And so we went to see what we could see at the Jackson County History Museums. Yes, there are, in fact, two history museums in Black River. One is on First Street while the other is on Main Street. The Dulcinea and I began with the one on First which was manned by an older couple who showed us around and answered our questions.
The building used to belong to the phone company back in the day and there was an old switchboard on display along with a dress that was worn by one of the operators.
Next to this, were portraits of town fathers including this man, Jacob Spaulding, who came to the area in 1839 as a logger.
To say that logging was important to Wisconsin is like saying that water is important to fish. It may be all kitschy to go to a restaurant up north and sit on a chair made of slices from a tree trunk, but it's also a reminder of our state's history. If someone from Chicago gives you any grief, just remind that person that, after their city burned down in 1871, the breweries of Milwaukee sent relief in the form of beer and our sawmills, as well as those of Upper Peninsula, provided the pine lumber for them to rebuild. As Robert Gard & L.G. Sorden wrote in their book Wisconsin Lore: "Almost every city in northern Wisconsin in built on one of these log-driving streams."
The museum didn't have much about logging but it did have some musical instruments that lumberjacks used to entertain themselves. Below is an autoharp which was called the "lumberjack piano".
One industry which was well-represented was that of the cranberry. Here's a scoop (or rake) used to harvest them, as seen on the plaque above.
We had driven by the Brockway cranberry bogs, which were empty, on the way to Wazee Lake. The importance of cranberries goes back a long way in the Black River area. Below you can listen to "Cranberry Song" as sung by Mrs. Frances Perry of Black River Falls in 1946. It appears on Folk Music From Wisconsin.
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