The history of Wisconsin
encompasses the story not only of the people who have
lived in Wisconsin since it became a state of the U.S.,
but also that of the Native American tribes who made
their homeland in Wisconsin, the French and British
colonists who were the first Europeans to live there,
and the American settlers who lived in Wisconsin when it
was a territory. Since its admission to the Union on May
29, 1848 as 30th state, Wisconsin has been ethnically
heterogeneous, with Yankees being among the first to
arrive from New York and New England. They dominated the
state's heavy industry, finance, politics and education.
Large numbers of European immigrants followed them,
including German Americans, mostly between 1850 and
1900, Scandinavians (the largest group being Norwegian
Americans) and smaller groups of Belgian Americans,
Dutch Americans, Swiss Americans, Finnish Americans,
Irish Americans and others; in the 20th century, large
numbers of Polish Americans and African Americans came,
settling mainly in Milwaukee.
The
first known inhabitants of what is now Wisconsin were
Paleo-Indians, who first arrived in the region in about
10,000 BC at the end of the Ice Age. The retreating
glaciers left behind a tundra in Wisconsin inhabited by
large animals, such as mammoths, mastodons, bison, giant
beaver, and muskox. The Boaz mastodon and the Clovis
artifacts discovered in Boaz, Wisconsin show that the
Paleo-Indians hunted these large animals. They also
gathered plants as conifer forests grew in the glaciers'
wake. With the decline and extinction of many large
mammals in the Americas, the Paleo-Indian diet shifted
toward smaller mammals like deer and bison.
During
the Archaic Period, from 6000–1000 BC, mixed
conifer-hardwood forests as well as mixed
prairie-forests replaced Wisconsin's conifer forests.
People continued to depend on hunting and gathering.
Around 4000 BC they developed spear-throwers and copper
tools such as axes, adzes, projectile points, knives,
perforators, fishhooks and harpoons. Copper ornaments
like beaded necklaces also appeared around 1500 BC.
These people gathered copper ore at quarries on the
Keweenaw Peninsula in Michigan and on Isle Royale in
Lake Superior. They may have crafted copper artifacts by
hammering and folding the metal and also by heating it
to increase its malleability. However it is not certain
if these people reached the level of copper smelting.
Regardless, the Copper Culture of the Great Lakes region
reached a level of sophistication unprecedented in North
America. The Late Archaic Period also saw the emergence
of cemeteries and ritual burials, such as the one in
Oconto.
The
Early Woodland Period began in 1000 BC as plants became
an increasingly important part of the people's diet.
Small scale agriculture and pottery arrived in southern
Wisconsin at this time. The primary crops were maize,
beans and squash. Agriculture, however, could not
sufficiently support these people, who also had to hunt
and gather. Agriculture at this time was more akin to
gardening than to farming. Villages emerged along
rivers, streams and lakes, and the earliest earthen
burial mounds were constructed. The Havana Hopewell
Culture arrived in Wisconsin in the Middle Woodland
Period, settling along the Mississippi River. The
Hopewell people connected Wisconsin to their trade
practices, which stretched from Ohio to Yellowstone and
from Wisconsin to the Gulf of Mexico. They constructed
elaborate mounds, made elaborately decorated pottery and
brought a wide range of traded minerals to the area. The
Hopewell people may have influenced the other
inhabitants of Wisconsin, rather than displacing them.
The Late Woodland Period began in about 400 AD,
following the disappearance of the Hopewell Culture from
the area. The people of Wisconsin first used the bow and
arrow in the final centuries of the Woodland Period, and
agriculture continued to be practiced in the southern
part of the state. The effigy mound culture dominated
Southern Wisconsin during this time, building earthen
mounds in the shapes of animals. Unlike earlier mounds,
many of these were not used for burials. Examples of
effigy mounds still exist at High Cliff State Park and
at Lizard Mound County Park. In northern Wisconsin
people continued to survive on hunting and gathering,
and constructed conical mounds.
