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Oconomowoc--"the Newport of the West"--was a summer home and tourist destination for Milwaukee, Chicago, and St. Louis families of prominence from the 1870s through the 1930s. Names like Pabst, Miller, Armour, and Ward built sprawling mansions along the shores of Lac La Belle. They arrived by train every summer to Oconomowoc's stone railroad depot, a popular restaurant today, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. According to local lore, there were 97 millionaires living in the Oconomowoc area during this era of opulence. The lavish living began to wane in the 1930s and drew to a close as a result of World War II, after which Oconomowoc was transformed into a hub of commerce and industry.
In 2002, Judy Cook discovered a packet of letters written by her great-great-grandparents, Gilbert and Esther Claflin, during the American Civil War. An unexpected bounty, these letters from 1862–63 offer visceral witness to the war, recounting the trials of a family separated. Gilbert, an articulate and cheerful forty-year-old farmer, was drafted into the Union Army and served in the Thirty-Fourth Wisconsin Infantry garrisoned in western Kentucky along the Mississippi. Esther had married Gilbert when she was fifteen; now a woman with two teenage sons, she ran the family farm near Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, in Gilbert’s absence. In his letters, Gilbert writes about food, hygiene, rampant desertions by drafted men, rebel guerrilla raids, and pastimes in the daily life of a soldier. His comments on interactions with Confederate prisoners and ex-slaves before and after the Emancipation Proclamation reveal his personal views on monumental events. Esther shares in her letters the challenges and joys of maintaining the farm, accounts of their boys Elton and Price, concerns about finances and health, and news of their local community and extended family. Esther’s experiences provide insight into family, farm, and village life in the wartime North, an often overlooked aspect of Civil War history. Judy Cook has made the letters accessible to a wider audience by providing historical context with notes and appendixes. The volume includes a foreword by Civil War historian Keith S. Bohannon.
Contains a short history of Pabst Brewing Company and Frederick Pabst's involvement with the National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic in Milwaukee, Wisconsin during August 1899. The majority of book concerns a picture of a gathering of the veterans of the all-German, 26th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment, other officers and soldiers and their guests held at the Pabst Whitefish Bay Resort with a description and photo of each veteran and guest identified.
David Wilson Small was born 18 December 1826 in Cheltenham, Montgomery, Pennsylvania. His parents were Jonah Small and Ann Wilson. He married Susanna Ely 30 January 1851 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. They had three children. He was a lawyer. He died 29 October 1899 in Oconomowoc, Waukesha, Wisconsin. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and England. Includes Doyle, Edgarton, Paxson, Stackhouse, Weart and related families.