· The First Inhabitants
In 1865, a tired band
of rugged government surveyors from Medford, camped on the west banks of
what is know now as Butternut Lake. It took two weeks on foot to make the
journey. Though believed that Butternut Lake was part of the Mississippi
River, the surveyors marked boundaries for the northern part of Wisconsin.
So became the birth Butternut and their friendship to their Native American
neighbors.
The country was only
populated with small band of Chippewa Indians who lived along the lakes
and streams. The Sioux (Dakota) Indians also once lived here. They were
pushed west by the battling Chippewa. Both tribes battled against each
other because of cultural differences. Friendly relations were established
between the two groups and trading eventually developed on a fairly large
scale. Since money was worthless to the Indians, large prime beaver or
fox pelt could be exchanged for goods. Tobacco could also be used to barter
for necessities such as clothing and fishing supplies.
The Chippewa, (Ojibwa)
were nomadic people, moving from place to place in search for food. Their
beliefs did not allow them to hunt and fish off the same place they have
hunted the season before in order to replenish land. They made birch bark
canoes and float along the lake shallows for wild rice. In the spring,
syrup would be taped from maple trees. Wigwams were made of birch bark,
which were easy to, pack, and move on to their next site. The skeleton
of the wigwam would be left intact with was reused when they returned.
The Indians would frequently visit the town of Butternut and its people.
Though there were never any skirmishes with the people of Butternut, the
Chippewa didn't stay around town long enough to form any intimate relationships.
No Indians ever lived
in Butternut, but often camp out on the hill next to the water tower. An
Indian chief named of Indian John McNockway, a name given by the town's
people, lived on the high site of the Park Falls paper mill. He made his
living by acquiring deer hides from the surrounding villages. He would
tanned the hides and resell back to people. John came by canoe, up the
Flambeau River, and then by foot on the Indian trail to Butternut. His
usual camping place was up on the hill where the baseball grounds are now.
He would stay as long as he could get "fire water," but as soon as no more
was available, he moved on.
Indians from the Bear
Lake region made frequent visits to the Butternut area. They camped for
five or six day. Indians from Odanah would visit, traveling a path that,
supposedly, no white man ever walked upon.
In the autumn to spring
months, deer could not be found as far south as Medford. But from August
to September, the Indians would cut down a line of trees, put up branches
too high for the deer to jump over and have a narrow door for the deer
to pass. There the Indians would ambush their prey quite easily. The Indians
continued this yearly process till the government appointed land to the
Ojibwa Indians, putting an end to the history of their visitation to the
town of Butternut.
· The First to Arrive
The earliest memories
of one pioneer were that there was little to distinguish Butternut from
any other railroad stop. Because of the large swamp area associated with
Butternut, passengers would walk on long hewn tamarack. This pioneer's
family homesteaded about three miles west of Butternut that took nearly
ten miles to zigzag through swamps and woods to reach their home. The only
road was a forest trail that avoided as much of the swamps as possible.
All furniture, including the stove, had to be packed on the father's back
and transported through the trail. Provisions were scarce. The stores rationed
bacon and lard so that all would be able to get a share.
When a child from this
pioneer's family died there were no boards to make a coffin. Relatives
dug a pit and laid logs across the top. With a crosscut saw, one man in
the pit and one on top, ripped planks out of the log for the coffin.
This pioneer also said
that settlers had to contend with mosquitoes and porcupines, along with
the lack of roads, money, or other conveniences. Some settlers left Butternut
and moved back to their former homes. Very slow progress was made in getting
the trails to the homestead. There was nothing to sell except a few farm
products. Pumpkins were one of the first money crops. When these were harvested,
the whole family would walk eight or ten miles through the woods, each
carrying as many pumpkins as possible. These could be traded at a store
for ten cents each to apply toward supplies. In later years, pine lumber
camps in the neighborhood bought farm products such as potatoes, rutabagas,
etc. Big loggers bought pine lumber from the settlers and sold it at $9.00
per thousand feet.
In 1871, the Wisconsin
Central Lines crept into northern Wisconsin and took ownership from the
Portage, Winnebago and Superior Railroad, and gradually extended the main
line to Fifield. The line continually moved north and came to a temporary
end where Butternut's Union Cemetery one mile north of town. With a mode
of transportation established in the area, settlers began to settle and
create a town. Two such pioneers are George Parker and George W. Stubblefied,
which both arrived about 1873. They were credited with the first store
buildings to be built in Butternut. Stubblefield was a mulatto from Kentucky
and was a veteran of the Civil War. He devoted much of his time in Butternut
to explore the land. He built his home on the island in Butternut Lake,
naming it Eagle Island. Parker was the assessor for the county for many
years.
Hart and Barnadge built
the first boarding house in. Joseph Harper built and operated the first
saloon. Personnel from the Wisconsin Central Lines build small shanties,
worked on the railroad and patronized the local establishments regularly.
