Town of St. Lawrence
The Town of St. Lawrence comprises
Township 23 north, Range 12 east. It is bounded on the north by
the Town of Helvetia, on the east by Little Wolf, on the south
by Waupaca, and on the west by Scandinavia.
The first settlement was made in 1852,
by Erick Hermansen, G. Hermansen, and M. A. Oleson. In 1854 C.
S. Ogden, S. Waite, H. Collier, and others, moved in.
The first birth was a child of Erick
Hermansen, in 1854.
The first marriage was D. C. Barker and
Emma Boyden, in 1857. The ceremony was performed by S. M.
Collier, Justice of the Peace.
The first school was taught in
Ogdensburg, by Mrs. Sarah Merry, in 1855. The first school house
was built in 1855.
The first churches built were a Baptist
and a Methodist, both in 1866. The first sermon was preached in
1854, by Rev, E. W. Green, at the residence of Judge Ogden.
The first saw mill was built in 1854, by
Judge Ogden. It was burned in 1859.
The first grist mill was built by Judge
Ogden, in 1859. It was burned before it was finished, although
it made some flour.
The first post office was established in
1856, at Ogdensburg, with N. Livermore for postmaster.
The mail was carried at first from
Waupaca, by C. S. Ogden. O. E. Druetzer carried it a few weeks.
The first survey was that of the
Government, in 1851, by J. Evans. In 1854, G. W. Taggart
surveyed the plat of the Village of Ogdensburg. The town was
organized in 1855. The first town meeting was held at the store
of C. S. Ogden.
April, 1855. The following
officers
Chairman, O. E. Druetzer
Clerk, C. S. Ogden
Treasurer, S. M. Waite
Justices of the Peace, H.
Collier, C. S. Ogden. |
The first law suit was held before H.
Collier, in 1855. The parties were C. S. Ogden vs. O. E.
Druetzer.
Judge Ogden started the first store in
1854.
The first apple trees were planted by
Judge Ogden and Charles Hoeffler in 1854. The first fruit was
grown by S. M- Collier in 1860.
The following sketch was kindly
furnished us by an old settler of the town, one of the leading
citizens:
The first election held in town (it then
belonged to Scandinavia) was in Ogden's store at Ogdensburg, in
the fall of 1854. More than forty votes were polled. Charley
Hoeffler was clerk of election.
Most of the voters were Norwegians who
could not talk English. As they gave their names, Charley would
write them as they were pronounced. The clerk being a German,
you can imagine how the names read. No one could tell whether
such persons lived in town or not.
The County seat question was before the
house, acid we voted strong for the 'No.' We favored Weyauwega,
and voted for her candidates. The representatives of Waupaca,
who attended the election, were offended, raised a row, and were
expelled from the room.
The next year the people of Weyauwega
thought they were strong enough without our help, so we voted
for Waupaca. We turned over about every year, and whichever side
we supported usually won. We forced both places to respect us.
The first County convention at which St.
Lawrence was represented was held at the Chandler school house.
Robert Meiklejohn and Charles Hoeffler represented all of the
northern portion of the County. They held leading trumps, and
controlled the nomination. Consequently, O. E. Druetzer was
nominated for Register of Deeds, and R. K. Meiklejohn for
Sheriff, which nominations were not satisfactory to the voters
of the County, and not sustained by them.
Ogdensburg was started with the
expectation of getting the County seat there. So long as the
fight between Waupaca and Weyauwega was kept up, we felt
hopeful. We were compelled to help each place alternately, to
keep them by the ears, each of those towns promising to go for
us if it failed to get the prize for itself. Finally, Weyauwega
failed, and gave up the fight.
During the County seat fight. New London
appeared upon the battle-field. She worked under the leadership
of Reeder Smith, in building a plank road through the center of
the County Smith selected James Meiklejohn and C. S. Ogden for
his "bowsers," and they worked with great zeal. Meiklejohn
invested about $1,000 in that plank road. It proved too heavy a
load, and was abandoned. It helped to settle the central part of
the County more than anything else.
