Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Foscoro: A Village that Was

More than 150 years ago it was known as Foscoro. Today it is Stony Creek, and nothing is the same. The once important creek is really nothing to write home about, and the bluffs high above the lakeshore are worn down much as the lakeshore in the rest of Kewaunee County. There was a time when residents didn't know in which county they lived, as the exact county line was somewhat obscure. After 1878 when Capt. Charlie Fellows secured a post office, the office jumped around from Kewaunee County to Door and back while only moving a few yards in the process.

Fellows' post office site request included a map indicating that the settlement was less than a few hundred feet to the north of Stony Creek. Wisconsin Underwater Archeology feels the Foscoro Pier which saw the shipment of thousands and thousands of posts and ties was almost directly off the end of today's Kennedy Road. Door Co. Historian D. Weimer, who grew up in the area, remembers being a kid and climbing around the wooden dam crib that was about 100 yards west of the existing bridge. He feels by then - the 1950s - the main channel had washed away all the evidence with the exception of a smaller channel just to the north that still had the cribbing in place.


Stories of the logging describes the amount of business there was for Wolf River/Ahnapee's Dr. Levi Parsons. In a newly settled, young and healthy area, the doctor's business depended on fingers sawn off - or worse. There were times when a Foscoro saloon brawl meant more business. Logging in the hamlet named for the owners Foster, Coe and Rowe was so good that an October 1866 Enterprise mentioned a steamer and six schooners that had cleared the pier on the 14th. All that remains of yesteryear's prosperity is the old photo (above) of the deteriorating mill and that of the Fellow's Eagle Hotel, surely named because it was high on the bluff.

The Fellows family was a Stony Creek fixture and one or another served the post office for at least 75 years. Nobody would have dreamed that the old Foscoro would come back to life while family members gathered at the Stony Creek cottage one July 1923 Sunday. There was a spot on the cottage whitewashed walls. The spot resembled an eagle in flight. As mailman Will reached up to brush it off, the whitewash fell away to reveal eagles in flight. Will, with others at the gathering, began to brush away the whitewash and were stunned to find a scene coming to life. Trees appeared. There was a fence. And then there was something resembling a castle at an opening between two bluffs in the center of the picture. A bay appeared in the foreground. Bluffs cut it off from a larger body of water. As those in attendance worked, an oil painting of a village emerged from the plaster.

When the group finished its work, the painting showed a man rowing a boat in a sheltered bay at the foot of the castle on the hill. Fellows felt the painting that was under at least 20 coats of whitewash was suggestive of Lake Michigan.

Fellows' cottage had belonged to the family for at least 20 years on that July day. Originally it was part of the Foscoro saloon built by Hugh Acker about 1878. The painting presented a flourishing village with a dance hall, a huge hotel, store, saloon and several residences. By the time the painting was found in the Fellows' cottage, the cottage was about all that remained of the village. Other buildings had burned or had just fallen down, buried under surrounding vegetation.

When the painting was found, there were evidences of a trail of two ruts running from the highway that twisted and wound its way down through the woods to the sawmill town at the lakeshore level. In an earlier day, stage coaches carrying passengers and mail followed the road, which was for some time the road from Ahnapee to Sturgeon Bay.

Foscoro has faded into history as have such Kewaunee County communities as Zavis, Darbellay, Sandy Bay and Forest Hill. The tiny village died not long after 1892 when the railroad came to Ahnapee. Just before the advent of Rural Free Delivery in Kewaunee County, the Foscoro/Stony Creek post office was moved to Woodside, a few miles to the southwest and just a few yards to the north of  Silver Creek. Today there are a few homes on either side of Stony Creek, a name that well describes the area. Lake Michigan continues its erosion at a place once deemed by the U.S. Department of Post Office to be important enough to have its own office.

