Bio: Mead, Julia A. (History - 1842)
contact:
stan@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: MEAD HONEYWELL HUNTZICKER BEGLEY SYTH EATON
History of
Clark County, Wisconsin (1918)
JULIA A. MEAD, who was born in Fulton County,
New York, in 1842, says: "In 1851, I came to Jefferson County,
Wis., with my mother, two brothers and two sisters. I was married
in Jefferson County in 1861 and remained there until 1865, when,
with my husband and two children, we started for Clark County. We
went as far as Sparta by rail, and there took a wagon and started
overland for Clark County through a wild country, and over rough
roads. We reached Neillsville in two days. From Neillsville to
Greenwood the timber was very dense, and where Greenwood now stands
there was a forest of pine and hardwood. The first night we stopped
at the house of C. S. Honeywell, the only house there. This
building is still standing, though sided over and improved. The
next day we started housekeeping half a mile north of town in an
old house known as the old Dwyer house. In the spring of 1866 we
moved on to our homestead six miles north of town and started
living in our little log shanty, built without a nail in it. The
snow was then three feet deep on the ground. The only clearing was
where our house stood, the rest of the farm being densely covered
with timber. We started feeding travelers, furnishing them with
tents to sleep in, and I continued in this occupation for seven
years, my husband in the meanwhile being engaged at logging and at
clearing the farm. We built a new house in 1871 and remained on the
farm till 1893. Our supplies were purchased at Black River Falls
and were carried mostly on my husband's back. During the first
seven months I was on the farm I saw just one white woman. We had a
cow and calf, and I used to have to chain the dog to the door to
watch the children while I hunted the cow and calf in the woods.
There were many Indians but they caused us no trouble. For three
years our nearest neighbors were in Greenwood. In the early days my
husband and I carried the mail on horseback from two miles south of
where Greenwood now stands to George Huntzicker's hotel, one mile
south of where Longwood now is. C. S. Honeywell started the first
store in Greenwood, which was burned down. The first hotel was
built and run for several years by W. H. Begley. We used to hitch
up our oxen and drive to George and Henry Huntzicker's and dance
till broad daylight, to music furnished by one fiddle, played by
Tom Syth. My best dress during all those times was taken from the
back of sheep by my own hands, while I lived in Jefferson County.
The Eatons' and Honeywells' wives and daughters-four women and four
girls-were all who attended these dances during the winter of 1866.
When we passed through Neillsville there were only five houses.
There were few buildings in Greenwood, except the Honeywell cabin,
prior to 1871. After that a few settlers came in and people
commenced to stump the land and get it in shape to
work."
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