Town of Fifield
The Town of Fifield was formed from a part of the
Town of Worcester on 18 Nov 1879. It was 250 square miles. It is located in
the north-eastern section of Price County with both the north and south
branches of the Flambeau River and it's tributaries running through it.
Fifield
The Village of Fifield was located on the north bank of the
south fork of the Flambeau River. It began as a station stop on the Wisconsin
Central Rail Road in the midst of an immense logging industry. The village
was named after former Lieutenant-Governor Sam S. Fifield.
The first post
office was established in 1877 and some of the first settlers of the village
were:
Name |
Occupation |
Brassell, Patrick | |
Cochran, David | |
Hintz, W. F. | Established the first General Store |
Hoter, William E. | Established the first hotel |
O'Day, Daniel | Built the one of the first log homes |
Pixley, Hiram | Operated a cook shanty |
Slattery, Reuben | Built one of the first log homes |
1900
U. S. Federal Census: Heads of Household
* * * * *
Excerpts from: Fifield: A History
By Douglas Severt
(To read the
entire article click here:
fifieldhistory.PDF )
The town of Fifield was first known as
Flambeau, and was then located in Chippewa County. In 1879, a new county
was established and named after William T. Price, thus Price County. At
the same time the town of Flambeau changed its name and became Fifield,
named after Sam S. Fifield of Ashland, Wisconsin, who owned much of the
timber rights at that time.
In the early 1800's, Fifield was known as
having some of the fightingest men in the middle west. The lumberjacks
and others were known all over this area as the roughest and toughest
men ever to hit the United States.
In the early 1900's, Fifield
became headquarters for vacationers, hunters and fishermen from all over
the Midwest. At that time there were hotels to accommodate many
travelers. Many homes also took in men who came to hunt and fish in the
thick forests, where game was abundant, and in the many lakes, rivers
and streams where some of the largest musky, pike, bass, trout and other
fish were recorded by sportsmen and took many blue ribbons or trophies.
Although there are still a few restaurants in Fifield, all of the hotels
are gone. There are still some taverns and a grocery store, but most
other places of business have vanished throughout the years.
* * * *
*
Logging in Early Fifield History
History of Fifield region
Logging operations told by William A. Spearbreaker, a longtime resident
and veteran of WWII.
1892: Van Dusen and Sherry built the Fifield
Manufacturing Co. sawmill and operated it until 1896. The mill had a cut
of 50,000 board feet. The mill was located at the sorting works dam. Van
Dusen built the large home known locally as the "Old Mansion".
Liebelt and Landgraff constructed a mill just south of the Fifield site
where the present Fifield Lumber and Supply Co. now stands. They sold
their holdings to Henry Ocker, and the mill was partially destroyed by
fire under Ocker's ownership. He sold his interests to Patterson
Brothers, and the mill continued to operate until 1929. Estimate of the
cut from 1900 to 1929 was 50,000,000 board feet before the mill was
dismantled and moved.
1913-1924: Bean and Maxwell erected the Central
Lumber Co. mill on the west bank of the Flambeau between the milk plant
and the new state hwy. 70. The engine foundations of the mill can still
be seen. This mill ran eleven years and cut 30,000,000 feet of lumber.
Another mill, the Hales mill, operated at Pike Lake from 1921 to 1928.
The cut was hardwood and hemlock. Lumber and ties were hauled to Fifield
and to the Coolidge spur by a steam hauler. Cut at this mill was
estimated at 50,000,000 feet.
Following 1928-29, there was a slump
in sawmill operations in the immediate Fifield area or until the late
40's when Liebelt and Fandrey built the Fifield Forest Products Co.
LOGGING METHODS: Logging methods had changed greatly during this period
covered in this history. During the pine days the transportation was
mainly via lakes, rivers, and creeks. In the hardwood and hemlock days,
the transportation was a sleigh hauled over iced roads and logging
railroads. During the present, more modern pulp era, the entire haul is
by truck. This era also brought in the bulldozer, the truck equipped
with logging jammer, the swede saw and the power chain saw. Skidding and
road making have also been simplified by the use of modern machines.