Matthew J. Hart, of the
firm of Hart and Barnadge, erected the Butternut House in the fall of 1876.
The Butternut House was the only hotel between Highway 101 and Ashland.
Hart also supplied the Wisconsin Central Railway personnel with their construction
needs. The Butternut House was used as a stopping place for the wannagans.
(A wannagan is a large boat used by the lumberjacks to carry food, sleeping
equipment and clothing. Meals were prepared on the boats but served on
shore. The men slept in tents. Later, this term was applied to any camp
store carrying supplies for lumberjacks).
Henry Besse of Milwaukee,
moved to Butternut in the fall of 1877. Henry Spille of Cedarburg, Osaukee
County, both Germans, also relocated to Butternut at the request of Henry
Besse. They were so pleased with the country that they encouraged a number
of settlers from the vicinity of Milwaukee and Cedarburg to relocate to
Butternut. These people formed the German colony, which consisted of about
120 families. Most German immigrants lived on farms near Butternut. Railroad
agent Spille and family, were the first to homestead in Butternut. His
appointed Town Board Chairman in 1878, and town treasurer in 1881, became
a key instrument in the first major growth in the town. Henry Besse became
the first postmaster in Butternut and established a postal stop for the
newly arrived residence. Postal service has been in existence since the
late 1800's. Some faithful rural carriers continued to serve nearly 50
years of employment.
John Russell opened the
first sawmill in Butternut. He was born in Buffalo County, New York, later,
moved to Sheboygan Wisconsin. John married Katherine Mahloch in 1872, and
then moved his family of wife and four children to Butternut in 1878. He
also owned 180 achers of land for farming and worked it when not in his
mill. John also became the Town Treasurer in 1880, and served on the School
Board as well.
Many settlers to Butternut
came directly from Germany. They commonly spoke the German language. Some
German immigrants came from Milwaukee. John Danckwardt brought his family
from Sheboygan and built a log house till 1885 when they moved into their
new house located on the hill off of Highway 13 just north of town.
Some of the first settlers
were Civil War veterans. The government, as well at the Wisconsin Central,
opened up land to homestead. It was necessary for the homesteader to clear
five acres of land within five years and provide the primary buildings
to fulfill the government’s requirements. Also, to complete the claim,
two witnesses had to be taken along to prove it was accomplished. Taxing
the land soon followed.
The first railroad depot
was a large tent in 1878. The first agent was named Mr. Mathews. The next
season a, small, wooden depot was built on the east side of the tracks.
The tracks were in the same place as they are now, only between the side
track and the main track there was a platform of cinders. At that time,
the railroad only went as far as the cemetery. Farmers hauled wood, which
was used as fuel for the engines. There was also a water tank and a roundhouse,
but later the tank was moved to Glidden and the roundhouse was moved to
Ashland. The train, which was made up of freight cars and a passenger coach,
came only once a day, coming north at 4:00 p.m. and leaving again at 7:00
p.m. The railroad engineers didn't favor Butternut on account of the hill
they needed to climb. Butternut became "Bothernut" from their frustrations.
The railroad continued to bring passengers to and from Butternut till the
discontinuation of services on January 6, 1959. Train service was limited
to freight, which ran daily.
· The First Town Assemblies
Butternut received its
name during the construction of the Wisconsin Central Railroad. Near the
head of Butternut Lake, the northern most point, butternut trees were found.
The butternut or 'oil nut', resembles an oversize black walnut tree. Pioneers
made a delectable relish of the fruit of the butternut by a pickled process
with spices and vinegar. This was usually served with wild game, fish,
or fowl.
Though the village site
was platted in 1877 by the Wisconsin Central Railway, the following townships
were set off on July 8, 1878:
Township 41, Range 1 east and Township 41, Range 1,2,3 and the east half
of
Township 41 Range 4 west.
On June 17, 1877, Butternut
received the remaining territory from the vacancy of LaPointe, which it
had acquired earlier. In 1879, Butternut received additional territory
by the vacation of the Town of Jacobs (formerly Juniper).
The first election in
Butternut was held at the home of M. J. Hart on August 13, 1878. The following
officers were elected:
M. J. Hart, chairman; H. Spille and R. Rom, supervisors; S. P. Hogan, town
clerk;
Henry Besse, town treasurer; M. D. O'Brine, assessor; A. Stangle, overseer
of highways;
M. J. Hart, R. Rom, A. McQuillan and William Erixson as the justices of
the peace.
There were thirty-one votes cast at this election.
· Business Begins to Grow
The first industry was
the gristmill built in 1879 by Karke, Russell, and Aldrich. A three-acre
storage reservoir was created to supply a constant current of water for
energizing the grinding machinery. This was a direct drive turbine. Rye
and wheat were ground into a fine grade of enriched flour. The residues
of wheat, bran shorts, and middling were used for livestock feeding.
Before the new decade
of 1880, Butternut's commerce situation had grown to seven stores, three
hotels, two butcher shops, three blacksmith shops, two wagon shops and
a post office. The town's booming business continued to attract people
to make Butternut their home.
