Price County
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Prentice Wisconsin

Town of Prentice
 
The Town of Prentice was formed January 27, 1886 from parts of the Towns of Brannan and Worcester. It was 72 square miles in size and densely wooded like most of the County. The Jump River and many of it's tributaries ran through it.
 
The Wisconsin Central Railroad ran north/south through the western end of the Town while the Minneapolis, St. Paul, & Sault Ste. Marie Railroad (Soo Line) ran east/west through it's center.
 
The township was platted and the Village of Prentice, platted on May 24, 1884, grew up on the bank of the Jump River with stations on both of the railroads. In May 1886 a potential adjoining village, to be known as Diamond, was platted by Louis Halstrom but it was never settled.
 
Other lumber stations on the Soo Line in the Town of Prentice were Cottonwood and Willis; stations that were eventually abandoned as the logging business dwindled.

Alexander Prentice
Prentice
 “In the summer of 1882 the Jump River Lumber company was incorporated at Portage, Wis., and consisted of the following gentlemen: A. Prentice, M. T. Alverson, O. D. Van Dusen, C. R. Gallett, L. L. Breese and F. H. Lewis. Early in the fall Messrs. Prentice and Van Dusen came up from Dorchester on the morning passenger with orders from the railroad company to let them off in the morning at the Jump river bridge and stop for them on the way down in the afternoon. They skirmished around all day in the brush and picked out a location for the dam and mill. They brought lunch with them and ate it on the bridge. Later in the fall, Messrs. Gallett, Lewis and Prentice came up on the freight with a carload of lumber from Dorchester. The freight stopped while they threw off the lumber, there being no side-tracks here in those days. They had tools, provisions, carpenters and workmen, and erected on the side of the track a cook shanty, which is the building now used by the Jump River Lumber company as a warehouse. They went to work clearing the site for the mill and built the “boarding house,” which has since been enlarged and improved and is now so ably conducted by Landlord Myers under the name of THE JUMP RIVER HOUSE and which is spoken of by the travelling public as one of the best hotels on the line.” From: The History of Prentice
 
                                 
                  
Jump River Hotel                       

Jump River Store
 
Also visit the Prentice WI Area History website. The site contains scanned images from the Prentice Centennial Book (1878 - 1978) and Progress Days - 1996. Both contain numerous photographs and historical information of area residents and is searchable by Surname.
For additional historical information about Prentice's early years, read 1895: A Bit of History
 
 
Photos contributed by Dale Heikkinen.

 

Jump River Lumber Co. Prentice, WI

Prentice Dam on Jump River

 

1895 

BIT OF HISTORY 

Something More About the Early Days of Prentice and Its Industrious Founders 

JUMP RIVER LUMBER COMPANY 

Its Early History and That of the Village Identical

 

In the summer of 1882 the Jump River Lumber company was incorporated at Portage, Wis., and consisted of the following gentlemen:  A. Prentice, M. T. Alverson, O. D. Van Dusen, C. R. Gallett, L. L. Breese and F. H. Lewis.  Early in the fall Messrs. Prentice and Van Dusen came up from Dorchester on the morning passenger with orders from the railroad company to let them off in the morning at the Jump river bridge and stop for them on the way down in the afternoon.  They skirmished around all day in the brush and picked out a location for the dam and mill.  They brought lunch with them and ate it on the bridge.  Later in the fall, Messrs. Gallett, Lewis and Prentice came up on a freight, with a carload of lumber from Dorchester.  The freight stopped while they threw off the lumber, there being no sidetracks here in those days.  They had tools, provisions, carpenters and workmen, and erected on the side of the track a cook shanty, which is the building now used by the Jump River lumber company as a warehouse.  They went to work clearing the site for the mill and built the “boarding house,” which has since been enlarged and improved and is now so ably conducted by Landlord Myers under the name of the Jump River House and which is spoken of by the traveling public as one of the best hotels on the line.  

About the same time they built the store.  Being the first store, it controlled the bulk of the trade, and its business increased to such an extent that in 1891 it was enlarged to more than twice its former size.  It is today a model store in every respect and incandescent lamps and the stock comprises absolutely everything in the line of general merchandise.  The next buildings to be erected were seven or eight dwelling houses that are now occupied by Emerson Brothers.  Before snow flew the dam had been completed and when winter set in logging operations were vigorously prosecuted under the direction of Mr. Lewis.  Mr. Prentice took charge of the clearing and building, while Mr. Gallett looked after the business interests of the company.  As soon as the ice in the pond broke the following spring, the mill, which in the meantime had been completed, was started, with George Morrow as foreman and Grant VanDusen as timekeeper.  Joe Rabdeau was in charge of the shingle mill and Dick Burritt of the lath mill; Mel Robbins presided at the boarding house; Charles Alverson kept the books and John Turner conducted the store.  The Wisconsin Central Railroad company was represented by Joseph Wilbur and the Soo had not been heard of.

