The History of Weston Township
Clark County, Wisconsin
Indians made
the first trails along the banks of the Black
River in Clark County with the early loggers
coming later, widening some of those trails
into tote roads that wound through the brush
and trees.
One
of those early tote roads was west of Christie,
between the Black River and the village’s present
location.
It
was there that
the first Christie post office
building was said to have been.
Later the tote road went along
the route of where Highway 73 and Christie are
now located.
The
above small building is said to have been the
first store in Christie in the late 1800’s,
located on the corner of Highway 73 and County
Road H, owned and operated by the Larvenez family.
It
was later moved to their property west of Meade’s
Avenue and north side of County Road H, presently
owned by Larry and Sharon Fitzmaurice.
Did that building formerly exist
as a post office on the first Christie site,
later to be moved on the eastern site and then
back? History
holds its secrets when there is no one left
who lived during that time frame that may have
known the answer.
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1844
Mormons in Weston
Rapids
1848
The first government entry
in Clark County was made by Isaac S. Mason in Section
35, in the Town of Weston, on Sept. 1, 1848.
1850
In the 1850’s the largest
owners of land in Clark County were
Cyrus Woodman
and Samuel F. Weston. Woodman was by far the largest
land owner of any one who ever owned land in the county,
having taken land in nearly every one of Clark County’s
34 townships. As many as 12 sections in the Town of
Seif, 5 sections in Hendren, 4 sections in Loyal, 7
sections in Weston, 15 in the Town of Eaton and 10 in
the Town of Washburn. These figures were taken at random
from the records and lesser holdings in every town in
the county but two. (A section is one mile square or
640 acres).
1854
History of Weston Rapids
1855
Usher, Isaac's Memories
of Hemlock and Weston Rapids
1873
Treasurer's Ledger
1890
"Clark County Illustrated"
History of Weston Township.
1895
West Weston:
Fred Seif has
bought two eighties from Hewett land, north and west
of Tom Free.
1898
Christie--This postoffice is in Weston Township,
Clark County, 7 1/4 miles north of Neillsville, its
nearest railroad station on the Chicago, St. Paul,
Minneapolis and Omaha Railway. It has a general
store, blacksmith shop, lumber yard and receives a
daily mail.
Turner's Hand Book and Gazetter of Wisconsin by Lura
J. Truner, Paul Samuel Reinsch, 1898
The
Tragedies We Faced Together
1873
"Victims
to amorous propensities" 1873
Shared Memories
"Berdina
Remembers" -- Recollections of Rural Wisconsin
in the 1920's
1918 History of Clark Co.,
WI
MRS. AMANDA SMITH, who came to
Clark County in 1878, says. "I was born in Rutland County,
'Vt., in 1838. My mother died when I was 3 years old.
When I was 12 years of age I came to Manitowoc County,
Wis., with my uncle. At the age of 15, I was married,
and subsequently reared a family of eight children,
all born in Manitowoc. In 1878 we came to Clark County,
traveling by rail to Hatfield, then by team and wagon
to a settlement called Christie. We passed through Neillsville,
which at that time was a small village. There were some
farms cleared, but most of the land was covered with
timber. From Christie we moved to Greenwood and lived
there one year, then went to Longwood. Here we built
a house, which was all open. We could see stars through
the roof at night. We had no stairs and had to climb
a ladder to get to the second story. We soon started
to repair and improve the building, and when completed
we opened the house as a hotel. For a time our guests
were obliged to sleep on straw spread on the floors.
We finally enlarged the building and used to keep the
logging crews. Just as we had gotten the house all fixed
up and paid for, it caught fire and burned down. We
then moved over the Longwood store, starting another
hotel, and soon had a fine trade, but immediately started
a new building, and soon had it ready to move into.
We lived at Longwood, keeping hotel all the time, until
1900, when we came to Withee. The town has grown about
two-thirds since we came here."