Butternut not only attracted
opportunist from Wisconsin, but Germany as well. The state of Wisconsin
sent pamphlets to Germany to advertise these opportunities for those who
would move to the state. Each pamphlet was written in German as well as
English. Eastern Wisconsin had a major influx of Germans, around Milwaukee
and Sheboygan, but Butternut also received a small share.
Indians traded their
wares at Wieh's store. To receive rifle shells for hunting and other goods,
traded such things as birch bark canoes, maple syrup, maple sugar, also
deer, mink, muskrat, and beaver hides. The canoes were sold to trappers,
loggers and hunters.
The year 1888 was a good
year to start a business. Henry Besse built a store one block north of
the Butternut House while he conducted a general merchandise business,
while brother Herman Besse developed the first banking system in 1888.
This made it the banking, trading and marketing center of the area.
Frank Heiderer Sr. purchased a store about two and a half blocks west of
the depot. The following year, Herman Zoesch built a general store on Main
Street.
In the summer of 1888,
the management of the "Muskanozee Hotel" (Muskanozee is an Indian word
for Big Fish), later named it "Idlewind Resort", floated the first steam
powered cruiser on Butternut Lake. The seating capacity was twenty passengers
and it was equipped with a metal canopy painted yellow and bright red.
It was christened the "Daisy Mae." Sundays and holidays sight seeing trips
were made around the lake for twenty-five cents a passenger. Trains coming
in from the north and south would carry numerous people for these excursions.
A horse and buggy would supply the transportation from the train to the
boat. The "Daisy Mae" served its owners well for many years but was later
removed when faster gasoline powered cruisers came along.
The Idlewild Hotel was
built (or rebuilt) in 1892 by Henry Besse. For many years it was the most
popular resort in the north. During the summer, the Wisconsin Central Railway
would put on one or more special excursion trains to Butternut which brought
hundreds of people to the lake; also, several bands would come up to make
the celebration a success. An excursion boat, owned by James Dygart, the
barber, was kept busy giving the excursionists a ride around the lake.
Horse drawn buses would also run from the depot to the lake to transport
the people.
Henry Hett purchased
the first steam powered threshing machine in 1896, signifying the passing
of the old hand operated flail. It required ten men to operate. The equipment
consisted of a steam-propelled engine, directional type blower and separator;
mobile water tank unit and auxiliary supply wagon. Hett Threshing Service
extended a radius of thirty miles. It was often on the road during a difficult
season of three to four months. The threshing procession passing through
the village created much excitement with the head engine man cleverly operating
the steam whistle rendering staccato effects and improvisations.
William Fredricks, a
pioneer schoolmaster, established the first newspaper in Butternut in 1882.
The printing plant was housed in a small fame building next to his home.
The printing press was hand operated.
· The Lumber Industry
The first lumber was hauled
up the grade from Station 101, now Worchester, below Phillips.
The need for lumber was
great as settlers began to arrive shortly after the railroad went through.
· The Late 1880’s
The 1880's and 1890's
proved to be a period of rapid growth for Butternut. New buildings were
built as well as older establishments change hands. A census was taken
of Butternut township in 1890 by Dennis Spellacy and reported 1,210 people.
The early settlers were stimulated by the discovery of the "unlimited"
lumber resources in the forest. Economic development was fairly rapid during
this period. As lumbering began to decline, agriculture began to grow in
importance. First attempts at farming were mainly to supply the needs of
the lumber companies. Oxen supplied the main source of hauling power.
The Butternut Eagle was
published from 1887 till 1921. The building was moved a number of times
and is now a block from its original location.
The leading industry
of the 1880's was that of charcoal manufacturing for the blast furnace
at Ashland. The charcoal kilns had much to do with opening up the community.
The kilns were in operation for only a few short years it was over. It
profited the settlers of those days very little. The Ashland Iron and Steel
Company operated the charcoal kilns at Butternut, as well as at Stetsonville,
Colby, Glidden and Highbridge. The Ashland Company had a blast furnace
at Ashland, which used the charcoal in smelting ore from the Goegebic Range,
and shipped pig-iron via boat and the Great Lakes to the lower lake ports.
The Butternut set of twelve kilns was built in two rows with a tramway
between the rows. The kilns were of brick construction and were filled
from an opening in the top. Sixty cords of hardwood were piled in each
kiln and then ignited. After burning for about three days the kiln was
sealed and the contents allowed to char, which took about six days. When
sealed, each kiln was given a coat of whitewash as a sealing medium. The
weather had much to do with the burning of the charcoal. The velocity of
wind was the prime consideration and here the charcoal burner had to use
his experience to regulate the draft. This was done through a series of
hole the size of a brick spaced about three feet apart and about three
feet from the ground all around the kiln. Should the wind be brisk, some
of the holes were plugged; if the weather was calm more holes were opened,
as was the kiln door. The kilns were about thirty feet in diameter and
about 20 feet high. The dome was shaped like a beehive.