Note: Stoney or Stony Creek? The picture of the old mill and today's Door Co. highway signs reflect the first spelling. D.Weimer reports that the 1990 plat book and other maps and the Door County Soil and Water Conservation Department use the second spelling.
Sources: An-An-api-sebe, Where is the River? c. 2001; Here Comes the Mail, Post Offices of Kewaunee County, c. 2010; D. Kleist interview, 1999, D.Weimer interviews and correspondence, on-going; Algoma Record Herald, Kewaunee Enterprise. Pictures from the blogger's collection.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Algoma Dowel Co. and Aluminum Christmas Trees


Thoughts of artificial Christmas trees never entered the mind of at least 99% of Algoma’s 1950 population. The rest of northeast Wisconsin was not far behind. Fragrant snow covered evergreen Christmas trees came from a farm woods or from the vendor on a corner lot in town. Christmas trees were generally put up on Christmas Eve, though some might have beaten the rush on the 23rd. Trees were real and trees were green. Some raised an eyebrow at the flocked trees here and there, but they started out as real green trees.
Ten years later things were changing. By then there were those in Algoma whose income, in part, depended on artificial aluminum Christmas trees. They worked at Algoma Dowel Co., the factory that stood at 80 S. Church Street on the southeast corner of Michigan and Church Streets. The Dowel Co. was founded by commercial fisherman Melvin Keller years before as a box company that manufactured and repaired fish boxes for Algoma’s booming commercial fishing industry. It became known as the Box and Dowel Co. and then Algoma Dowel Co.

By the time Maynard Feld bought the company in 1959, boxes were nearly a thing of the past and dowels were going strong. Bed slats were a side product. Birch bolts bought from Warren Halstad  – though hard rock maple, elm and other woods were used – were sawn into lumber in the sawmill behind the plant. Wood strips separated the sawn birch which was dried in the company’s huge kiln. From the drying, the lumber went to the planer where Feld or his brother LeRoy fed it so fast that it took two tailers to keep up. From there the boards went to the saws where Butch or Stanley Haegele, Jerry Vandertie, or perhaps the part timers on the night crew, would saw them to the appropriate width. Then it was on to the rod machines run by Frank Weisner, Joe Schmidt and Wally Engelbert. The long dowel rods were sawn into specific sizes by Aggie Langer, Elsie Schmidt, Viola Serrahn and Mary Kustka. Some dowels were tumbled to ensure smoothness and some were chamfered.
Spiral grooved glue pins were used in the manufacture of fine furniture and in sash and door products. Algoma Net Co. used longer dowels – 36” or longer – in the manufacture of hammocks. Used as spreaders, the supporting lines from the hammock went to the spreader and then converged to the ring, or rings, which attached the hammock itself to the stand. Dowels were used as barrel spigots, in looms, chairs and hundreds of other places where nobody recognized them. Then came the artificial Christmas trees.

Jerry Waak of Aluminum Specialty Co., known as AlSpecCo to those at the Dowel Co., was married to the cousin of the Feld brothers. It was AlSpecCo that introduced aluminum Christmas trees to a mass market and thus to Algoma. How AlSpecCo, maker of house wares and toys, got into the aluminum Christmas tree business is a story in itself. More about that can be found in past issues of Voyageur, in the website of Wisconsin Historical at www.whs.org or by simply Googling.

And what happened at Algoma Dowel Co.?  After the long dowels came from the rod machine, they were cut to specific lengths.  An employee laid the shorter sections in a cradle and, when held firmly with both hands, the ends were simultaneously drilled by a machine custom developed by Maynard and Leroy and constructed by the Beitling brothers. Steel pins inserted into the drilled holes held the sections together to form the tree trunk. The tree trunk sections enabled efficient packaging when the time came. Algoma Dowel’s work was finished and the tree sections were shipped to Manitowoc.

For a time the wooden trunks were covered with aluminum foil. Later they were painted. Holes were drilled for 100 or so aluminum branches, each of which had its own sleeve in the packing box. Trees were originally silver, but eventually there were some gold and even pink trees. Possibly there were other colors. Living rooms looked somewhat commercial when the revolving stands came about. That was kicked up a notch with revolving lights that worked something like a strobe light.

Algoma and Manitowoc enjoyed the economic heydays of the aluminum Christmas trees, which faded from popularity by the early 1970s. The trees that seemed so garish fit a 1960s culture. Inexpensive in their day, the trees now are highly prized collectibles. When in the late 1970s teachers could no longer have real Christmas trees in their classrooms, some brought the aluminum trees. Primary kids oohed and aahed over the trees which they thought were so “beauty-tee-ful,” which just goes to show beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

Beautiful or not, the aluminum Christmas trees are fun to look at. For those who worked at Algoma Dowel Co. during that time, Christmas came on payday. Fifty years later, the trees bring memories of people in a time that was. Nobody knew then that aluminum Christmas trees were on the cusp of the consumerism that we know today, a half century later.

