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Early Days In The Chippewa Valley
Bundy, Charles Smith, 1831-1928. Menomonie, Wis.,
Flint-Douglas ptg. co., 1916.
Chapter One
How I Came to Settle in Dunn County, Wisconsin
In the month of September, in the year 1856,
while on a visit to my two paternal aunts who had migrated from the family
nest in Oxford, Chenango county, New York, to Toronto, in Clinton county,
Iowa, where I found them, I first met Fred Church. He had then just married
my cousin, Maria Louisa Noble, daughter of one of the aunts whom I was
visiting. I had just been admitted to the bar in New York and was looking
for an eligible site for a law office in the West, where I could "grow up
with the country," as the saying was. Mr. Church had no profession, but
he was an ambitious young man of fine natural abilities and he was also
looking about for a business location. We soon found each other peculiarly
congenial, and after a short acquaintance, agreed upon a trip by boat up
the Mississippi river, with no very definite destination that I now
remember.
Our first stopping place proved to be Clinton,
Iowa, where, much to our surprise, we found on a little frame building a
few feet back from the river bank, (there were no piers then), a sign
reading "Chapman & Thorp, Bankers and Brokers." We had both of us known
Chapman & Thorp as the leading merchants in Oxford, and had a boy's
acquaintance with both. So we ventured in and found Mr. Joseph G. Thorp.
Introducing ourselves as Oxford boys, we had no difficulty in awakening
Mr. Thorp's kindly interest. He asked us where we were going, and since
neither of us knew much about that, he said, "Well boys, let me give you
some good advice. Mr. Chapman and I have been buying some mill property
on the Chippewa river in Wisconsin and a new town has just been laid out.
There is an opening for you; go up and see for yourselves." Here was an
"opening" seemingly large enough for us both, (a consideration seldom
lost sight of by young men planning a career), and we jumped at it.
Resuming our journey on the river we reached
Reed's Landing soon after sundown on the 17th of September. We were to
ferry across the river to the Wisconsin side and there take the stage
from Pepin to Eau Claire. There had been a severe storm that day, and the
steamboat Alhambra lay just in sight on the shore of Lake Pepin a wreck;
and the river at Reed's Landing was so rough that we found it difficult
to induce the ferryman to undertake to cross us that night, and this was
necessary to enable us to catch the next morning's stage up the Chippewa.
However, by adding a dollar to the usual fare we prevailed on him to make
the venture. We crossed in safety but reached shore nearly a mile below
the usual landing; that, however, was a small matter to us who were hot
on the trail for that "opening" in Eau Claire.
We found hospitable lodging somewhere on the
beach and were on time at the stage office in Pepin the next morning.
That evening we alighted at Eau Claire, having made forty miles. We passed
less than twenty houses on the road. Durand had not then been dreamed of,
and H. Clay Williams (afterwards a distinguished lawyer in Eau Claire),
was keeping a little store at Bear Creek (I think near the site of the
Durand of this day), and that was the only settlement so far as I can
remember on that side of the river. On the way we stopped at and passed
through Waubeek, consisting of a single dwelling house from which on a
clear day two farm houses could be seen up the road towards Dunnville.
An old gentleman, whose name is not now remembered, but who was afterwards
known to me as a justice of the peace, lived in one of them, and Mr.
Gardiner lived in the other. The latter was a farmer who was said to have
raised enough sod potatoes the first year of his settlement o pay for his
quarter section of land. He sold his potatoes to Carson & Eaton of Eau
Galle for $1 a bushel.
At Eau Claire we put up at the only hotel in
the place, a two-story frame building, not yet plastered or ceiled, but as
mine host tried to make up in cordiality what he lacked in shelter for his
guests, our first night in Eau Claire did not bring on chills. The
following morning we sallied out early and eager to see the town. The
first man we met was a Mr. Seely on his way to the real estate office of
Mr. Wm. H. Gleason; from him we received a picturesque description of the
town as it was, and was to be, from the purchase of a section of school
land by Gleason and "Dick" Wilson, to its then state of completeness, and
the great things in store for it to be realized in the near future,
including a trunk railroad from Madison to St. Paul and the improvement
of the water power at the Dells.
Eau Claire at that moment could hardly be
called a metropolis. It consisted of the hotel and real estate office
already mentioned, Gage & Reed's saw mill, and the ferry boat, all
enveloped in a halo of great expectations. I believe that Mr. Adin
Randall had started some building operations a little below and on the
west side of the Chippewa, but he was thought to be too far from the
center of the city to sell any lots. It was only a matter of a few days
before we were introduced to Mr. Wm. H. Gleason, Mr. Richard Wilson, Mr.