The operation of the
kilns was a year round operation, although the bringing of the cordwood
was seasonal and done with horse and sleigh during the wintertime. The
local yard at that time was covered by 15,000 to 20,000 cords of wood each
winter and measured about thirty acres. This product was measured by the
bushel and the annual output of the Butternut battery of kilns was 480,000
bushels annually.
The kilns operated from
1893 to 1902, at which time the Charcoal Iron Ashland Company built a set
of kilns in Ashland. They had the ability to rescue the chemicals, which
were lost from creosote, could not be saved at the small burning plants.
However, the waste materials at Butternut had been used as insulation in
many of the houses. Cordwood sold for $1.50 a cord and a charcoal raker
received $1.35 a day for his ten-hour day.
· Where They Gathered
The first St. Paul's Lutheran
Church was built in 1883. The dedication service was held on July 22, 1883.
The building was 26 X 40 feet by 14 feet high. The last service in this
building was held on November 11, 1905. The church was moved to the west
part of town and later torn down. The second parsonage was built in 1897
and was torn down in 1967 and replaced by the present parsonage on the
same site.
The old Catholic Church
was started in 1885, and was completed in 1887. It was a 30X50 feet building.
In 1907, the church was moved to the vacant lot where the present church
is now. The corner stone for the present Immaculate Conception Catholic
Church was laid on May 22, 1910, with Bishop A. F. Schinner, Superior,
presiding. The Church was completed in 1911, with a structure of 46X112
feet and cost the town $14,500. The members donated the stained glass windows
to add the finial touches. However, the bell would not be installed till
1914. The old church was torn down in 1921. In May 1966, a special Mass
honored senior citizens of the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church. Many
of them had worshiped in the first church and helped build the present
church. Father Kreinbrink gave a crucifix to each member, crucifix blessed
by the Holy Father at the time, Bishop George Hammes.
United Brethren "Friedens"
Church was built in 1900. At first it was housed in the old Legion building,
complete with a high steeple. However, lightning hit the building, which
forced the congregation to move to the new Legion building to continue
worship. One of the last services of the church was in 1967, for Lee Edwards,
a pioneer mail carrier in Butternut. That building is now the American
Legion Hall. All the churches had their services in German.
A log cabin, previously
used as an icehouse, was utilized for a school in 1878. It was located
where the Lutheran church now stands. Miss Hannah Tomkins was the first
teacher and she had fourteen pupils. A regulation school house was erected
the following year. It was a wooden structure with four recitation rooms,
two libraries, and a large attic used for various purposes, mainly as a
gymnasium. In 1900, two rooms were built on the north end, one for the
kindergarten and one for the eighth grade. The school was heated with large
wood burning box stoves.
The G. A. R. Hall (Grand
Army of the Republic) was built in 1882 and was then the largest post in
northern Wisconsin. It was built to honor nearly 100 civil war veterans
who decided to call Butternut their home. The people of Butternut and the
soldiers bought five acres of land for this purpose. The first floor contained
a spacious dining room, able to seat several hundred guests. It also had
a checking alcove, and a complete kitchen. Twenty-five cents would purchase
a three-course dinner and a schooner of beer. The top floor served as an
auditorium, dance hall and political rendezvous with weekly entertainment.
The basement at one time was earmarked as a well-fortified arsenal.
During the hectic lumbering
days, Captain Metzer and his famous artillerymen were called out to quell
feuding rival camp lumberjacks. The captain had an artillery piece on the
order of a small cannon which when stationed at a street intersection produced
a tremendous blast. It always got highest respect from would be rioters.
After one or two shots, tranquility was quickly restored.
At the annual town meeting
held April 5, 1887, motion was made and carried that the town board be
authorized to erect a building for a town hall. It was located south on
west Main Street.
· A New Century Dawns
Sometime during the year of 1902, a group of citizens of this settlement decided that the community needed a different form of government, other than the township form; one that would meet the demands of the growth of the new settlement. The village was expanding, growing up around the railroad. Much needed sidewalks were demanded, planning of street and alley improvement and extension, police and fire protection were needed and ordinances to govern the community were indicated. Citizens discussed incorporation "under the laws of the State of Wisconsin". A survey was then made and boundaries established by John Grieves, who on December 31, 1902 filed a complete map, with established boundary containing 945.37 acres as the Village of Butternut. After meeting all preliminary requirements, an election was held on June 1, 1903, to decide whether a separate village should be established. A total of 132 votes were cast; of these 103 were for the incorporation and 29 were opposed and the new municipalities took the corporate name "Village of Butternut." The result of the first election was:
Frank Heiderer Sr., president; H. D. Klein, clerk; John Danckwardt, John
Ebert,
Fred Heinske, George Weber, W. B. Graf and Fritz Zoesch, trustees; Joseph
Schienebeck, assessor; Herman Otto Zoesch, supervisor; C. B. Kilger, constable;
F. C. Fredricks, police justice; C. J. Roethig, justice of peace.
These officers met for
the first time on June 30, 1903. The only official who received compensation
was the clerk who received $25.00 a year. Two to four meetings a week were
held until a complete set of by-laws and ordinances were drafted to govern
the new village.
