German Settlement
“The first lumbering was undertaken in Price
County by Major Isaac Stone in what is now the town of Spirit, on the Spirit
River, a tributary of the Wisconsin River. Major Stone came to the Spirit
River country in 1860 before the land was marked by government surveyors. He
married an Indian and raised a family of two sons and one daughter. He cut
the choice timber on the land and backed his logs on the Spirit River, then
floated them down the Wisconsin. In due time he became the first homesteader
in Price County. He located his homestead in what is now the town of Spirit
on June 18, 1868.” (Crop Reporting Bulletin, WI August 1953)
In 1873
Siegfried Meier, a German immigrant visited the area with his son looking for
good homestead lands. It must have met his approval as records indicate that
in 1878 he returned with a group of relatives from Germany who settled the
area along a portion of the Spirit River. The little settlement that came to
be known as the German Settlement grew.
A detailed history and description
about the German Settlement in the Town of Spirit was written by Roy Meier in
1977: German Settlement
History. (Contributed by Joyce Bant. Used with permission by Marilyn
Erickson.)
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