Showing posts with label Map. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Map. Show all posts

Sunday, January 24, 2021

Plat Book 1963

 


(Source:  Kenosha County Farm Bureau
Published by Rockford Map Publishers, 1963)


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Ozanne Family

1877 partial map of Somer Township
Ozanne parcels, Section 9 and 10
Peter Ozanne, James Ozanne, Dr. James Ozanne, E.G. Ozanne, H.A. (Helena Ozanne) Hitler, A.C. Ozanne
James Ozanne
James and Rachel (Thoume) Ozanne were natives of Guernsey.  They were the parents of four children, three sons and one daughter, namely:  James, Peter, John and Rachel of whom John died at the age of fifteen years, and Rachel died in childhood.  James Ozanne and his family came to America, landing at Racine, Wisconsin June 18, 1842.  On July 4th following, he bought 326 acres on land, located in Somers Township, Kenosha County, later dividing a portion of this land between his sons, James and Peter, and passed the balance of his life here, dying age at 72 years.
He was twice married, his first wife being the mother of  Peter and James.  After her death, he went back to Guernsey where in 1847 he married Mary Carre, who lived in Somers Township  four children were born to this union:  Helena, widow of H.A. Hitler of Somers Township whom she had one children, Clinton; Alfred, who died in Tempe, Ariz in 1916, leaving three children; Miss Emma, of Somers Township, and Edward G., also of Somers Township.
(Source:  Biographical Record of Prominent and Representative Men of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Wisconsin, J.H. Beers & Co., 1906)

Dr. James Ozanne
Dr. James Ozanne (son of James and Rachel Thomne Ozanne) was born on the Isle of Guernsey May 21, 1825.  He was a physician.  He was a graduate of Hahnemann Medical College, Chicago, Illinois, 1862.  He married September 21, 1851 in Princeton, Wisconsin, Miss Marie Fidelia Kellogg, the daughter of Austin Kellogg, one of the first pioneer settlers in Somers, Township and Kenosha County, also Kellogg's Corners neighborhood in Somers Township.  Dr. James Ozanne died in Somers July 24, 1891.  His widow, Maria, moved to Oshkosh, Wisconsin with her son.  To this union six children were born: James Thoume Ozanne, Rachel Amelia, Walter Henry, Gail Austin, Irvine Eugene, and Herbert Giles.
(Source:  "The Kelloggs in the Old World and the News, Volume 2, by Timothy Hopkins, published in San Francisco, California 1903).

