BURLINGTON
HISTORIAN
March 2012
Burlington
Episode of "Around the Corner with John McGivern" to be Previewed
March 4 at Veterans Terrace and Televised March 8 and 9 on MPTV
The MPTV television series "Around the Corner with John McGivern"
will present its episode on Burlington on Thursday, March 8, at 7:30
p.m. on MPTV-HD Channel 10.1 and MPTV Channel 36.2. The Burlington
episode will be repeated on Friday, March 9, at 8:00 p.m. on MPTV-HD
Channel 36.1. It will be available thereafter on the MPTV website.
As a treat for area residents, the Burlington episode will be
previewed at Veterans Terrace at Echo Park on Sunday, March 4,
around 1 p.m. The doors will open at noon. The preview event is
free, open to everyone, and snacks and a cash bar will be available.
Host John McGivern, producer Lois Maurer, and production manager
Raul Galvan will be in attendance for questions after the half-hour
preview. Program DVDs will be available for purchase.
The Burlington program is one of thirteen episodes in which
McGivern, the Milwaukee-born comedian-actor-storyteller, takes
viewers to various Wisconsin communities for a behind-the-scenes
look at unique aspects which make the communities good places to
live, work, and play.
In McGivern’s visit to Burlington last year, filming was done at
the Historical Society Museum, where McGivern "met" Wisconsin
historian John Gurda to talk about Burlington’s history. Also filmed
were the Aquaducks at Brown’s Lake and various aspects of
ChocolateFest – which draws large crowds, is managed and staffed by
many volunteers, and supports many community causes.
Among other places McGivern visited were The Malt House for the
Haylofters’ production of "Jesus Christ Superstar," the Beaumont
Field baseball diamond, and Fred’s Parkview.
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President’s
Message With daylight getting longer, we are on our way to
another spring season. Our Wisconsin winter this year, having been mild, did
seem to move along fast.
Browsing the photo pages of our website (burlingtonhistory.org) gives us
an idea of how time and society have changed the way we look and live our
daily lives. It was a much slower pace years ago. Most went about their
chores in a routine manner unlike the "go here, go there" activities of
today.
It’s important to teach our next generations how to pace ourselves and
enjoy everyday life and keep our priorities in proper order.
With the addition of the upper level storage and office area and with our
museum display area completed with many new items on display, we encourage
all Society members to spread the word to all your friends and neighbors to
stop in on a Sunday afternoon to browse and enjoy Burlington as it was years
ago.
I’m looking forward to a fun and eventful 2012 and hope all the same for
each of us.
Dennis Tully
Pioneer Log Cabin to Open in May; Docent Scheduler and
Docents Needed
Pioneer Log Cabin in Wehmhoff Square in downtown Burlington will open for
the season in mid-May. The season generally extends into October depending
on the weather.
The Cabin has usually been open to visitors on Thursday evenings from 3
to around 6:30 p.m. in conjunction with the Farmers Market and on Saturday
afternoons from 1 to 4 p.m. The Thursday evening hours seem to be
particularly popular.
Jackie Heiligenthal, who has served dependably and faithfully as
volunteer head and scheduler of the Cabin docents since 2007, has decided to
step down from that position. Her efforts have been most appreciated and
successful.
Now, however, the Society must look for someone to take on those
responsibilities. If you are interested in the position, or in becoming a
docent, call the Museum at 262-767-2884 or stop in the Museum some Sunday
afternoon from 1 to 4 p.m.
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Christmas
Program Again a Success The Society’s 2011 Christmas program at
Veterans Terrace, which featured Rochelle Pennington’s presentation on the
World War I "Christmas Miracle," attracted a good size crowd, a portion of
which is shown in the accompanying photo.
Ms. Pennington showed vintage photos; shared diary entries, letters home,
and newspaper articles describing the Christmas truce between the German
troops and those of the British, Scottish, and French forces; and showed
some authentic World War I battlefield artifacts. A member of the audience,
standing with Ms. Pennington in the photo, also showed some of his uncle's
World War I memorabilia.
Because of the quality and popularity of Ms. Pennington’s programs, the
Society has asked her to return on December 2, 2012, to present her program
"A Walk Down Memory Lane." Further details on the program will be included
in a future newsletter.
50 Years Ago . . .
In 1962 the City revised house numbers to provide a uniform numbering
system and changed the names of several streets. Former street names that
faded into history included Geneva, Dyer, Liberty, Livingston, Frederick,
East, West, North, South, Second, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Fox River, West
Water, Mutter, Tower Lawn Circle, Delavan, South Origen, Wilmot Avenue, and
Mary Ceil Drive.
Also in 1962, Burlington telephone numbers changed to the All Number
Calling (ANC) system, with the prefix "ROckwell 3" becoming "763." |
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Historic
Downtown Business Signs Donated to Society Two large wooden
signs, one around and the other over 100 years old, from historic downtown
businesses have recently been donated to the Historical Society.