Charlie Davis, and Captain Victor Whipple, all important men and pioneers
whom we were to meet many times thereafter.
Probably no more fitting opportunity will
offer than this to pay a passing tribute to one of the most remarkable men
I have ever known. Wm. H. Gleason came to Eau Claire in 1855 or 1856, after
being two years sergeant-at-arms on the house side of the Wisconsin
legislature. There he conceived the project of laying out a town at the
confluence of the Chippewa and Eau Claire rivers, and to that end obtained
title to section of school land, (Mr. Wilson was interested with him). The
peculiar trait which differentiated Gleason from most men of remarkable
mental activity was that he no sooner saw a conception of his own under
way than he seemed to lose interest in it and flit to a new one. In his
imagination he saw Eau Claire then as we see it today, but he had no time
to wait for others to see it, so instead of sitting down to watch the new
city grow he turned his attention to banking.
Between the years 1857 and 1867 he organized
bank after bank in different states, of course not wholly for benevolent
reasons, but in great part to satisfy an irresistible craving for new
sensations. When the Civil war broke out, he with one Hunt became a
purveyor or wholesale dealer in sutler's supplies for the army. After the
war he moved south to the east coast of Florida and founded a city that he
called Eau Galle; he got an appropriation through the Florida legislature
sufficient to build an agricultural college, was elected lieutenant
governor of the state and offered more bills in the legislature for
internal improvements than any other man living or dead had ever done
before. He spent a month with me in Washington in the year 1867, and
during that time he drafted a dozen or more bills to be presented to the
Florida legislature for enactment into laws, all of them deepening some
river, draining some swamp, or digging some canal.
After a long acquaintance with Governor
Gleason, I can say that his many schemes were always laudable and the
methods he employed were not materially different from those followed by
all exploiters. But he was multifarious to the last degree; his head
seemed to be an inexhaustible storage battery of new ideas which he never
tired of imparting to others. The last word I heard of him, however, was
that he was suffering from paralysis of the vocal organs and nearing the
end of a strenuous and restless life.
Among the young men of that early day whose
acquaintance has furnished me pleasant recollections never to be forgotten,
was Gilbert E. Porter of Eau Claire. I made his acquaintance in the fall
of 1856 and during the winter following was frequently in his company.
He came to Eau Claire as the agent for Chapman & Thorp and remained with
them in full charge of their business until he was succeeded by Mr.
Calahan. Mr. Porter liked a good cigar and no one of my acquaintance made
out of a sociable smoke than he. I shall never forget the pleasure he
manifested in reciting the lines written by a Buffalo (N. Y.) editor on
receipt of a box of cigars. They run as follows:
I thank you for the present; it seems you
know my falling,
A popular disorder with which myriads are
ailing.
I own the weakness frankly, if weakness it
may be,
Though thousands of my fellow men are just
as weak as me.
In the stillness of my chamber when the moon
is at her height
And the earth is wrapped in darkness 'neath
the shadows of the night,
When no sound the soft air pierces save the
whistle of the cars,
I'll think of thee and bless thee as I smoke
these same cigars.
May your days be long and peaceful and their
evenings fair as June,
May their end be sweet and pleasant as the
ending of a tune,
May our friendship, pray indulge me in a
trifle of a joke,
Unlike your gift, be permanent and never end
in smoke.
Returning to the "opening" at Eau Claire.
The first event of consequence to us both (Church and myself) was the
fall election in which a senator from that district was to be chosen for
the state legislature. It appears at this distance of time not a little
curious that a month's residence in a state should be thought to be a
qualification for any participation in a political campaign, but we were
all alike ("tenderfeet"), and what was a few days' residence more or less
mong friends?
My recollection now is that there never had
been but one senator elected from that district and that was Benjamin
Allen, a Democrat residing at Pepin, or Hudson, I do not remember which.
The district was thought to be Democratic and a nomination equivalent to
an election. Mr. McNalley, a lawyer at Chippewa Falls, and a Democrat,
was thought to have a sure thing for the nomination, and consequently an
easy walk over to the office, but there proved to be a cloud on his horizon
that he had failed to notice.