Note: The tree is from a picture taken by the blogger while the Box and Dowel Co. is from a section of a postcard in the blogger's collection.

Rosiere, Misiere, Crud, Leccia and the Belgian Church

Rosiere straddles the Kewaunee-Door County line. Misiere is in Door County, a stone's throw to the northwest. Both were small Belgian Catholic communities that had churches and, eventually,  post offices. To name their community Misiere - a loosely translated French word suggesting misery and poverty - reflects the plight of the Flemish Belgians who settled there. A translation of Rosiere, a Walloon Belgian community, is just the opposite, suggesting promising, optimistic, or even smelling like a rose.

Throughout the history of the world, religion has been the root of hatred and wars. For the Catholic Belgians along the county line, it was a war of words. While hatred may indeed be a strong word, records suggest it was not so far off. While the accounts of the rift do not always agree chronologically, they all point to discord within the Belgian church. A history of the Green Bay Diocese indicates Father Wilkins was the first resident pastor at Robinsonville in 1862 and thus served all the Belgian settlements, most of which were strong enough to support their own priests by 1875.

Jennifer Neinas wrote in her student paper Ghost Parishes, presented at UW-Green Bay on April 28, 1994, that what is St. Hubert today was built in 1866 as St. John the Baptist, the first church built in the Rosiere-Misiere area about 1/2 mile to the northeast of the present church. An undated interview of Father Becker indicates St. John's was built in 1864. Disagreements began after it was destroyed in the horrendous Peshtigo fire of 1871. Those who wanted Rosiere as a church site heard rumors of a post office there and felt they could pick up mail on church days. The small business community included both a blacksmith shop and a wagon shop, and there were rumors of a county line highway in the offing. Misiere folks, however, felt the distance was too great for travel in winter. Father Becker also said that if a visiting priest didn't arrive on time at the "schismatic church," - St. Michael's in Misiere - a lay trustee conducted mass.

A few years following the destruction of the Rosiere church, Father Phillip Crud built a new edifice on the same site. Emanuel Wynkers won the contract, dated June 13, 1874, to build that church. Francois Barbiaux was a manual laborer and a mason's helper who was contracted to work at 81 1/2 cents per day to be paid by January 1, 1876. His contract stipulated that if he quit before the church was completed, the trustees would owe him nothing. On November 1, 1875 a list was drawn up of articles from the debris of the burned and torn down church that were sold by Pierre Charles. Items also included materials left over from masonry when the new church was finished.

Not long after, in 1878, Jesuit priest Father Erasmus Leccia built St. Michael's in Misiere, however Bishop Krautbauer felt the new church was too close to Rosiere and did not approve construction.  Before 1878, Misiere was supposed to be a mission of Rosiere, however a deed regarding the first Misiere church was dated in 1864, the year in which the first Rosiere church was built. PenBel tells us that St. Michael’s was the first Catholic church built in the Town of Brussels at Misiere about 1865 on land donated by Adrian Francois. PenBel also says that the church was destroyed in the Peshtigo fire and a new one built in 1878. The society says that sometime later, fire destroyed the Misiere rectory and because the congregation was unable to build a new one, the church became a mission of St. Hubert of Rosiere.

Both of the early churches were built before the Green Bay Diocese was organized in Spring 1868. When the Misiere church wardens, or trustees, wrote to Bishop Krautbauer on November 7, 1877, they asked for blessings and then informed the bishop of "neighborhood gossip" and the doings of Father Crud. Keeping silent until then, the trustees felt they "must speak up about his antics." They went on to say that since his arrival he had not stopped stirring up trouble, going around the Rosiere congregation counseling people "get rid of the present priest" so he (Crud) can take his place. The trustees said Father Leccia was a worthy man although when he arrived nobody knew him and at first they didn't want him. Crud said that both Leccia and (Edouard) Daems were "troublesome, meddlesome priests of the diocese." The trustees said they liked Leccia who taught religion and the word of God while Crud just told stories. "We have become two families, " said the trustees, "the family of the servant girl Crud married" who is his housekeeper. "They make trouble for the priest and for the congregation who loves and respects their priest." The trustees wanted Crud sent away because there was no peace among the Belgians. Leccia denounced the Rosiere faction as being blackhearted while those from Misiere were as white as snow. The "black people" and the "white people" kept the feud going.