Peter Ozanne (son of James and Rachel Thoume Ozanne)
"Peter Ozanne was born on the Isle of Guernsey in the English Channel on March 27, 1827, and died March 6, 1905, lacking but twenty-one days of being seventy-eight years old.  He was one of the pioneers in this section of Kenosha County and for many years was a very prominent and influential man in Somers Township.
James and Rachel (Thoume) Ozanne, the parents of Peter Ozanne, were natives of Guernsey.  They were the parents of four children, three sons and one daughter, namely:  James, Peter, John and Rachel of whom John died at the age of fifteen years, and Rachel died in childhood.  James married and reared a family; he became a physician.  James Ozanne and his family came to America, landing at Racine, Wisconsin June 18, 1842.  One July 4th following he bought 326 acres of land, located in Somers Township, Kenosha County, later dividing a portion of this land between his sons, James and Peter, and passed the balance of his life here, dying aged seventy-two years.  He was twice married, his first wife being the mother of our subject.  After her death he went back to Guernsey where he married Mary Carre, who still lives in Somers Township; she has been blind for some years.  Four children were born to this union:  Alfred C. of Tempe, Ariz.; Helena, widow of H.A. Hitler of Somers Township; Miss Emma, of Somers Township; and Edward G., also of Somers Township.
On March 28, 1849, Peter Ozanne was married to Miss Mary Ann LeMessurier, who was born April 17, 1832 in Guernsey, and six children were born to them, as follows:  Mary Ann, Pierre T., Lawrence E., Clarence F., Rosa A. and Charles H.  Mary Ann died aged five months.  Pierre T. is single, and lives on the old homestead with his brother Lawrence E.  Clarence F. twin brother of Lawrence E. died in 1884, aged twenty years and three days.  Charles H. died in 1877 aged nine years, eleven months and twenty-four days.  Rosa A. married Fred L. Holmes, lives at South Haven, Michigan and has five living children: Bertrand M., Harry R., Fred B., Beatrice R. and Mary L.
For a period of nineteen years Peter Ozanne was Somers Town Clerk continuously; for a number of years he was Somers Town Treasurer; was Clerk of School District No. 7; and for a few years was Secretary of the Somers Mutual Fire Insurance Company.
The farm which Mr. Ozanne originally owned in Somers Township, a gift from his father, contained eighty-seven acres, two acres having since been sold.  To have lived in one locality for sixty-three years and to have, during that time, gained the respect and esteem of one's fellow citizens and preserved it to the end, is a pretty fair test of a man's quality, and such was the case with Peter Ozanne.  His remains rest in Oakwood Cemetery.  He was a member of the Methodist Church.
Mrs. Ozanne, who still survives, is much esteemed in Somers Township where she is well known for her many admirable qualities of mind and heart.  Her parents were Abraham and Mary (Le Prevost) Le Messurier, and her maternal grandparents were Daniel and Elizabeth (La Huray) Le Prevost, the family evidently being of French descent.  The three daughters of Abraham and May Le Messurier were:  Mary Ann, Mrs. Ozanne; Margarate, deceased, formerly the wife of Thomas Le Poidevin; and Matilda, widow of Fred Graham, now residing in Racine.
The father of Mrs. Ozanne died in Guernsey (where he was born) aged thirty-nine years.  He was by trade a boot and shoe manufacturer, but gave up much of his time to music, for which he had considerable talent, being a fine performer on the cornet and the clarinet; his services were frequently in demand in musical organizations.  After his death his widow came to America, in 1847, settling in Racine, Wisconsin., where she died in 1886, at the age of seventy-five years.  She married (second) William Graham, who had been a soldier in the Mexican War.  He was a ship carpenter by trade and lived at Racine for many years, dying aged about seventy-nine.  The two sons of Peter Ozanne carry on the farm, both being capable agriculturists and good citizens."
(Source: Biographical Record of Prominent and Representative Men of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Wisconsin, J.H. Beers & Co., 1906)

Peter Ozanne
He served 19 years as Somers Town Clerk and also several years as Somers Town Treasurer.  He was served a number of years as Secretary of the Somers Mutual Fire Insurance Company.

"Mrs. Holmes (nee Rosa Ozanne) and children of Chicago are visiting with her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ozanne."
(Source:  Racine Journal, July 11, 1900)

Edward G. Ozanne (son of James and Mary Carre Ozanne)
Edward G. Ozanne, who was engaged in farming in Section 10, Somers Township, was born August 30, 1854, in the township where he now resides, his parents being James and Mary (Carre) Ozanne, who were natives of the Isle of Guernsey, whence they came to the United States in 1842.  Edward went to local school until 16 years old.  he has since inherited a portion of his father's farm and has purchased the interest of the other heirs in the property.  Later he sold off part of his land but at present owns 80 acres. In 1881 Edward G. Ozanne married Miss Ida Clemens, who died in 1895, leaving two children, Edward C. and Mary E.  The former is married and has two children.  Mr. Ozanne was married again October 6, 1898, the lady of his choice being Miss Minnie A. Grimshaw, daughter of Joseph and Bessie (Lee) Grimshaw, the former a native of England.  The mother, who was born in Somers, is still living in that town.
(Source:  The City and County of Kenosha, Wisconsin, Volume II, S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1916)

"E.G. Ozanne has put up a windmill for the purpose of cutting feed.  It is one manufactured by the Winship Co., of Racine.
(Source:  Racine Journal December 3, 1896)

"E.G. Ozanne left on Tuesday fro Beatrice, Nebraska where Mrs. Ozanne is spending a few weeks for the benefit of her health."
( Source:  Racine Journal Aug. 18, 1905)




