YORK, present and past
By
Marilyn Jaeger
York is in the most southerly bottom tier of counties of the state of
Wisconsin, but in the top tier of towns (as Wisconsin calls “townships”) in
that county of Green. To the north
is Dane County, wherein lies the state capital of Madison.
To the east is theTown of New Glarus and the village by the same name,
settled in 1837 by Swiss immigrants. South
is the Town of Adams, another strictly rural township like York.
On the west border are the counties of Lafayette and Iowa, and straddling
their county borders, the village of Blanchardville just one mile from the York
boundary.
What reaches out to you
first is the beauty of this place. Approach
the Town of York from outside its limits and you will probably be “riding a
ridge” like State Highway 39 or 78 and County J or A or traversing bottomlands
such as Postville Road or Dougherty Creek Road or VW Road. Turn off that ridge road and you soon drop into the lovely
twisty valley of Blue Mound Branch or Sawmill Creek or Erickson or Dougherty
Creeks.
A paragraph from Jerusalem Creek: Journeys into Driftless Country
by Ted Leeson describes this 36-square-mile town accurately:
“Ahead
of you, though, the land begins to wrinkle and old, like
fingerprint or the creases of an old man’s palm, producing an
almost regular alternation of steep-sided ridges and small, deep
ravines. . . Two-lane
blacktops, shoulderless and unlined,
rise and fall with the terrain,
twisting around side hills and coiling
down the valleys.
The farms are smaller here, confined to the narrow
plateaus and flatter ridge tops
and scattered irregularly along the
meandering strips of bottomland;
the slopes that rise from valley floors,
too steep to till, remain in mixed
hardwood forest. . .”
Immigrants, many from Norway and Switzerland, found York to be a land
recalling their own heart-full memories of mountains and streams.
Willing to work hard to break new ground, they quickly rose above the
harshness of the farms many must have left, and wrote letters back to the old
country encouraging family and friends to join them in this new place of
“limitless” opportunities.
Who were some of the first settlers?
In 1838 John Stewart settled in the area that is now called Postville but
was formerly named Stewart. Other
early settlers in York were William C. Green, Amos Conkey, Albert Green, Albro
and William Crowel, and Ezra Wescott. Records
from History of Green County, Wisconsin published by Union Publishing
Company, Springfield, Illinois, 1884 reflect that Harriet Peebles, the
two-year-old daughter of Philander and Hannah Peebles, was the first death, on
January 1, 1843. Philander Peebles
was one of the early town chairmen (see “Town Board” on the website menu).
Adeline Stewart, the wife of first settler John, died September 5, 1844
and is buried on the old John Stewart farm.
Many of the pioneers are buried in one of the cemeteries in the town:
York Prairie Cemetery (section 23), Old York Cemetery and York Memorial Cemetery
(section 5) or the Ula Cemetery (section 17).
How many others are lying in unmarked graves on the farmsteads, or in
neighboring towns?

Early area settlers' graves here at the
northern edge of York Township are marked with a signpost visible from Lee
Valley Road in Perry Township. The graves had been previously marked only
by red paint on nearby trees.
Two Norwegian Lutheran churches were established in the Town of York,
close to each other, on Highway 39 in Section 5.
Before they were built residents traveled to use the services of the old
Hauge log church in Town of Perry. In
the 1960’s a Baptist church was started in the brick schoolhouse in Postville.
That congregation since moved to New Glarus and became the New Glarus
Baptist Church—but the old pews are still being used in the York Town Hall.
The Old York Church congregation moved to New Glarus and became Shepherd
of the Hills Lutheran Church. York
Memorial Church is the only active church building in the Town today.
A sawmill was in operation in the mid-1800’s on the east bank of
Sawmill Creek where Sawmill Road crosses the creek.
The site is now owned by Skip and Sharon Marunde.
By 1890, according to a plat map, there is no record of the sawmill.
It served its purpose of providing lumber for farm buildings when
homesteads were being claimed and subdued.
A number of farmers might still have in their possession old homestead
papers signed by the U. S. president in office at the time – President Taylor,
President Buchanan, etc.
Six country schools in the Town of York echoed with learning and laughter
through the years. Bem School was in Section 12, on Highway 39.