Krautbauer received another petition, this time from those who said that the trustees' letter was false. Bishop Krautbauer was petitioned by the members of the Rosiere parish who asked him to "Please send back our good Father Crud." The petition suggests that Crud had gone to France at the time. Included in the petition was the fact that "he works here with great zeal in a land without roads" to establish Belgian congregations. It further said he visited the sick in winter and traveled through swamps and snowstorms to go 30 miles to visit the feeble and dying. The petition pointed out that the saintly Crud lived there for 13 years and wanted to die there. He saw the dissolution of the congregation with the worst possible leader and felt the flock was scattered by a large wolf. It went on to report that the "wolf has blood dripping" and asked the bishop how he could wish "people don't revolt against Leccia" as Leccia caused suffering for the humble sisters at the chapel.*

According to the trustees, that petition came from the housekeeper and her husband whom, the trustees said, collected signatures by handing out whiskey. Some of the signatures belonged to those not of the congregation. If the bishop needed further information, the trustees were prepared to send it. J.J. Gilson, Prosper Naze and J.B. Denis were three of the five trustees whose signatures were decipherable.

Found in the archives at St. Peter, Lincoln, was somewhat of a history that Father Crud wrote on July 12, 1878. In it he recalled his appointment as pastor at Robinsonville in November 1864, at which time he was "in charge of all the Belgian colony and the Irish Congregation at Casco." He told of serving 10 missions every month for six years and building churches at Casco, Walhain, Thiry Daems, Delwiche, Little Sturgeon, Dyckesville and Marchand as well as a convent at Robinsonville. When Crud said he built those churches, he no doubt meant that he assisted in a physical sense: Crud was a mason. Crud talked about Bishop Melchers appointing Father Vermare as Rosiere's first resident pastor in 1869. Vermare left the following year. Crud said he came to Rosiere in 1876 when he built the replacement church. An addendum by one unidentified said there appeared to be no resident priest at Rosiere in the intervening years, but that Father Smett of Dyckesville took care of Rosiere in 1872. The addendum indicates that Father Leccia came in 1878 and in 1879 Rosiere became a mission of Lincoln. Father LePage came in 1880. Father Vaillent came right after and stayed until 1883.

Crud's 1878 St. Peter's history reported that the "great majority of Belgian people remain faithful to the Catholic faith and proved always very devoted to their beloved pastors," but goes on to say that among the immigrant families were "two or three apostate, calling themselves evangelist protestants." He continued saying they requested services of the protestant minister at Robinsonville, and with the assistance of a French lawyer, tried by all means, including money, to "seduce" the faithful of Grandlez.* Fourteen Catholic families "fell into protestant heresay (sic), calling themselves sometimes Presbyterians, sometimes Baptists or Millenarians."

A letter from Bishop Krautbauer on February 13, 1880 said that if the schismatic Belgians - those at Misiere - returned and were obedient and penitent, they would be treated mildly. He said they must be absolved from excommunication according to Roman Ritual and then admitted to the sacraments. As for Father Leccia, the Bishop demanded submission. He wanted Leccia to submit to a theology exam as Leccia said he studied in Rome. Leccia made two requests to see Krautbauer but Krautbauer refused, saying he had no patience with" maliciousness and mendaciousness." He said Leccia was without humility and was shameful. In April, Father Katzer* was apparently writing for the bishop when he said Leccia refused to accept the bishop's conditions and had 8 days to retract and renounce his falsehoods. Katzer also  complained about the Jesuits.

Father Francis Valliant (or Vaillant) wrote on November 21, 1882 that he was the pastor of St. Hubert, Rosiere, having been delegated by Bishop Krautbauer. He said he had blessed St. Michael's Church at Misiere which had been built by a schismatic priest. A few years later, on October 5, 1886, Krautbauer was invited by Rosiere pastor Father Rogers to confirm the children of St. Hubert, St. Michael, St., Francis Xavier, St. John Baptist* and St. Joseph. He did at what was called a simple, elegant event where the Rosiere band played beautiful sacred music as the children processed and the people knelt for a blessing. Luxemburg's pastor Father Drews said a high mass. Father Sellbach, a Green Bay pastor, gave a simple but excellent instruction* in French and Bishop Krautbauer gave a "learned and solid talk."*

A Diocesan letter dated December 15, 1887 (could be 1889) indicated Bishop Joseph Fox was another who did not approve St. Michael's as it was too close to St. Hubert's, and that he did not want a "saloon next to every church." Fox maintained that an old proverb said, "Wherever God builds a church, the devil builds a chapel. But in America, it is surely apparent that it must be said that wherever there is a saloon, people want a church."