The senatorial district consisted of Pierce,
St. Croix, Polk, Dunn, Clark, Eau Claire, and Chippewa counties; and all
the territory to the northwest to Lake Superior, which latter was, I think,
included in Douglas county, with county seat at Superior city. ("The Zenith
City of the unsalted sea" was then unborn). The project of a railroad
across the Chippewa Valley towards the northwest had just begun to interest
the settlers along the route, and live men everywhere were beginning to
take notice. It was, of course understood that McNalley would naturally
favor the Chippewa Falls route, and the Eau Claire men were unanimously for
the Eau Claire route.
One day Mr. Gleason came to me with a paper
in his hand and asked if I would accept a proxy for a Mr. O'Neil of
Neillsville, Clark county, and attend the nominating convention a few days
later at Hudson. Not seeing any objection to that, I readily consented.
Two days afterwards, a party of five besides the driver, in a two-horse
lumber wagon started on the road to knapp, Stout & Company's mill on the
Red Cedar river, where we were to stop over night and hold a conference
with the managers of that concern upon the "political crisis," and the
next day go on to the convention.
Our party consisted of Capt. Victor Whipple,
Wm. H. Gleason, Richard Wilson, Charlie Davis and C. S. Bundy, besides the
diver. Reaching what is now Menomonie in due time we introduced each other
to Capt. Wm. Wilson, the manager, Andrew Tainter, a member of the firm,
and S. B. French, the book-keeper, and others whom we met in the store of
the company. It didn't take many minutes to explain the nature of the
crisis and the importance of pompt action on our part to avert the danger
threatening at Chippewa Falls.
Less than an hour's consideration served to
settle all the difficulties in sight. This was the program,--a people's
mass meeting was to be held at the dining hall that evening at eight
o'clock to agree upon a candidate whom we delegates were to bring out and
support, we to furnish the speakers and Knapp, Stout and Company to furnish
the audience for the meeting. This mass meeting came off pursuant to a
notice dictated by Mr. Gleason, reduced to writing by Mr. French, and
posted on the store door. (This notice was prepared for use in the canvass
to follow). Suitable resolutions were also adopted and the delegates duly
instructed to use all lawful and proper means to nominate and elect Hon.
Wm. Wilson of Dunn County to the office of state senator for the Twenty-
eighth district of Wisconsin.
This preliminary settled to our liking, the
delegates started out bright and early the next morning for the trip
through the "big woods." There was a bridle path through the woods over
which the mail was carried on horseback, and that path served for a snow
path for sleighs in winter, but no wheeled vehicle had ever gone through
that thirty miles known as the "big woods" on its own wheels. Equipped as
we were, however, with an ax and saw, we encountered only small difficulties
which were easily removed and so we made the trip without notable incident.
About noon we arrived at Holmann's the only house in the whole distance,
and there dined on bear steak, of which we were duly apprised as we drove
up to the door by the fresh pelts nailed to the trunks of forest trees
surrounding the house.
Chapter Two
Menomonie in 1856
I turn now for a moment to speak of Menomonie
as I saw it on this trip for the first time, in the month of October, 1856.
On approaching Menomonie from the East, the first objects to attract notice
were the mill pond, the log boom, and the ferry which furnished the only
means of crossing to the mill and other buildings around it. It was a rope
ferry and I think it was propelled by the current of the river and a carrier
pulley. The bridge, which I think stands very near the site of the ferry
crossing, was not built for more than a year afterwards.
The company's
store, a large two-story building of modern appearance, stood facing the
ferry landing, and perhaps fifty yards distant. The mill, a little longer
distance down the stream, was what is known as a "gang mill," that is, it
had several saw blades fixed in a frame the thickness of a board apart, so
that the carriage which moved the logs forward against the saws made but a
single trip to saw the whole log into boards. Whether the mill had more than
one gang of saws I cannot now remember; I know, however, that it had one or
more circular saws for I saw one in motion just in time to avoid sitting on
it on a certain occasion. The mill was a long building, having every
appearance in itself and its surroundings of being what it was reputed to
be, the center of a very large and profitable industry. The kitchen was a
little above the mill and the sleeping shanty below.
Going back to the store and turning to the
west, the traveler would see Bullard's Tavern, a story and a half frame
building, standing a little way off at the top of hill near the entrance
to the "big woods" going west. The tavern was the property of the company
but was always spoken of a "Bullard's."
