Door County Almanak, No. 2, 1985 The shape of the conversation remains the same. Its timing varies only slightly from year to year, beginning as an offhand remark in mid-summer, by September swelling in proportions like an apple tree loaded with fruit, then dropping off gradually, like windfalls, through the autumn. It is heard in […]
Door County’s First Cherry Cannery: Preventing Fresh Fruit Spoilage by John Enigl
Door County Almanak, No. 2, 1985 When were the first cherries processed in Door County? By what company? Who headed the processing operation? Fortunately, the man who can answer those questions with authority is still living. Capt. Edward S. Reynolds, now 93 years old, organized Company F, of the Thirty Second Division of the U.S. […]
Sister Bay’s Farmer Market is on Saturdays, 9 am – 1 pm
Due to the current coronavirus pandemic, the Farm Market will have some new restrictions during the 2020 summer season. The Sister Bay Historical Society’s annual Farm Market, a season-long event at Corner of the Past in Sister Bay, will still take place every Saturday this summer and early fall, through October 3. Farm Market hours […]
Ellison Bay’s First and Only Meat Market, 1908
Ellison Bay’s first and only meat market was built in 1908 by Gilbert Wickman, an enterprising young man only 21 years old at the time. Gilbert purchased the lot from Simon Evanson. Later, his brother-in-law Anton Anderson helped Gilbert build living quarters on the site, located at 12020 Lakeview Rd. in Ellison Bay, a highly […]
The Conversion from Manpower to Steam Power in the Fishing Industry By Walter M. and Mary K. Hirthe
Door County Almanak, No. 3, 1986 Although the age of steam was well launched on the Great Lakes by 1818, the revolution made possible by steam power did not reach the northern islands of Lake Michigan until half a decade after the Civil War. The fishermen of Washington Island were leaders in the conversion from […]
Orchards by Duncan Thorp
Door County Almanak, No. 2, Orchards, 1985 They almost killed the golden goose when they clear-cut the pine and milled the remaining hardwoods. The somewhat alkaline and shallow soil that topped the Niagara Reef in Door County was poor farmland. But it could grow trees. Someone found that fruit trees liked the limestone, and dooryard […]
Charles Peterson by Liz Maltman
An article from the Door County Almanak, No. 1, 1982-83 Charles (Chick) Peterson is well-known throughout Door County and the Midwest for his watercolor paintings. His ability as a watercolorist is exceptional, as is his use of an unusually wide variety of subjects. While Chick enjoys painting all kinds of subjects, he says, “I find […]
Spring Flowers by Ruth Cook
An article from the Door County Almanak, No. 1, 1982-83 “What do you folks do up there in the wintertime?” Most of us who are lucky enough to live in Door County year-round have formulated a glib answer for the query by now. But in our privately candid moments many of us will admit that, […]
