

Vernon County Pioneers
William Haverley
Born August 26, 1839 (birthplace
believed
to be Schenectady, New York). Believed to be of German ancestory;
(According
to Lorraine Haverley Amann paternal ancestry Pennsylvania
Dutch.) William
learned the trade of broom making while living in New York. He left New
York about 1856 around the age of 17 and went to Illinois.
Married
Emily Jannette Bromley, born December 25, 1844 in Arlington Heights,
Cook County, Illinois (called “Young Chicago”). They were married
March 1,
1859
in West Wheeling, Cook County, Illinois. They operated a grocery
store
and William was Postmaster of Red Mound, Vernon County, Wisconsin. Six
children: Gilbert born and died July 22, 1860, William R., Ann F.,
Frances
E., John M. and Edward L.
The following was taken from “Memoirs of
Vernon
County, WI: “
William R. Haverley is a thrifty
farmer
of the town of Wheatland. He was born July 22, 1861 in Chicago, IL., a
son of William and Emily (Bromley) Haverley, the former a native of
Schenectady,
NY and the latter of Cook County, IL. The father was a broom maker who
came to Chicago when but seventeen years of age. It was there that his
marriage was solemnized. In 1862 he brought his family to this county,
obtaining 150 acres of land in Section 32 of the town of Wheatland.
The property was all timber land,
but Mr. Haverley cleared a space and built a log cabin and after he had
gotten a good start in clearing he returned to making brooms. This
trade
he followed for the rest of his life. His death occurred on May 27,
1901
(note: he died May 25/26, 1899), and that of his wife on December 24
(25,
1898). Their four children were William R., the subject of this memoir;
Annie, now Mrs. Clarence Bean of Wood County, WI.; Frances is married
to
George Angell of Victory, WI.; and John was drowned on March 31, 1894.
William R. Haverley received only a limited scholastic training in the
common schools of the town of Wheatland. He lived at home until
he
reached
his majority and then took an extended trip through the south and west.
After a two years’ residence in
Charles
City, IA, he returned in 1888 to this county and purchased 122 acres of
land in Section 31 of the town of Wheatland, part of which was
improved.
He remodeled and rebuilt the dwelling which is now his home (1907) and
from time to time, as he has added to the size of the farm, he has also
added to the improvements. There are in all 364 acres in the place, 215
of which are under plow. Most of the cultivated land is given over to
the
culture of tobacco and grains, beside which numbers of fine horses and
cattle are reaised. In November, 1888, Mr. Haverley married Miss Eliza
M. Foster, a daughter of John and Agnes Ann (Watson) Foster, the latter
a native of County Cumberland, England. Mr. and Mrs. Foster came to
America
in 1859 and located in Belleville, NJ, and
remained there until 1868.
In
that year they came to Genoa, in this county, and for twenty years had
their residence there.
They now live in the town of
Wheatland.
The children in the Foster family are Eliza Matilda, John Henry, Thomas
Edwin, Clara and Cora May. To Mr. and Mrs. Haverley have been born five
children--Harry Leslie, Audrey E., Vera Agnes, Lasca Lorine (Lorraine)
and Morris (Maurice) (and Margaret). Mr.
Haverley is well and favorably
known throughout the county, and has been active in its politics. For
twenty
years he has been a member of the school board and for the past six
years
has been a member of the town board, having been elected as the
Republican
candidate. He has worked hard and conscientiously and has won the good
will and respect of his neighbors.”
William R. died July 29, 1949 in
Retreat,
Town of Sterling, Wisconsin; Eliza died June 17,
1946.
They are buried at Walnut Mound Cemetery; Wheatland Township, Town of
Sterling,
Wisconsin. There is a large tombstone with “Emily J. wife of Wm.
Haverley.
Born Dec 25, 1844 Died Dec 29, 1898” on one side. The second side
reads:
“William Haverley Born Aug 26, 1839 Died May 25, 1899”. The third side
reads: “John M. Haverley Born Sept 13, 1874 Died Mar 31, 1895. Directly
next to this tombstone is a small headstone: “In Loving Memory Edward
L.