People
of the Mississippian culture expanded into Wisconsin
around 1050 AD and established a settlement at Aztalan
along the Crawfish River. While begun by the Caddoan
people, other cultures began to borrow & adapt the
Mississippian cultural structure. This elaborately
planned site may have been the northernmost outpost of
Cahokia, although it is also now known that some Siouan
peoples along the Mississippi River may have taken part
in the culture as well. Regardless, the Mississippian
site traded with and was clearly influenced in its civic
and defensive planning, as well as culturally, by its
much larger southern neighbor. A rectangular
wood-and-clay stockade surrounded the twenty acre site,
which contained two large earthen mounds and a central
plaza. One mound may have been used for food storage, as
a residence for high-ranking officials, or as a temple,
and the other may have been used as a mortuary. The
Mississippian Culture cultivated maize intensively, and
their fields probably stretched far beyond the stockade
at Aztalan, although modern agriculture has erased any
traces of Mississippian practices in the area. Some
rumors also speculate that the people of Aztalan may
have experimented slightly with stone architecture in
the making of a man-made, stone-line pond, at the very
least. While the first settler on the land of what is
now the city supposedly reported this, he filled it in
and it has yet to be rediscovered.
Both
Woodland and Mississippian peoples inhabited Aztalan,
which was connected to the extensive Mississippian trade
network. Shells from the Gulf of Mexico, copper from
Lake Superior and Mill Creek have been found at
the site. Aztalan was abandoned around 1200 AD. The
Oneota people later built agriculturally based villages,
similar to those of the Mississippians but with the
extensive trade networks, in the state.
By the
time the first Europeans arrived in Wisconsin, the
Oneota had disappeared. The historically documented
inhabitants, as of the first European incursions, were
the Siouan speaking Dakota Oyate to the northwest, the
Chiwere speaking Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) and he Algonquian
Menominee to the northeast, with their lands beginning
approximately north of Green Bay. The Chiwere lands were
south of Green Bay and followed rivers to the southwest.
Over time, other tribes moved to Wisconsin, including
the Ojibwe, the Illinois, the Fauk, the Sauk and the
Mahican. The Mahican were one of the last groups
to arrived, coming from New York after the U.S. congress
passed the Indian Removal Act of 1830.
The
first European known to have landed in Wisconsin was
Jean Nicolet. In 1634, Samuel de Champlain, governor of
New France, sent Nicolet to contact the Ho-Chunk people,
make peace between them and the Huron and expand the fur
trade, and possibly to also find a water route to Asia.
Accompanied by seven Huron guides, Nicolet left New
France and canoed through Lake Huron and Lake Superior,
and then became the first European known to have entered
Lake Michigan. Nicolet proceeded into Green Bay, which
he named La Baie des Puants (literally "The Stinking
Bay"), and probably came ashore near the Red Banks. He
made contact with the Ho-Chunk and Menominee living in
the area and established peaceful relations. Nicolet
remained with the Ho-Chunk the winter before he returned
to Quebec.
The
Beaver Wars fought between the Iroquois and the French
prevented French explorers from returning to Wisconsin
until 1652-1654, when Pierre Radisson and Médard des
Groseilliers arrived at La Baie des Puants to trade
furs. They returned to Wisconsin in 1659-1660, this time
at Chequamegon Bay on Lake Superior. On their second
voyage they found that the Ojibwe had expanded into
northern Wisconsin, as they continued to prosper in the
fur trade. They also were the first Europeans to contact
the Santee Dakota. They built a trading post and
wintered near Ashland, before returning to
Montreal.
In
1665 Claude-Jean Allouez, a Jesuit missionary, built a
mission on Lake Superior. Five years later he abandoned
the mission, and journeyed to La Baie des Puants. Two
years later he built St. Francis Xavier Mission near
present-day De Pere. In his journeys through Wisconsin,
he encountered groups of Native Americans who had been
displaced by Iroquois in the Beaver Wars. He evangelized
the Algonquin-speaking Potawatomi, who had settled on
the Door Peninsula after fleeing Iroquois attacks in
Michigan. He also encountered the Algonquin-speaking
Sauk, who had been forced into Michigan by the Iroquois,
and then had been forced into central Wisconsin by the
Ojibwe and the Huron.
