Historic Times - Mequon-Thiensville Historical Society
Transcription
Historic Times - Mequon-Thiensville Historical Society
Mequon-Thiensville Historical Society Historic Times Vol. 13 No. 2 Fall, 2012 Published by Mequon Thiensville Historical Society 6100 W. Mequon Road, Mequon, WI 53092 262-242-3107 | [email protected] Open Thursday afternoons from 2-5 p.m. and by appointment For research, email archivist Bev Silldorff: [email protected] President’s Message “In the Good Old Summertime” As we enjoy our late summer in Thiensville and Mequon, it’s a great time to recall when our area boasted having “The most popular summer resort in the state of Wisconsin.” The construction of the original Thiensville Dam in the early 1840’s created what has been called “Thiensville Lake” where people enjoyed swimming, fishing, and boating. The arrival of Wisconsin Central rail service in 1871 and the Interurban Electric Railway in 1907 made it easier for travelers from Milwaukee and even Chicago to come to Thiensville and the Town of Mequon’s “Natural Playground”. The most prominent of the local hotels was the Memmler Hotel which was located on Green Bay Road between the present day Skippy’s and Glaze. The Memmler hotel, which opened in 1886, offered 30 guest rooms, a saloon, a dining room, beautiful gardens behind the hotel on Pigeon Creek, and a stable. The proprietor, Fred Memmler, was a very engaging man who offered great meals and often entertained his guests. Cost? $3/week for adult room and board. Other hotels in the heart of Thiensville included the Thiensville Hotel (now Skippy’s) which dates back to 1856, The Holnagel Hotel (now the north wing of the Tres Jolie complex), and the former Commercial House Hotel which still stands on the southwest corner of Main and Buntrock in Thiensville. Resort hotels in Mequon included the original Alpine Village and the building now housing Libby Montana. Both hotels were on Donges Bay Road (Highway 9) which was a very popular Interurban stop. Wulff’s Island Resort (now Sybaris) was another popular “Highway 9” destination for vacationers into the early 1920’s, and the Heidel family and others operated a hotel and park complex on the site of the present day Piggly Wiggly shopping center in Mequon. Another local tourist attraction was Boder’s Tea Room which operated between Easter and Thanksgiving from 1929 until 1954 when it became a year-round full service restaurant. Continued, with photos, inside on Page3 SAVE THE DATE! Sunday, Novemer 11th, 1:30 p.m. MT Historical Society Annual Meeting Mequon City Hall - Council Chambers Boat Landing in Thiensville. Boating on the Milwaukee River was - and remains - a popular activity in Mequon and Thiensville... in the good old summertime! FREE BOOK! We’ll send you a free copy of “History of the Town of Mequon, Brought Down to About 1870,” just for joining the M-T Historical Society! Since the revitalization of the Society late last year, we’ve grown to over 120 voting members. Join today. It’s easy. Individuals can join for as little as $10 and entire families for just $15. Send your check to: Mequon Thiensville Historical Society 6100 W. Mequon Road Mequon, WI 53092 Don’t forget to include your name, address and email and we’ll send your free book! Inside . . . President’s Message In the Good Old Summer Time Intersection of History How much do you think about the places you pass? Crawford House from 1854 Who Knew? Increase your knowledge of the past... www.mthistoricalsociety.org Intersection of History You’ve no doubt driven through the intersection of Donges Bay Road and Wauwatosa Road countless times. But how often have you thought of the people and businesses that were once located on this corner? Society Members Ruth Renz and Don Silldorff found the December, 1998, reminiscences of Louis Lemke, the owner of Lemke Seed Farm. Lemke’s farm was located one mile west of the intersection, sometimes known as Southwest Mequon. The text is copied here with their edits: The Siebert saloon and dance hall occupied the northwest corner of Donges Bay Rd. and Wauwatosa Rd. Jack Siebert was the proprietor, and it was later run by Shorty Hintz. Immediately to the north of Siebert was the Herbst Butcher Shop. It consisted of two small building. The building with the chimney was moved a mile west around 1998 to the site of the Phillip Klumb Landmark. Now owned by Charles Tritt, it was restored and converted into a home office. The other building stood in disrepair until 2009 when it was razed. North of Herbst was the Emory Voland farm. Herbst moved his butcher business a mile north into a building he had moved from the east side of Wauwatosa Rd. The building was one of Louis Wagner’s pickle sheds. Wagner processed pickles raised by local farmers. LaVerne Herbst along with his wife Dorothy ran the butcher shop until they retired. He sold the building to Catena who operated a catering business from there. The largest business at the Donges Bay and Wauwatosa Rds. intersection was the George Schubert and sons McCormick Deering Farm Implement dealership. It was located on the northeast corner of the intersection. It served many farmers over a wide territory for many years. When George died his son Harvey ran the business until he left to go into the insurance business. Then another son, Lester, ran the business until it closed, probably due to low interest in farm machinery. Sunnyside School which originally had been located a quarter of a mile north of Schubert was vacated and a new school was built east of Schubert in 1916 on the Alfred Schaefer land. Alfred’s brother, Henry, was the sales person for the Schubert Implement Company for many years. East of the school was the Ben Levy farm. Levy dealt in dairy and beef cattle and sold fertilizer. Ben’s two grandsons are attorneys in Cedarburg. Further to the east was the John Schmechel business. He had a saw mill, east of his house, which was powered by an engine taken from a Lake Michigan fishing