Sidewalks were being
made of corduroy. There were gas streetlights, which were lit every night
by hand. The first fire truck was a pumper that was pumped by hand. Water
was taken from the cisterns for fighting fires.
A mid-way located in
the old Blaschko addition was a rendezvous for young and old every Sunday
afternoon during this period. Butternut's twelve-piece brass band played
country folk songs. On the mid-way, there was an open-air dance pavilion,
African dip, coon dodger, shooting gallery, taffy pull, and the Old Dutch
Bratwurst stand. Schooners of beer (nearly a quart) could be bought for
a nickel.
Traces of iron ore were
discovered in 1902. Geologists found only a trace of low-grade iron ore
in test pits west of the village. A specific survey showed a 20:1 ration
that necessitated removing better than 20 tons of worthless slag in order
to recover one ton of low-grade ore. Cost proved too prohibitive to warrant
extensive ore mining. However, a few years later, tests were taken at Whiteside
Camp 22, which revealed a fairly good grade of iron ore. Samples were shipped
to the smelters, but more research was needed to project on a paying basis.
Not only was it expected to get iron from the mines but gold and silver
as well which was proven false.
A local cigar factory
employed eight to ten people on a full-time basis. George C. Klein was
the proprietor. Some of the tobacco filler stock, which is the heart of
the cigar making business, was grown and cultivated here in Butternut.
It was harvested in the early fall of the year and stored in a well-ventilated
warehouse to undergo the sweating out process. After moisture was removed,
the leaves were stripped and cut into proper lengths and pressed into the
cigar mold. The wrapper, usually an imported Havana blend, was creased
and gently applied to the filler; this was a delicate procedure, as utmost
care had to be exercised to obtain uniformity in the shape and size of
finished cigars. After a careful check-up, the cigars were labeled, sorted,
and packed, ready for shipment. All north and southbound trains generally
carried a large shipment of the Klein cigars. Trade names of the high-class
cigars made by the Klein cigar factory were "King of the Trail," "New Wrinkle,"
"Highway 38," and "Little Idlewild."
The Grand Army of the
Republic Veterans erected the first flag pole in Butternut. They decided
to utilize native material and a large 80 foot pole was selected. It was
placed at the corner of Michigan and East Main Streets. In the haste of
raising it for the 4th of July, someone forgot to attach the rope for raising
the flag. Since the pole could not be lowered, George Stubblefield climbed
to the top of the pole to attach the rope.
William Schultz built
the first generating light plant in 1910. At this time it was used to furnish
electricity for his home and the Ebert Theatre.
The Circuit Opera Show
House was located at the Butternut Lumber Company and was a two-story building.
The ground floor was used as a combination confectionery store, ice cream
parlor, and restaurant. Upstairs was a large hall that served as a movie
theatre, dance palladium, and a community-gathering place.
The first automobile
appeared in Butternut in 1910. Dr. Violet's Lambert special roadster rolled
into town. A long-handled crank got the machine started. The maximum speed
was never over twenty miles per hour and it used premium fuel. The roadbed
in town still resembled the rutted historic trails of covered wagon days,
driving was not a pleasure.
The first creamery was
built in 1895 by August Semerau and son Conrad; later it was sold to William
Whittam. Fire destroyed this building and a new concrete block building
was erected. Many farms in the area led to the organization of the Butternut
Cooperative Creamery Association in May of 1915. A. N. Newell, Gus Tank,
O. A. Schaekel, Matt Bruch, and John Klein worked together to have a factory
built. The first butter maker was James Waagan. Starting with 75 patrons,
it made 40-50 tubs of butter per week. Moving to 112 patrons in 1923, it
shipped 100 tubs of butter a week in the summer. Later, an addition was
built with an icebox downstairs and a meeting room upstairs. Ed Russell
used the old creamery building as an ice cream factory and a bathing place.
· Business Growth and Changing Hands
R. F. Goellner built a
shingle mill on Butternut Creek in 1900. A stave mill was built during
that same year (owner unknown). Also that year, a veneer mill, built by
the Creamery Pack Manufacturing Company was built and operated for many
years but finally went out of business and the plant was dismantled. The
next year, 1901, Mr. Goellner built a sawmill in the back of his house
on Butternut Creek, which was destroyed by fire in 1903. He rebuilt it
in 1904. Mr. Goellner built a cement block hardware store in 1907. E. A.
Drott built a stave mill in back of his house at this time also and built
again when it was taken over by Edward Russell some years later.
Fritz Zoesch built a
meat market on east Main Street in 1910 at the southeast corner of Michigan
and Main. It is now the Hoppe Market. Herman Zoesch and conducted this
business until 1906 when he sold it to his sons, Charles and Arthur. They
erected a modern and up-to-date building in 1909.
