|
Follow the River....... Historical Recollections by Lula Mae Stewart Contributed by the Greenwood Public Library, Transcribed by Janet Schwarze
The Clark Store
First Roads
One of the things the community needed most was roads. In l907 one of the first roads was cut and built from the settlement to County Trunk T. The families worked to build the roads and bridges. Without roads and bridges these families suffered many hardships in trying to travel from their homes to town. Think of how easy we have it now compared to what it was like back then. In 1905 a resident of the community passed away on the west side of the river, the ice broke up early that year so there was not only no road but no ice to take the coffin across the river. A Mr. Venet put the coffin in a boat and poled his way across the swollen river where it was laid to rest. How brave this man must have been as Black River can be very treacherous in the spring. My father told me this story many times.
With railroads now providing transportation for wood and timber the little settlement began to consider building a mill. Charles Very and Ed Smith two of the boosters of the community started to build a mill. I believe this was in 1912. Also that same year the men petitioned the Soo Line to put in a spur track to the mill. The Soo Line approved their petition and the men cut down a hill and filled a ditch for the right of way. The work was done free of charge by the men in the community. After the right of way was cleared the Soo Line laid the necessary track.
Ed Smith moved and built bunk houses and a cook shack for the mill crew. He also built barns for the horses needed in the mill and woods. The new mill opened up new jobs and brought in more settlers. The little community grew to about seventeen families. Most of the men worked in the mills in summer and in winter they worked in the woods to supplement their income. The growing community already had a store and a tavern which Ed Smith had built for James Shannon in 1911.
Pictures of Clark many years ago (Click on the pictures to enlarge them)
|
|
**This Clark Co., WI Internet Library, ALHN & AHGP website is dedicated to the free sharing of information by researchers, local historians, genealogists and educators. Because of our non-profit status, submissions are not to be used for profiteering of any kind. Our representatives cannot accept gratuities beyond the basic expenses (i.e. postage, copying, courthouse or rental fees) for obtaining requested information. We reserve the right to ban the involvement of anyone who intentionally disregards these policies. Promotion of research services or publications is not permitted on these pages, or by our representatives without the prior endorsement of the site overseers. If you need professional help, we recommend contacting an accredited genealogist. Please show your appreciation for this database by Becoming a Clark County History Buff or making a contribution to our Support Fund and Perpetual Preservation Account to help keep this Clark Co., WI database freely available on the World Wide Web and free from commercial enterprise.
*** This copyrighted Clark Co., Wis. genealogy and history material is used on this nonprofit site with permission of the submitter. Contact us if you are personally aware of anyone using this submitted data inappropriately. It may not be copied and posted on any commercial genealogy sites such as Family Tree Maker or the merged companies Ancestry.Com/RootsWeb/MyFamily or sold for personal profit.
This page is a part of the Clark County, WI Internet Library Project Every submission is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998. ~~The Clark Co., Wisconsin History Buffs maintain these pages in support of Free On-line History & Genealogy~~
|