Haverley 1879-1938”. Next is: “In Loving Memory Father William R.
Haverley
1861-1949”. Next is: “In Loving Memory Mother Eliza M. Haverley
1868-1946.
Next is Eliza and William’s son, Maurice: “Maurice E. Haverley Apr 12,
1899 Sept 17, 1899”.
Submitted by:
Marilou
(Haverley)
Naeve

First Pioneers to Hillsborough, Bad Axe
County,
(Vernon) Wisconsin
The town of Hillsborough was named for the four Hill
brothers
from Colchester, Chittenden Co., Vermont. They were Vilentia B.,
William W., Alonzo, and Ichabod B. Hill. They came to Bad Axe by way of
Indiana and Baraboo, Sauk Co., WI.
Vilentia B. was married to Mary J. Johnson. He
was
the first to make a claim in1850 in Section 14. He milled and
later
farmed. He died 26 Feb 1857 at the age of 47, probably in
Hillsborough,
leaving six children: Cornelia, Caroline M., Ichabod B., William
A., Mary M., and Evaline.
William W. Hill, ancestor of Kenneth Mogren, married
Mary
Mead and had three children: Harriet, David W., and Mary
Euretta.
He later married Eliza Rhines and had 4 more children: William
Warren,
George W., Emma, and Jane/Charlotte. William W. also made claims
in Bad Axe on Section 24. He lived there until about the
1870s.
He died 24 Oct 1886 in Bloomer, Chippewa Co. at the age of 77.
Alonzo Hill went to Kansas and had 2 or 3
marriages.
He married Caroline Rhines. Two children born in Bad Axe.
Caroline
died and he married Elizabeth Northern. They had 6
children.
He died 18 March 1884 in Kansas.
Ichabod B. Hill never married and went into the
Civil
War . He died 15 Jan 1880 in Kansas.
The first marriage in Hillsborough was Vilentia's
daughter
Caroline who married Froland Willey in 1856 performed by Daniel Kimball
who married William W.'s daughter, Harriet Hill. Another daughter
of Vilentia, Caroline Hill Mack, gave birth to the first child born in
Hillsborough, Andrew Mack, in 1852. Eveline Hill, another
daughter
of Vilentia married James Hamilton in Hillsborough.
Serving in the War of the Rebellion in the 6th
Regiment
from Hillsborough from the Hill family were: Ichabod B.Hill, Levi
Pearson who married Mary E. Hill, daughter of William W. Hill, and
Froland
Willey who married Caroline, daughter of Vilentia Hill. Also
George
W. Thurber who married Chrlotte/Jane Hill, daughter of William W.
Hill.
Levi Pearson was killed in the war. Ichabod Hill was wounded.

Ben
Hanson
Benjamin Hanson, son of Hans Skaalbones, was born June
12, 1848 and came to Wisconsin in 1873 from Bodo on the Saltenfjord in
North Norway. He left the hard and dangerous work of ocean
fishing
with its uncertain income and came to America to seek his fortune on
the
ridges of Vernon County as a farmer, woodsman and stump grubber, a
calling
that was certainly hard, dangerous and uncertain of income. He
had
made contact with his stepmother's brother, Hans Lauganess in the Town
of Harmony, who made him welcome and no doubt suggested available
work as farm labor and grubbing stumps.
More importantly, it turned out that when Ben later
went
to visit his Uncle Hans Lauganess, he met his future wife, Oline
Hage.
This happened when Uncle Hans was laid up with a broken leg in the home
of her parents, Erland and Marit Hage, Norewgian immigrants who lived
near
Purdy. Ben, being captured by her beauty, came to visit again and
again.