The
next major expedition into Wisconsin was that of Father
Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet in 1673. After
hearing rumors from Indians telling of the existence of
the Mississippi River, Marquette and Joliet set out from
St. Ignace, in what is now Michigan, and entered the Fox
River at Green Bay. They canoed up the Fox until they
reached the river's westernmost point, and then
portaged, or carried their boats, to the nearby
Wisconsin River, where they resumed canoeing downstream
to the Mississippi River. Marquette and Joliet reached
the Mississippi near what is now Prairie du Chien,
Wisconsin in June, 1673.
Nicolas Perrot, French commander of the west,
established Fort St. Nicholas at Prairie du Chien,
Wisconsin in May, 1685, near the southwest end of the
Fox-Wisconsin Waterway. Perrot also built a fort on the
shores of Lake Pepin called Fort St. Antoine in 1686,
and a second fort, called Fort Perrot, on an island on
Lake Peppin shortly after. In 1727, Fort Beauharnois was
constructed on what is now the Minnesota side of Lake
Pepin to replace the two previous forts. A fort and a
Jesuit mission were also built on the shores of Lake
Superior at La Pointe, in present-day Wisconsin, in 1693
and operated until 1698. A second fort was built on the
same site in 1718 and operated until 1759. These were
not military posts, but rather small storehouses for
furs.
During
the French colonial period, the first black people came
to Wisconsin. The first record of a black person comes
from 1725, when a black slave was killed along with four
French men in a Native American raid on Green Bay. Other
French fur traders and military personnel brought slaves
with them to Wisconsin later in 1700s.
None
of the French posts had permanent settlers; fur traders
and missionaries simply visited them from time to time
to conduct business.
The
Second Fox War In the 1720s, the anti-French Fox
tribe, led by war chief Kiala, raided French settlements
on the Mississippi River and disrupted French trade on
Lake Michigan. From 1728 to 1733, the Fox fought against
the French-supported Potawatomi, Ojibwa, Huron and
Ottawa tribes. In 1733, Kiala was captured and sold into
slavery in the West Indies along with other captured
Fox.
Before
the war, the Fox tribe numbered 1500, but by 1733, only
500 Fox were left. As a result, the Fox joined the Sac
tribe.
The
details are unclear, but this war appears to have been
part of the conflict that expelled the Dakota &
Illinois peoples out onto the Great Plains, causing
further displacement of other Chiwere, Caddoan &
Algonquian peoples there—including the ancestors of the
Ioway, Osage, Pawnee, Arikara, A'ani, Arapaho, Hidatsa,
Cheyenne & Blackfoot.
The
British Period The British gradually took over
Wisconsin during the French and Indian War, taking
control of Green Bay in 1761 and gaining control of all
of Wisconsin in 1763. Like the French, the British were
interested in little but the fur trade. One notable
event in the fur trading industry in Wisconsin occurred
in 1791, when two free African Americans set up a fur
trading post among the Menominee at present day
Marinette. The first permanent settlers, mostly French
Canadians, some Anglo-New Englanders and a few African
American freedmen, arrived in Wisconsin while it was
under British control. Charles Michel de Langlade is
generally recognized as the first settler, establishing
a trading post at Green Bay in 1745, and moving there
permanently in 1764. In 1766 the Royal Governor of the
new territory, Robert Rogers, engaged Jonathan Carver to
explore and map the newly acquired territories for the
Crown, and to search for a possible Northwest Passage.
Carver left Fort Michilimackinac that spring and spent
the next three years exploring and mapping what is now
Wisconsin and parts of Minnesota.
Settlement began at Prairie du Chien around 1781.
The French residents at the trading post in what is now
Green Bay, referred to the town as "La Bey", however
British fur traders referred to it as "Green Bay",
because the water and the shore assumed green tints in
early spring. The old French title was gradually
dropped, and the British name of "Green Bay" eventually
stuck. The region coming under British rule had
virtually no adverse effect on the French residents as
the British needed the cooperation of the French fur
traders and the French fur traders needed the goodwill
of the British. During the French occupation of the
region licenses for fur trading had been issued scarcely
and only to select groups of traders, whereas the
British, in an effort to make as much money as possible
from the region, issued licenses for fur trading freely,
both to British and French residents. The fur trade in
what is now Wisconsin reached its height under British
rule, and the first self-sustaining farms in the state
were established at this time as well. From 1763 to
1780, Green Bay was a prosperous community which
produced its own foodstuff, built graceful cottages and
held dances and festivities.
