Presented at the City of Oconto Sesquicentennial Celebration Kickoff Reception

Similar documents
Chapter 3: Many Flags over Iowa

Siblings: Owen R., Horace A., Juliza, Frances A., Julie E. Married to Delia Blackwell, 4 July 1838

WINTERS, RALPH L. ( ) PAPERS,

PRAIRIE GROVE CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HISTORY

Chapter 2: Historical Overview of Independence

Tucker Nelson September 15, 2018

CHAPTER IX SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS. This study has attempted to give a general outline of

Townships and Towns in Pottawattamie County, Iowa Courtesy of iagenweb.org/pottawattamie. BigPigeonAreaOverview.docx 8/11/17

The Webbs. A Tompkins County Family

NUGGETS of HISTORY. Last Kishwaukee Settlement on Stillman Valley Road South of Kishwaukee School

Missouri. Copyright 2010 LessonSnips

Bradley Rymph IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF OUR ANCESTORS

Final Study Guide. Name:

The Fishery and Settlement Patterns in Newfoundland and Labrador:

Johnston Farm & Indian Agency. Field Trip Guide

Townships and Towns in Pottawattamie County, Iowa Courtesy of iagenweb.org/pottawattamie. Boomer&HazelDellOverview.docx 7/15/16

Mini-Unit Integrating ELA and Social Studies With Maps and Primary Source Documents

"Father of Brownwood"

Tarrant County. Civil War Veterans of Northeast Tarrant County. Isaac Duke Parker. Compiled by Michael Patterson

Chapter 11, Section 1 Trails to the West. Pages

Chapter 5 Lesson 1 Class Notes

PIONEER STORIES of MAINE

Bible Christian Cemetery

The 250 th Anniversary of Toms River. By: J. Mark Mutter, Township Historian PowerPoint By: Stacy Proebstle, Public Information Officer

History 32S IB Local History Tour Assignment

Hardin Cemetery No. 1

Virden family papers (bulk dates 1820s 1860s)

Sandwiching in History Shiloh Baptist Church 1200 Hanger Street, Little Rock September 4, 2015 By Rachel Silva

HISTORY OF THE UNIQUE BURIAL SITE OF JOHN AND NANCY OSTEEN MOORE. by Jesse Felma Moore

Utah. Copyright 2010 LessonSnips

Charlottesville Sacred Spaces

Old Sandy Baptist Church Graveyard

Jump Start. You have 5 minutes to study your Jackson notes for a short 7 question Quiz.

Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church, Salt Lake

Tucson s Jewish Pioneers

Plaques and Signs Mark Vicksburg s History

Subject (s):german Methodist Church, Calvary Methodist Church

Mother: Betsy Bartholomew Nicholson ( ) Married: Alice Samantha Fowles in Born in 1843

Historical Society of Frankford collection on Northeast Philadelphia churches

council met at the home of William Latimer, from 1840 to 1846 at the home of William Vance and later at Tooley s Tavern in Blackstock.

ANGLICAN CHURCHES OF MANITOBA

Chapter 5 Colonization and the Empresarios

Conrad Fink Family. The Home is Built

Brief History of Williams Bay By Frank M. Van Epps

1863 Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation Cemetery plat filed with Hennepin

United States History. Robert Taggart

This Newsletter marks the tenth All About Stout newsletter! To celebrate, can you find all 10 Tens in this Newsletter edition? Inside this Issue:

The History of Poquonock: A Paper Recorded by. Carrie Marshall Kendrick ( ) on February 28, 1962

REMEMBERING THE BOND. The Story of the Bond Memorial Methodist Church, Benwell. St James Heritage & Environment Group

Chapter 3. Comparison Foldable. Section 1: Early English Settlements. Colonial America

African American Heritage Saint James Episcopal Church & Holy Trinity Lutheran Church

Hallowed Grounds: Sites of African-American Memories. Courtesy of the archival collection at the Albany County Hall of Records

Albert Hollister - Son of a Pioneer

Irish Immigration in Springdale, Alexandria Township, Leavenworth County, Kansas

New England Colonies. New England Colonies

PASTORAL CARE FOR NEBRASKA S NATIVE AMERICANS: CREATION OF THE MISSIONARY DISTRICT OF THE NIOBRARA

Mural History. The First Book of American History Henry Steele Commager Chapter 1 Page 5 & 6

