early settlers - elementary

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State Standards: B.4.3 Examine biographies, stories, narratives, and folk tales to understand the lives of ordinary and extraordinary people, place them in time and context, and explain their relationship to important historical events B.4.5 Identify the historical background and meaning of important political values such as freedom, democracy, and justice B.4.9 Describe examples of cooperation and interdependence among individuals, groups, and nations Early Settlers Our Stories: The Hisotory of Marathon County Exhibit Marathon County Historical Society Map from www.worldtimezones.com

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Early Settlers - Elementary

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Page 1: Early Settlers - Elementary

State Standards:

B.4.3 Examine biographies, stories, narratives, and folk tales to understand the lives of ordinary and extraordinary people, place them in time and context, and explain their relationship to important

historical events

B.4.5 Identify the historical background and meaning of important political values such as freedom, democracy, and justice

B.4.9 Describe examples of cooperation and interdependence among individuals, groups, and nations

Early SettlersOur Stories: The Hisotory of Marathon County Exhibit

Marathon County Historical Society

Map from www.worldtimezones.com

Page 2: Early Settlers - Elementary

Why Leave Europe?

Economic

Religion

Military

Page 3: Early Settlers - Elementary

Think about the natural resources of Wisconsin as you drive to school, a friend’s house, or to the store. What do you see?

Would it look nice to someone from another country?Vast forests for loggingWisconsin River and its tributaries for

transportation

Why come to Wisconsin?

Page 4: Early Settlers - Elementary

“My father, he came from Posen. That is part of Poland now. When he was 17 years old he made up his mind to come to America. He had no relatives over here or anything. They came over on a sailboat-it took six weeks. They landed in New York. He went to Albany and took the boat on the Erie Canal. I don’t know how he got to Milwaukee from there. He knew no English but he hired out to a farmer who could not speak German and that is how he learned English.”

-Father Rudolph Raschke

Why did Father Rudolph's own father come to Wisconsin?

Page 5: Early Settlers - Elementary

“Then they say we got the sponsorship papers back from the United States. [I was] really happy and really sad at the same time. The part that I’m glad – I had a chance to go to the United States, but sad, yes I was sad, I had to leave Asia and go to another country and start a new life in another country. What should I do? How do I survive? Two different things happen at one time made me happy and sad at the same time. I’m really glad that I did the right thing.”

–Tong Xeng Thao

Imagine moving to another country with a new language, would you feel

the same way?

Page 6: Early Settlers - Elementary

The advertisements did not match the actual expereince in Marathon County

“In Holland everything was neat and clean and raked up and planted and here we saw nothing but stump land- stumps that had been burned and so black. My mother kept shaking her head and saying “Oh my, I don’t know what we’re getting into.”-Wilhemlmina Geurink

Page 7: Early Settlers - Elementary

August Kickbusch

Recruited German immigrants to help develop Marathon County

Traveled to Germany with a large ship to bring immigrants to Marathon County

Helped immigrants set up farms, find jobs at lumber companies and local businesses.

Recruited Polish immigrants to create cities on his land

Created the cities of Rietbrock, Bevent, and Athens

Helped settle the citiesBrought in electricity,

phone lines, and other services

Helped cities transition from lumbering to farming

How did they get here?

Frederick Rietbrock

Map from geology.com 

Page 8: Early Settlers - Elementary

“He migrated from Switzerland. They came in a sailboat. Eventually there was land to be homesteaded in the Rib Mountain area. So my great grandfather came up here in a covered wagon from New Glarus and my grandfather said he walked behind the wagon all the way up here. They homesteaded a quarter section of land just the other side of Rib Mountain.”

-Myron Rhyner

Would you walk miles every day to get to your destination?

How did his great-grandfather get here?

Page 9: Early Settlers - Elementary

“I remember that the Germans and the French didn’t get along too good together. My mother never liked the German people, I don’t know why. But I married a German girl.”

-Marshall Duranso

Did the immigrants get along?

Page 10: Early Settlers - Elementary

Who will be the next immigrants?

Where were the immigrants from?

Page 11: Early Settlers - Elementary

Why did immigrants leave countries in Europe and Asia?

Why did the immigrants come to Marathon County?

How do you think immigrants reacted to the land once they arrived in Marathon County? Why?

Why would people continue to come to this land after they found out the truth? Would you still come?

How would people like Kickbusch and Rietbrock benefit from bringing large groups to Marathon County?

Discussion Questions

Page 12: Early Settlers - Elementary

End of Immigrant Presentation