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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMXI8_winter-veterans-memorial_Winter-WI.html
In memory of the men and women who have served, in war and peace, on the land, in the air, on the seas. [American Legion emblem][Veterans of Foreign Wars emblem]Donated by Wright - HowardVFW Post 2495 Dedicated June 6, 1999 [military service…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVY5_john-f-deitz_Winter-WI.html
In 1904, John F. Deitz and his family purchased a farmstead on the Thornapple River about 2 miles south of here. Deitz soon discovered that Cameron Dam — one of many logging dams on this important tributary of the Chippewa River — lay …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVX6_hayward-and-the-big-mill_Hayward-WI.html
Anthony Judson Hayward, 1835-1913, found this an ideal site for a water powered saw mill and organized the North Wisconsin Lumber Company to harvest the vast pine stands of the upper Namekagon. Their "Big Mill" was built beside the dam, began sawi…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVWU_the-chippewa-flowage_Hayward-WI.html
In 1921, the Federal Power Commission granted a license to the Wisconsin and Minnesota Power and Light Company for a dam construction on the Chippewa River. The dam was completed in 1923, and provided hydroelectric power and flood control to the a…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVVH_namekagon-court-oreilles-portage_Hayward-WI.html
Still visible here is the southeast terminus of the 2½ mile portage that linked the St. Croix and Chippewa River systems. Indians, explorers, missionaries and fur-traders all used this "carrying place" to move their birch bark canoes back and…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVUZ_pierre-esprit-radisson-and-medard-groseilliers_Stone-Lake-WI.html
These brothers-in-law during the winter of 1659-60 camped with the Ottawa Indians two miles upstream from this point on Lac Court Oreilles (meaning "Lake of the Short Ears" in French). Early French explorers called the Ottawa Indians "Court Oreill…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVUK_court-oreilles_Couderay-WI.html
The area around Lac Court Oreilles has long been a favorite habitat of Indians because of the abundant game, fish, berries and wild rice. Radisson and Groseilliers were the first white men to visit this area (1659) and they found Ottawa Indians. B…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMFPJ_st-francis-solanus-indian-mission_Stone-Lake-WI.html
Lac Courte Oreilles remains one of the earliest Ojibway (Chippewa) Indian settlements in Wisconsin. In 1796 John Baptiste Corbine, a French-Canadian fur trader, arrived at Little Lac Courte Oreilles and established a trading post here in 1…
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