American Indian Policies & Practices of the Early 1800s

Luther Family Millstone Memorial

Joseph B. Stratton Papers (Mss. 464, 1329) Inventory

Dennis Wetherington. pg 1/6

Lessons from the Capital

HISTORY OF LA MARQUE CEMETERY

Shiloh-McCutcheon Cemetery. Shiloh-McCutcheon Cemetery is located southeast of the Williamson County

ADDENDUM. Chain of Title. Tax Map 144, Parcel A

Denny-Frye family papers,

THE HOLBROOK BELL FOUNDRY OF EAST MEDWAY

Boone County Commission Minutes 11 September September Session of the August Adjourned Term

Wichita Stamp Club Newsletter

A Tale of Two Cemeteries: Dispatch, Smith and Jewell Counties, Kansas. Jillian Hocking. HIST 533: Lost Kansas Communities. Dr. MJ Morgan.

Seven Generations of Ancestors of John D. Hancock

The Rison Family of Madison County By Collins (CE) Wynn Alumni of Rison Elementary School

The Beattie Family Papers, MS 158

Table of Contents. Our Pennsylvania Story 5

Christian Street Rural Historic District

Keen Field Sr. ( ) Culpeper County Virginia, Jefferson County, Kentucky & Gibson County, Indiana Keen* Field Sr.

Mary Ann Owens Crosby 1 by John Silas Crosby

Chapter 7 - Manifest Destiny

BURYING GROUNDS AT THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF LAWRENCEVILLE

Samuel Packard by Richard G. Packard Mesa, AZ 2008 [Last revised April 13, 2008]

A Letter to Grand Mother Hannah Hyatt ( ) September 1, Dear Grand Mother Hannah,

Thars Gold in Them Thar Hills

The Elgin Settlement

NW Lower Michigan 33,820. NW Wisconsin 21,627. EC Wisconsin 13,403

MANUSCRIPT DIVISION TENNESSEE STATE LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES. ~ Pryor, Jackson, Papers, Accession number 67-16

CENTRAL NEW BRUNSWICK WELSH SOCIETY FEBRUARY 2016

Colonial America. Roanoke : The Lost Colony. Founded: 1585 & Founded by: Sir Walter Raleigh WHEN: WHO? 100 men

ROBERT McDowell, sr. GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY On the 14th of December, 1881, Rosa I. He now has

Station 1: Maps of the Trail of Tears

GHM ARCHIVES MSS. COLL. #17. MSS. Collection #17. John Hanner Family Papers, [bulk 1850s-1880s]. 1 box (16 folders), 110 items.

WESTWARD EXPANSION II. The Expansion

Walla Walla Valley, The Cradle of the Pacific Northwest

Journey through Time: Arizona, From Territory to Statehood

Religious Buildings Tour in Seattle

MISSION U TRAINING EVENT West Ohio Conference

The Death of Zebulon M. Pike

Lampercock Spring Farm

Comal Settlement CONTEXT

A Brief History of I. M. DARTER, M.D. AND ANNIE MARY GORDEN of Fort Worth, Texas

The Gray Eagle A biography of Maj. Gen Robert H. Milroy

Transcription:

Today we re celebrating the 150th anniversary of the incorporation of the city of Oconto. But what would become the city began long before March 11, 1869. Early Native Americans, known as the Old Copper Complex, lived in this area about 5000 years ago. Evidence of their lives was found at what is now Copper Culture State Park west of Oconto. This map shows how the shoreline of Green Bay has changed over the millennia. The blue line is the shoreline about 10,000 years ago, the green line is about 5000 years ago, and the yellow line is the present. So, at the time the Copper Complex was here it was at the edge of the bay and where we are today was under water. 1

After the Copper Complex disappeared the Menominee Tribe became dominant in this area more than 1000 years ago. They had a settlement along the Oconto River between Superior Avenue and Park Avenue. This is a what the dwellings of that time might have looked like. In 1669 Father Claude Allouez founded the first mission in northeastern Wisconsin at the present-day city of Oconto and named it St. Francis Xavier Mission. An estimated 600 Native Americans lived in the nearby village of Oak-a-toe now Oconto. In 1787 Oconto was part of the Northwest Territory of the new United States of America through the Treaty of Paris. 2