Isle of Guernsey - About
"Off the northern coast of France lies Guernsey, from which many early settlers came to Racine and Kenosha Counties.  The island is high-cliffed and topped with living green and lies amid the swirling tides of the English Channel.  It was called Sarnia by the Romans.  Guernsey has an area of about 25 square miles, much less than a standard township in the state of Wisconsin.  It is about 5-1/2 miles at its widest point and 9-1/2 miles in length.  Its inhabitants are dairy and garden farmers who have acres of greenhouses where the choicest garden crops are raised.  Famed are the White Pinks and other flowers raised for the English  markets.
The little isle is the home of "a beautiful streamlined creature, straight of back and clean of limb" - the famous Guernsey cow.  In 1831 Capt. Prince of Boston brought two heifers and a sire back with him from Guernsey and sent them to his brother on a tiny island in Lake Winnepesaukee.It was questioned whether these imported cattle could stand a more severe climate, but they proved to have endurance and adaptability.
Tragedy came to the isle in 1940 when the Germans invaded it.  Many of the natives were evacuated but others refused to abandon their cows-most of these gentle-eyed creatures disappeared into the conquerors' stew pots.  America is making plans to return this breed of cattle to native soil."
(Source:  Plight of Guernsey in Dark Days of War Revealed in a Letter to Lawrence Ozanne. Article written by Minnie Ozanne, Racine Journal Times, published September 28, 1945).

Friday, November 4, 2011

Sniffin

Solomon Sniffin
Solomon Sniffin was born in Coxsackie, Green County, New York state about 1820.  He was the son of David Sniffin.  His wife was Sarah G. who was also born in New York state about 1819.  They came to Wisconsin with brother, Ebenezer and wife Almira in 1850.  Their farm was located in Somers Township, Section 6 West, also known as the Kellogg's Corners area.
Solomon and Sarah had eight children.  Solomon died January 27, 1883 and Sarah died on August 20, 1890.  Both are buried at Sylvania Cemetery.
Children of Solomon and Sarah Sniffin:
Kitty Sniffin.  Married Josiah D. Merritt, a lawyer from Chicago, Illinois on June 26, 1877 in Kenosha County.
Emma Sniffin.  Born October 29, 1850 in Somers Township.  Married Charles T. Coonley, son of Edward & Ulellia Coonley, on April 5, 1868 in Kenosha County.  He was born on April 10, 1846 at Stephensville, Greene County, New York.
Mary Ann J. Sniffin.  Born about 1853 in Somers Township.  Married Francis A. Hunter, son of John and Esther Hunter, on March 22, 1864 in Racine County.
Reuben N. Sniffin.  Born about 1855 in Somers Township.
Sarah E. Sniffin.  Born about 1861 in Somers Township.
C. Sniffin.  Born about 1668 in Somers Township.  Married Lydia J. (Raines) Watkins, daughter of John and Ellen Raines, on December 31, 1883 in Racine County.  He was a farm in Somers Township.
David L. Sniff.  Born about 1869 in Somers Township.

More About the Sniffin Family
Ebenezer Sniffin is included in this posting because he is Solomon's brother.  Ebenezer resided for a short time in Somers Township but eventually purchased a parcel in Mt. Pleasant, Racine County.
Ebenezer Sniffin married Almira J. Titus in the fall of 1846 in New York state.  They moved to Wisconsin with Solomon Sniffin, Ebenezer's brother.  They moved to Mt. Pleasant in 1866 where they farmed.  They had four children.  Almira died November 21, 1881 and Ebenezer died on September 7, 1886,  They bare buried at Sylvania Cemetery.
Children of Ebenizer and Almira:
Mary F. Sniffin.  Born February 27, 1850 in Green County, New York.  Married Rufus Sniffen, son of Reuben and Mary Ann Sniffin, in Kenosha County, on Spril 5, 1868.  He was a carpenter who was born in Coxsackie, Green County, New York.
Edwin S. Sniffin.  Born about 1853 in Somers Township.  Died at the age of 18 years on May 19, 1871. 
David Sniffin.  Born about 1854 in Somers Township.
Harvey E. Sniff.  Born about 1862 in Somers Township.
(Source:  Mary Ann Culshaw Falk and Sylvania Cemetery Trustees)

1861 Partial Map of Somers Township, Kellogg's Corners area
Sniffin two (2) parcels in Section 6

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

1877 Map and Minnie Ozanne Somers History

Partial Plat Map of 1887 Somers Township
The purpose of this blog page is to identify (1887 Map) some of the earliest settlement in Somers - along the Green Bay Trail.  The Green Bay Trail can be identified on the map above as the center north-south road in the middle of the map.  The intersection showing the "M.E. Church" is Highway E or Somers Road.
A few historical building photographs are shown below and are considered some of the oldest evidence of our historic settlement.   Although the landscape and structures have changed, you can take a ride and see for yourself where our history began.  I hope you enjoy finding the names on the map!
Click on this link to read Somers history written by Mrs. E.G. (Minnie) Ozanne, one our pioneers,  published in "Souvenir, Kenosha County Court House: and bits of yesterday, foundations of today" by Otis L. Trenary. 1925.