The
Territorial Period The United States acquired
Wisconsin in the Treaty of Paris (1783). Massachusetts
claimed the territory east of the Mississippi River
between the present-day Wisconsin-Illinois border and
present-day La Crosse, Wisconsin. Virginia claimed the
territory north of La Crosse to Lake Superior and all of
present-day Minnesota east of the Mississippi River.
Shortly afterward, in 1787, the Americans made Wisconsin
part of the new Northwest Territory. Later, in 1800,
Wisconsin became part of Indiana Territory. Despite the
fact that Wisconsin belonged to the United States at
this time, the British continued to control the local
fur trade and maintain military alliances with Wisconsin
Indians.
The
War of 1812 and the Indian Wars The United States did
not firmly exercise control over Wisconsin until the War
of 1812. In 1814, the Americans built Fort Shelby at
Prairie du Chien. During the war, the Americans and
British fought one battle in Wisconsin, the July, 1814
Siege of Prairie du Chien, which ended as a British
victory. The British captured Fort Shelby and renamed it
Fort McKay, after Major William McKay, the British
commander who led the forces that won the Battle of
Prairie du Chien. However, the 1815 Treaty of Ghent
re-affirmed American jurisdiction over Wisconsin, which
was by then a part of Illinois Territory. Following the
treaty, British troops burned Fort McKay, rather than
giving it back to the Americans, and departed Wisconsin.
To protect Prairie du Chien from future attacks, the
United States Army constructed Fort Crawford in 1816, on
the same site as Fort Shelby. Fort Howard was also built
in 1816 in Green Bay.
Significant American settlement in Wisconsin, a
part of Michigan Territory beginning in 1818, was
delayed by two Indian wars, the minor Winnebago War of
1827 and the larger Black Hawk War of 1832.
The
Winnebago War started when, in 1826, two Winnebago men
were detained at Fort Crawford on charges of murder and
then transferred to Fort Snelling in present-day
Minnesota. The Winnebago in the area believed that both
men had been executed. On June 27, 1827, a Winnebago war
band led by Chief Red Bird and the prophet White Cloud
(Wabokieshiek) attacked a family of settlers outside of
Prairie du Chien, killing two men. They then went on to
attack two keel-boats on the Mississippi River that were
heading toward Fort Snelling, killing two men and
injuring four more. Seven Winnebago warriors were killed
in those attacks. The war band also attacked settlers on
the lower Wisconsin River and the lead mines at Galena,
Illinois. The war band surrendered at Portage,
Wisconsin, rather than fighting the United States Army
that was pursuing them.
In the
Black Hawk War, Sac, Fox, and Kickapoo Native Americans,
otherwise known as the British Band, led by Chief Black
Hawk, who had been relocated from Illinois to Iowa,
attempted to resettle in their Illinois homeland on
April 5, 1832, in violation of Treaty. On May 10 Chief
Black Hawk decided to go back to Iowa. On May 14, Black
Hawk's forces met with a group of militia men led by
Isaiah Stillman. All three members of Black Hawk's
parley were shot and one was killed. The Battle of
Stillman's Run ensued, leaving twelve militia men and
three to five Sac and Fox warriors dead. Of the fifteen
battles of the war, six took place in Wisconsin. The
other nine as well as several smaller skirmishes took
place in Illinois. The first confrontation to take place
in Wisconsin was the first attack on Fort Blue Mounds on
June 6, in which one member of the local militia was
killed outside of fort. There was also the Spafford Farm
Massacre on June 14, the Battle of Horseshoe Bend on
June 16, which was a United States victory, the second
attack on Fort Blue Mounds on June 20, and the Sinsinawa
Mound raid on June 29. The Native Americans were
defeated at the Battle of Wisconsin Heights on July 21,
with forty to seventy killed and only one killed on the
United States side. The Ho Chunk Nation fought on the
side of the United States. The Black Hawk War ended with
the Battle of Bad Axe on August 1–2, with over 150 of
the British Band dead and 75 captured and only five
killed in the United States forces. Those crossing the
Mississippi were killed by Lakota, American and Ho Chunk
Forces. Many of the British Band survivors were handed
over to the United States on August 20 by the Lakota
Tribe, with the exception of Black Hawk, who had
retreated into Vernon County, Wisconsin and White Cloud,
who surrendered on August 27, 1832. Black Hawk was
captured by Decorah south of Bangor, Wisconsin, south of
the headwaters of the La Crosse River. He was then sold
to the U.S. military at Prairie du Chien, accepted by
future Confederate president, Stephen Davis, who was a
soldier at the time. Black Hawk's tribe had killed his
daughter. Black Hawk moved back to Iowa in 1833, after
being held prisoner by the United States
government.
