Near Spring Green in Iowa County, Wisconsin — The American Midwest (Great Lakes)
Shot Tower
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
1. Shot Tower Marker
Inscription.
Shot Tower. . Twenty years before Wisconsin became a state, the discovery of vast lead deposits brought a population boom to this area., Green Bay merchant Daniel Whitney organized the Wisconsin Shot Company to build a shot tower on this site. T.B. Shaunce dug out the shafts with pick and gad and removed the earth in buckets. The history of the shot tower is told in detailed exhibits within the tower house., Men like Daniel Whitney and T.B. Shaunce worked with humble tools and crude methods, utilizing Engineering ideas and principles which provided the highly sophisticated procedures of today's Manufacturing Engineers.
Twenty years before Wisconsin became a state, the discovery of vast lead deposits brought a population boom to this area.
Green Bay merchant Daniel Whitney organized the Wisconsin Shot Company to build a shot tower on this site. T.B. Shaunce dug out the shafts with pick and gad and removed the earth in buckets. The history of the shot tower is told in detailed exhibits within the tower house.
Men like Daniel Whitney and T.B. Shaunce worked with humble tools and crude methods, utilizing Engineering ideas and principles which provided the highly sophisticated procedures of today's Manufacturing Engineers.
Erected 1977 by the Society of Manufacturing Engineers, Milwaukee Chapter 4. (Marker Number 238.)
Location. 43° 9.005′ N, 90° 2.71′ W. Marker is near Spring Green, Wisconsin, in Iowa County. Marker can be reached from County Highway C, 2 miles west of U.S. 14, on the right when traveling west. The marker is accessible via a paved but somewhat steep path starting at the parking lot in the Tower Hill Shelter
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area in Tower Hill State Park. A vehicle admission sticker is required to stop in the park. Theoretically, one could avoid the fee by parking on the highway and walking into the park; aside from the safety issues, however, it is worth the price of admission to visit the park. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Spring Green WI 53588, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
2. Shot Tower Marker
The smelter house is in the background.
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
3. Smelter House
The path to the Shot Tower marker as it approaches the smelter house.
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
4. Smelter-House Description
You are inside a reproduction of the original smelter-house that stood on this site from about 1833-1861.
Lead from the mines of southwest Wisconsin was brought here in ox-drawn wagons and melted in an iron kettle in the open fire place.
The molten lead was then poured through holes in the side of a ladle, down the 180 ft. shaft. As the particles of lead fell, they assumed a spherical shape and cooled slightly, forming shot.
A pool of water at the bottom of the shaft broke the fall of the shot and completed its cooling.
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
5. Inside the Smelter House
The open fire and kettle for melting the lead is on the left, with the opening to the drop shaft on the right.
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
6. Looking Down the Drop Shaft in the Smelter House
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
7. Looking Down the Outside of the Drop Shaft
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
8. View from the top of the Drop Shaft
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
9. View from the top of the Drop Shaft
Spring Green and the Wisconsin River are in the distance.
Photographed By William J. Toman, September 5, 2010
10. Shot Tower Sign
This sign is near the beginning of the path to the Shot Tower marker. The sign points to the Site of Old Helena and Tower Hill State Park markers.
Credits. This page was last revised on December 7, 2021. It was originally submitted on September 6, 2010, by William J. Toman of Green Lake, Wisconsin. This page has been viewed 1,224 times since then and 85 times this year. Photos:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. submitted on September 6, 2010, by William J. Toman of Green Lake, Wisconsin. 10. submitted on September 7, 2010, by William J. Toman of Green Lake, Wisconsin. • Bill Pfingsten was the editor who published this page.