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Scott McCormick Remembers his father and
uncles
One of my uncles, F. E. McCormick, arrived in Portage
County in September 1899 to run the Hetzel creamery near Almond. In 1902
he was married to
Minnie Hetzel and they erected a house on the opposite
side of the road. The house is now the property of a Mrs. Swanson, Dan
Hetzel’s daughter. Uncle ran the Hetzel creamery for ten years. He also
ran the Arnott creamery for eight years.
My father arrived in Portage County in April 1902
and started the Eau Pleine creamery for the farmers. This was two miles
south of Dancy. He stayed there for six weeks and then in May of 1902 went
to run the Buena Vista creamery. My father was born in Richland Center,
Wisconsin and raised near Soldiers Grove. My mother was from the Buena
Vista area. She was born at the first farm west of the D. F. Gates
farm. William O’Keefe was the last owner of the place. My grandmother Adams
died when ma was a baby and she was brought up by her grandparents, Scott
and Sylvia Clark.
My uncle, O. R .McCormick, arrived in Portage County
in the Spring of 1903. He drove a team of horses from near Soldiers Grove
to Hetzel. That summer
he learned the creamery trade from F. E. McCormick. In the Spring of 1904
he
went to Bancroft to operate the creamery. While there he was married to
Rose Hetzel in 1908. He ran this plant until 1912 and then went to Stockton.
He afterwards ran plants at Buena
Vista and Plover. He made butter
for Mr. Schmidt at the Stevens Point Dairy Products Co. He sent some butter
to the State Fair in 1907 and received Sweepstakes prize. This was a score
of 98.
You have heard of different businesses at Maynard’s
Corners. Edward Myers and Sanford Topping started a feed mill there. This
was run by a traction engine. Sanford Topping built a house there. The
business didn’t last long and Sanford Topping sold the house to Thomas
Footit. My father bought the house from Mr. Footit about 1903. In 1905
he moved the house and attached it to the Sylvia Clark residence. All of
us boys were born in that house.
My uncles and my father are gone. Aunt Minnie lives
with her oldest daughter in Red Granite, Aunt Rose is dead but one of the
girls is Mrs. Ed. Rossier who lives in Plover. My mother is living and
the oldest three of us boys are bachelors. The youngest is married and
lives in Horicon. He has a family of three girls and a home of his own.
He has worked in the John Deere plant for over twenty years.
When the Centennial issue of the Stevens Point
Journal was printed, I noticed a picture of the car that was owned by E.
H. Joy. My father traded a motor cycle to A. J. Clements for that car.
The last man I knew that had the car was Byron S. Ward.
The first time I was in Stevens Point was by train.
My folks took three of us from Arnott to Stevens Point. This was in 1910
and I wasn’t quite four years old. I didn’t appreciate a train ride then.
The next time I got to Stevens Point was by auto. My folks took two of
us to the Fair in 1911. This auto was a 1910 two cylinder Reo. When we
were about to leave the Fair the whistles had started to blow in the city.
I heard Soo Line No. 5 whistle in and out of town.
We lived in Stevens Point from November 1920 until
April 1923. I wish I had taken an interest in historical things while we
lived in Stevens Point. I had just started to take an interest in them
when we moved out. At that time the grade teachers started us to make books
called Pioneer History. When those teachers started us digging into the
past I started to look for old catalogs on threshing machinery, autos and
dairy machinery.
In 1933 I looked through my grandfather’s house
and found two piles of old farm papers. I kept all ads and pictures on
threshing machinery. All news about dairy plants at that time was pasted
into books. I have quite a few pictures of the old creameries in Portage
County. I also have a file of books called “Wisconsin Farmer’s Institutes”
from 1889 through 1915.
See also "Portage
County Creameries"
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