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Rosholt Pioneer Museum provides link with past
taken from the May 19, 1992 Stevens Point Journal
By KELLY BERG
of the Journal
Just step into the one-room schoolhouse in the Rosholt
Fairgrounds and you’ll find yourself transported into the past. Photos
of former Presidents Abraham Lincoln and George Washington hang at the
back of the room on either side of an American flag. Small desks line up
from smallest to largest waiting for the students that no longer come.
The ancient schoolhouse stands tribute to Portage County’s past in a
museum on the fairgrounds site. The Pioneer Museum is made up of the schoolhouse,
a granary, sawmill and two log cabins. Not only are they reminders of the
past, they are a part of it. Artifacts from the pioneer household, farming
and logging have been collected and displayed within their walls. Almost
all have been donated by local residents.
Among the items are broad axes, bear traps, ox shoes, buggy lamps, dress
forms and typewriters. Some of the most unusual antiques are an armor-plated
vest and a magneto phone, which came with the schoolhouse. An unusual facet
of the museum is that it’s only open four days a year. Its doors open each
year during the Rosholt Free Community Fair, held during the Labor Day
Weekend
Malcolm Rosholt served as director
for 43 years, with Craig Anderson taking over as curator in 1991. Anderson
had helped Rosholt through the years with the museum and was a natural
to take over the duties. “Mac did all the hard work,” Anderson said. “Mac’s
not one to blow his own horn, but I know he has stuck a lot of his own
money into that place.”
The museum is completely self-supporting. Any money going into maintenance
and acquisition comes from donations during the annual Community Fair,
he said. The Rosholt Fair Association pays insurance on the museum, he
said.
Begun in 1948, a log cabin was the first piece of the museum. The Portage
County Board granted $500 to move the cabin to the fairgrounds, which then
was called Hill Park. The cabin was built in 1881 on the banks of the Flume
Creek in Rosholt. It housed a Danish widow, Bente Rasmussen, and her family.
Almost a decade later, the State Bank of Rosholt granted enough money
to buy and move a granary from the old Budsberg farm in the town
of New Hope. “It was an unusually well-preserved log building. There
was very masterful craftsmanship in cutting of the corners and construction,”
Anderson said.
Another grant in 1962 moved the old Garfield School from New Hope to
Rosholt.
In 1983, another log house, probably built before 1876 by John Glodowski,
was moved to the site. The house had stood in the town of Stockton off
Highway I on land owned by Jerome and Gladys Lepak, who donated the building
to the museum.
And a Phoenix sawmill was moved to the site and refurbished by the Rosholt
Thresheree Club in 1989. Eight people spent about 300 hours rebuilding
the mill. The steam-powered sawmill operates twice each year - during the
Threshermen’s annual picnic and the fair.
Putting a value on the museum and all its artifacts is virtually impossible,
Anderson said. A lot of it is sentimental, he said.
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