Wisconsin became a state in 1848. Oconto County was formed in 1851 from the northern part of Brown County becoming one of the largest counties. The yellow area on this 1852 map shows the boundaries. This bird s-eye view map created in 1871 shows an overall view just two years after becoming a city. It shows how four distinct areas of town had developed. This resulted in duplicate street names including two Main Streets and four sets of numbered streets. However, in 1869 they joined together to become a city. Of course, Oconto looked very different then than it does now. It has gradually and continually changed from the beginning settlement to today. The earliest pictures we have of Oconto were taken in the late 1860s from the first courthouse located on the southeast corner of Collins Avenue and First Street. You can see the first Presbyterian Church on Main Street. This courthouse is probably where the city would have had any formal gathering for the incorporation. The people who attended had been settling the area for about 20 years. 3

Lumbering is what first brought settlers to the Oconto area. The Arndt Mill was the first built in 1827 in Pensaukee. The first successful mill in Oconto was built in 1844 by David Jones and his sons Huff and Tarleton at what is now known as Susie s Hill. Huff later built a home in 1851 at 1345 Main Street, one of the oldest houses in town. It was here that the first election was held. Documents from that election were found in the house. In 1862 the Holt Lumber Company began operations in Oconto. The first family to settle permanently in Oconto was the Thomas and Lucy Lindsey family who built an over-night place near the mouth of the Oconto River in 1847. Thomas died in 1852 but Lucy carried on running a boarding house and raising their seven children. Three of their daughters became prominent members of Oconto society. Lovina married Thomas Millidge, a merchant who had the first general store. Their home, built by Uri Balcom, was the first meeting place for the Christian Science Church. It later was the Kriewaldt Glove Company. Almeda married Charles Pendleton who was a successful lumber baron. They later moved to Washington to establish a lumber business there. Libbie married Charles Hall, a prominent merchant. He also built the Music Hall with an auditorium that was the cultural center of the community. 4

Peter Pecor came to Oconto about 1849 and bought land in the area we now call Frenchtown. He married Angelique Courchaine, a Native American woman. Peter laid out the area and sold blocks to families settling in the community. He gave land for St Peter s Church and cemetery and for a school. His name is perpetuated by Pecor Street and Pecor Point as well as numerous descendants. William Brunquest came to Oconto in 1849. He was involved with the mills but then had a general store. The family later moved to Menominee. He was the Village President in 1861, the first County Treasurer, and clerk of the County Board. He also built what we call the Scofield Mansion in 1868. Edwin and Eliza Hart arrived about 1850. Edwin starting in lumbering but then got into the mercantile and shipping business. He became active in the community early on presiding at funerals and establishing the first school. He conducted the 1855 Wisconsin census for Oconto, finding 115 citizens. Their son, Cyrus, built the first brick home in the county in 1866. 5

Samuel Brazeau and his new bride, Zoe Reindeau, settled here in 1855. Samuel started at the Spies water mill, moved to logging, and in 1870 opened the Brazeau general store with his newly arrived brother F.X. Brazeau. George Beyer came with his father in 1856. Even with little formal education he was able to become a leading entrepreneur in the area, being involved with banking, utilities, railroads, lumbering, and real estate. He and his wife, Fannie, bought the home constructed by Cyrus Hart which later became the Beyer Home Museum. Louis Pahl and Anton Links established the Oconto Brewery in 1858. A few years later the partnership dissolved and Pahl continued on his own. Arriving in the US with $2.50 in 1854, he developed his business into $15,000 to $20,000 a year by 1881. As a prominent businessman Pahl also was involved with politics. He was a Town Supervisor, 3 term City Treasurer, 1 term state Assemblyman, and had many terms as a County Board Supervisor. 6

George Smith came on the Oconto River in 1848 building a sawmill at Leightown with his brother-in-law. In 1860 he moved to the city of Oconto to build a sawmill but soon decided that there were greater opportunities in lumber jobbing. By the time Oconto was becoming a city, George was well established as a businessman and prominent citizen. He was elected as the new city s first mayor and handled the position so well that he was elected again for a second term. These and other first families, along with all the workers in the lumbering industry and supporting businesses, steadily increased the population. By 1859 Oconto had the required 150 citizens to be incorporated as a village. It only took ten years for the community to pass the 1000 citizen mark to incorporate as the City of Oconto on March 11, 1869, two hundred years after the first white men landed at the Oconto River harbor. By 1880 the population had passed 4000, then remained roughly between 4500 and 5000 for the next 100 years with the highest population in 1910 at 5600. In 1919 the city recognized the 50th anniversary of the city with a smaller ceremony incorporated with a larger ceremony welcoming home soldiers from World War I. In 1969 the city combined the 100th anniversary of the city with the 300th anniversary of the first landing and celebrated all summer with various events. Today we celebrate 150 years of coming together as a community. As happened 50 years ago there are many events planned for the year. 7