Near Hartman Creek Road, 2.2 miles south of Wisconsin Highway 54, on the right when traveling south. Reported missing.
In 1976, fish managers filled this raceway with 20,000 hybrid tiger muskies and installed mechanical feeders. Why? To find out if muskies would eat food pellets dispensed from mechanical feeders instead of minnows. The experiment worked! Pellets . . . — — Map (db m76130) HM
Near County Road QQ at Bell Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Charles King, one of America's most illustrious soldiers, was born in New York and came to Milwaukee in 1845. His father was Rufus King, editor and publisher of the Milwaukee Sentinel and first commander of the famed Civil War Iron Brigade. . . . — — Map (db m146391) HM
On Bell Avenue at Wright Avenue, on the left when traveling west on Bell Avenue.
The Grand Army Home was established in 1887 by the Wisconsin Department of the Grand Army of the Republic, a nationwide organization of Union veterans of the Civil War (1861-1865). The Home provided care for indigent veterans and their wives in a . . . — — Map (db m4272) HM
Near Hartman Creek Road, 2.2 miles south of Wisconsin Highway 54, on the right when traveling south. Reported missing.
George Allen's crude birch bark cribs provided habitat to grow 1-inch trout fingerlings large enough to be transplanted into area streams. These cribs still exist, preserved and concealed beneath the lake.
In 1939, the State of Wisconsin took . . . — — Map (db m79038) HM
On East Windfeldt Lane east of Hartman Creek Road, on the right when traveling east.
The old Coach Road ran from Oshkosh to Stevens Point and connected the towns of Rural and Amherst.
Horses snort, wheels rattle and dust flies. If you were traveling between Oshkosh and Stevens Point during the 1880s, you'd have traveled . . . — — Map (db m74529) HM
On Windfeldt Road, 0.3 miles west of Hartman Creek Road, on the left when traveling west.
In 1962, the Windfeldts sold this 80-acre site to the Wisconsin Conservation Department to be included in Hartman Creek State Park. Windfeldt Road honors this family.
Can you spot any reminders of the old Windfeldt estate? Look for flowering . . . — — Map (db m74969) HM