Fox's letter went on to say that the oldest church - St. Hubert - is the mother church and if farmers can go 10 or 17 miles from Cooperstown to Green Bay, they can go 2 1/2 miles to Rosiere. It was said that if the people of St. Michael join St. Hubert and submit to ecclesiastical authority and "take either a pew or pay $5 for one" toward the priest's salary at St. Hubert, St. Michael would be recognized as a chapel and mass for the dead would be said several times a week. Again the parish failed to be approved.

A letter on February 10, 1888 was addressed "To Our Brothers, the Catholics of our diocese residing in the woods of the Peninsula." It addressed the issue of a "declared irregular" (lay person) saying "Holy Mass" and required attendance at mass on Sundays and Holy Days under "the pain of mortal sin." The letter continued about the many  who have the "fervor and piety and faith enough to go 5, 6, 7, even 10 miles to Church and assist at the Holy Sacrifice and hear the word of God." Continuing, "We regret to have to say there are too many negligent ones who believe they have done their duty when they has assisted at a Mass sung by a lay clerk. This is a false mass." The letter said only properly ordained priests were successors to the apostles and that, "a fake Mass done by a clerk has less value than one rosary."

Fox apparently was following precedents set by Krautbauer years earlier. In an undated letter signed by Bishop Krautbauer, the people were told that if they were too poor to support a priest, they should go to the church nearest to them even if it was as much as 10 miles away. He seemed to indicate that the father the travel, the greater the merit. He meant lay-said masses when he said the "evil custom" was detrimental to religion and needed to be done away with. He closed in saying,  "In place of it, say a rosary with the litany and sing hymns in your own language when no priest is present." Krautbauer also said any priest who might happen to see "your way of having mass" couldn't help but laugh at its silliness and would say he had never seen the likes of it. "Brothers, we hope you will obey this order and that our dear priests will insist upon it being carried out with all their power."

By the time Father C. Mickers arrived in Rosiere on April 15, 1896, it appeared that Belgian Catholics of Rosiere and Misiere were much less at odds. Mickers wrote telling of his trip from Hoboken to Rosiere, a trip that started with meeting Father Wilkens, Robinsonville's first appointed resident pastor in 1862. From Hoboken Mickers took a 28 hour train ride to Chicago where he was met by Prior Pennings and others. He told about the trip to Green Bay and then starting off by buggy for Martinville (Duvall) where they'd intended to be by noon. Weather was bad and the buggy and all clothing was full of mud, prompting the comment that buggies would not be on such roads in the old country.

Mickers told of arriving in Dyckesville where he had beer while the others had coffee. Then it was off to Delwiche where they arrived toward evening and covered with more mud that didn't seem to bother anybody other than Mickers. They were met at Delwiche by one from Rosiere who wanted to know when they would arrive so he could alert the Rosiere band. When Mickers arrived in Rosiere, church bells rang, trustees came to the house and a housekeeper brought in food. Mickers told of St. Michael's sacristan coming to call. He courteously rang the bell while the other just walked in. Father Mickers felt those who walked in the back door without any formality was suggestive of American liberty or equality.

Mickers said a list of parishioners hung in the back of the church. Ninety-four families were Belgian while 12 were either German or Bohemian. Twenty-five more families were from St. Michael's where Father Mickers had mass every two weeks and on special occasions.

Jim Hale's Going for the Mail tells us the post offices at Leccia and Minor were a result of religious unrest among the Belgians from the 1870s to the 1890s which gave rise to both a Spiritualist and an Old Catholic movement. Hale says the Leccia office was named for Father Erasmus Leccia who started an "Independent Catholic Society based on rejection of papal authority." He says Leccia built the church in 1860. He continues saying that when Leccia reconciled with the Roman Catholic Church, some of his "indignant parishioners" applied for a new post office to be named Minor as a protest. There were proposals in 1880 to name the post office Misiere or Masse but postal records indicate such proposals were turned down in favor of Leccia. When Minor was approved, the post office was moved about a half mile east of the Leccia office on the northeast corner of what is now Misiere Road and Door County Highway J.

