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Although Malone is the "town" of Farmer Boy, the Wilders also lived near the village of Burke, in their own township of the same name. Almanzo's uncle's potato-starch mill was in Burke, as well as a wagon maker, saw mill, flour mill, hotel, telegraph office, drygoods store, blacksmith, attorney, and multiple churches. The Northern Ogdensburg Railroad line ran through Burke, and the railroad bridge in Burke was the first in the area. It was also the first railroad to operate a refrigerated railroad car, called the "Icebox on Wheels." Multiple cars of butter were shipped on the Northern. On one run in 1850, eight tons of butter were shipped out of Burke, perhaps even some of Mother Wilder's good butter! The photo at right shows Main Street through Burke in the early days.
"Town" to the Wilders meant Malone, the county seat of Franklin County, just a thirty minute ride behind swift Morgan horses from the Wilder farm. It was founded in 1812, having been known in earlier years as Harrisonville and Ezraville. At the time of Farmer Boy, there were well over three thousand people in Malone, as well as multiple churches, two banks, and many stores. There were flouring mills, a tannery, machine shops, a sandstone quarry, iron foundry, newspaper office, and woolen mill. Malone was bisected north and south by the Salmon River, and east and west by Main Street, shown at left. At the heart of the town was its "three cornered" city park, bisected by the railroad tracks. Although there had exhibitions by the Franklin Agricultural Society as early as 1820, the first official County Fair was held in 1852, with the fifteenth annual fair being the one included in Farmer Boy. The fairgrounds occupied twenty-five acres west of town. Franklin County Township Schools and Franklin Academy
In 1836, a three-story stone building, 36 by 64 feet, was built to serve as the Academy. This is where Royal, Eliza Jane, and Alice attended school; it was torn down in 1870. It is not known if Almanzo ever attended Franklin Academy, but it is likely that he did. The Wilder children must have attended a Township School prior to entering the Academy, although there has long been debate over the location and identity of this District School. On the deed for school property dated 24 February 1851, James Wilder was named a trustee of (joint) District School No. 5 & 8, Burke and Belmont Townships ; this school was called the Skeelsboro School (after trustee Lyman Skeels) and in later years, was located near the corner of Perham and Vincent Roads, just southeast of the Wilder farm. However, Laura Ingalls Wilder's description of the walk to school in Farmer Boy suggests that the school Almanzo Wilder attended in 1866 was across the Trout River and just south of the farm in Belmont Township; again, the site of a known schoolhouse in later years. The historical "Hardscrabble Settlement" was in Spring Valley, Minnesota, the name being borrowed for use in Farmer Boy.
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For more information: "Almanzo Wilder: Life Before Laura." From Legacy Documentaries with executive producer, Dean Butler. Available from the Wilder Homestead. Click HERE to order. Anderson, William. The Story of the Wilders. Davison, Michigan: Anderson Publications, 1973. Dumont, Diane Selkirk. Reflections: A Brief History of Burke from 1797-1976. Burke, New York, 1976. Farmer Boy News, a newsletter published by the Almanzo and Laura Ingalls Wilder Association, P.O. Box 283, Malone, New York 12953. See the Wilder Homestead website for details. Smith, Dorothy. The Wilder Family Story. Malone: The Industrial Press, 1972. Distributed by the Laura and Almanzo Wilder Association, Malone, New York. |
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