Lorenzo Bullard was an ideal boniface,
admirably adapted to his time and place, and his wife was his match in
equipment for every duty of the landlady. Both were always ready to welcome
the coming and speed the parting guest. They sold no liquor; and no coffee
or mince pie that Mrs. Bullard ever made was known to leave a bad taste in
the mouth. I took my meals with them for more than a year, and my
recollections are strong and clear on that subject. Mr. Bullard held the
office of justice of the peace one year or more, while I held the office
of district attorney. He was a faithful and useful magistrate.
Now, leaving my old friend Bullard, let us go
back to the store. Directly back of the building stood Mr. Andrew Tainter's
house, where his six children by his first wife were born. It was a
two-story unpainted frame, probably the first he ever occupied, and in
every way suited to his circumstances during the first years' residence
in that Indian county. I have a pleasant recollection of him which seems
worth telling along with these desultory reminiscences. He asked me one day
to ride up to Rice Lake with him; we returned about seven o'clock p.m.,
cold and hungry, and found that his wife had cooked a mess of brook trout
for his supper. They came on the table steaming hot in an ordinary baking
tin, "full pressed down, shaken together and running over." Nothing but
speckled trout and griddle cakes. But what a supper it was! It would take
the vocabulary of a Roosevelt to describe it.
Still standing at the store, and turning to
the southeast, just across the street was a small cluster of story and half
houses presenting the appearance of having been built at different times,
but all united into one house and enclosed by a fence. This was the
residence of the manager, Captain Wilson. There was nothing in the external
appearance of this house to distinguish it from the poorest house I have
mentioned unless the fence around it should be thought to be so. I have
unintentionally omitted Mr. French's house, which I think stood just north
of the store, but my recollection is too dim to recall in any manner how it
looked. These are all the buildings that I now remember. I have a very
faint recollection of the old mill on Wilson creek, but I feel sure it was
not remodeled and turned into a shingle and planing mill until the big mill
was rebuilt after the fire, probably in the year 1858.
Now resuming our journey. Once through the big
woods the balance of our way to the convention was easy, and there good
fortune awaited us. Our ticket was nominated: Wm. Wilson of Dunn county for
senate, and Dr. O. T. Maxon of Pierce for the house. But it soon dawned
upon us that a nomination is unimportant unless ratified at the polls; and
right there was our difficulty. The district was thought to be Democratic
and our candidate, so far as he had any politics was known to be an
abolitionist. Now how could we land our fish with that bait? A conference
was held at which it was decided that Gleason should make the trip to
Superior, Whipple, Wilson and Davis should canvass the Chippewa valley,
and I was to remain in the St. Croix country and do what I could in Pierce,
St. Croix and Polk county. The election was only three weeks off. The men
I remember to have seen on my canvass were Oliver Gibbs and Dr. Maxon in
Prescott, H. L. Humphrey (afterwards Judge Humphrey) and a Mr. Hughes in
Hudson, Mr. Cox and Mr. Lute Taylor in River Falls, and one man only,
(I think his name was Samuels), at St. Croix Falls, Polk county. We all
did nobly; but the details unfortunately are now lost. It would be
especially interesting to know the particulars of Gleason's canvass, but
that is now impossible. All that is known about it is that he made the trip
(some 200 miles) on foot with an Indian guide; he was detained in the lake
country several weeks after election by inclement weather, and when he
reached Madison with the returns they showed "800 majority for Wilson."
That settled it; our ticket was triumphantly elected.
Chapter Three
The "Opening" Changed From Eau Claire To Dunnville
The election over, I returned to Menomonie
Mills with the company's horse that I had been riding, and there met
Captain Wilson, as he was called. He was naturally gratified at his success
and looked upon me as one of the instruments employed to attain it. He
invited me to his table and in other ways manifested his interest.
Conversation soon turned to the question of what were my plans for
settlement in the new country; and learning from me that they were not
yet fixed, he remarked that Dunnville, the county seat of Dunn county,
only thirteen miles down the river, was just the place for a young lawyer,
and went on to recount the inducements already apparent as well as others
in the near prospect substantially as follows: A court house was nearing
completion and would be ready for occupancy in a few days. That Dunnville
was a fine site for a mill, the river only needing a dam at that point to
make it available as a great water power. Steamboats could run up the river
out of the Chippewa to Dunnville Landing. That Knapp, Stout and Company
contemplated building a large mill on the site to the full capacity of the
water power. In short that, although very little had been done in the way
of improvements so far, its natural advantages were such that almost
anything was possible there. These were forecasts merely. The only thing
he pledged the company to do was to build me a law office and give me all
the time I required to pay for it, and this the company did. I accepted the
proposition with thanks and thence-forth forth for over four years became a
resident of Dunn county. That winter, while Captain Wilson was in attendance
upon his legislative duties in Madison, the company suffered a heavy loss by
fire in the burning of the mill at Menomonie.