Mike Zimmerman store,
previously purchased from Henry Besse, then later sold to Harry Sharf in
1902. Mr. Sharf operated a general merchandise business at this place until
1906 when he built a new store on the west side of the track.
The Bloom, Haire Company,
purchased from M. Wehe on August 28, 1890, conducted this business for
three years when Alfred Bloom bought out the interest of M. Haire.
Alfred and J. L. Bloom conducted the business until 1903 when J. L. Bloom
took it over alone.
William G. Fordyce organized
the Ashland County Bank in 1892. Alf Elm was the cashier and Helene Kuehl
and Caroline Keenan were assistant cashiers. This bank was incorporated
in 1903 with Mr. Fordyce as president. In 1918 the bank had a cashier by
the name of Ted Scofield. He was best remembered as always having a pet
pig follow him wherever he went, including at work at the bank.
Between the years of
1905-1910 the "Tin House", was a store. Later, it was converted to Alyce
Schultz's home. The theatre burnt down in 1919 and Arnie Timm built his
lumber company on the site. His son, Dick, took over in later years. Admission
to the theatre in those days was 5 and 10 cents.
The Zoesch store was
built by Fritz Zoesch in 1909 and occupied until 1937. He then sold it
to W. R. Boettcher. In 1907, Mr. Stockhouse built the Boettcher home, now
occupied by the Dick Timm family. Mrs. Vogel had a bakery just north of
the lumber company in these early years.
To accommodate his many
and varied customers, R. Scharff, an early businessman, spoke seven different
languages, and employed at least five clerks.
In 1916 L. S. Barber
& Sons of Merrill came to Butternut and erected a broom handle factory.
In 1916 the Village board
granted a franchise to the Butternut Electric Light and Power Company.
For the first few years lights were furnished to only a small number of
residents, but eventually most homes an businesses were "electrified."
In 1919 the plant was destroyed by fire but a new brick building was immediately
built.
In 1917, a new train
depot was built on the west side of the main track. It consisted of two
waiting rooms, an office and a freight room.
Schools always seemed
important to the citizens of the village. In 1914, the school burned when
it was struck by lightning. It was rebuilt immediately with a complete
steam-heating system, a hot and cold air system, a high school, a grade
school, a boy's and girl's lavatory, also a lunchroom, four cloakrooms,
and an engine room. There were eight rooms in the grade school and five
rooms in the high school.
It was also in 1914 that
a County Normal School was begun in Mellen. However, in 1917 it was moved
to Butternut with nine students in attendance. The two teachers were Mr.
Weldon and Miss Lange. Due to Mr. Weldon's illness, Mr. Lorschetter took
over as teacher in January of 1918. The attendance was shortly raised to
15, but with his insistence, the county normal was moved to Ashland in
the summer of 1918.
· The Twenties Roar In
In 1921 the Butternut
Veneer Company was organized and a new and modern brick veneer mill was
built, of which E. I. Ross Sr. was the manager. This factory gave employment
to about 50 men. They purchased all the logs offered for sale by the farmers
and loggers and besides shipped and trucked several million feet more into
Butternut each year.
In 1921 the Butternut
Lumber Company was incorporated with Arnold Timm as manager. A building
and office was erected on the old Ebert corner. The principal business
of the company was building materials. In 1926 an addition was built to
take care of their increasing business.
Fritz Zoesch, C.A. Besse
and his son Arthur Besse later purchased the Butternut House sometime in
the 1890's, was sold to Charles Newell in 1923. Mr. Newell then sold the
hotel in 1925 to Charles Vashaw. A fire took away this town landmark in
February of 1927, it was burned to the ground.
The village had a funeral
home about 1920 when August Felch offered his services. In addition to
the parlor, he also operated a furniture business where later the Walker's
lived. Upon Mr. Felch's death, Henry Russell took over for his father-in-law
until the 1940's.
From the first advent
of printing in the village, people's voices were heard. The old Eagle was
sold to the Peavy Publishing Company who, in the early 1920's, moved the
plant to Ashland and established the Ashland Journal. The Butternut Bulletin
was established in 1922 by W. C. Currie and published by him for two years,
then sold to H. Fautek. Later, it was taken over by Bill Kuehl and Soren
Anderson. Matthew Hart took it over in 1925 and published it through its
final issue of December 27, 1967. Copies of the Butternut Bulletin can
be viewed at the Hart Publishing Company in Glidden.
A blacksmith shop was
built in 1915 and used by Carl Wartgow and sons Fred and Herman as a garage
and repair shop. It was later leased to George Kline as a tobacco-drying
shed, and further used by Otto Schaekel as a farm machinery store. When
the Hudel-Koch blacksmith shop burned, Charles Koch purchased the building
and conducted his business there. It was later sold to Charles Teschner
who did smithing until 1947 when Fred Wartgow purchased it and added a
machinery department to his motor sales.