Krautbauer's notes indicate when he arrived in 1878, there was a petition to build in Section 21 or 23 in the Town of Brussels. Fathers Crud and Daems were against it, and the church was built without consent. The bishop said no to the naming of St. Michael's and said it was too close to St. Hubert and that he would not allow a church next to every saloon. In November 1864, the bishop appointed the pastor at Robinsonville to be in charge of all the Belgians. This is indeed confusing as Krautbauer served from 1875-1885, so he had arrived prior to 1878. Fox was quite specific about his feelings on saloons, but perhaps he knew Krautbauer's feelings. The 1864 appointment seems confusing as the Green Bay Diocese was not formed until 1868. Northeast Wisconsin was then a part of the Diocese of Milwaukee.

Additional Notes:
  *Champion was the original Robinsonville. Sr. Adele Brise suggested the name of Champion because of the Belgian convent she wanted to enter before her family immigrated. It was today's Champion to which Wilkens was appointed.
  *St. John Baptist was the name of the first church on the site that became St. Hubert in Rosiere. The church was called St. John Baptist in 1886  was sometimes called Robin's Church, and was destroyed by fire in 1894. Its cemetery remains.
  *Grandlez is is known as Lincoln, in Kewaunee County, today. Dictionary.com defines Millenarium as an adjective meaning "of or pertaining to a thousand, especially the thousand years of the prophesied millennium or pertaining to the millennium, especially of Christian prophecy, or millennialism: millenarian zeal." As a noun, the word means "a believer in the coming of the millennium."
  *Ferdinand Katzer served as 3rd Bishop of the Green Bay Diocese from 1886-1891.
  *The letter is dated, however the website for the Green Bay Diocese indicates Krautbauer served as the Diocese's 2nd bishop from 1875-1885.

Sources: Jim Hale, Going for the Mail c. 1996; Jennifer Neinas, Ghost Parishes c. 1994;Knnerwurf, Sharp & Johnson Here Comes the Mail: Post Offices of Kewaunee County c. 2010; St. Joseph Catholic Parish, Champion, Wisconsin, 1862-2012; letters in the ARC at UW-Green Bay; website for PenBel (Peninsular Belgian Society); website for the Diocese of Green Bay. The postcard and undated picture of St. Michael's from Door County Advocate are in the blogger's collection.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Kewaunee County and the First Elections


At  the creation of Kewaunee County in the spring of 1852, the entire county was made up of one town, the Town of Kewaunee. Hugh Ritter, John Volk and Abraham Hall got the county underway when they called for and signed for an election to be held on May 22, 1852. Ritter was later to be associated with Carlton and Hall with Ahnapee, though all three men were connected with the lumbering along the Kewaunee River, overseen at the time by Volk.
George Rosier, Edwin Shaw and John Volk were judges of the election and with that responsibility came signing affidavits saying they would support Wisconsin's constitution and would endeavor to prevent abuse and deceit. John Lee signed a similar document as he was clerk. Lee appears to have been an itinerant – possibly a fisherman – as he does not appear in county records beyond the beginning.

On Election Day polls were open from 10 – 12 AM and again from 2 – 4 PM. Voters included Rosier, Shaw, Lee, two Volks – John and John L. – Orrin Warner, John Hughes, Rufus Andrews, John McNally, Francis Trewdell, Nathanial Wickham, Charles Nutt, Levick F. Meirick, Charles Nelson, John Kelly and William P. Dutton. Abraham Hall was selected as Superintendent of Schools, but it was several years before the county had a public school. Hall and Lee were elected as clerks.  John Volk served as treasurer, supervisor and inspector. Two other inspector positions were held by Shaw and Rosier. Early town minutes do not clarify the work of an inspector but later minutes indicate that such a position was connected to road building. Hughes, Ritter and Shaw were voted in as justices of the peace while Lee, Wickham and Hiram Ritter served as constables. Hiram Ritter, however, did not appear on the list of registered voters. Hugh Ritter was elected assessor. There were barely enough electors to fill the required offices and some men held more than one office.*
Set off from Door County, Kewaunee County was judicially attached to Manitowoc, and on May 31, 1852 in the Town of Two Rivers in the County of Manitowoc, Hugh Ritter was sworn in as Justice of the Peace before Charles Kuehn. On June 2, in the presence of Orrin Warner, Ritter, Volk and Hall were paid for assessing expenses. Though Kewaunee County was a wilderness, the men also swore to do the best of their ability while upholding the U.S. Constitution, that of the State of Wisconsin, and more.

