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The
Ephraim Foundation (continued)
In the past 58 years, the foundation – supported by the Village
of Ephraim, its residents, visitors, and countless volunteers –
has succeeded in acquiring and restoring five historical buildings, formulated
village walking tours, and created three historical districts. Walk through
the foundation’s lovingly renovated, restored buildings and the
voices of early Ephraim echo with each step.
From its earliest days, education was important to the community’s
founding fathers and mothers. Just six years after Pastor Andreas Iverson
led a small band of settlers to Ephraim’s shores, a one-room schoolhouse
constructed of flat-hewn logs was erected.
A simple white structure, the Ephraim schoolhouse was on the verge of
demolition in 1949, a year after it was closed to students. Former teacher
Helen Sohns had spent many years in the building teaching Ephraim’s
children and valued its place in the village’s history.
Enlisting her friend Warren Davis in her mission to save the schoolhouse,
their combined efforts resulted in the purchase of the building, which
was subsequently renamed the Pioneer Schoolhouse. But Warren and Helen
did more than salvage an old schoolhouse; their efforts resulted in the
founding of the Ephraim Historical Foundation. The first steps had been
taken and it was just the beginning.
Among the first settlers to Ephraim, Aslag and Halvor Anderson left a
significant mark on the village. The “Anderson Corner,” eventually
designated one of Ephraim’s historic districts, consists of the
family’s barn, home, store, and dock. The Anderson house, constructed
in the late 1860s, is the only one of the buildings privately owned.
The Anderson family’s pier and dock were constructed in 1858; their
general store was located at the end of the dock. Situated in the depths
of the frontier, the dock was vital to community life, serving as the
only access to the outside world. In actuality, Anderson’s corner
was the heart and pulse of the growing village, its business and social
center.
Following the purchase of the Pioneer Schoolhouse, the foundation turned
its attention to Anderson dock, recognizing its historical importance.
In serious disrepair, the dock and its warehouse were purchased by the
village for $500 with the stipulation that repairs be undertaken. With
financial contributions from the foundation, improvements were completed.
As trails were carved through the frontier, the Anderson Store eventually
found itself situated alongside the shore road. Owned and operated by
the Anderson family for 100 years, the general store was popular with
tourists who increasingly visited from the cities to the south. Passenger
steamers dropped anchor at the Anderson dock, their passengers stopping
by the store to purchase essentials or to frequent the Western Union Office
located within.
Although the Anderson family maintained ownership of the store, operation
of the business was supervised by other individuals in later years. In
1964, the village purchased the property and leased it to the foundation
for one dollar a year. Completing its restoration, the foundation reopened
the site as a living history museum in 1967. The foundation assumed ownership
of the Anderson Store in 2000.
The Anderson Barn, built circa 1880, reflects the history of the peninsula.
Located across from the family’s store, the barn was used as a riding
stable in the first half of the 20th Century. Privately purchased in 1986,
the barn had fallen into disrepair and required considerable restoration,
including a new foundation. Today, the old Anderson Barn serves as the
foundation’s museum, featuring permanent and rotating historical
exhibits throughout the year.
Arriving on the shores of Green Bay, Andreas Iverson and his family built
a home on the hill above the waters. The oldest frame house in Door County,
the residence is distinguished by its beautiful proportions. The first
church services and school classes were conducted on its main level.
Purchased by the Walker-Field family in approximately 1912, the house
was maintained in its original condition with minimal modernization. Remarkably,
the correspondence of the third minister’s wife, Anna Petterson,
survived and documents the interior construction and furnishings of the
house. Following the foundation’s purchase of the property in 2001,
Anna’s letters proved instrumental in its representation of the
late-1800s period.
Chronicling her life in Ephraim, Anna’s precise and detailed information
allowed for an accurate interpretation of life in the late 1800s. Under
the auspices of the foundation, Historic Iverson House was opened to the
public in 2005.
In the early 1850s, Norwegian immigrants Thomas and Kirsten Goodletson
built a one-room log cabin on Horseshoe Island. Shortly afterward, Thomas
moved the cabin across the ice to Ephraim. Members of the family lived
in the cabin and it was used as the Bethany Lutheran Church meetinghouse
until the mid-1880s. Over the ensuing years, the cabin was utilized in
a number of ways, first as a farm building and later as a honeymoon cottage
for Hotel Ephraim.
In 1973, when the hotel was converted to the Ephraim Condominiums, Ted
Hoeppner donated the cabin to the foundation and it was moved to a location
on the hill and just above the Pioneer School. Completely restored, the
“Goodletson Cabin” provides an excellent example of typical
frontier structures of the corresponding period.
Another structure preserved by the foundation, the Svalhaus, a traditional
Norwegian cooling house, is not open for tours; however, the structure
serves the foundation in a number of capacities. Its use is free to all
non-profit and civic organizations for activities and private groups may
rent the building for a fee.
With an appreciation of what has been and a vision for what will come,
the Ephraim Historical Foundation continues its dedication to the history
of the community. So many individuals contributed to its birth and life.
But one particular individual stands apart as the guiding force behind
the organization in its formative years.
“Founding Door County’s first preservation society may sound
like an ordinary, everyday event, but it was not ordinary, and Warren
Davis was not an ordinary person,” Goodwin Berquist wrote in Half
a Century With The Ephraim Foundation. Added former foundation president
Oscar Boldt, “He ‘had the pulse of the village and a sense
of vision.’” Simply put, Davis loved Ephraim, and once shared
with Berquist, “I want to do my best to preserve its uniqueness
and build up its attractiveness.”
Tours and Events
The Ephraim Historical Foundation hosts events for the entire family beginning
in June. All five foundation museums are open to the public Tuesday through
Saturday, 11:00 am – 4:00 pm. Excluding the Goodleston Cabin, docents
in period costumes are on duty at each site. Walking tours of Ephraim
step off from the Anderson Barn History Center Tuesday – Friday,
at 10:30 am. Tours are $5 for adults and $3 for students; children ages
six and under are free. Entry to the five museums is included in the tour
fee; passes are valid until tours have been completed.
For a calendar of events or additional information contact the Ephraim
Historical Foundation at 3060 Anderson Lane, (920) 854-9688, and online
at www.ephraim.org.
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