Unfortunately, Ben had little money and was just
getting
the hang of farm work so he was not well situated to be a son-in-law,
but
he didn't give up. He went to see Oline as often as he could,
even
when she got a job across the river in Iowa. One winter night, he was
driving
his team back across the Mississippi River, when the ice began to sink
beneath the weight of the horses and the wagon. He pulled out the
evener pin, left the wagon, and standing on the eveners, raced the
horses
across the sinking ice, reaching the safety of the Wisconsin shore.
That
"crazy Norlening Norwegian" was just the man for Oline, the girl from
Gudbrandsdal.
They were married on June 8, 1876 at Purdy. He was 28 and she was
18. They started to farm. Their first child, Anna
Dorthea,
died at the age of one. He bought 80 acres of land on the ridge,
where his grandson, Richard and great grandson, Benjamin Hansen now
farm,
and built a two room frame house for his bride there. A bed in one
corner,
a stove stood by the door and it had a dirt floor, but it was their
home.
His first barn for his one cow was built with a straw roof in the side
of a ravine, quite a distance from the house. He later built a
better
structure for his growing herd and improved the house. Five
children
were born who survived their infancy: Hilbert, 1881,
Alfred,
1883, Christian, 1885, Mathilda, 1888, and Delia, 1896. Ben
worked in the northwoods in the winter, and one summer in the harvest
fields
of Minnesota. When he was gone, Oline had to haul water from the valley spring for the house and
livestock.
She worked in the house, in the barn and in the fields. She
clothed
and fed the children, milked the cows, kept the garden, and helped with
the field work by binding sheaves of cut grain by hand, deftly wrapping
a twist of straw around each bundle to hold it together, and raking hay
with a hand rake.
Ben kept cows, a few hogs and a team of
horses.
He raised hay and grain and raised his first tobacco in 1890-1891
before
giving it up because the price paid for tobacco then was only two cents
a pound. It involved a lot of work because everything was done by
hand. They even made a bed of straw for the tobaco to rest on
after
it was cut. After spearing it, they carried it into the stock
barn
for curing. The fence around the farm was made of wooden rails, 6
or 7 rails high, or by driving poles into the ground at an angle. The
children
carried butter and eggs to the La Crosse stage route about a mile from
their home where their jars and baskets were picked up in the morning
and
returned at night.
The two eldest sons had four years of elementry
education
but the younger three finished the eighth grade and Mathilda went to a
Young Ladies Academy in Red Wing Minnesota for one year of high
school.
All went to the Norwegian summer school for religious education. Ben
was
a leader in the neighborhood Lutheran Church which met to worship in
the
homes or the schooolhouse and was served by an occasional circuit
riding
preacher. This church was of the Hauge Synod in which the
ministers
avoided the pastoral robes and collars used in the more traditional
United
Norwegian Synod. Ben served as 'klokker" at the meetings. He gave
an opening prayer and led in the singing. Everything, of course,
was in Norwegian. In 1903, Ben erected a large white house for his wife
and children, but unfortunately, his wife Oline (born March 28, 1858)
died
April 26, 1905. Ben survived her by 30 years. All of his children
became farmers or married farmers and all spent most of their lives in
Vernon County, except Mathilda and her husband who went ot farm in
Nebraska.
Alfed farmed in Montana for 18 years before returning to Wisconsin in
1930.
Ben was very active until about 1926. He established a
substantial
farm with machinery and cattle on top of a ridge in Vernon County, thus
fulfilling his American dream. His son Christian, farmed the home
place and today his grandson, Richard and great grandson Benjamin
Hansen
operate the farm.
For the last eight years of his life, Ben suffered
from
a hernia and rhematism and walked with great difficulty with the aid of
two canes. He passed away quietly at his
home on
January 9, 1934
at the age of 85 years and is buried in the Zion Church Cemetery.
Blessed be their memory.
Submitted by:
Arne Hansen

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Annette Bame Peebles, 2008
Richard
Ross 1999-2001; Sarah Owens 2001-2004; Marceline Beem 2004-2007
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