The
resolution of these Indian conflicts opened the way for
Wisconsin's settlement. Many of the region's first
settlers were drawn by the prospect of lead mining in
southwest Wisconsin. This area had traditionally been
mined by Native Americans. However, after a series of
treaties removed the Indians, the lead mining region was
opened to white miners. Thousands rushed in from across
the country to dig for the "gray gold". By 1829, 4,253
miners and 52 licensed smelting works were in the
region. Expert miners from Cornwall, England, formed a
large part of the wave of immigrants. Boom towns like
Mineral Point, Platteville, Shullsburg, Belmont, and New
Diggings sprang up around mines. The first two federal
land offices in Wisconsin were opened in 1834 at Green
Bay and at Mineral Point. By the 1840s, southwest
Wisconsin mines were producing more than half of the
nation's lead, which was no small amount, as the United
States was producing annually some 31 million pounds of
lead. Wisconsin was dubbed the "Badger State" because of
the lead miners who first settled there in the 1820s and
1830s. Without shelter in the winter, they had to "live
like badgers" in tunnels burrowed into
hillsides.
Although the lead mining area drew the first
major wave of settlers, its population would soon be
eclipsed by growth in Milwaukee. Milwaukee, along with
Sheboygan, Manitowoc, and Kewaunee, can be traced back
to a series of trading posts established by the French
trader Jacques Vieau in 1795. Vieau's post at the mouth
of the Milwaukee River was purchased in 1820 by Solomon
Juneau, who had visited the area as early as 1818.
Juneau moved to what is now Milwaukee and took over the
trading post's operation in 1825.
When
the fur trade began to decline, Juneau focused on
developing the land around his trading post. In the
1830s he formed a partnership with Green Bay lawyer
Morgan Martin, and the two men bought 160 acres (0.6
km²) of land between Lake Michigan and the Milwaukee
River. There they founded the settlement of Juneautown.
Meanwhile, an Ohio businessman named Byron Kilbourn
began to invest in the land west of the Milwaukee River,
forming the settlement of Kilbourntown. South of these
two settlements, George H. Walker founded the town of
Walker's Point in 1835. Each of these three settlements
engaged in a fierce competition to attract the most
residents and become the largest of the three towns. In
1840, the Wisconsin State Legislature ordered the
construction of a bridge over the Milwaukee River to
replace the inadequate ferry system. In 1845, Byron
Kilbourn, who had been trying to isolate Juneautown to
make it more dependent on Kilbourntown, destroyed a
portion of the bridge, which started the Milwaukee
Bridge War. For several weeks, skirmishes broke out
between the residents of both towns. No one was killed
but several people were injured, some seriously. On
January 31, 1846 the settlements of Juneautown,
Kilbourntown, and Walker's Point merged into the
incorporated city of Milwaukee. Solomon Juneau was
elected mayor. The new city had a population of about
10,000 people, making it the largest city in the
territory. Milwaukee remains the largest city in
Wisconsin to this day.
Wisconsin Territory was created by an act of the
United States Congress on April 20, 1836. By fall of
that year, the best prairie groves of the counties
surrounding Milwaukee were occupied by New England
farmers. The new territory initially included all of the
present day states of Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Iowa, as
well as parts of North and South Dakota. At the time the
Congress called it the "Wiskonsin Territory".
The
first territorial governor of Wisconsin was Henry Dodge.