Charles Fischer, one
of Buttenut's most famous native sons and the namesake of the Butternut
High School Sports Teams was a true champion. The undefeated Middle and
Light Heavy-weight Wrestling Champion of the World drove from New York
to California and all points in between, wrestling an average of three
bouts per week. He took on any contender and most were taller and heavier
than his 5'3", 160-pound frame. During his phenomenal amateur career he
won seven gold medals and the A.A.U. Amateur Championships in the 160-pound
and 175 pound class, In the Olympic tryouts he won high honors. In 1925
he turned professional. He won the World's Championship in the 160-pound
class in 1929 by defeating Johnny Meyers, and the 175-pound title by defeating
Billy Edwards. He won over 1000 matches and lost only 6 decisions in his
career. He retired in 1938 with both titles and the Diamond Belt. Although
Charles Fischer died in 1982, the Butternut ''Midgets" still carry on his
winning tradition. In the 1920's a great number of logging camps were in
existence. One of the largest was the Newell camp, which employed many
woodsmen and offered good living for many. In the late 20's logging dropped
off, but farmers were still bringing in varying amounts of hardwood timber.
Few hemlock ties were being placed on the local landing, as hemlock logs
were not in production. Woodwork slowed down considerably toward the end
of this decade.
In the 1920's, independent
trappers did quite well financially by trapping muskrats, skunks, red fox,
mink, silver fox, black fox, coyote, lynx and beaver. Other enterprising
men shipped Christmas trees to the cities of Chicago and Milwaukee. One
impressive shipment in 1929 was six carload of tress, numbers from 1500
to 2200 trees per carload.
Doctors have come and
gone throughout the existence of the village. In 1915 there were two dentists
and three doctors in the village. The doctors were Violet, Marble, and
Doherty. Dr. Kirsten was also in Butternut, but left about 1929. Dr. Ansfield
had an office in Butternut from about 1948 and stayed through the fifties.
On November 14, 1928
the highest flag pole in northern Wisconsin was blown down. Being 81' high,
it was in a concrete foundation on Vashaw's corner. Ted Scofield had placed
there a number of these old relics.
The Village of Butternut
in the year 1929 had the following establishments: five general stores,
three churches, band, grade and high school, creamery, cheese factory,
veneer mill, two sawmill, broom handle factory, shingle and floor mill,
and four garages.
· The Depression
The Northern Hardwood
Veneer Company has always played an important part in the economy of the
village. When it opened in 1905, it made only cheese boxes, but added a
heading mill soon after. During the depression the veneer mill did not
run. It made a big comeback after the financial situation was settled,
and in 1942 employed about 250 men. Its production was about a carload
of finished veneer each day. It was also at this time that women first
went to work at the mill. Production kept up until the disastrous fire
on April 26, 1964. The fire was spectacular and could be seen for miles.
After years of setting idle it is now back into production.
The village has changed
its face in many ways. In the 1930's, a store stood on the corner of Michigan
and Main, where the bank is now. It belonged to Blooms and Bix, later it
was operated by George Sibernagle who ran it for about a year and tore
it down. Across the street was George Hirtreiter's Commercial House, offering
overnight lodging.
This burnt down in 1940,
being replaced by what is now "Slim's". Until the depression the bank was
known as 'Ashland County Bank', and it stood next to the Log Cabin. Evidence
is still there in the form of the old vault. After the depression, the
banks organized and the name became Northern State Bank.
Butternut has had a succession
of small mills throughout the century. Barber's handle factory employed
from 6 - 10 men when in full production and lasted to the 1940's. The Bauer
and Knoop mill started 1902, then later sold and operated Hardy Sharff
in the 1920s. The mill was torn down in the late 1930's. The Badlinger
family had a sawmill at the veneer plant. Haegeral's had a tie mill north
of the Lutheran Church. They employed about 10 men, and Schultz's handle
factory employed a dozen men.
During the decade of
the 30's the C. W. A. (Civil Works Administration) came into being. Most
of the work done was on highways by men working at these wages: 50 cents
an hour for unskilled labor, 65 cents and hour for semi-skilled labor,
$1.20 an hour for skilled labor. A supervisor received 10 cents an hour
more than the highest class of men that he supervised.
Changes in the village
in the 30's were not spectacular. However, Ed Koran built Knoop's station,
with masonry done by George Danckwardt. In 1938 a new waterworks and sewer
system was installed in the village.
· Butternut Goes To War
During the Second World
War, Northern Hardwood Veneers, Inc. of Butternut manufactured plywood
(or veneer) that was used to build the famous de Havilland "Mosquito" Bomber.
Thirty-five percent of the wood going into this plane was from the plant
at Butternut. It is recorded that one thousand carloads of Butternut veneer
"winged its way over Europe" -- the "Mosquito" Bomber.