"Among the early settlers of Somers (1835) were Benjamin Felch, Hugh Longwell, Griffin and William Allen, Charles Leet, and William Smith.  Jacob Montgomery and his two sons built a log cabin near the present site of E.G. Ozanne's residence, the first in the town and in the county.  In the southeast part of the town Cephus Weed began his farming and on Pike River, Thomas Parsons built a sawmill (near Berryville).  This early immigration followed the Indian Trail which later became the Green Bay Road.  The plank road running from Racine and connecting with the plank road west out of Kenosha followed part of the old Green Bay Trail and ran near Petrifying Springs in Somers.  A toll gate was placed near the present home of George Leet.
In 1836 a weekly stage began to run from Chicago to Milwaukee over this Green Bay Trail, and the first Post Office was established at Willis's.  This tavern was located in the southwest corner of what is now the intersection of the Prairie Avenue Road with the Green Bay Road, Maxwell's Corners.  In this year, too, the first school taught by Miss Brizee was held in the Hugh Longwell house.  In the spring of 1837 the Kelloggs' - Chauncey, Seth H., and Thaddeus - with their families built their shanties and held their first religious meetings.  The result of the first Sunday School is shown when in 1860 a festival was held with an attendance of 300 children.
The Methodist Episcopal Church completed in 1840 was not only the first in the town of Somers, but we believe, the first in the state.
A Government observatory was built in 1860 on the William Robinson farm to a height of 72 feet.  This is on the present John Salentine farm on the hill about one mile south of the Somers Cemetery and Town Hall.  It is the highest point between Chicago and Milwaukee on the Green Bay Trial.  A pile of stones shows today where the tower stood.
The first frame barn built in the town was built for Rev. James Ozanne, and a part still stands.  By act of the state legislature, the town was named "Pike", April 15, 1843.  In 1851 "Pike was changed to "Somers".
On May 1, 1843, the first town meeting was held in the house of Charles Leet.  Joseph P. Hurlbut was chosen moderator of this meeting and Oscar Hurlbut, Clerk.  Tax raised in 1843 - $372.39; 1924, $96,594.  A farm of 88 acres in Somers in 1836 was valued at $1,040, the amount of taxes on this farm was $10.79."

Charles Leet Home
Contributor:  C.E. Dewey
This home was built in 1842 and it is believed that this picture shows the house in its original state.  It was remodeled in the 1860's at the close of the Civil War.  This property had been in the Leet family for one hundred years at the time this slide was produced. (1940).
(Source:  Photo Courtesy of Minnie Ozanne Family)

The Longwell House, residence of Hugh Longwell.
Southern Wisconsin's first public school building, erected in Somers Township in 1836, was held in the Longwell home with a Miss Brizee as the teacher.  In 1846 the Pike River school district was formed.  A new school building was constructed and opened in 1849.  Mr. Hugh Longwell, the first settler of Somers made a claim in March 1835 and settled where he resided with his family until his death.
(Source:  Minnie Ozanne Family)


Hugh Longwell Biographical Sketch
Hugh Longwell was born in New York about 1798.  He married his wife Letta in New Jersey and the couple had six children.  Hugh Longwell's sister, Sarah Maria Longwell, was born in Somers Township in 1841 and married William Toase (a neighboring land owner in Section 2).  William's mother married a second time to George Haigh of Somers Township, a substantial farming family in Section 8.