After the many changes time has wrought in the
sixty years since that disaster, it is difficult to estimate the loss it
entailed not only upon the owners, but also upon the inhabitants for sixty
miles up and down the river from the mill. Its immediate effect upon the
prospects of Dunnville was dispiriting. The following spring I was joined
by my brother, the late Judge E. B. Bundy of Menomonie, and without further
ado we bought a tin sign and nailed it to the new office on the left and
hand side of the door, reading "C. S. and E. b. Bundy, Attorneys at Law."
The remaining two years of my life in
Dunnville were not crowded with either law business or other secular
vocations. We had one suit entitled "McCain vs. McCain," which we won,
but not satisfied with that my brother caned the lawyer on the other side
and that act so ingratiated him with the gentle sex that he was able to
marry one of the fairest maids in the whole neighborhood. She has survived
her husband, to be a faithful and devoted mother of her six sons and three
daughters, all living and all as fond and proud of her as she is of them.
Our firm drew the contract, including the plans and specifications,
between Mr. Downs and Knapp, Stout & Co., for rebuilding the mills, and
that reminds me of Mr. B. B. Downs, a mechanic and millwright of rare skill
in this calling and a very useful--almost indispensable--man in that new
country. He built and at one time (I think) owned and operated the mill a
Downsville and that place was named for him.
Among the notable men in and about Dunnville
at that time were Amos Colburn, first sheriff of Dunn county, and owner
and landlord of the first hotel built there. David Heller and his sons,
Dr. Walter Crocker, his brother-in-law. Charles, Thomas and Robert McCauley,
brothers, who in after years became respectively sheriff and county judge
of Dunn county and members of the legislature, Squire J. D. Fiske, Squire
William Tice, who was drowned in the Chippewa river, Frank Breck and
Frederick Church (already mentioned), who afterwards removed to Menomonie
and was elected to the assembly form that place, and died in Madison
during his term of office; Samuel B. Washburn, one of the famous Washburn
brothers, John McCauley and his son, Hugh, Dr. J. R. Greene, the county
clerk, Edward Lane, the blacksmith, George Porter, the fiddler, R. R. Root,
wagon maker, William Cady, county judge, J. B. McKahan, clerk, John
Cavanaugh, storekeeper and postmaster, Milton Culbertson, blacksmith, J. J.
Cavanaugh, pilot, and Russell Culbertson, carpenter and builder.
Chapter Four
How Dunnville Came To Lose The County Seat
Two lawyers of prominence in this part of the
state were residents of Pepin and they complained of the distance they had
to travel to the county seat and that led to a movement to change it from
Dunnville to Pepin; and finding that impracticable, they applied to the
legislature to set off a new county from the southern part of Dunn with a
county seat at Pepin. In spite of a strong opposition in Dunn county, the
bill passed and Pepin county was created. The effect of this division of
Dunn county was to leave Dunnville (which before was central) near the
southern boundary line. Immediately there was a strong and active party
advocating the removal of the county seat from Dunnville to Menomonie,
which was more central. Although that project met considerable opposition
and seemed at one time likely to be defeated, a new and unexpected event
occurred which completely changed the situation, to-wit: the court house
caught fire and was burned to the ground. Whether that fire was accidental
or criminal in its origin has never been satisfactory ascertained. Only
one thing now is known about it. It served to cancel the last claim of
Dunnville for the retention of the county seat.
The first plan after Pepin was organized as
a county, I believe, was to move the county seat to Eau Galle. Then a
compromise was effected, and a law passed making the contest between
Dunnville and Menomonie. At any rate the county seat was changed to
Menomonie, and C. S. and E. B. Bundy moved their law office to the new
site. Meanwhile and in anticipation of the change, Knapp, Stout & Company
had laid out the city of Menomonie and put the lots on the market. One of
the first thoughts of the proprietors of the new town was the importance
of a newspaper devoted to its interests. Captain Wilson, who was the
"whole thing" in those days, knew two men, brothers I think, living at or
near Reed's Landing, both of whom were practical printers. They could do
typographical and mechanical work but neither one would undertake to write
the editorials, so the establishment of a newspaper depended upon finding
an editor. At this juncture the Captain turned to me saying, "Bundy, can't
you edit a newspaper?" I replied that I knew no reason why I could not,
and that was the naked truth, for I had never written a word for publication in my life, and had never been inside of a printing office that I remember. I had seen pictures of the Franklin printing press in the school books, and I wrote a fair hand; these acquirements constituted my equipment for editor of "The Dunn County Lumberman," as the newspaper was to be christened. Only a few days sufficed to procure a press and complete printing office outfit,
including a sufficient stock of paper. How this material found its way from
Reed's Landing I do not remember, but have an impression that it went by
steamboat to Dunnville, (Captain Tainter had about that time bought a
steamboat), and from thence by wagon to Menomonie. My recollection is that
I was told the whole newspaper outfit cost something near $1,000.