Meanwhile, back at home,
Nora Gaab purchased the saloon next to the Catholic Church in 1940. Henry
Miller previously owned it. Before the church was built, the Father would
use a room upstairs as his temporary home. During the hunting season the
rooms would all be occupied with deer hunters. In the morning before and
after their daily stalk, the hunters would come downstairs, in the back,
where a large picnic table would be and they would be served breakfast
and supper family style. In 1948, Howard and Rose Schultz (Nora's daughter)
purchased the saloon where they continued to serve customers till their
retirement in 1995.
· Time Marches On
A Consolidation of the
school district took place in 1950. Other improvements during this decade
were a building of the new gymnasium in 1953, the co-op built a warehouse,
a new fire hall, the new post office, and a new trailer park with sewer
and water facilities was installed.
Several buildings were
raised or burned in the late 50's and early 60's. The boulevard of trees
from the Catholic Church corner to Highway 13 was removed in September
1958. The Schienebeck building was raised in 1959. The G.A.R. building
was razed in April 1956. On March 4, 1958, the Bright Spot was destroyed
by fire. This landmark was built by August Yankee about 1888, and was used
as a residence and a tavern for the succeeding years. The Heiderer store
and the Schoenberger building were both torn down in 1963. The village
town hall was torn down in 1967. Louis Wagner has built a new home on that
site. Also, the Town Hall of Butternut, built in 1887, was torn down by
Louis Wagner July 1965.
A spectacular event took
place around Butternut on June 30, 1954 by a total eclipse of the sun.
The event took place at 5:08 am and made the town completely dark. The
next eclipse is scheduled to arrive in the Butternut area again on May
3, 2106.
New ideas for a clinic
for Butternut are in the making, with chances of full-time doctors and
nursing service as a possibility. A new home for retired persons has been
built. Hopefully, more will come, with other new people making their home
here in the north.
The village is moving
continually on. New additions have been added to the school, the latest
being a complex of offices, music room, art department and a large complex
for the industrial arts.
The churches in the village
have continually kept in good repair, making changes as congregations grown
and see new needs. Both churches have excellent parish halls, and well-kept
grounds.
Homes are being continually
improved; more young people are choosing to stay in the areas; some of
the old timers are coming back to spend their retirement here; and many
who had moved away are returning here to raise their families in the atmosphere
of small town living.
It is good to look back
to our forefathers. It gives us a good prospective when we consider what
they have done. It gives us the courage to go on and make the next writing
of a history as spectacular as the first.
· Park Falls – Neighbor to the North
As far back as the late
1600's, Chippewa trappers would travel to the Flambeau flowage to hunt
and fish. There were no known Indian settlements around Park Falls because
of the cold climates. They were perhaps the first human inhabitants to
fish along the 16-foot high falls. The muskellunge was so appealing to
them that Park Falls received its first name, Muskellunge Falls.
Later in the mid 1800's
the name was changed to Gould's Siding. There was no particular reason
for this name, only speculation that Gould was a railroad worker who lent
his name to the Wisconsin Central map makers when a name was needed. Gould
Siding was one of the two tiny settlements that later merged.
In 1877, the name was
changed to Flambeau Crossing. This was the year the first school opened,
making this one of the first three schools made in Price County. Also in
February of that year, a news paper reporter from Fifield visited Flambeau
Crossing and gave an ill-report of what he saw. "I fail to discover anything
nice about the place," he wrote,"... five frame buildings, one log ditto
and a good depot." However, six months later he reported that "settlers
are pouring in almost everyday".
With a strong hold on
the land surrounding Price and neighboring counties by the Cornell University
and the railroad, it was difficult for settlers to own and sell timber
on the land. Cornell cut and sold the timber. At the end of the 25-year
hold on the land, the University made a profit of 4.5 million dollars.
In 1885, Cornell sold its property at the falls to Henry Sherry of Neenah,
a veteran lumberman, and set up his own sawmill next to the falls. With
a park-like stand of mature pine trees surrounding the falls, Park Falls
finally received its permanent name.
In 1889 when Park Falls
became a town, the population was around 400 people. In 1901, the population
rose to 800 and 1972 people in 1910. The population dropped down to 1398
in 1930, and continued to decrease to 1241 by 1960. However, by the time
of the Centennial, in October of 1988, the population was up to 1348 people.
Since the lumber days
of Cornell and later with Henry Sherry, the lumber business has been a
big part of Park Fall's history. With the incorporation of the Park Fall's
Lumber and Pulp Company, Park Falls had become one of the largest and active
lumber operations in Wisconsin. The Park Falls Lumber and Pulp Company
is now today's
Flambeau Paper Company.
There is much more on
the history of Park Falls. Written history and pictures were compiled into
a book called "100 Years on the Flambeau" by the Weber Publishing Co. in
Park Falls, Wisconsin. If you wish to buy a copy, contact them there.
_______________________________________________________________________
This is a written history of Butternut, Wisconsin. It was put together from segments of "The History of Northern Wisconsin" (1888), oral history from the towns people, and an essy by Ruth Gear.