

Vernon County's Ethnic Heritage
(Information provided by Vernon County
Historical Society)
English/Yankees
English
immigrants to Wisconsin often
were indistinguishable from the "Yankees," the native-born
Americans
who flooded into the state from the New England and Middle Atlantic
states.
In 1850, when Wisconsin's population stood at 305,000, the English made
up about 9% (27,000) and the Yankees 34% (103,000).
The English had
many advantages over other European immigrants. Of
course,
they knew the language. They better understood the political process
and
how to use it to their advantage. A greater number of the English were
professionals, thus they could fill the more prestigious
occupations.
The English also were less inclined to settle in ethnic enclaves and
assimilated
rapidly.
Like the
Yankees, the English were apt to know the mechanics of making
a homestead claim and of the land auctions better than other Europeans.
This allowed them to claim the better farmland and to select suitable
townsites
and waterpowers (where mills could be built). Consequently, those who
arrived
later often found that they must conduct their necessary business in
communities
dominated by the Yankees and the English.

Norwegians
Hundreds
of Norwegians settled in Coon Valley and on Coon Prairie. The area from
Prairie du Chien to Eau Claire is still the most densely populated
Norwegian
district in America, and Coon Prairie is the district's center.
In 1846, Evan
Olsen Gullord, from Norway's Bin parish, staked the first
claim on Coon Prairie. Evan's letters home, which highlighted the
similarity
of the hills and valleys to Norway's rugged landscape, enticed hundreds
more to the area. Besides Bin parish, Gudbrandsdal supplied a great
number
of settlers.
Helge
Gulbrandson and his wife were the first settlers in Coon Valley
(1849).
They carved out a farm along the creek named for the wooded hills'
numerous
raccoons. For more than a year, they were the only white settlers
living
among the Indians in the valley.
Bergen and
Christiana townships are named after well known cities and
districts
in Norway. The settlers quickly participated in the political
opportunities
they found here, after the Town of Coon was organized in April 1859.
In 1851
Ingebret Ness came to Coon Prairie to seek land. He could not
find
what he wanted, he went 25 miles southwest until he came to that area
which
is named West Prairie. He settled down and in time there gathered
around
him many others from Sogn, Lyster, and Aardal.
Most Norwegians
farmed. Until 1890 wheat was their primary crop. As
wheat
declined, they moved into dairying, and often grew tobacco as well. A
few
of the original farmsteads are still owned by descendants of the men
and
women who pioneered in Coon Valley, on Coon Prairie and West Prairie.

Germans
Germans
emigrated to the United States
in three waves -- 1845-55, 1865-73, and 1880-93. Wisconsin, of course,
received a large number. In 1900, Germans constituted 34% of the
state's
population. The greatest concentration of Germans in Vernon County
occurred
in Bergen and Hamburg townships. But Germans never constituted more
than
8% of the county's population.
Like other
European immigrants, the Germans came to America to escape
adverse
economic and social conditions. Those who came in the second wave often
desired to escape military service, for this was when the German nation
finally unified. Some sought political freedom saying, "There is no
king
in America."
The Germans
were excellent farmers. They were appalled at the wasteful
practices of their Yankee neighbors. The Germans set good examples by
rotating
their crops and using manure to maintain fertility. Their first farms
were
no more than large gardens which yielded corn, beans, and potatoes.
Later,
when more land had been cleared, they added wheat. In the 1880's,
German
farmers moved into dairying and set up cheese factories.
The Germans
often settled in tight-knit groups, according to their
place
of origin in the "old country." If their number was large enough, these
communities formed musical and athletic societies, set up clubs, and
supported
a German-language newspaper. Neverthless, the settlers' offspring soon
began to assimilate into American society.

Irish
The Irish
settled in two separate
communities
in Vernon County. One settlement developed along the southern border of
Sterling and Franklin townships. The other arose in Forest township on
Irish Ridge.
A big wave of
Irish came to the United States in the mid-i 840's. They
were driven to emigrate by the potato famine, by the lack of
employment,
by the absence of religious and political freedom, and by the high
rents
charged by English landlords. They were attracted to Vernon County
because
some already had relatives here and because land was available to
homestead.
An early Irish
settler was William Mahan, who arrived about 1845 from
Ireland.
He homesteaded a mile north of Rising Sun, among rolling hills
reminiscent
of Ireland. He moved a good deal, homesteading perhaps as many as nine
different properties until he settled down.
Records of the
William Shannon family from the 1850s state that they
grew
Indian corn, wheat, oats, peas, beans and, of course, Irish potatoes.
They
used oxen to pull their simple farm implements.
The focal point
of the Sterling and Franklin Township settlement was
St.
James Catholic Church at Rising Sun. A priest began celebrating mass in
homes in 1849. A log church was built in 1855.
These Vernon
County Irish communities did not long retain their
identity.
Other European immigrants, especially the Norwegians and Germans, soon
outnumbered them. Intermarriage and integration has taken place as it
has
in the other ethnic groups.