The first is the HOTEL BURLINGTON sign shown in the 1906 photo at right.
In the photo, the "HOTEL BURLINGTON" sign hangs from the canopy over the
front door of the hotel on Pine Street. The building is now occupied by the
Sci Fi Café. Shown are fishermen Ed Petrie, Gus Heublein, Henry Kortendick,
Edwin Caldwell, and Oscar "Hooty" Konst (not necessarily in that order), who
brought their 1-day catch from Duck Lake – 89 pickerel, 3 bass, 76 perch, a
croppy, and a bullhead – and strung them up on three lines at the hotel.
The sign, donated to the Society by member and former president, Nick
King, is shown in the photo at left. It is now housed in the Society’s
storage building near the Whitman School.
The other sign, reading F. A. SCHWALLER LAND CO., stretched nearly 20
feet across the front of the Schwaller building, also on Pine
Street. The sign is shown between the 2nd and 3nd floors of the second
building from the left in the circa 1915 photo at right. At that time,
businesses on the ground floors of these Pine Street buildings were Jacob
Wien’s clothing store, Al Reuschlein’s shoe store, Egizo Giannini’s fruit
and confectionery store, and C. B. Wagner’s hardware Store.
The sign, which had been stored on the Schwaller building’s upper floor,
was donated to the Society by Connie Stellmacher, who owned the building and
formerly had a law office there. The sign was moved, with help from the
Wanasek Co., to the Society’s storage building, where it is shown in the
photo at left.
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And Away We
Go . . . . . Contributed by Priscilla Crowley
Here it is the middle of February – we have finally gotten our first
snowstorm of the season and all I can think of is summer vacation. Thinking
of summer and vacation just naturally brings back the memories of those
beloved "family vacations" we all took in our much younger years. Our family
never went anywhere too fancy; most of the time our vacations consisted of
visiting relatives we didn’t see very often or staying in a cabin "up North"
and once we went to the Wisconsin Dells. It’s not really important whether
we stayed at the finest resort available with all the amenities or stayed in
a simple cabin in northern Wisconsin. What was important was that we were
all together as a family, sharing an experience.
I would like to be able to tell you that our vacations were organized and
calm with no hint of chaos at all. Unfortunately, we never did things that
way. Most of our travels were accompanied by a certain amount of
disorganization, a little hysteria, a certain amount of squabbling and a
whole lot of chaos. We always had a great time; after all what’s a family
vacation without chaos and a little hysteria?
Getting ready to go on vacation was almost as much fun as being on
vacation. It was always a "Murphy’s Law" kind of a thing. If something could
go wrong – it did. Mom would spend weeks trying to figure out how many and
what kind of clothes to pack for all of us, how to pack, should we take our
own pillows and bedding?, what about food?, and how could everything
possibly fit in the car? One year we even took our dog – now that was a
vacation!
One year on the night before we were to leave to go "up North" my brother
was helping out in the garden, he was digging with the pitchfork and instead
of digging up a potato, he managed to stick one of the tines through his big
toe. Now remember, this was the night before we were to leave "on vacation."
There was a lot of yelling and crying and blood and dirt and dire
predictions of possible "lockjaw," possible blood poisoning and should we
take him to the doctor? (where would we find a doctor at 6:00 on a Friday
night?) do you suppose if we clean it out good with soap and water and
peroxide it will be ok?
Eventually the crying stopped, the bleeding stopped, the toe was washed
out with soap and water and peroxided with everything we had and iodine
added for good measure. The toe was wrapped and the decision was made to not
go to the Doctor that night but to wait and see what it looked like in the
morning. I was always surprised at the amount of faith that was put into the
plan of "Let’s sleep on it and see what it looks like in the morning." With
that statement we were all sent to bed and told to go right to sleep – no
fooling around – we all had to be up and out of the house early in the
morning.
Of course we girls were all sympathy for our brother’s suffering. It was
really more like, "Good going moron – now we’ll probably have to stay home,
what a klutz!" or "Great, just great – now I suppose your toe will turn
black and fall off!" It’s just wonderful how brothers and sisters always
pull together in a crisis.
Well, morning came, his toe had not turned black or fallen off as
predicted; it looked ok, so it was decided to take a chance on "lockjaw" and
/or blood poisoning and head for the North Woods anyway. We were gamblers at
heart. We girls were good with that, after all it wasn’t our toe. A fresh
bandage was put on the toe, we managed to get his foot into a tennis shoe
without laces, Dad started stuffing the car with various suitcases, boxes,
bags, pillows, food, maps, drinks, dog food, blankets, extra jackets,
sweatshirts, Mom, brother, sister, me and Dad and the dog and away we went.