1918 History of Clark Co.,
WI
EMMA F. ROBINSON was one of the early pioneers and her
experiences were most interesting. Writing Nov. 25,
1901, she says:
"I came to Clark County, Wis., in January, 1859, my
husband, myself and little twenty-months-old baby girl,
now Mrs. James O'Neill. We drove through from LaCrosse
with a team to what was then known as Weston's Rapids.
We were four days making the trip. There were but a
few settlers then in Clark County. Among them was the
late James O'Neill, founder of Neillsville, Judge Dewhurst,
Robt. Ross, Chauncy Blakeslee, B. F. Chase, James Hewett
and S. C. Boardman.
"Neillsville was then a mere hamlet, although the county
seat. It was there that I attended my first Fourth of
July celebration in Clark County. Dr. B. F. French was
the orator of the day. I met Mrs. French, Mrs. A. W.
Clark and Mrs. John King for the first time, at that
small gathering of patriotic settlers.
"There was a dam and bridge across Black river at Weston's
rapids. A sawmill and grist mill were in operation there.
There was a 'tavern,' as it was then called, for the
accommodation of the lumbermen, and several tenement
houses. We lived in one of those houses nearly two years
and kept the first post office there. We only got our
mail once a week and had no county paper at that time
in fact all literature was very scarce in those days.
The books and periodicals which we had brought from
our eastern homes were gladly exchanged with our neighbors.
They were read and re-read, passed out from one home
to another till when they returned they were often in
a somewhat dilapidated condition. After a time we were
favored by having a very good little district library,
which was greatly appreciated. Mrs. Melvin Mason, Mrs.
Chandler and myself composed the committee to select
the books for this small library of 100 volumes.
"A Methodist Church soon sprang up. It was built in
Neillsville, all contributing most willingly. Its good
influence was soon felt and it was the means of bringing
the old settlers together oftener in a social way. Many
are the church sociables we attended when our only conveyance
was a big wagon or sleigh drawn by oxen or a span of
mules. Before we had our little church our only pleasures
socially were the meetings in our homes to read and
discuss our well worn books and papers, and dancing.
It was not considered a hardship by any means to have
the big sleigh brought around right after supper and
drive six or eight or even ten miles to a dance, gathering
up our friends on the way. Mrs. Stafford, Mrs. Blakeslee,
Mrs. Clark, Judge and Mrs. Dewhurst were generally along
and always ready for a good time. By the way, it did
not take as much to give us a good time then as at the
present day. We were all young and full of health and
hope and enjoyed everything to its fullest extent, our
books, our dances, our drives and, last but not least,
our church meant much to us in the wilds of Northern
Wisconsin.
"The woods abounded with wild game, which was the means
of bringing a great many Indians to our country. But
they were friendly-too friendly, we thought, when several
would walk into our houses and demand food, without
even stopping to rap. We soon learned to keep our doors
locked day and night and not to be frightened when we
saw their dusky faces looking in the window at us.
"There was a log shanty near what is now known as Schofield's
Corners, which was then used for a trading post for
the Indians, by quite a notorious character in the early
history of Clark County, by the name of George Pettengill.
He was a tall, muscular fellow and affected Indian style
by dressing in buckskin and wearing his hair long, reaching
to his waist, and spending his time hunting and trading
with the Indians. He at one time openly shot and killed
a half-breed, which so enraged the Indians that the
settlers were obliged to have him (Pettengill) arrested
and lodged in jail at LaCrosse. But he was afterwards
acquitted. He was not generally disliked by the white
settlers and was allowed to trade with the Indians in
the shanty on the corner without being interfered with,
although they got in exchange for their furs and game
a few gaudy trinkets and lots of poor whisky, and the
nights were often made hideous by the weird cries of
those poor children of the forest as they went reeling
by to their wigwams after indulging too freely in 'fire-water.'
I think there was quite as much need of a Mrs. Nation
and her hatchet in those early days as now."
1949
"Globe-Marshfield Bridge" over the Black River
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