The old merry-go-round is still prominent in the front yard, and the
school has been turned into a residence. The
building for York Center School on York Center Road in Section 15 still stands
but is abandoned. Sunnyside School was in Section 18, tucked back into a branch of the
small valley. Only the foundation
can still be seen. Postville School was a sturdy brick building, and it metamorphosized
from a school to a church to the present house.
Loyalty School stands on the
top of a hill in Section 29. Over the front door of the school, now a home, reads
“Loyalty School, where all the smart Norwegians come from, 1858-1965”.
Of Sunnyside and Loyalty Schools particularly, oldtimers say “You had
to go uphill both ways, both going to and coming home from school!” Farmers
School was on the corner of County J and County H.
The original building is gone but there is another residence at the site.
Cheese factories were vital to the life of all York residents.
Fifteen factories were humming at one time; now six of them have been
turned into residences and the rest are completely gone.
York Prairie Valley (Section 4) is now the dwelling of the Thomas
Dobson family. Step Valley (Section 5, north of York Church and off of Highway 78),
McPeace (Section 7, off Highway 78 between the Robert Marks’ and the Rick
Fredrickson’s), and Brager (Section
7 at intersection of Buckeye Road and Sunnyside Road) have only a few piles of
stones indicating where they were. York Center (Section 10, residence of the Kurt Fellers), Poplar
Grove (Section 12, far southeast corner), and Hay
Hollow (Section 16, now the home of the Tony and Mindy Winchester and where
their pottery is also produced using the cooling waters of Sawmill Creek) can
still be seen. Hay Hollow was the
last operating cheese factory that closed in the late 1980’s.
Blue Ribbon, Section 19, is on
the York-Blanchard town line on County H, the old Ed Lageson farm and now
“Gray Gables”. Sawmill cheese factory is now the home of Steve and Barb Jackson, on
Loyalty Road in Section 29. South
of the Wenger farm buildings on County H in Section 23 was the Postville
factory. Not far from there was the
Walnut Grove factory (Section 27) on
County A land, presently owned by Ron Strommen. Farmers Grove was
in Section 25 north of the junction of County Roads H and J.
The Vinger factory was on
Yankee Hollow Road, Section 33, below the Bob Helmeid farm, and Strommen
was on Gould Hill Road in Section 31 where Jamie and Michelle Ritschard now live.
A copy of the articles of Association for the "York Prairie Cheese and
Butter Manufacturing Company" of the Town of York, Green County,
Wisconsin show the principals to be Lewis Lewis, Ole Burgeson, Henry
Jordee, Henry Legler and Fred Legler. This factory was just south of
Kuenzi Lane directly across from the former Fjelstad barn an eighth mile west
of County J. This factory was registered on November 3, 1888. When it ceased
operating as a factory it served as sleeping quarters for the workmen that
built the Fjelstad farmhouse around 1910. The lumber was salvaged only to be
reconstructed in the "Company" shed just north of the Dane/Green
line on the west side of County JG. A company shed housed the threshing
machines for oats or barley, corn shredders and silo fillers. The neighbors worked
together to accomplish these tasks throughout the year at the appropriate harvest
time.
There were at least three post offices in the Town at the turn of the
twentieth century, in Stewart (now Postville), at the Ula
farm, and at Bem which is now Strahm corners where Highway 39 and County J
intersect. Mail was brought from
Mineral Point through the Town of Moscow and to these stations by stagecoach on
the way to Monroe, county seat of Green County.
The 23,050 acres of land in York became “civilized” predominately by
dairy farms. At one time there were
nigh unto 200 farms raising cows, pigs, chickens, sheep, horses and growing
wheat, oats, barley, corn and soybeans. Now
in the year 2004 there are 32 dairy farms and 26 farms running heifers and
steers but without milking facilities. Three
farms currently raise sheep and/or goats, and five farms have 3 or more horses.
Most of the current farms have one or both partners working off the farm;
many commute to Monroe, Madison, and Dodgeville.
York has become an attractive location for those who desire the rural,
pastoral atmosphere but can still get to jobs in less than an hour.
Thus to continue having viable farms as well as provide home for people
seeking country living is an ongoing challenge.
(Thanks to former Town Clerk, Quinten Syse,
as well as David
Hermanson and Bill Kuenzi for valuable information.)
Back
to Table of Contents