On June 5, the witnesses to the election of May 22 levied a county tax of $400. Fifty dollars went toward common schools  and another 50 to Manitowoc County “for the privilege of being attached to that great county for judicial purposes.” The balance went to surveying and building roads.
Voters were notified on October 2 that polls would be open for the Presidential Election on the first Monday of November at the home of G.W. Rosier in T25, R25, the coordinates for what would become the Town of Ahnapee. Rosier lived in the area that is now approximately the southwest corner of Lake and Jefferson Streets. Rosier, Hughes and Warner were all residents of the area then being called Wolf River.

Electors voted for President, Vice-president, a representative for the 3rd Congressional District and a member of the Wisconsin Assembly. Franklin Pierce carried Kewaunee County with 23 votes to opponent Winfield Scott's 5. Included in the election were the offices of county treasurer and register of deeds. Voters also had to decide if the assessor could be scheduled for 10 more days of work. The names of the electorate follow this article.

A week following the election, bills were paid. Volk received $6, McNally’s $8 was for 3 days and included travel expenses, Warner was paid $6 for 2 days, and Hughes was paid $3 for sitting as a judge. Abraham Hall got $25 for serving as  clerk of the Town of Kewaunee for a year, a position including traveling. 

Although he was paid to be a supervisor, John Volk resigned on February 12, 1853. Still, Volk shows up numerous times in succeeding records. Supervisors continued to pay Manitowoc Co., and also to survey from the county line to “Woolf River.” Naham Pancels (or Powels) did the work.
Abraham Hall notified the electorate on March 21, 1853 that the county annual meeting would be held on April 5. A list of electors included J.C.S. Mathan, Benjamin Burleigh, Andrew Scott, S.E. Tiler, Nathanial Emery, Aaron Cory, W.T. Jones, John Zebo and A.E. York. It also included Edwin Tweedale, who arrived in Wolf River on June 28, 1851. Where was Tweedale during the first election? He was one of the county's three first permanent settlers. Surprising too is that Bradford White was elected constable: he does not appear on the poll list.

As the county gained residents, there was more business to transact and much more to deal with. There were questions of land sales for taxes that were delinquent for a year and about providing each district $50 for roads. Most meetings began with paying for road surveying and chaining.
The year 1853 culminated on December 12 when the county was divided into three towns along the lake shore road. Town 22 and north for 7 miles in Town 23 was called Sandy Bay District. From that line in Town 23 to 2 miles north in Town 24 was named the Kewaunee District.  Two miles north of the south line of Town 24 to the mouth of Woolf River was Woolf River District, but then what had been known  as Woolf/Wolf River District was renamed named Wolf Town, with River being crossed off in the minutes. Land north of the river was not mentioned in the original records, however it became a part of Wolf Town and is now the northern part of the Town of Ahnapee.

On November 2, 1852 Kewaunee County registered these voters: Mr. Anderson, Francis Brisso, Samuel Burbeck, Aaron Cory, Nathan Emerer, George Finch, Abraham Hall, Gunder Hanson, Francis Kelly,  Francis Luchor, E.J. Merick, Levey Merrick, John H. Nathan, Ethel Penny, Peter Rando, Joseph Secver, John Smenroe,  John Snider, John Tebo (Zebo), S. Tiler,  Francis Trudell, Ed Tweedale, John Volk,  A.E. York, John C. Volk and Thanuel Wickham.
Several of these men went on to make a significant impact on Kewaunee County while the others faded from history.

*It was about 70 years later before women got the right to vote. Women in elected positions came later.
Note: Spellings of proper names were taken from minutes at the Area Research Center at UW-Green Bay and are not always the commonly accepted spelling of 2013.