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TOWN OF MEQUON
The early settlers who came to the Mequon area
in the 1830's were Yankees from New York state and English,
followed by Germans and Irish. These new settlers found a very
different place from the Mequon of today. The entire area was
covered with dense forest. The Milwaukee River, which runs through
Mequon, was fast flowing, with falls and rapids and underground
water courses, offering never failing-fresh-water springs. The
only type of road available through the area was the Green Bay
Trail, which wound its way due north and was barely passible by
the settler's wagons. The word "Mequon" is said to have
come from an Indian word "Miguan", which means
"ladle", because the river in Mequon was shaped like an
Indian ladle.
During 1839, the first of the German settlers
were Saxon-Germans from Saxony, who purchased a large tract of
land along North 76th Street. Then came the Pomeranian
Germans, from the Prussion state of Pomerania, who bought more
than 1,000 acres to the north and west of the Saxons.
That same year, 43 families, all members of a
Lutheran congregation, came from Northern Germany and settled in
the western part of Mequon. They named their tiny colony,
Freistadt, loosely translated as "free city". These
people came in search of religious freedom and held their initial
church service that same year.
Text courtesy of Wisconsin
Country Life |