Thursday, September 11, 2025

Kewaunee County Post Offices - Part of a 250 Year History

 

Happy 250th Anniversary to the U.S. Post Office….


During the 163 years since Kewaunee County was set off from Door in 1852, Kewaunee County had between 40-50 U.S. post offices. Today there are four. In the early days, post offices were found in saloons, hotels, stores, cheese factories, and even in barns, although U.S. post offices have been found in even more “creative” spots in across the U.S. One of the more interesting (above) from a 1940s-era Row Peterson reading book illustrates a carpenter who wore the post office in his hat band!

Post office at Mahlik's complex in Pilsen


Wisconsin Postal History Society prepared listings for all counties, beginning in 1821 when the first post office was established at Green Bay, then in the Michigan Territory, continuingduring the era of the Wisconsin Territory and, finally, after Statehood in 1848.

Depending upon the manner in which one counts, Wisconsin Post Office Handbook, Revised #20 lists 45 post offices in Kewaunee County’s first 160 years of existence. The handbook maintains that total accuracy of early Kewaunee County post offices is difficult because the post offices are hard to follow. It lists Boalt and Bolt, but neither Darbellay 1 and Darbellay 2, nor Sandy Bay 1 and Sandy Bay 2.

WPHS’s listing of the 45 post offices depends on how one accounts for changes in spelling and for the changes in geographic location of many of the offices.  For instance, Handbook Revised #20 lists post offices with the same name in the same county, meaning there were offices with the same name, but at different times. It indicates the name changes from Luxembourg to Luxemburg, and Darbellay to Thiry Daems. Foscoro and Red River offices moved to or from Door County. Site documents for Ahnepee/Ahnapee indicate Rushford and Royal Creek, however neither has its own such document. Rushford was established on April 4, 1861, and discontinued July 31, 1863. James Pierce was postmaster. Royal Creek – not to be confused with Rio Creek - was established July 17, 1862, and discontinued on the same day as Rushford. Richard Gage was postmaster. It was James Pierce after whom the Town of Pierce was named. Richard Gage was an early employee of Hall’s Mill, on the South Branch of the Ahnapee River just beyond the point at which that branch broke off from the main channel of the river.

Absences of Rushford and Royal Creek can be explained since few site locations were filed before the mid-1860’s, and that it was in 1862 when the Post Office Department began a concentrated effort to develop comprehensive postal maps for existing post offices. These maps, which were required to show rivers, creeks, railroads, and distances from already established routes, became mandatory in the establishment of a new post office.

The mapping system found the Kewaunee County post offices already in operation by 1864. Such offices all have a first site location report processing date of October 16, 1864, regardless of when they had been established. Thus, both Rushford and Royal Creek closed too early to ever file such a site report.

Wisconsin Postal Handbook, 1821-1971, Bulletin #10 notes errors in U.S. Post Office Department records. Keweanee was changed to Kewaunee and Tisch Mills was changed to Marathon in Manitowoc County. Dates for Zavis post office were changed from 1879 – 1879 to 1878 - 1879. Rio Creek was discontinued on June 18, 1976, when it became a branch of Algoma.

Microfilmed files reproduced from report forms sent to the postmasters by the U.S. Post Office Department are found in the National Archives. The forms required information for use in compiling postal route maps. Most of the site location reports cover the period from the mid-1860’s to 1946. A few reports exist for the 1830’s into the 1850’s and for 1946-1950.

Prior to 1837, the U.S. Post Office Department purchased its maps through commercial firms. During that year the department appointed a cartographer who began preparing maps for postal use. In 1862, the route maps were offered for public sale, a practice ended in 1955. Site location reports were eliminated at the same time.

Site location maps found in the compilation of Kewaunee County post offices were used by the U.S. Topographer to determine the location of post offices in relation to nearby offices and routes. Requested data included Town, Range and Section as well as the physical descriptions as mentioned above.

Location documents indicate that many of the early post offices were Special Offices, created in Section 733 of Postal Laws and Regulations of 1887. These offices were supplied by special carriers who picked up mail at a convenient point somewhere on the nearest mail route. Remuneration was a sum equal to two-thirds of the amount of the salary for the postmaster at such an office. Before 1887, the Special Offices were supplied “without expense to the Department other than net proceeds.” Those offices were not on routes under contract. In 1881, Pilsen was one of those offices. Contractor Andrew Bohman traveled two miles west to Ellisville to pick up mail on the Mishicott*-Casco route, for a four-mile round trip. Pilsen Postmaster Andrew Mahlik requested that Pilsen be placed on a postal route, which would have been serviced through Henrysville to the west in Brown County. (Mishicott was the spelling of the time.)

Kewaunee County’s postal history provides a fascinating glimpse into the cultural history, the roads, the people, and long-forgotten hamlets deemed important enough to support a United States post office. Future blog posts will chronicle some of these hamlets.

 



                                                                                      1885          



   
                                                                                     1908                                                                               

Kewaunee County post offices then in service, and some in neighboring counties, appear on the map on the right printed just before the advent of Rural Free Delivery on November 30, 1904. Source is unknown.

 

Source: Here Comes the Mail: Post Offices of Kewaunee County, Kannerwurf, Sharpe, Johnson, Copyright  2010; available at Kewaunee, Door and Brown County Library, WHS through Area Research Centers and Yardstick Book Store in Algoma, WI.

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