tug. The mill produced lumber and timbers for customers from all over the area. The mill was sold and removed some time in the late 1970s. Schmechel also produced domed shaped laminated rafters which rested on the ground. The buildings in which they were used served as farm machinery sheds. Many are in use today. Schmechel along with George Schubert invented the TUSCO SILO FILLER. The tractor that drove the filler could be attached by a belt in any of four different ways to accommodate cramped locations. Schmechel also built and repaired large truck bodies. His vehicles were used to plow snow on many of the roads in Mequon. The area around the intersection of Donges Bay and Wauwatosa Roads was known as Southwest Mequon. It had also acquired the name of “Klatzschbach” because of the friendly nature of the neighbors as they visited each other. Based on the memoirs of Louis Lemke, a former member of the Board of Directors of the Historical Society, written in 1998. By Ruth Renz (edited by D. Silldorff ) September, 2012 SAVE THE DATE! Sunday, Novemer 11th, 1:30 p.m. MT Historical Society Annual Meeting Mequon City Hall - Council Chambers Who Knew? Increase your local history knowledge with these facts taken from a local history manuscript written by Les Rehm between 1953-71. This book is not available for sale, but a typed copy of the Rehm volume is available for viewing on Thursday afternoons at the MT Historical Society’s office in the Logemann Community Center. February,1864 the Provost Marshal’s office in Fond du Lac informed Mequon Town Clerk that the draft quota for Mequon was 51 volunteers. Christian Heinrich Hawks was the first to qualify for the $200 payment. When it appeared that more than enough volunteers were available the payment was cut to $175.00, March, 1865 Mequon had 345 dogs. No license was needed for the first dog. 1867 Mequon school money apportioned from the state was $654.71 based on 47 cents per scholar. 1902 A franchise was issued for a telephone line in the Town and granted to the Mequon Telephone Co. for transmission of messages along and within the limits of our highway in the Town of Mequon. The first phones were to Dr. Albers and to Zimmermann’s General Store, both in Thiensville. www.mthistoricalsociety.org Ruth J. Renz Good Old Summertime... Ultimately prohibition and the freedom offered by the automobile led to the downfall of the resorts in Thiensville and Mequon. People became less dependent on railroads and the Electric Interurban Railway for vacation travel. The once famous Memmler Hotel, later known as the Aussem Hotel, closed in 1947 and the building was razed in 1963. Other local hotels turned their rooms into apartments or boarding houses, but kept their taverns and restaurants open. The heyday of the famous resorts of southern Ozaukee County was over. But those of us who live in the area still enjoy “Nature’s Mecca” that drew vacationers to our area for so many years. Bob Blazich, President, Mequon-Thiensville Historical Society Looking North on Green Bay Road, the Thiensville Hotel (presently Skippy’s)is on the left with the famous Memmler Hotel just behind it. The Memmler Hotel building was razed in 1963. Visit Us on the Web! http://www.mthistoricalsociety.org Fishing on the Milwaukee River below the Thiensville dam. Anglers continue to fish above and below the dam. A new, meandering fish passage allows fish to swim upriver around the dam for the first time in 150 years. Mequon Thiensville Historical Society 6100 W. Mequon Road, Mequon, WI 53092 Crawford House (1854) The land on which this house (right) sits was purchased in 1839 by Charlotte Crawford. She bought 80 acres from the US Government for $100, and built a log cabin on the southern part of her land near Freistadt Road. She sold her “south 40” and her cabin to Hartman Houseburg and built this house is 1854. Ms. Crawford went on to sell the rights to the western part of her land to the railroad, and she sold rights to eastern part of her land to Byron Kilbourn for his plank road between Milwaukee and Cedarburg. As if Charlotte Crawford hadn’t squeezed enough value out of her purchase, later owners created the large dip in the home’s back yard when they quarried stone and sold it to the railroad. The house remained in its original state until 1939 when Carl Blume brought large salvaged pillars from Milwaukee to create the present Neoclassical style home’s entryway. Later owners made additions to the building and used the former residence for commercial purposes. www.mthistoricalsociety.org Frenz’ Friend Isham Day House with Flowers The MT Historical Society would like to thank Jim and Emily Gehrke of Frenz Garden Center for their display of planters and flowers in front of our Isham Day House. This house, the oldest remaining structure in Ozaukee County, was built in 1839 by a squatter named Isham Day. When the government offered the land for public sale, Day apparently could not afford to buy the land on which his home stood. He sold his holdings to a land speculator and moved further upstream. In the years since it was built, the tiny structure served as The Mequon River Post Office, a harness makers shop, and a print shop as well as a private residence. The building was purchased by the City of Mequon in 1989 and was declared a City of Mequon Historic Landmark in 1992. It was listed on both the State and National Registers of Historic Places in 2000. Thanks to Sommer’s Automotive! Thanks to Sommer’s Automotive in Mequon for their sponsorship of the Mequon Thiensville Historical Society website! You’’ll find them at 7211 West Mequon Road! Visit Us on the Web! http://www.mthistoricalsociety.org Increase your knowledge of the past... Crawford House from 1854 How much do you think about the places you pass? In the Good Old Summer Time Inside . . . Published by Mequon Thiensville Historical Society 6100 W. Mequon Road, Mequon, WI 53092 Vol. 13 No. 2 Fall, 2012 Historic Times www.mthistoricalsociety.org