history of these prehistoric people in Wisconsin. 500 Generations in Wisconsin - An Archaeological TimeJlne 1!000. u_oco. io.ooo· 11000 • 7.C(JQ. 6 000· a.ooo - .i.coo . 1•.oo:> 12.000 uaoo 9,000 0000 7. 000 iz_(l':JQ , coo Y-. ~ YrAN ~ Y«n.A.\I> "- •-1\P Y..-•~ y,,,.,, ¥ 'hon~ 'y,...... ~' m fNIJI ~ c-. Tcba~~ l'.C( ,i.M: 64<1<1'• ll.•tr~n~ /ILrlnmtlllult. YI- tm;lwntl.Tr"' 11t. ., ~..,,.J Flil«l'"':'ll I>•')' Con..!)!l.,.,. ~r~1ilr'li~1 Cok.S..wm:<il'l1r~ f'!i'"°"M Wisconsin's archaeological timeline. (Image from the Wisconsin Historical Society collection.) Palecrlndian Period - As the glaciers retreated northward, Paleo-Indians en tered Wisconsin and hunted woolly mammoth, mastodon, and bison. They created tools made of stone, hunted and fished with spears, and gathered wild plants. Archaic Period - The climate warmed about 8,000 years ago during the Ar chaic period, and the large Ice Age mammals were replaced by animals found in the state today. People lived in small family groups in caves, rock shelters, along rivers, and around lakes and wetlands; they harvested wild plants, nuts, and acorns. They also mined copper which they dug from pits in Upper Michigan to make tools, and

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