Thursday, June 16, 2022

An adventure in Waldick Township, Iowa County, Wisconsin

"It is. supposed, and justly, too, that Waldwick was inhabited shortly after the discovery of the mines at Mineral Point, for the earliest known pioneer and settler in the town, James Fitch, who came here in 1833, found the relics of an old smelting furnace on the farm now owned and occupied by Joseph Griddle. The owners of this furnace, or the names of the men connected with it, Mr. Fitch could never ascertain, neither could he learn where, or from what mines, the mineral so smelted was obtained. These facts prove conclusively that the town was inhabited at least as early as 1830, or before the Black Hawk war."

In the spring of that year, the brothers, William and Benjamin White, of Indiana, immigrated to Waldwick, built a cabin, and broke twenty acres of prairie land.


About the year 1836, William Burr, of Dover, N. H., attempted to found here a colony of Free-Will Baptists, but his sanguine hopes were blighted, as but two persons of the contemplated colony immigrated here. These were Ansen Hall and I. W. Sargent. From 1840 to 1850 a number of settlers located in the town.

Prominent among the "diggings" of Southern Waldwick was the "Dyer Diggings." The Dyer brothers bought the mine from William's brother Amos Young and Amos's partner Uriah Groshong, after William's brother-in-law Ephraim White discovered "rich ore" in 1845.

Mineral was discovered at the "Young Diggings," by Pleasant Fields, in 1843. He operated the mine for a time and then sold it to William Young. The Waldwick Mining and Smelting Company also operated several mines.


The town was created 2 Jan. 1849 and originally contained eighty-four sections. at latitude 425147N and longitude 0900121W. The first post office was established in December, 1849. Ezra A. Hall was appointed postmaster.

 "WALDWIC, Town, in southeast corner of Iowa county, intersected by the east Peckatonnica and Yellowstone creek. It possesses both prairie and timber, is sparsely settled, and is adapted both to mining and farming." Description from John W. Hunt's 1853 Wisconsin Gazetteer:

In 1861 forty-two sections of the eastern part of Waldwick were organized into a separate town and named Moscow.

Waldwick Methodist Epsicopal Church ca. 1900  Wis Hist. Soc.
The Yellowstone Methodist Church was built in 1867. It was founded by settlers from Devonshire, Cornwall and Yorkshire, England. In 1902 the name was changed to Waldwick Methodist Episcopal Church


Alfred Teague 
built the first home in Waldwick.  He also built a store behind the church and in 1885 a post office was located at the store. The post office was disbanded in 1907. "As a child I remember Waldwick as the place where we attended church. sold the eggs, bought groceries, and chicken feed, and filled the truck with gas.  Besides the church, there was a frozen food storage locker, a telephone switchboard, blacksmith shop, school,...auto repair shop, cheese factory, Woodman's Hall, and two general stores." (info from Waldick by Marion Howard)

Allen Lodge, No. 207, Good Templars, was organized in Waldwick, by Ph. Allen, Jr., of
Mineral Point April 18, 1874.







The Primitive Methodist Church, located on Section 32, was erected in 1880. Today it is called Bethel Methodist Church at the intersection of Highways 39 and County W.

By 1895, a map of Waldwick village appears in the Iowa County Plat Book. The village was never platted into blocks, lots and streets but appears to have grown from the intersection of two main roads of the township.


A Handbook of Wisconsin published in 1898 notes that businesses included a cheese factory, feed mill, blacksmith shop, farm implements and two general stores. The village was never incorporated.

Waldwick Community Church, Waldwick Wisconsin.  photo by G.F. Glaeve 4-20-2014






Pastor David Richie
The Waldwick United Methodist Church was closed by the Wisconsin Conference of the United Methodist Church because Pastor David Richie's training was not recognized by the United Methodist Church. 



The congregation voted to disband their affiliation with the  United Methodist Church and to reopen as the Waldwick Community Church.  This re-opening was accomplished in August of 2011 with the symbolic placing of the cornerstone. The ceremony was conducted by the officers of the Grand Lodge of Masonry in Wisconsin. The builders' tools of square, plum, and level are used to represent virtue, uprightness, and equality.  The Scottish Rite is one of the appendant bodies of Freemasonry that a Master Mason may join for further exposure to the principles of Freemasonry.