It wasn’t quite the early, early start the parents wanted but we did
manage to get out of town before 8:30 a.m. Not bad, but of course that
doesn’t count the time spent coming back home to check and make sure that
all the doors and windows had been closed and locked and that the stove was
turned off.
There
we were, Mom and Dad in front, me, Jackie and Jon and various pillows,
games, blankets, bags and one very over-excited dog who spent her time
running back and forth across the bare legs of all three of us kids trying
to look out of both windows at the same time. I’ve often thought we must
have resembled either Ma and Pa Kettle and their brood or the Beverly
Hillbillies making their way down the road.
By the time we hit Janesville on our way "up North," there were already
rumblings from the backseat about "When are we going to stop and eat?, I
have to go to the bathroom., The girls are pinching me, tell them to stop
pinching me (absolutely not true!), Jon is being a big dummy jerk!
(absolutely true!), Tell the dog to stop scratching my legs – stop the car,
I think the dog is gonna throw up!" I don’t know how Mom and Dad stood it
and still retained any amount of sanity. This wasn’t a vacation, this was a
tour through the "Twilight Zone."
After many hours of travel – it seemed like days – we finally arrived at
our destination. We were staying in a cabin that belonged to Dad’s boss. Our
expectations were that we would be by a lake with a sandy beach where we
could swim and play in the water and Dad could do some fishing. The cabin
would be a little rustic but very comfortable. What we got was a man’s
hideaway cabin really meant only for fishing and hunting. The cabin was dark
and musty smelling because it was deep in the woods and the trees blocked
out most of the sunlight. It was sort of spooky looking and felt damp, it
was on a lake but the lake wasn’t suitable at all for swimming it was full
of algae and lily pads and unknown creepy creatures. It was ok for fishing
as long as you liked Bullheads. There was a pier and a boat but the woods
were thick and there was no open space around the cabin for kids to run and
play.
Let’s face it, these kinds of vacations really weren’t much of a vacation
for Mom – there was still cooking and cleaning to be done and trying to keep
track of three kids and a dog in foreign territory was no easy task. In
spite of everything we managed to have a good time, we found a swimming lake
close by and Dad did enjoy catching what fish he could from the pier. He
helped out with the cooking and we managed to figure out how to play in the
"big woods" without getting lost or falling into the icky lake, and we even
managed to not be attacked by the swarm of snakes Mom was just sure were
lurking just beyond the cabin door.
Thankfully it only rained one day while we were there so we weren’t all
penned up in the cabin driving each other crazy. We managed to hang on to
the dog without losing her in the big woods. Jon’s toe healed up and none of
us acquired any new injuries of gigantic proportions, only the normal
run-of-the-mill ones we were used to seeing on a daily basis.
Friday rolled around and the packing started all over again, only this
time it seemed as if there was more stuff than we had started out with. It
couldn’t have been food, we ate most of that – we didn’t buy that much in
souvenirs but somehow the stuff didn’t pack as nicely for going home as it
did at the beginning of this adventure. We kids figured it was because we
were going home with dirty clothes – everyone knows that dirty clothes pack
bigger than clean ones – it’s all the dirt and sand and sweat – it expands
the fibers and makes clothes bigger. Somehow everything got crammed into the
car for our return journey home. We cleaned up the cabin, made sure it was
locked up tight, took our rightful places in the car with hardly any
disagreement as to who got to sit by a window and away we went.
If you think the drive up took a long time – it was nothing compared to
how long it took to get home. Remember we had all been semi-nice to each
other all week and now we were confined in really close quarters – something
had to give. We didn’t even make it to the main road before the squabbling
began. Bless Mom and Dad for not stopping the car and depositing us by the
side of the road with a sign that said, "Free for the taking!" Eventually we
ran out of steam and fell asleep – I can only imagine how happy Mom and Dad
were – the silence must have been wonderful.
Finally we arrived back home safe and sound. Never had a little house
looked so good. We piled out of the car, all five of us, hot, sweaty and a
little scruffy around the edges and I swear the first thing out of our
mouths was, "Hey Mom, what’s to eat?" Mom didn’t even dignify that with an
answer. It was all hands on deck to help unload the car. The bad part about
coming home from vacation is putting everything away and doing the laundry
that had accumulated all week. It was beans and weenies for supper and
Sunday was promoted to wash day.
Home always feels like a fantastic place to be when you’ve been away for
a while. To quote Dorothy from the "Wizard of Oz," "There is no place like
home!" The memories these family vacations generated are so very important.
It’s another part of the "Remember When" game we all play. When you take
your family on vacation and the kids are squabbling about whose turn it is
to sit by a window, and aren’t we there yet? and when do we eat? and the
always popular, Mom tell him or her to quit pinching me – just remember that
someday you will look back and remember those days as some of the best ones
you ever shared with your family. It may take a lot of years, decades even,
but someday it will become a great memory.
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