He and other territorial lawmakers were initially busied
by organizing the territory's government and selecting a
capital city. The selection of a location to build a
capitol caused a heated debate among the territorial
politicians. At first, Governor Dodge selected Belmont,
located in the heavily populated lead mining district,
to be capital. Shortly after the new legislature
convened there, however, it became obvious that
Wisconsin's first capitol was inadequate. Numerous other
suggestions for the location of the capital were given
representing nearly every city that existed in the
territory at the time, and Governor Dodge left the
decision up to the other lawmakers. The legislature
accepted a proposal by James Duane Doty to build a new
city named Madison on an isthmus between lakes Mendota
and Monona and put the territory's permanent capital
there.[38] In 1837, while Madison was being built, the
capitol was temporarily moved to Burlington. This city
was transferred to Iowa Territory in 1838, along with
all the lands of Wisconsin Territory west of the
Mississippi River.
By the
mid-1840s, the population of Wisconsin Territory had
exceeded 150,000, more than twice the number of people
required for Wisconsin to become a state. In 1846, the
territorial legislature voted to apply for statehood.
That fall, 124 delegates debated the state constitution.
The document produced by this convention was considered
extremely progressive for its time. It banned commercial
banking, granted married women the right to own
property, and left the question of African-American
suffrage to a popular vote. Most Wisconsinites
considered the first constitution to be too radical,
however, and voted it down in an April 1847
referendum.
In
December 1847, a second constitutional convention was
called. This convention resulted in a new, more moderate
state constitution that Wisconsinites approved in a
March 1848 referendum, enabling Wisconsin to become the
30th state on May 29, 1848. Wisconsin was the last state
entirely east of the Mississippi River (and by extension
the last state formed entirely from territory assigned
to the U.S. in the 1783 Treaty of Paris) to be admitted
to the Union.
Nelson
Dewey, the first governor of Wisconsin, was a Democrat.
Born in Lebanon, Connecticut, Dewey's father's family
had lived in New England since 1633, when their
ancestor, Thomas Due, had come to America from Kent
County, England. Dewey oversaw the transition from the
territorial to the new state government. He encouraged
the development of the state's infrastructure,
particularly the construction of new roads, railroads,
canals, and harbors, as well as the improvement of the
Fox and Wisconsin Rivers. During his administration, the
State Board of Public Works was organized. Dewey was an
abolitionist and the first of many Wisconsin governors
to advocate against the spread of slavery into new
states and territories. The home Dewey built near
Cassville is now a state park.
A
notable instance of abolitionism in Wisconsin was the
rescue of Joshua Glover, an escaped slave from St. Louis
who sought refuge in Racine, Wisconsin in 1852. He was
caught in 1854 by federal marshals and put in a jail at
Cathedral Square in Milwaukee, where he waited to be
returned to his owner. A mob of 5,000 people led by
Milwaukee abolitionist Sherman Booth, himself a "Yankee"
transplant from rural New York, sprung Glover from jail
and helped him escape to Canada via the underground
railroad.
A
railroad frenzy swept Wisconsin shortly after it
achieved statehood. The first railroad line in the state
was opened between Milwaukee and Waukesha in 1851 by the
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad. The
railroad pushed on, reaching Milton, Wisconsin in 1852,
Stoughton, Wisconsin in 1853, and the capital city of
Madison in 1854. The company reached its goal of
completing a rail line across the state from Lake
Michigan to the Mississippi River when the line to
Prairie du Chien was completed in 1857. Shortly after
this, other railroad companies completed their own
tracks, reaching La Crosse in the west and Superior in
the north, spurring development in those cities. By the
end of the 1850s, railroads crisscrossed the state,
enabling the growth of other industries that could now
easily ship products to markets across the
country.
In
parts of northern Wisconsin, farmers cultivated
cranberries and in a few counties in south central
Wisconsin, farmers had success growing tobacco, but the
most popular replacement for wheat was dairy farming. As
wheat fell out of favor, many Wisconsin farmers started
raising dairy cattle and growing feed crops, which were
better suited to Wisconsin's climate and soil. One
reason for the popularity of dairy farming was that many
of Wisconsin's farmers had come to the state from New
York, the leading producer of dairy products at the
time. In addition, many immigrants from Europe brought
an extensive knowledge of cheese making. Dairying was
also promoted by the University of Wisconsin–Madison's
school of agriculture, which offered education to dairy
farmers and researched ways to produce better dairy
products. The first test of butterfat content in milk
was developed at the university, which allowed for
consistency in the quality of butter and cheese. By
1899, over ninety percent of Wisconsin farms raised
dairy cows and by 1915, Wisconsin had become the leading
producer of dairy products in the United States, a
position it held until the 1990s. The term America's
Dairyland appeared in newspapers as early as 1913 when
the state's butterfat production became first in the
nation. In 1939 the state legislature enacted a bill to
add the slogan to the state's automobile license plates.
