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The community that built St. Anne's was chiefly German and German-Bohemian, mainly people who immigrated from around the border between Bohemia and Bavaria from 1881 to 1883. [2] Clergy first came to St. Anne's community by horseback or rail for services in homes. [3] In 1884 the Wisconsin Central Railroad donated a
By 1881, St. Anna consisted of a wooden shoe factory, several general stores, and two hotels. [3] The Chilton Times-Journal said that St. Anna was "once the center of the wooden shoe industry in Wisconsin." [5] The cornerstone for the community's new brick block church was laid on November 4, 1895, and the structure was still used as of 2014 ...
202 W. Wood St. Barneveld: Queen Anne home with unusual lintels above the windows, built around 1890 by the owner of the local lumberyard, in hopes of renting rooms to visitors to a local mineral spring. [21] [22] 13: Hole-in-the-Wall No. 1 Cave
Small neighborhood along Laflin Avenue, including the 1886 simple Queen Anne-styled Sinsel house (a remnant of the Fountain Spring House resort-hotel), [148] the 1897 Queen Anne Trainor house, [149] the 1904 Picturesque Queen Anne Patterson house, [150] the 1895 Wadsworth-Weeks house which was restyled Neoclassical in 1906, [151] the American ...
Large neighborhood NE of the downtown on a rise east of the Rock River, including the 1847 Italianate-style Lawrence house, [223] the 1860 gabled-ell house at 445 Cornelia St, [224] the 1870 Gothic Revival Nowlan house, [225] the 1893 Queen Anne-style Palmer house, [226] the 1901 High Victorian Gothic St. Mary's Catholic Church, [227] the 1916 ...
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He also claimed to have issued the first insurance policy in Wisconsin. [2] [3] The McClurg Building at 245 Main St. was begun in 1857, and is the finest of Italianate-style buildings in the district. [2] The four buildings at 320, 322, 324 and 326 Main St. carry a similar design, though they had different owners and were built at different times.