 

        

Jump River Hotel               Jump River Store

 

   

 Jump River House G. D. Meyers & sons, proprietors

 

Of the next four years there is little to be said.  The mill ran steadily night and day, turning out in the neighborhood of 100,000 feet of lumber every twenty-four hours, except from the time when the pond froze up in the fall until the roads were suitable for hauling.  The mill employed a force of about 150 men and in the winter the company operated from four to six camps of from thirty to fifty men each.  Wages were good and everybody was prosperous and happy. 

Early in the summer of 1886, there began to be rumors afloat of a new railroad which was coming from the west, and when in the fall G. W. Carrington with a corps of civil engineers came here and started through the woods in search of a location for the right-of-way, the rumors became a certainty, the seeds were sown which were soon to take root, bud and blossom into an ear of prosperity hitherto undreamed of in Prentice.  Corner lots were now at a premium and before spring Prentice real estate was selling by the front foot.  The population now began to double every week—some weeks—hotels grew up like mushrooms, and when the road struck Prentice in the spring of 1887 she enjoyed the distinction of being the liveliest and wickedest town in all Northern Wisconsin.  Up to this time the history of Prentice and of the Jump River Lumber company had been identical, but now the town, which had hitherto grown up under the wise policy and fostering care of the company, broke loose from all restraint and assumed, as it were, among the powers of earth a separate and equal station. 

In 1889 the company, having cut all the nearest timber, built six miles of logging railroad, through a newly acquired tract of pine, which they operated for about five years.  It was on this road that Mark Haley received the injuries from which he died some months later 

All who are in touch with the financial questions of the day know how disastrous the past two years have been.  Never before in the history of our country have so many failures occurred in all branches of business, and in August, 1894, the Jump River Lumber Company were compelled to allow their business to go into the hands of a receiver, in the person of Mr. W. J. Hartzell.  The causes that led to this result are varied and the writer is unable to state them clearly in an article of this length.  Suffice it to say that Messrs. Van Dusen and Gallet did all that could have been done to avert the crash.   

Within the coming year we look for better times and hope here many moons have passed over our heads to see the smoke issuing once more from the tall smoke stack and to hear the merry hum of the saws which brings prosperity and happiness alike to the workman and company.


Author of the article is unknown.

 

This article was submitted by Dale Heikkinen

 

Prentice High School Football Team 1922
People Unidentified

1923 Prentice High School Basketball Team
L - R: Clarence Chvala, Ted Chvala, Rudy (Pelican Pete) Schultz, Bill Branch, Harold Nelson, Art Lindmark, and Clarence (Pat) Peterson

 

Prentice High School

School Playground Prentice, WI

Prentice High School 1938
  

PUBLIC SCHOOL Prentice, WI                                 Prentice Public School Hot Lunch & Art Building

  Prentice_SchoolBuses.gif

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PUBLIC SCHOOL Busses Prentice, WI

Public School Prentice WI

 

 

    

Catholic Church and Prentice High School Prentice, WI

 

7th DAY ADVENTIST Church Prentice, WI

CONGRESSIONAL Church Prentice, WI

SWEDISH BAPTIST Church Prentice, WI

SWEDISH LUTHERAN Church Prentice, WI

Businesses of Prentice WI

   

CENTER STREET CREAMERY PRENTICE, WI

  

Prentice Tannery & Creamery

 

U.S. LEATHER COMPANY TANNERY Prentice, WI

 

Wisconsin Telephone Co. Prentice, WI

 

 

Central Office Switchboard Prentice, WI Individual Workers are Unidentified

TOWN HALL Prentice, WI

Wisconsin Central Depot Prentice, WI
This was the first depot in Prentice

Prentice Train Depot

Prentice Train Depot & Dwyer Hotel

 

Prentice Dwyer Hotel

 

Eagle Hotel Prentice, WI

 

Prentice Hotel

 

Dodge Chrysler Star Garage Prentice, WI 
Individual Workers are Unidentified

Prentice Downtown - Early years

G.O. VAN DUSEN & CO. SAW MILL Prentice, WI

NORTHWESTERN COOPERATIVE COMPANY STAVE MILL Prentice, WI

NW EXCELSIOR MILLS PRENTICE, WI c. 1920's

Prentice Hardware Store & Sonny's Bar Located on Railroad Ave, Prentice WI

 

MEN'S CLOTHING STORE PRENTICE, WI

 

Rabernowiches Store Prentice, WI

 

Prentice North Cheese Warehouse

 

Opera_House_Crystal_Saloon.jpg

Opera House and Crystal Saloon Prentice, WI

 

 

Oliver_Valois_Saloon.jpg

 

Oliver Valois Saloon Prentice, WI

Prentice Saloon

 

OLD KRUEGER TAVERN PRENTICE, WI

AERIAL VIEW OF VILLAGE OF PRENTICE c. 1940's  

Prentice Ranger Station

Railroad Avenue – Looking North Prentice, WI

Railroad Avenue – Looking South Prentice, WI

 

Village of Prentice WI

Prentice Railroad Section Crew L-R: Chas Peterson, Chas Haag, Sebastian Keller, Peter Bro.

 

 

Grading road in Prentice WI

Prentice Volunteer Fire Department 1905

 

PRENTICE AIRPORT PRENTICE, WI c. 1950's

 


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This page was last updated 11/06/2024