Digger_O'Dell
New member
Hi All,
Just wanted to share about some interesting information I researched about the farm I recently moved to. I finally located a plat map from 1894 listing the owner's name. I then researched that person in hope to find a bit more information. It turns out that the owner was a German immigrant who married a woman who was born nearby here in Wisconsin. Sh was 16 when married and 9 years younger. I would assume he already had the farm by this time to afford getting married and supporting a wife and any future children. The first child was born in 1870, and they had 11 children in total! (Geez!) So what this tells me doing the math is that the farm was operational by at least 1870 if not even earlier. The farm plot has not changed since that time other than a small strip at the far edge where there is now a house on a small lot.
The layout of the buildings has changed a lot over the years as told by an aerial photo I found from 1938, but that gives me a lot of information to work with and the ability stop searching many areas that look good now but I'm sure now have nothing of value as they had buildings on them until recently. Now, I just have to wait for the soybeans to be harvested end of October to search the fields.
Hope you like the history! GL and HH!
Just wanted to share about some interesting information I researched about the farm I recently moved to. I finally located a plat map from 1894 listing the owner's name. I then researched that person in hope to find a bit more information. It turns out that the owner was a German immigrant who married a woman who was born nearby here in Wisconsin. Sh was 16 when married and 9 years younger. I would assume he already had the farm by this time to afford getting married and supporting a wife and any future children. The first child was born in 1870, and they had 11 children in total! (Geez!) So what this tells me doing the math is that the farm was operational by at least 1870 if not even earlier. The farm plot has not changed since that time other than a small strip at the far edge where there is now a house on a small lot.
The layout of the buildings has changed a lot over the years as told by an aerial photo I found from 1938, but that gives me a lot of information to work with and the ability stop searching many areas that look good now but I'm sure now have nothing of value as they had buildings on them until recently. Now, I just have to wait for the soybeans to be harvested end of October to search the fields.
Hope you like the history! GL and HH!