Methodist Episcopal Church
Built by Austin Kellogg and his brothers around 1837 and was completed in 1840.  An addition was added at the front of the building some years later.  The church was torn down around 1910.  The timbers were hand-hewn out of solid oak.
(Source:  Photo Courtesy of Wisconsin Historical Society, Wisconsin Historical Images)





 

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Kramer, Jacob


The Jacob Kramer Family
Jacob, Sr., Mrs (Minnie Bose Kramer), Clarence, Arthur, Albert, Ella, Jacob, Jr. (Jake), and Fred.
Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer
Click on photo for larger view.

The Jacob J. Kramer farmhouse in Berryville
Photo Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer


Jacob J. Kramer Biographical Sketch

Jacob J. Kramer was born September 6, 1860 in Hessen, Nasau, Germany.  At the age of 23, he sailed on the ship "Fulda" from Bremen, Germany on March 15, 1883, arriving in America at the Port of New York.  Mr. Kramer's sister, living in Racine, arrived in America several years before Jacob arrived.  She married a Mandernack and lived by the Halter farm.
Jacob J. Kramer married Miss Minnie Bose in 1887.  She was the daughter of Frederick and Sophia Bose, Somers pioneers who settled in the Berryville area.  Frederick Bose, born in Germany about 1835, was the son of Conrad and Mary Bose, who left their native land of Germany and immigrated to America with their children, Charlotte, Eliza, Frederick, Henry, Ed, and Charles.  The Bose family sailed on the ship "Emma" leaving the Port of Bremen, arriving at the Port of New York.  Conrad Bose was one of the first pioneer families in the Berryville section of Somers Township.
Frederick Bose purchased 39 acres (shown on map below as "F.  Bose" located on County Line Road and Lathrop Avenue) in Somers Township and with his wife Sophia built a house and raised their family.  When Jacob J. Kramer and Minnie Bose were married, they lived with Minnie's parents and eventually the Kramers purchased the parcel from Minnie's parents.  Jacob and Minnie raised their children and lived their entire lives on this farm.

1887 partial plat Map of Somers Somers, Berryville
Frederick Bose parcel located center top of map
Corner of Lathrop Avenue and Racine/Kenosha County Line Road

Jacob, Sr. and Minnie Bose
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)
Kramer hay wagon
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

Kramer hand plowing
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

Kramer hay wagon in from of barn
(Source:  Photogeraph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

The Kramer farmhouse kitchen
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

Kramer Chopping Wood
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

Ms. Kramer picking raspberries
Notice the arms are protected from being scratched by the berry thorns.
The wooden berry carrier was very common and can still be found in our old barns.
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

The Kramer Farm
Butchered Hogs
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

Kramer chopping wood with ax
(Source:  Photograph Courtesy of Warren and Lyla Kramer)

Smith, William

Photo Courtesy of the American Geographical Society
Partial Map of 1861 Plat Map of the Township of Somers, Kenosha County, Wisconsin

Introduction
This 1861 map shows four parcels owned by William Smith; 120 acres (Wm Smith), 160 acres (Wm Smith), and 2 parcels of 55 acres (W. P. Smith) each.  Of significance is the location of his parcels; the location being the intersections of Highway E (Somers Road) and Highway 31 (Green Bay Road), the site of the earliest settlements in the Township of Somers.  Please take special note of the school, town house, and cemetery on this intersection.

About William Smith
"William Smith, a farmer in Somers Township, was born in Scotland in 1802. He came to America in 1834 and in the fall of that year went to Milwaukee.  In the spring of 1835 he purchased 160 acres of land where the city of Milwaukee now stands.  In the fall of 1836, Mr. Smith burned a kiln of lime of 300 barrels, in what was probably the first lime kiln built in Wisconsin.  He sold his land in Milwaukee in 1836, and repurchased it in 1838.
In 1836, he came to Kenosha County and at the land sale the following spring, he purchased 320 acres in what is now Somers Township, (see map above) and began cultivating it.  Mr. Smith married in Burlington, Wisconsin in 1842, Miss Arvilla Dyer, a native of Herkimer Co., New York.  Mr. Smith, some years ago, while ordering from his premises two young men who were shooting pigeons, on a Sunday morning, was fired upon by one of them, shooting his right arm entirely off, from which Mr. Smith has since suffered very much, being quite old at the time of the occurrence."
(Source:  The History of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Wisconsin, Chicago: Western Historical Company, 1879)

