The Walworth County Historical Society was incorporated August 29, 1904 is now approaching its 118th year of existence. Since its incorporation Walworth County Historical Society has been an auxiliary of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. It began with a list of the county court house.
In its 1906 report to the State Historical Society it was stated that the Walworth County historical Society held "a great collection of books, pamphlets, circulars, maps, charts, diagrams, pictures, autograph letters, and relics of real interest."
Excerpt from History of Walworth County Wisconsin by Albert Clayton Beckwith
The Walworth County Historical Society was incorporated August 29, 1904, by ten members of the Old Settlers' Society. It was not attempted, as
in other years, to arouse the indifferent, nor to assemble unknown friends of such a movement. Mr. Page said to a friend, "Let us act at once." Eight
more friends were ready for instant action, and the dream or hope of 1846 became a reality. Nine of these movers were named in the first officer list,
which is yet unchanged (except as to treasurer) by election, resignation, removal, or death; and the tenth lies in a soldier's grave. In its first report, in
September, 1904, to the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, to which the county society is auxiliary, was shown a list of twenty members. Pursuant to
provisions of chapter 650, statutes of 1907, a room in the basement of the county court building, well warmed and lighted and accessible, was in that
year placed at the society's service for storage of its bulkier collections. About two hundred feet of shelving is crowded with its variously valuable
printed matter. How this society sees the task it has undertaken may be judged, perhaps, from the following extract from its report for 1906:
"This body is made up of intelligent members, who are therefore capable of doing some useful work, and who. by the fact of their membership,
may be presumed to be willing so to contribute to the society's objects. To find and take some working part, greal or small, is to assure and increase
each one's permanent interest in the institution we have founded. We have taken the first step, which costs; and movement forward at some fair rate,
and continuously, is but a just expectation. Neither one nor a hundred willing minds and hands can do all that has been too long left undone; but we can
gather no inconsiderable fraction of the records and memories of the past and the passing, and can move onward with the ceaselessly coming.
"A great collection of books, pamphlets, circulars, maps, charts, diagrams, pictures, autograph letters, and relics of real interest is very desirable; but
such matter will accumulate with comparatively little effort. The most important division of our work—one that may yet give some distinction to our
society—is what each member or his friends may contribute: Manuscript accounts of early arriving families; of the earlier social life; of long-gone
relatives and esteemed friends; of pioneer road-making; of abandoned highways; of the growth of villages; of church building; of earlier schools; of
business development, and changes therein; of the decay of certain industries and the causes thereof; of crops, greatly above or below the average; of
changes in the county landscape arising from known causes; of earlier caucuses, conventions, and public meetings; of various phases of public
opinion; of early mail communication; of wayside taverns; of stage routes; of past generations—how they lived, how employed and amused themselves;
where men and families came from, and whither they went for greener graves: of epidemic diseases and other notable calamities; of the personal
appearance and distinctive qualities of men in public service, and similarly of lawyers, physicians, and clergymen; of personal service in war; of local geographical
names now disused or not found on maps—in short, of things the like of which we miss in the meager details of the histories of our ancestral
Eastern towns, and which will be valuable in many ways to coming generations, since they will show how men, women and children of the nineteenth
and first decade of the twentieth centuries lived, thought and acted."
Member List | |
---|---|
Adkins, Henry De Lafayette, Elkhorn | 1904 |
*Beckwith, Albert Clayton, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Beckwith, Edward Seymour (died), Elkhorn | 1904 |
Bill, Dr. Benjamin Jephthah, Genoa Junction | 1910 |
Bradley, Henry (died), Elkhorn | 1908 |
*Bradley, William Mallory, Salt Lake City | 1905 |
Brett, James Elverton, Springfield | 1905 |
Carswell, Orland, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Child, William, Lafayette | 1906 |
Cook, Daniel Seymour, Whitewater | 1911 |
Derthick, Edna Lorene, Elkhorn | 1908 |
*Douglass, Carlos Stewart, Fontana | 1910 |
Eames, Francis Havilah, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Fellows, Theodore A. (died), Genoa Junction | 1910 |
Flanders, Joseph Taylor (died), Lyons | 1909 |
Frater, George William, Elkhorn | 1907 |
Goff, Sidney Clayton, Elkhorn | 1908 |
Harrington, Grant Dean, Elkhorn | 1910 |
*Isham, Fred Willard, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Isham, Ruth Eliza (Wales), Elkhorn | 1904 |
Kellogg, George Olney, Elkhorn | 1905 |
*Kinne, Dr. Edward, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Larnard, Ira Pratt, Delavan | 1911 |
Lean, Frank William, Lagrange | 1905 |
Lyon, Jay Forrest, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Meacham, William Pitt (died), Troy | 1911 |
Morgan, Theron Rufus (died), Elkhorn | 1905 |
Morrison, Smith Baker, Elkhorn | 1906 |
Page, Jaw Wright, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Rockwell, Le Grand, Elkhorn | 1906 |
Skiff, Benjamin Franklin, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Skiff, Iris Emeline (Stowe), Elkhorn | 1904 |
Snyder, Clifford Francis, Munich | 1906 |
*Snyder, John Henry, Jr., Elkhorn | 1904 |
Sprague, Edward Harvey, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Thomas, Katherine Wentworth, Elkhorn | 1904 |
*Wales, Charles Marshall, New York | 1904 |
*West, Walter Aaron, Elkhorn | 1904 |
Mr. Morgan died September 28, 1905; E. S. Beckwith, May 28, 1909; Henry Bradley, August 17, 1909; Captain Fellows died Fehruary 10, 1912;
Mr. Flanders, December 16, 1909. Asterisks denote members of the State Society. Officers, 1904-1911: Beckwith, president: Lyon, vice-president;
J. H. Snyder, secretary; Kinne, corresponding secretary; Eames, librarian; Carswell, treasurer; Page, F. W. Isham and Sprague, executive committee.