A printing office was fitted up in the second
story of an old frame building, standing near the river just south of
Captain Wilson's residence, with access to it by an outside stairway at
the south end of the building. The first issue of that paper was an event,
if not a miracle of style and matter. Fortunately it has not been preserved
so far as I know. I was present at the birth; did whatever I could to
assist the printers at the press work and took part also in the folding,
wrapping and addressing of the papers. After the first issue the paper
came out weekly during the first year, until I left Menomonie for the war,
when I turned it over to my brother, E. B., but I wrote several letters
for it from camp near Washington. That was the beginning of The Dunn County
News, the oldest weekly paper in the Chippewa valley.
Chapter Five
Company K, 5th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry
It will be remembered that President Lincoln
issued his first call for 75,000 volunteers on the 15th day of April, 1861,
three days after the firing on Fort Sumter. From the day that call reached
Menomonie until a company of 100 men were enrolled ready to be mustered
into the service there was no rest or peace in that part of Dunn county.
About two months thereafter (date not now remembered)they were mustered
into the United States service at Madison, Wis., where they had been
encamped waiting their turn, as Company K, 5th Wisconsin Infantry
Volunteers, with William Evans, captain; Charles Baird, first lieutenant;
Theodore S. West, second lieutenant; and Charles S. Bundy, first sergeant
or orderly sergeant, as it was commonly known. So that Company K was among
the first offerings of the loyal state of Wisconsin for the defense of the
flag. The 5th Regiment formed a part of the Army of the Potomac and served
as such during the war.
Since Chippewa Falls was in those early days
considered to be within the circle of our interest and activities, a few
words relating to the infancy of that now important town cannot be out of
place. All the mill towns in the Northwest were essentially alike in their
beginnings. Each was dominated at first by some one man of exceptional
energy and force of character. In Chippewa Falls it was H. S. Allen (and
Thaddeus C. Pound was his clerk and bookkeeper.) His sphere of influence,
like all other proprietors of lumber mills, extended from the logging
camps in the pineries to the market towns on the lower Mississippi. They
were necessarily autocrafts because they owned and operated all the means
of transportation and all the supplies for the subsistence of man and
beast. If they were potentially despotic, theirs was a benevolent
despotism, and was always relieved and amelioraed by a tendency towards
lavish hospitality.
The following are the mills of that day in
the Chippewa valley as far as my memory serves me, i. e., Chippewa Falls
Mill, owned by H. S. Allen; Eau Claire mill, owned by Gage & Reed and
afterwards by Chippewa & Thorp; Menomonie Mills, owned by Knapp, Stout
& Co; Eau Galle mill, owned by Carson & Eaton, and Gilbert's mill, owned
by Oliver Gilbert. (This last was sometimes called Gilbert's old mill,
and was located a mile or so below Knapp, Stout & Company's mill).
Chapter six
Fifty Three Years After
In the summer of 1909 I revisited the places
I have so imperfectly sketched and marked the changes which fifty years
had wrought. I found that constant and never-falling water power, the Red
Cedar river, had worked out a wondrous change under the guidance of
far-sighted men. After transforming the wilderness about it into populous
cities, thriving 'villages and productive farms, it had furnished the
markets of the Mississippi valley sufficient lumber to build whole cities,
and then when the pineries were sawed out, it turned under similar guidance,
with unspent energy to the generation of electricity to supply light, heat,
and power to surrounding towns. I said to myself this is indeed a working
model of the conservation of natural resources not surpassed anywhere
within the circle of my observation. Turning then to the valley of the
Chippewa proper, I found in place of the old Indian trail two trunk lines
crossing it and traversing the prairies on either side and abundant
evidences of profitable farming where fifty years before I could see but
little promise of fertility or thrift. Eau Claire had made good the
sanguine prophesy of its adventurous projector, and Chippewa Falls was
only second to Eau Claire in its evidence of wealth and prosperity.