It continues to be the nation's largest producer of
cheese, no longer focusing on the raw material (milk)
but rather the value-added products. Because of this,
Wisconsin continues to promote itself as "America's
Dairyland", Wisconsinites are referred to as cheeseheads
in some parts of the country, including Wisconsin, and
foam cheesehead hats are associated with Wisconsin and
its NFL team, the Green Bay Packers.
Brewing The first brewery in Wisconsin was
opened in 1835 in Mineral Point by brewer John Phillips.
A year later, he opened a second brewery in Elk Grove.
In 1840, the first brewery in Milwaukee was opened by
Richard G. Owens, William Pawlett, and John Davis, all
Welsh immigrants. By 1860, nearly 200 breweries operated
in Wisconsin, more than 40 of them in Milwaukee. The
huge growth in the brewing industry can be accredited,
in part, to the influx of German immigrants to Wisconsin
in the 1840s and 1850s. Milwaukee breweries also grew in
volume due to the destruction of Chicago's breweries
during the great Chicago fire. In the second half of the
19th century, four of the largest breweries in the
United States opened in Milwaukee: Miller Brewing
Company, Pabst Brewing Company, Valentin Blatz Brewing
Company, and Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company. In the 20th
century Pabst absorbed Blatz and Schlitz, and moved its
brewery and corporate headquarters to California. Miller
continues to operate in Milwaukee. The Jacob Leinenkugel
Brewing Company opened in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin in
1867 and continues to operate there to this day.
Logging Agriculture was not viable in the densely
forested northern and central parts of Wisconsin.
Settlers came to this region for logging. The timber
industry first set up along the Wisconsin River. Rivers
were used to transport lumber from where the wood was
being cut, to the sawmills. Sawmills in cities like
Wausau and Stevens Point sawed the lumber into boards
that were used for construction. The Wolf River also saw
considerable logging by industrious Menominee. The Black
and Chippewa Rivers formed a third major logging region.
That area was dominated by one company owned by
Frederick Weyerhaeuser. The construction of railroads
allowed loggers to log year round, after rivers froze,
and go deeper into the forests to cut down previously
unshippable wood supplies. Wood products from
Wisconsin's forests such as doors, furniture, beams,
shipping boxes, and ships were made in industrial cities
with connects to the Wisconsin lumber industry such as
Chicago, Milwaukee, Sheboygan, and Manitowoc. Milwaukee
and Manitowoc were centers for commercial ship building
in Wisconsin. Many cargo ships built in these
communities were used to transport lumber from logging
ports to major industrial cities. Later a growing paper
industry in the Fox River Valley made use of wood pulp
from the state's lumber industry.
Logging was a dangerous trade, with high accident
rates. On October 8, 1871, the Peshtigo Fire burned
1,875 square miles of forest land around the timber
industry town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin, killing between
1,200 and 2,500 people. It was the deadliest fire in
United States history.
From
the 1870s to the 1890s, much of the logging in Wisconsin
was done by immigrants from Scandinavia. By the beginning of the twentieth
century, logging in Wisconsin had gone into decline.
Many forests had been cleared and never replanted and
large corporations in the Pacific Northwest took
business away from the Wisconsin industry. The logging
companies sold their land to immigrants and out of work
lumberjacks who hoped to turn the acres of pine stumps
into farms, but few met with
success.
Trempealeau Mountain (from the French for
"mountain with its foot in the water"), a bluff
located in a bend of the Trempealeau River, which
flows through the county
William Vilas (1840-1908), officer in the
Civil War, United States Postmaster General
(1885-88) United States Secretary of the Interior
(1888-89) and Senator from Wisconsin (1891-97)