   In the United States the Scottish Rite is officially recognized by Grand Lodges as an extension of the degrees of Freemasonry.  


Recently the Waldwick Town Board, without being requested by the church, took the step of declaring the building a Historic Landmark as a way to protect its significant place in the community.
From Dodgeville Chronicle 9/15/2011 6:24:00 PM  "Ceremony marks formation of
Waldwick Community Church"  
Jean Berns Jones (see entire article here)







Willmirth Ching gravestone in the Waldwick Cemetery bears the Scottish Rite double eagle.
The double-headed eagle is a common symbol in heraldry. It is most commonly associated with the Byzantine Empire, the Holy Roman Empire, the Russian Empire and their successor states. In Byzantine heraldry, the heads represent the Emperor having authority over both secular and religious matters, Byzantine emperors were regarded as Christ's viceregent on Earth. It also signified the dominance of the Byzantine Emperors over both East and West. In the Holy Roman Empire's heraldry, it represented the church and the state. Several Eastern European nations adopted it from the Byzantines and continued to use it as did the Hapsburg Empire as well as the Russian Empire ; and as a fraternal emblem as in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry.   In a Scottish Rite Masonic context: the Double-Headed Eagle was introduced by King Frederick the Great of Prussia, an early patron in the formative stages of the Scottish Rite.  The Constitution of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, was ratified on 1st May 1786 when Frederick, King of Prussia was proclaimed its Chief.








about Grace Hodgson Flandrau and Judge Charles Eugene Flandrau

After readings in books by, and about Charles Macomb Flandrau, I became interested in his sister-in-law Grace.   

I did surmise that Charle's early promotion of her work, diminished as her popularity grew and began to out-shine his own.  



Selected Bibliography
 Of Grace Hodgson Flandrau

 Cousin Julia (1917)

Being Respectable (1923)

Entranced (1924)

The Lewis and Clark Expedition (1927)

Then I Saw the Congo (1929)

Indeed This Flesh (1934)

Under the Sun: Tales of Love and Death (1936)

Memoirs of Grace Flandrau (2003)

Grace Flandrau was the sister-in-law and close friend of architect Theodate Pope Riddle, who provided her with a life tenancy in a house on the Hill-Stead estate in Farmington, Connecticut. Flandrau died there on December 27, 1971 at the age of 85. By the time her will was probated in 1973, her estate was valued at $10,000,000

 

The Patriarch was Charles Eugene Flandrau (July 15, 1828 – September 9, 1903) He was an American lawyer who became influential in the Minnesota Territory, and later state, after moving there in 1853 from New York City. He served on the Minnesota Territorial Council, in the Minnesota Constitutional Convention, and on the Minnesota territorial and state supreme courts. He was also an associate justice on the Minnesota Supreme Court.


Judge Flandrau was married twice. His first marriage was on August 10, 1859 to his first cousin, Isabella Dinsmore of Kentucky, the daughter of Martha Macomb and James Dinsmore. The couple had two daughters, Martha Macomb and Sarah Gibson Flandrau, before Isabella died in 1867. Martha married Tilden Russell Selmes; their daughter, Isabella Selmes, became the first female congresswoman from Arizona, known by her married name of Isabella Greenway.

Flandrau married again to Rebecca B. Riddle, a widow and daughter of Judge William McClure and his wife of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. They had two sons. Charles Macomb and William Blair who married Grace Hodgson.

During the Dakota War, Flandrau enlisted in the Union Army and was commissioned as a captain in 1862 to raise a force to defend settlers at New Ulm. Given his success, the governor appointed him to lead the defense of southwest Minnesota, at the rank of colonel.  Flandrau moved to St. Paul, where he had a law partnership with his former Court colleague, Isaac Atwater, before being elected Minneapolis City Attorney in 1867. He died in 1903 and is buried in Oakland Cemetery. 



Her body was moved to St. Paul and buried in Oakland Cemetery, St. Paul, Minn. in the family plot near her husband William Blair Flandrau and brother-in-law. Charles Malcomb Flandrau. Her grave is marked with a single small stone.