Chapter Seven
Society News
I am indebted to a lady friend whose
recollection of names and social events is better than mine, who has
written the following chapter on the "Society News" of that early day:
"The first event I recall was a large dancing
party given as an opening of the hall, afterwards known as Knapp, Stout &
Company's store, on the other side of the river from Dunnville on the 4th
of July, 1857. There was a large company from all over the county. The
next was the wedding of Miss Henrietta Cavanaugh to Mr. William P. Lewton
of Winona, Minn. It was the first wedding celebrated in a social way. They
were married in the parlor of the bride's father by the Reverend James
Gurley of Pepin with Episcopal church services. There was a large company
present. From Menomonie Thomas B. Wilson and bride, who had been married
a short time before, Miss E. T. Wilson, her brother Martin Wilson, the
Misses McKahan, Messrs. Louis Newsom, and Willis Downs. From Eau Galle,
Mr. and Mrs. William Carson, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Smith, Charles Smith and
his sister Mrs. Wright, Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Downs and Miss Mary Downs. The
bride was dressed in white Swiss, the groom in conventional black. Hugh
Macauley was groomsman and his cousin, Miss Reubena Macauley, was
bridesmaid. After congratulations all adjourned to the hotel where
Charles Curtis and wife served a fine supper, thence all went into the
hall upstairs and danced till morning.
The next social event which I recollect was
the Calico ball January 8, 1858, given in commemoration of the Battle of
New Orleans, fought and won by General Jackson January 8, 1815. As he
fought behind bales of cotton the ladies who had helped to plan the ball
decided and agreed to all wear calico gowns, which was announced on the
invitations sent out. There was a very large company in attendance, and
with the exception of the ladies from Eau Claire, all were, as had been
agreed, dressed in cotton. For a time it threw a damper on the spirits
of those dressed in accordance with the agreement to find others dressed
in silk and looking so fine. But when the latter came forward and made
their apologies, declaring they had no understood the arrangement and
were truly sorry for the mistake, good feeling was restored and all had
a fine time.
The society people of Menomonie, Eau Galle,
Durand and Dunnville were all out. From Eau Claire, I remember Pitt
Bartlett, A. Meggett, G. E. Porter of the press, Miss Tewksbury and the
Thorps; others have forgotten. After the dance and supper there were
toasts. Pitt Bartlett made a lengthy speech, C. S. Bundy and many others
also spoke. (Judge E. B. Bundy, I think, was not there.)
The next social event of importance was the
wedding of Mrs. Wright of Eau Galle to H. Clay Williams of Durand, which
brought together a very large gathering of about the same people who were
out on the former occasions. This wedding occurred in the spring of the
same year (1858). They were married at the house of Mrs. William Carson,
the bride's sister. A fine supper and dancing were the pastimes of the
evening. I think it was the same winter we had a singing school and
debating club. I remember the debate that was held in Mrs. Colburn's
dining room in the old house. The question that was up that evening was
"Resolved, that the Indians of the United States have suffered more from
the hands of the Whites than the Negroes." I think that either C. S. or
E. B. Bundy on the negative and Robert Macauley on the affirmative.
During the evening a band of Sioux who were on the warpath and who came
up here to scalp the Chippewas were in and listened to the debate. I
remember how frightened my mother and we girls were.
In the summer of 1860 Mary Downs was married
to Thompson Heller of Menomonie. Mr. Downs and family had moved from near
Eau Galle to the place that was afterwards called Downsville, where the
wedding was held in the afternoon. A large number of friends were present.
After a fine dinner the company left for Dunnville, where the bridal party
took the steamboat for a wedding trip. I think it was the winter of 1860
that Oliver Goldsmith's comedy, "She Stoops to Conquer," was played in
the hall of Dunnville Hotel. I remember the names about all who took part.
They are as follows: Robert Macauley was Mr. Hardcastle; Mrs. Root was
Mrs. Hardcastle; Mr. Russell K. Root was Sir Charles Marlow; E. B. Bundy
was young Charles Marlow; John J. Cavanaugh was son of Mr. Hardcastle;
Miller Culbertson was George Hastings; Mrs. Lane was Miss Kate hardcastle
whom young Marlow was to marry; Miss Reubena Macauley was Miss Constance
Neville, an heiress and niece of Mrs. Hardcastle, whom Hastings was to
marry. I remember that "The Dunn County Lumberman" had quite a humorous
write-up about the play.