The most significant happening during the late years has been the
growing prominence of our national forest and the entry of small jobbers
into the logging economy. In the early days of logging in northern
Wisconsin, the logs were decked on the banks of streams and lakes that
had outlets to rivers. They were hauled by means of oxen and horses
pulling large, two-wheeled skidders, with wheel and axle high enough off
the ground to clear the many stumps in the roadways. The wheels on these
big skidders were ten feet high. Logs were fed into the river from
tributary creeks, and these creeks were often harnessed by a series of
dams to control the flow of water.
LOGGING DAMS: Many of these dams
are still very much in evidence. The Flambeau River (south fork) had
outlet at Pike Lake, a stake dam at the north of Riley Creek, a gate dam
at Sugarbush and another at the sorting works at Fifield.
Sailor
Creek had a series of dams: a roller dam at the mouth of Sailor Lake, a
gate dam just east of Sailor Creek bridge at Hykinski's farm, and
another gate dam was just east of the railroad bridge. The early
pine-day dams were constructed by augering and driving wooden pegs to
hold the timbers in place. At a later date, drift pines and spikes were
used. The Gradey dam was rebuilt and maintained by Fifield with the
flowage extending east to the Hascher road.
LOG DRIVES: The start of
any log drive in the spring called for great organization because of the
diversified equipment necessary. The drive in itself was quite a
spectacle with all its special gear and equipment among which were large
French type Bateaus (river boats) and tents. And no drive would be
complete without a Wannigan (a floating bunk and cookhouse), among Jacks
it was better known as the "bug house".
Runners who carried messages
from headquarters to the crews and reported the progress of the drive to
head quarters were employed. Joe Traenkle was a runner from the
headquarters' end.
The last year of the big drive, the "bug house"
cast away from its crew on July 6, 1906. The high swift water caused it
to rampage all the way to Ladysmith before its mooring ropes could be
secured. A Wannigan was built on the lines of an Ohio river
flatbottomed, keel boat. It was built in four sections and put together
by means of wooden pins. The walls were also constructed in sections. It
was propelled by large oars and steered by means of a stem sweep. A
Wannigan could sleep a hundred men.
Logging roads followed low,
leveled ground as much as possible. Where they had to cross soft or
swampy ground, these stretches were corduroyed (a road made of logs laid
to fill the low spots). At a later date, cuts and fills were made as the
road making improved until finally there was a network of logging roads.
The corduroy road is a hand-me-down from colonial pioneers.
Logs
flowed down the Flambeau by the thousands, or came in on wagon or
sleigh, depending on the season. Dams were built on creeks and streams
to float logs to the river. Families and loggers came from all parts of
the U.S. and Canada. Some weekends found as many as fifteen thousand
humans crowded into the village. Saloons and stores did a land office
business, and streets were jammed with teams of snorting, stomping
horses, wagons, buggies, and carts.
The town was now called Flambeau
and was located in, what was then, Chippewa County. In 1878, a railroad
was extended from Westboro to the town of Prentice by the Central
Railroad Company. In 1879, Price County was established, and the town
was renamed after Sam S. Fifield, who owned most of the timber rights in
that section. Now W. F. Huitz, who ran one of the mills, was elected as
chairman to the new town of Fifield.
Some Indians still lived on the
bank of the river, although many had moved and the village was growing
smaller. Game was becoming scarce since the white men come, and the food
shortage caused the Indians to move eastward. Someone had built a cabin
south of the river, and a small foot bridge was erected for crossing. A
large building was erected beside the Indian village, which later became
a sporting house.
Henry Ferguson had built a cabin south of the
river beneath the tall pines that still stood. One hundred yards south
of the Ferguson home and deeper in the woods, John Rivers also built a
cabin and moved his family there.
* * * * *
Fifield School
The
first Fifield school was established in 1887 in a warehouse owned by Bud
Spalding. Carrie Goodell, sister of the station agent, became the first
teacher. The first actual school building came in 1880 and was soon sold
as a drugstore because it was too small. Another was erected and known
as the North school on the northwest comer of Linden and Balsam street.
Then in 1889 a larger school was built on Spruce Street north of Linden,
which brought students from around the north country; later it was
replaced by the new brick building in 1923.
If you have any
information you would like to contribute, please contact the County
Coordinator.
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