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Native Americans following their trail from Milwaukee
to Green Bay could always tell where they were when they reached
the mouth of the Sheboygan River. They called this spot Schwab-we-way-kum,
Native American terminology for "great noise underground." The theory is
that the rushing sounds of the falls upstream prompted this description
and this is a more generally accepted version of how Sheboygan
got its name.
When the European settlers first came, there were
probably about 1000 Native Americans living in the county, composed mainly
of Pottawatomies, Chippewas, Ottowas, Winnebagoes and Menominees.
Their villages and camps were clustered on the bank or shore of
practically every lake or stream, with the largest villages situated
along the shore of Lake Michigan. After this territory began to
interest the pioneers, treaties were made with the Native Americans. On
September 26, 1833, in a treaty made at Chicago, the Native Americans relinquished
all claim to the lands on the west shore of Lake Michigan, including
what is now Sheboygan County, though many Native Americans remained here
for many years.
Sheboygan County has three birthdays.
On December 7, 1836, an act of the territorial legislature detached
the area from Brown County. This was less than a year after Wisconsin
became a territory and nearly twelve years before it became a
state. It was not until two years later, December 17, 1838, that
the legislature passed a law organizing the county government
and providing for the first election of officers, which was held
March 4, 1839. December 17, 1838 should properly be considered
the county's birthday.
Sheboygan County's boundaries have never
changed from its original organization. The first town was the
Town of Sheboygan, organized March 8, 1839, with its boundaries
extending to those of the county. As new towns were formed they
were set off from the Town of Sheboygan. In early times Sheboygan
County had a commission form of Government. The governing body
was a board of three commissioners elected by the people of the
county at large.
In 1848 the supervisor system was made
compulsory, but Sheboygan County had voluntarily accepted it some
years before. So rapid was settlement that the county had all
of its present number of 15 towns by 1855. By 1870 the county
board consisted of supervisors chosen from each town, incorporated
villages and each ward in the cities. In 1965 the county was divided
into 39 supervisory districts, based on population, with one supervisor
elected for a two-year term in each district. In 1982 the number
of supervisory districts changed to 34. The city of Sheboygan
has always been the county seat.
The first permanent settlement in Sheboygan
County, it is claimed, was made in the fall of 1834 when William
Payne and Col. Oliver Crocker built a sawmill near the confluence
of the Mullet and Sheboygan Rivers at the present site of Sheboygan
Falls.
A study of names of the first pioneers
established them to have been of English ancestry or so-called
"Yankees" from New England. First came trappers, then surveyors,
followed by businessmen. They were followed in the 1840's and
50's by large migrations of Germans, Dutch, and Irish who came
directly from Europe. The Settlers started clearing the land and
raising crops--the work they had learned in their native land.
With the increased interest in agriculture, dairying emerged as
a principal industry in the county. These hardy immigrants faithfully
carried on the work that the American Pioneers of New England
stock had begun. The present wealth and prosperity of Sheboygan
County shows how well they succeeded. Cheese-making moved from
the farmhouse and dairy barn in 1858 with the first cheese factory
being located on the Fond du Lac Plank Road, two miles west of
Sheboygan Falls. By 1875 there were 45 factories producing over
2,000,000 pounds of cheese. At one time there were 116 factories
in the county. Today the number of operating factories has dwindled
and the bulk of the dairy products are produced in cooperative
and corporate dairies. A great concentration of dairying continues
in Sheboygan County. While the number of dairy farms is decreasing,
herd sizes are becoming larger.
Many factories contributed in making Sheboygan
County a prosperous manufacturing center almost from the beginning.
A wealth of natural water power from lakes and streams flowing
generally south-easterly into Lake Michigan attracted numerous
saw mills and flour mills. Many of the immigrants were artisans
with skilled trades and with the abundant supply of raw materials,
it was natural that early manufacturing utilized the abundant
forest resources. In the 1850's implements and engines were being
made in Sheboygan and a tannery prospered. Up to the Civil War
Sheboygan Falls out-ranked Sheboygan as a manufacturing center.
Two outstanding developments characterized the era between 1880
and 1890. One was a phenomenal growth in population, and the other
was a development of large scale industry. In 1875, Sheboygan
had a population of less than 7000 and this mushroomed to 16,300
by 1890. Currently, Sheboygan County has a population of over
110,000. Woodworking continued to dominate the scene, producing
such products as lathes, windmills, spokes, sashes, doors and
window blinds, clothes, reels, rakes, carriages, wagons and barrels.
The manufacturing of enamel-ware emerged as an industry of great
importance in the 1880's in the form of small kitchen cooking
utensils and large kitchen and bathroom fixtures. The latter industry
has become the largest employer of labor in the county with outlets
throughout the world.
Various immigrants had their cultural
and economic effect on the community. Thrifty and industrious,
they earned and saved money with which to build homes and communities
of which they can justly be proud. Great music lovers, they also
formed singing societies and these groups still conduct festivals
and dances. Slavonic Catholics and Lithuanians arrived on the
Sheboygan scene early in the twentieth century, and these ethnic
groups have added to the heritage of the county.
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