Of all those who took part in that play only
Miss Reubena Macauley and Mrs. Lane are left, the former the widow of
Judge E. B. Bundy living at Menomonie, their old home, and the latter
still well and active overseeing her large fruit orchard in Clifton,
Colorado, where she resided. She is the second time a widow, by name
Mrs. Martha Hall, and is now 80 years old. The following were familiar
names and faces to me in my girlhood days: Miss Nellie Kiskaden, who
taught the Dunnville school, and was assistant editor of the little
paper gotten out by the Literary and Debating society. She was married
in the spring of 1860 to Mr. Charles Kyle. She was a music teacher in
Eau Galle before going to Dunnville and was a bright and talented young
lady. She and her husband are still living in Menomonie, having retired
from their farm several years ago.
The Misses Martha and Eliza Kyle were very
popular young ladies in the county. The former married Thomas Blair, the
second sheriff of Dunn county. (Mr. Colburn was the first). Eliza married
Captain William Cassidy, who is still living in Wabasha, Minn. Martha and
her husband died many years ago. Miss Emma Evans, (sister of Mrs. Root),
a dressmaker, was another nice young lady of Dunnville. Mary Macauley and
her cousin, Annette Cavanaugh, young girls at that time, are still living,
the former in Portland, Oregon, the widow of Rev. Theodore Lewton, the
latter with her husband, George Allen, are living and in good health in
Palo Alto, California.
The spring of 1861 was one long to be
remembered, so many of the best men of Dunn county enlisting for the war,
many never to return. The only thing of a social nature for a time was
having small entertainments for the purpose of raising money to help
soldiers in the field or their families at home.
The first 4th of July celebration held in
Dunn county was in 1862, in Dunnville, in a grove near the school house.
William H. Smith of Eau Galle was president of the day, Dr. Crocker the
marshal, and E. B. Bundy delivered the oration. After the exercises a
good dinner, provided by the women of the village and vicinity, was
enjoyed. There was a very large gathering from the towns and countryside
nearby, and the celebration was regarded as a success.
The 4th of July, 1863, was celebrated in the
city of Menomonie. Captain Wilson was president of the day and Hon. H. L.
Humphrey delivered the oration. There was a great crowd and the ladies of
Menomonie had provided for a big dinner, but the people who had not made
any provision for their dinner forced their way to the tables and ate so
ravenously that we who had worked so hard to prepare the delicious food
had but little left for ourselves. Many went home hungry. This was the
first and last celebration of that kind ever held in Menomonie within
my recollection."
Chapter Eight
Bench and Bar
I cannot close this sketch without a paragraph
recalling some of the judges and lawyers of the Chippewa valley in those
early days. The first judge of the judicial district was named Fuller. He
was somewhat advanced in years, but was well preserved both in body and
mind. The lawyers in Pepin, so far as I remember, were Benjamin Allen
(heretofore mentioned), Henry D. Barron, afterwards Judge Barron, Frank
Clark, who soon changed his residence to Chicago, and his profession to
that of a physician, and Solomon S. Burleson, who some time afterward
entered the ministry and lived a long and useful life at Wabasha, in
the state of Minnesota, and as a missionary among the Indians. He was
the referee in the divorce suit of McCain vs. McCain already mentioned.
On the prairie below Dunnville lived the Bartlett brothers, E. M. and
M. D., who later settled in Eau Claire, where both attained distinction
at the bar and are well remembered.
There were several lawyers in Eau Claire
during my time, but only four have left any distinct impression in my
memory. They are Alexander Meggett, George Meeks and William Pitt
Bartlett, the latter still living, a sturdy and vigorous man devoted to
his profession, who has never been pushed aside nor overshadowed by
younger men; and Theodore Spencer, who died young, and I think in the
military service. Mr. McNalley of Chippewa Falls, heretofore mentioned,
has entirely passed from my memory, and I can recall only two more,
viz: Hollen Richardson, who attained military distinction as an officer
in the Civil war, and Andrew Gregg, Jr., who I think held the office of
county judge.
In this sketch I have had occasion to mention
four justices of the peace. The office of justice of the peace is
everywhere held in honor. Sir Edward Coke, who has been called the father
of common law, said of it: "The whole Christian world hath not its like
if only it be duly executed."
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