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Milking Traditional Cache

Hidden : 7/16/2020
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:


In 1915 almost every farm had a cow or two for milking and many of the farms in the area were dairy farms. Farming wasn't just hard work for men and boys, women and girls worked hard on the farm as well. It was not unusual to see women in the barn milking morning and evening. Just as their tender touch soothed a fussy child, it too soothed a fussy cow.

Part of the Boyceville-Wheeler “Old Roads” series.

Old maps can be fascinating! Our family has a battered 1915 plat book for Dunn County that has probably been in the family since it was new. You might think that our current roads more or less follow along the routes laid out by the pioneers – until you really look at an old map! In the map montage shown here, you won’t find State Highway 170 at all – the idea of a state highway did not even exist until 1917 when Wisconsin enacted the first numbered highway system in the world. Highway 170 was not extended west of Wheeler until 1947!  Maybe there were too many marshes to cross? Instead, there were two routes, only one of which survives today.


As you work your way along this series of mostly easy park and grabs, take a moment to look around and compare today’s view to the 1915 map. Some roads from 1915 vanished seemingly without a trace, unless you are an archeologist.

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