Community Histories
CHITTAMO
"Twilight Era for Wisconsin
Town"
The Evening Telegram, Superior, Wis., Friday, 26 Jul 1974
Written by Vince Plesko
Donated by Faith Yeager
Across the
asphalt pavement from an old school, about 50 Indians and settlers lay buried
in unmarked graves. They are the only “residents” remaining in this once
hustling little community in the Township of Frog Creek in Washburn County.
Chittamo didn’t die from lack of natural provisions. On the contrary, the
soil is loamy and well aerated and white and norway pine still reach
majestically to the sky.
The town, which served the needs of about 120
people, began to fall into ruin during and after World War II when it’s young
people were siphoned into the armed forces or deserting the soil and flocking
to the city where humming industries provided better lifestyles. Returning
GI’s also found that big city factories were offering more than they could
ever realize on the home farm --- and, they too, sought life in the bigger
cities.
At it’s peak, Chittamo boasted the only store in the township.
The locality also had a school with 60 pupils, a town hall where dances were
held every Saturday night, a church with a community cemetery, and a railroad
landing where lumberjacks loaded logs and where passengers disembarked or
boarded the train.
The first settler, Jack Goodwin, arrived in 1888.
After erecting a log cabin, he began the difficult task of clearing the land.
Trees had to be felled, trimmed and removed and their stumps blasted by
powder or pulled out by oxen or horses. Goodwin had neither. Grubbing the
stumps out by hand, he first cleared enough land for a small garden. Winter
found him supplies with its harvest. The surrounding forest afforded a
plentiful supply of wild game and the nearby Wolfe River provided a variety
of fish.
Other settlers and their families arrived to expand the
settlement. Several years later, a general store opened, followed by the
building of a one-room school house. The railroad came through in 1890. It
plunked down it’s rails right through an Indian village whose chief was named
Chittimo.
Chief Chittimo balked strongly at this invasion of what he
considered his land. In fact, he put up such a violent display of hostility
that he and his tribesman were subsequently rounded up and hustled off to a
reservation near Hayward.
The settlers, however, needed the railroad
and to soothe the chief’s anger -- they named the budding new village
“Chittimo” in his honor. It is rumored that several years later the elderly
chieftain left the reservation and walked to Chittimo to “see his village.”
The rumor has it that the chief died there during this visit and was buried
in the church graveyard. Others say that the chief died on the reservation
and never did see the town that was named for him.
Bolstered by the
railroad, the town grew to serve the needs of the surrounding dairy farmers
until World War II began it’s drain on the younger generation.
Adding
to it’s war-time woes, Chittamo’s general store burned to the ground in 1951.
Then, in 1952, following consolidation of the village school, the school
building was closed and the pupils were bused to Minong.
In succeeding
years, Chittamo’s decline was swift. The church was hauled away, leaving only
the toppled tombstones of the graveyard. Several years later the last of the
five families that lived near the town proper moved away.
Today, the
winds of change blow through the abandoned buildings decaying beside County
Trunk Highway G several miles north of State Highway 77, a main thoroughfare
between Minong and Hayward. Although the weathering process has set in and
the lonely winds rattle the windows and creak the timbers of the resided log
cabins, farmers in the area still prosper in timber and beef and the train
still stops at the Chittamo landing to load timber just like it did back in
those rousing days when Chittamo was young.
CEMETERY MARKER
PIONEER SETTLER AND INDIAN BURIAL GROUND IN UNMARKED GRAVES NEARBY
LIE
NEARLY 50 SETTLERS AND INDIANS WHO DWELT IN THE CHITTAMO AREA JUST BEFORE
1900
ONLY THE FOLLOWING ARE KNOW TO HAVE BEEN BURIED IN THE YEAR SHOWN.
JOHN DETWEILER* 1894
JAMES HEENAN 1894
JOHN HEENAN, JR. 1895
LAXIUS La PRAIRIE, SR.* 1895
MRS. JOHN HEENAN, SR. 1897
JOHN HEENAN,
SR. 1898
MRS. LAXIUS La PRAIRIE, SR. 1900
DAUGHTER, MARY La PRAIRIE
1900
SON, LAXIUS La PRAIRIE, JR. 1901
*denotes Civil War Veterans
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