Italians
The Italians
who
founded
Genoa had been living and working in the lumbering and mining camps
near
Galena and had gotten fed up with the poor conditions. In 1853 they
sent
Guiseppi (Joseph) Monte, a Swiss-Italian, upstream to find a suitable
site.
He chose the Genoa area because its bluffs and wild pigeons reminded
him
of his ancestors' Alpine country.
The oldest
known settler was David Hastings, who erected the first
house
in 1853. For a short time the town was called Hastings Landing.
A village,
originally named Bad Axe, was platted in 1854. In April
1860,
the first village officials were elected. In 1866 the community's name
was changed to Genoa, in honor of the birthplace of Christopher
Columbus.
The village was often called "Little Italy" in recognition of its many
Italian residents.
There being no
suitable farmland, Genoa's residents pursued many
occupations.
The town's stores, bars and hotels served steamboat passengers.
Sometimes
the steamboats brought some pretty rough characters to the community.
Some
quarried nearby limestone. Other Genoa residents harvested clams to
supply
the local button factories with their raw material. In 1884, the
Chicago,
Burlington, and Northern Railroad reached Genoa. For several years,
some
men found work building and, later, maintaining the tracks.
Genoa's
population has remained fairly stable for over one hundred
years.
The 1980 census tallied 288 persons who called "Little Italy" their
home.

Blacks
Vernon County
hosted one of the
largest
rural black settlements in Wisconsin in its Cheyenne and Revels
Valleys,
lust east of Wildcat Mountain. This area became the Melting Pot of
Vernon
County as the black and white residents (Norwegians, Irish, Czechs) of
these valleys were thoroughly integrated. They built schools and
churches
as a community.
The 1870 census
lists 62 black settlers in 11 families as living in
that
area. The 1920 listed 100 blacks. After that, however, the black
population
began to decline as young people moved away to escape the very limited
employment opportunities.
Walden Stewart
and Wesley Barton from Illinois and Mycajah Revels from
Indiana were the first black settlers. Revels' name was attached to the
valley where he settled: Barton founded Barton Corners and became its
first
postmaster in 1859. In 1856, six black families arrived from North
Carolina.
These free people came to Wisconsin seeking greater security from being
dragged into slavery and to enloy the state's greater educational
opportunities.
Farming was
their major occupation, but lumberjacking was also common
in
this heavily forested area. The trees provided logs for their homes and
barns. They manufactured barrels, shingles, and lath. At the mill, the
black farmers turned their sorghum, wheat and corn crops into symp and
molasses, flour and meal. One old-timer, interviewed in 1975,
remembered
that, "We always had lots of food but were short of money". She
recalled
big barrels of pork, sauerkraut, molasses, and corn.

Czechs/Bohemians
All of
Wisconsin's major Czech
settlements
were made in the 1850's. The Czechs settled primarily along the eastern
lakeshore, from Racine to Manitowoc, and in the bluff and coulee
country
of La Crosse, Vernon, Grant, and Crawford counties. Their communities
were
founded specifically for farming, as most had been peasant farmers in
Bohemia
and Moravia before emigrating to America.
The Czechs were
attracted to Wisconsin by low taxes, inexpensive land,
similarities to their homeland in soil and topography, political and
religious
freedom, and liberal residence requirements (males could become voters
after six months if they swore an intent to become a citizen). They
were,
at the same time, being pushed out of their provinces in the Austrian
Empire
by the absence of these opportunities and freedoms.
In Vernon
County, the Czechs settled almost exclusively in Champion
Valley,
which stretches south from Dilly to Yuba in Richland County. The number
of Czechs in Vernon County was never large, 1870=281, 1880=446,
1890=415.
Nonetheless, these Czechs, like their countrymen elsewhere in the
state,
readily maintained their cultural traditions. These traditions may
today
be seen and sampled during Hillsboro's annual "Cesky Den" celebration,
which features Czech foods, crafts, music and dancing in June each year.

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To contribute information to this site, contact the
county coordinator, Annette Bame
Peebles:
All data is copyrighted by the submitter, unless
otherwise noted.
©
Annette Bame Peebles, 2008
Richard
Ross 1999-2001; Sarah Owens 2001-2004; Marceline Beem 2004-2007
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