Park Falls
1865
Located on the Flambeau River in north-central
Wisconsin, Park Falls was first mapped by government surveyors in 1865.
1876
The land that had previously belonged to the Anishinabe (Ojibwe) had
only been know to hunters and trappers up until 1876 when two Frenchmen
settled the first homesteads. Albert Lacqueoix and Frederic Neadeau built
their homesteads along the north fork of the Flambeau River that later became
known as Muskellunge Falls.
1877
In the summer of 1877, the
Wisconsin Central Railroad’s line between Milwaukee and Ashland opened
providing transportation that brought more people to the area. With families
settling in, the area required additional resources and the first school was
established on the south end of town.
1885
The first band-saw
mill was built by Henry Sherry in 1885 giving Park Falls the impetus to
expand. The first post office opened in the company store in 1889. According
to one source, Muskellunge Falls was renamed to Park Falls because the pines
near the falls gave the area the feeling of being in a park.
1890
By 1890, Henry Sherry was manufacturing pulp and the town included a company
store, two boarding houses and nearly twenty homes. The town grew quickly
with new settlers to the area and by 1900 Park Falls had its own newspaper
office, a church and several stores. Sherry’s pulp mill expanded into the
Flambeau Paper Company, producing its first paper in the late 1890’s.
Park
Falls in Feb 1896
1900’s
By 1901, Park Falls had 750 people
and was incorporated as a village. Although most of the big trees had
been clear-cut by 1906, Park Falls continued to prosper on the paper
mill industry that attracted even more settlers to the area. In 1912,
with approximately 2,000 residents, the village of Park Falls became a
city.
For additional information on the history of Park Falls
and Butternut, visit the following website which includes a wonderful
photo slideshow of the area: http://www.russscott.com/~rscott/butternut/
2000
The city’s population has waxed and waned over the past 100
years, with its population reaching over 4,000 at one point and down to
2,793 at the 2000 census.
A comprehensive look at Park Falls and
the surrounding areas of Lake and Eisenstein, advertised as including
over 250 local families, can be found in the book 100 Years on the
Flambeau (1989) by Michael J. Goc, Weber Publishing Company, Park Falls,
WI. Available for purchase at the Price County Historical Society.
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