Lead-Mining Towns of Southwest Wisconsin

Lead-Mining Towns of Southwest Wisconsin

Author: Carol March McLernon

Publisher: Arcadia Publishing

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 132

ISBN-13: 9780738551999

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East of the Mississippi River, and just north of the Illinois-Wisconsin border, the soil was once fertile with huge deposits of lead and zinc. White men discovered these riches in the early 1800s, well before Wisconsin became a state in 1848. Miners, farmers, and merchants flocked to the region, some bringing along their families. Towns with names like Snake Digs, Cottonwood, and Etna grew very rapidly. Roads, bridges, and railroad tunnels soon connected these towns where schools, churches, and businesses developed. Today tourists are invited to visit museums, mines, and shops in the region to explore its colorful past.


Wisconsin

Wisconsin

Author: Robert Carrington Nesbit

Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 660

ISBN-13: 9780299108045

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Robert Nesbit's classic single-volume history of Wisconsin was expanded by Wisconsin State Historian William F. Thompson to include the period from 1940 to the late 1980s, along with updated bibliographies and appendices. First paperback edition.


Mineral Point

Mineral Point

Author: George Fiedler

Publisher: Wisconsin Historical Society Press

Published: 2014-06

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780870206900

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A history of the town of Mineral Point from its origins to the mid-twentieth century.


Reports

Reports

Author: Missouri. Bureau of Geology and Mines

Publisher:

Published: 1894

Total Pages: 468

ISBN-13:

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A Gathering of Rivers

A Gathering of Rivers

Author: Lucy Eldersveld Murphy

Publisher: U of Nebraska Press

Published: 2000-01-01

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13: 9780803232105

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In A Gathering of Rivers, Lucy Eldersveld Murphy traces the histories of Indian, multiracial, and mining communities in the western Great Lakes region during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. For a century the Winnebagos (Ho-Chunks), Mesquakies (Fox), and Sauks successfully confronted waves of French and British immigration by diversifying their economies and commercializing lead mining. The success of the Native communities prompts important questions: What strategies did they devise to accommodate the newcomers? Why and how did very different cultures forge stable communities and working relationships? And what led to the conflicts that shattered this syncretic frontier world? Focusing upon personal stories and detailed community histories, Murphy charts the changing economic forces at work in the region, connecting them to shifts in gender roles and intercultural relationships. She argues that French, British, and Native peoples forged a social and economic syncretism expressed partly by mixed-race marriages and the emergence of multiethnic communities at Green Bay and Prairie du Chien. Significantly, Native peoples in the western Great Lakes region were able to adapt successfully to the new frontier market economy until their Native-controlled lead mining operations became the envy of outsiders who forced their way into the region during the 1820s. Murphy examines the creation of the mining and settler communities and the breakdown of their relations with Indian people.