William Smith - 1860 Awarded 2nd Prize from Wisconsin State Agricultural Society
A judging committee, appointed by the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society, assembled to judge six farms that were entered in the statewide competition.  Awards would be given for "superior tillage, proper rotation of crops, and general good management, calculated to be economical and profitable, than, to costly buildings or large outlays of an amateur or fancy nature".  Examination was made between the 15th of June and the 15th of July, 1860.  The written report for William Smith of Somers is as follows:

"Mr. Smith's farm is located in the Town of Somers, in Kenosha County, nine miles from Racine.  Mr. Smith, a Scotsman by birth, having landed in this country in 1834, coming to the territory of Wisconsin soon after, and stopping for a time in Milwaukee.  In 1836 he located on the farm upon which he now lives, and have ever since devoted himself to farming, and with excellent success.  His farm, at present, consists of 280 acres, 200 of which is under a good state of cultivation, the balance being timber land.  The portion under cultivation is upon prairie - of an excellent soil naturally, and which has lost nothing of its excellence under the judicious management of Mr. Smith.
His farm is subdivided into lots of 28 acres each, and each lot is provided with a good spring, rendering it convenient for pasturing stock in its regular turn, and a regular rotation of pasturage, meadow, and tillage is kept up with the various lots.
The fencing upon this farm is mostly of boards.  Five boards with a cap of scantling about two by five inches.  These caps are spiked firmly to the posts, and where the ends come together, they are coupled with a scrap of iron some four inches long, and spiked through the cap pieces into the posts.  This makes the fence remarkably firm, and protects the lots against the most vicious animals with entire certainty.  We are thus particular in this description, as it was new to us, and we were very favorably impressed with it, and would be glad to see the example followed by others.  The crops upon this farm are very fine, and the appearance of the whole farm gives abundant proof that the director of the operations upon it, is worthy to rank with the finest farmers in the State.  Mr. Smith's herd of cattle is among the best, as a whole, that we have seen in the State.  In his buildings, Mr. Smith has shown good taste, having in both economy and utility."
(Source:  Wisconsin State Agricultural Society, Reports and Awards of Premiums, Report of Committee on Counties, Vol. VI 1860).

Monday, September 26, 2011

1908 "Village" of Somers

1908 Map of the "Village" of Somers, Township of Somers, Kenosha County, Wisconsin
Click on map for closer view.

Settlement of "The Village"

Early pioneer settlement of farms and little neighborhood clusters were established in Somers Township as early as the 1830's. The building of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad is the primary reason why the "village" of Somers established and grew at its current location. Here are a few photos that may interest you.
Click on this link to view a freight train and Somers Station (c. 1934).

Click on this link to view a passenger train photographed in Somers (c.1934).

Pioneer Family Names on Map - West to East North Side of Highway E or Somers Road
  1. Bush, W.R.
  2. Sorensen, C.
  3. Bishop A.J.*
  4. Longmore, J.
  5. Heddle F.*
  6. Thompson, N.E.*
  7. Spence*
  8. Woodmen Hall
  9. Nelson, J.
  10. Bain, W. (east of tracks)
  11. Mitchell, Mrs. (east of tracks)
  12. Hamilton, G. (east of tracks)*
Pioneer Family Names on Map - West to East South Side of Highway E or Somers Road
  1. Longmore, E.
  2. Bailey, P.*
  3. Cook, E.
  4. Anderson, P.M.*
  5. Grimshaw, Mrs.*
  6. Bishop, J.*
  7. Longmore J.*
  8. Bishop J.*
  9. M.E. (Methodist Episcopal) Church Parsonage
  10. Lytle, H.*
  11. Gould, M.R.*
  12. Mitchell Bros.
  13. M.E. (Methodist Episcopal) Church
  14. Bishop*
  15. Yule, B.F.*
  16. Presbyterian Church Parsonage*
  17. Schultz, A.*
  18. Mitchell Bros.
  19. Wirtz, J.B.*
  20. Bullamore Bros.*
  21. Lauer (east of tracks)
  22. Rasmussen (east of tracks)
Back Street - West to East
  1. L.H. Fenske*
  2. Lytle, H.
  3. Fenske, L.H.
  4. Lytle, H.
* = 20 original pioneer homes still standing