After the County seat question was
settled, and the plank road was given up, and during the first
of the war, the Rebels, through their agents, nearly depopulated
this part of the County. The Indians came in from the Northwest,
about 300,000 of them, well-armed, and equipped with all the
accoutrements of war. They camped on an island in a large cedar
swamp near Ogdensburg, under the command of General Slasher, a
brevet-brigadier under Jefferson Davis. The news spread rapidly.
The citizens turned out en masse. The women and children took
possession of the old red mill. The men, with muskets and
rifles, scouted the neighborhood. While out on a reconnoitering
expedition, General Slasher fell in with three brave scouts, who
with Spartan heroism, surrounded and captured him (the General
being unarmed!) The brave scouts marched the General into town
receiving the congratulations of their families and friends.
They placed the General in a chamber of the Hoeffler House,
barricaded the door, and set a strong guard, with swords,
pistols, and a bottle of whisky. Then they adjourned until the
next morning.
When they met in the morning to dispose
of the prisoner, some were in favor of hanging him, as a spy;
some thought he should be shot, as a soldier; others, that he
should be held as a prisoner of war. Before they had finished
their business, a scout came in and informed them that the guard
had fallen asleep, and that the prisoner had taken the road for
Waupaca at about a 2:40 gait.
After his visit to Waupaca, the General
tired of military service, and settled in Lanark, Portage
County, where he still resides.
After the Escape of General Slasher, the
alarm spread all over the State. Those who were able, left the
County. Waupaca stationed armed men around the village to keep
out the Indians. Ogdensburg sent out a scouting party. It found
one Indian family, consisting of one old man, one woman, and
three children, all badly frightened, who said there were no
more Indians in the neighborhood. This, however, did not deceive
the brave scouts, who were sure that there was a large Indian
army in the vicinity. Reports to that effect reached Waupaca and
Rural, which places in turn sent out scouts. These last reported
that, about a mile and a half from Ogdensburg, they found four
Indian families, who were so badly frightened that they dared
not venture out of their wigwams, for fear of being shot. The
people who had left the country soon returned.
St. Lawrence formerly had the best
conducted courts in the County. That was when S. M. Collier was
Justice, D. A. Jones, Constable, and Joshua Goodale and C. S.
Ogden, attorneys. Any case that they could not handle was not
worth attention. The beauty of the thing was, they did not allow
any outsiders to win a case!"
We would like to give the name of the
writer of the foregoing, but have promised not to do so. We will
say, however, that the Judge is well known, is a prominent man
in our county, and must have been well posted in the matters of
which he writes.
Other towns in the County were "scared,"
as well as Ogdensburg and Waupaca. We were at New London one
night during the panic. The news came there that "rebel
emissaries" had stirred up the different Indian tribes, who had
elevated the hatchet, and were within a few hours march of the
doomed burg, thirsting for the blood of innocent women and
defenseless children. All was bustle and confusion. During the
night, trusty scouts were sent out. One of them returned towards
morning with the startling intelligence that he had discovered
an encampment of painted warriors, consisting of a few old men,
women, children, dogs, and ponies, the two latter being
decidedly in the majority.
But New London was spared. No chickens
were startled on their roosts by the shrill whoops of the savage
foe, and no "red nigger" amused himself by pulling a white man's
scalp on that eventful night. Thus passed the great "Indian
Scare," and the historian has performed his task in duly
recording the important event.
Village Of
Ogdensburg
The Village of Ogdensburg, in Section
22, was platted in 1854, by Judge Ogden. It contains several
stores, a grist mill, a hotel, and the variety of shops usually
found in the smaller villages. The Green Bay, Winona & St. Paul
railroad passes through the place.
Town officers for 1889
Chairman, K. B. Knutsen
Supervisors, John Moore,
Samuel Petersen
Treasurer, W. A. Mallory
Clerk, E. E. Russell
Assessor, William Pray
Justices of the Peace,
Charles Nichols, P. H. Peterson, Edward Lyons
Constables, O. C. Hermansen,
H. J. Pitcher, Charles Eastman |
Waupaca
County | Wisconsin
AHGP
|