Tag: Old Building

Picture of the Day for March 14, 2015

In the late 1800s, towns could become a bit wild when Saturday evening came and the work week ended for many. Old logging towns became rowdy when brawling lumberjacks hit the town with their winter pay after months in the woods to spend it in local saloons and dance halls.

The town of Port Wing in northern Wisconsin was a sawmill town surrounded by a dozen logging camps so the local constable was kept busy when hundreds of lumberjacks hit the town. In 1896, this jail house was built with double walls of two inch solid white oak planking, one laid horizontally and one vertically; with wrought iron doors, windows and half inch thick hinges. It was used until the 1930’s.

Port Wing Old Town Jail

Port Wing Old Town Jail

Picture of the Day for September 22, 2014

I don’t think last Monday’s tow truck will be towing any cars to this garage for repairs. Weathering too many storms, or just too many years, has put a toll on this former business, soon to be forgotten and probably will disappear from the side of the road soon.

The Cloverland Garage in Cloverland, WI doesn’t have a page on Wikipedia, nor is on the National Register of Historic Places like the Cloverland Garage in Cloverland, WA does. One letter change means one building important and the other forgotten, except for the people who once passed through its doors. I wonder what make and model was the first car worked on in the garage and what was its last vehicle.

Cloverland Garage

Cloverland Garage

Picture of the Day for January 3, 2014

With predicted wind chills of -40 to -60 later this weekend and early next week, I don’t think I will be staying in this building as it might be just a wee bit too drafty.

I wonder the history of the building as it looks like there was a stove pipe opening on the front which is now covered over with a piece of tin. Was it the original homestead of the settlers or a bunkhouse for the hired hands? Did it later become a chicken coop or storage shed? Has the old building seen the late 1800s and now the early 2000s? The answers are probably locked up in the timbers never to be revealed.

A Wee Bit Drafty

A Wee Bit Drafty