27.3.15

Clouds and High Tension, Appleton, WI

Clouds and High Tension Lines, CE and  Rail Road Street, Appleton, Wisconsin, July 2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann

Suburban bleakness among suburban bleakness with clouds being caught in the high tension lines.
And I love the U.S.A.
So share the modern world with me
 'Cause I'm in love with the U.S.A. now
I'm in love with the modern world now
Put down your cigarette
 Well out on Route 9 it's bleak and nearly dying
Well the modern world is not so bad 
-- Jonathan Richmond from "Modern Lovers"(1976)

22.3.15

Found: Cherry Orchard, Door County, WI

Found: Cherry Orchard in Full Bloom, Door County, Wisconsin.
E. A. Bishop, Publisher, Racine, Wis. circa 1910
The first cherry orchards in Door County were planted in 1896. The market for the fruit grew and 10,000 acres of orchards planted. Finding labor to help with the harvest remained an issue until the mechanical cherry shaker was developed. At first cherries were hand harvested and workers paid by the bucked. The new machine harvested 60 to 100 trees per hour and eliminated the need to recruit hundreds of workers each season. Cherries are turned into juice, jam, infamous Wisconsin red tart cherry, and the maraschino cherry that work so great in old-fashioneds and Manhattans.

17.3.15

Back of the Barn Harvestore, Chilton, WI

Back of the Barn Harvestore, Schneider Road at Highway 57, Chilton, Wisconsin, 12.30.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
A lone Harvestore completes this sprawling dairy set-up.

12.3.15

Urban Harvestore, Sherwood, WI

Urban Harestore, Highway 55, Sherwood, Wisconsin, 12.03.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Photographed from the sidewalk in downtown Sherwood, Wisconsin.

8.3.15

Descending Harvestores, Calumet County, WI

Descending Harvestores, Calumet County, Wisconsin, 12.03.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Silos of varying heights against a cloudless sky accent a tidy farm yard. Everything has a place, all machinery is safely inside a shed, the buildings are perfectly maintained. The rural American Dream.

4.3.15

Nestled Harvestore, Forest Junction, WI

Nestled Harvestore, Military Road, near Forest Junction, Wisconsin, 12.03.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Part of a cluster of feed dispensing structures, this Harvestore is sandwiched between a concrete block and a concrete stave silo.

28.2.15

Lone Harvestore, Brillion, WI

Lone Harvestore, Hugh Road, Brillion, Wisconsin, 12.03.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
A lone Harvestore looms along Hugh Road. Separated from the building that it was originally attached to, there is a void framed by trees where the building once stood.

25.2.15

4 Harvestores, St. John, WI

4 Harvestores in the Snow, St. John, Wisconsin, 12.30.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
A collection of four Harvestores erected over a span of decades show a dedication to farming, progress, place, and faithful consumption of a luxury silo brand.

21.2.15

Gravity Park USA, Chilton, WI

Gravity Park USA, 2571 Hickory Hills Road, Chilton, Wisconsin, 12.30.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
A farmyard converted into an "extreme race facility" accented by a Harvestore at the entrace. Opened in 2000 as Gravity park, it was converted in 2005 to Gravity Park USA with a new track, club house, and gear shop according to the web site. Dirt Grinders welcome!

13.2.15

Dairyland's Best Harvestore, Appleton, WI

Dairyland's Best Harvestore, Lamers Dairy & Store, Speel School Drive, Appleton, Wisconsin, September 2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann

A Harvestore repurposed as a dairy store entrance is eye catching in suburban Appleton among strip malls, Lowe's and rehab centers. Lamers Dairy & Store, locally owned, distributes milk throughout the region in returnable glass bottles. The store design reflects the farming legacy of the milk, cheese, ice cream, and Wisconsin souvenirs it sells not far from busy Highway 441. Visitors are invited to watch milk being bottled through an observatory window.

7.2.15

3 Harvestores, Calumet County, WI

Three  Harvestores in Various Heights, Calumet County, Wisconsin, 12.03.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
A whole lot of silage going on with four vertical silos and an expansive horizontal silage bunker and mound.

30.1.15

Found: Beautiful Washington Park, Milwaukee, WI

Found: In "Beautiful Washington Park," Milwaukee.
 © E. C. Kropp Co. Publishing, Milwaukee No. 4201. Circa 1900.
Handwritten in fountain pen on the frontside: "The lilies in this pound are as big as a plate."
Washington Park in Milwaukee, designed by American landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, included a band shell and a zoo. Begun in 1891, the park faced financial challenges throughout the 20th century.  The zoo moved away to expand in 1958 but the Urban Ecology Center located in the 135 acre park in 2007. The  Center's mission is to carry out Olmsted's vision of municipal parks as respite for people form all walks of life. Olmsted believed that parks could connect city people with nature thus providing "spiritual uplift." Today, volunteers and neighbors work to restore native plants, wetlands, animals, and maintain gardens in the park.

25.1.15

Quonset Huts, Appleton, WI

Quonset Huts along Railroad Tracks, East Randall Street, Appleton, Wisconsin, September 2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Quonset Hut along Railroad Tracks, East Randall Avenue Appleton, Wisconsin, September 2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Designed to be lightweight and easy to assemble without skilled labor, the Quonset hut served more than 86 official military uses during the World War II era. Sometimes built along railroad tracks in small Wisconsin towns, they could be used to store supplies needed for the war effort. In Appleton, for example, Kimberly-Clark made bomb fuses that needed to be stored and accessible. After the war, Quonset huts were repurposed as housing, churches, libraries, liquor stores, movie theaters, and more.

21.1.15

Harvestore Twins, Brillion, WI

Harvestore Twins, County K, near Brillion, Wisconsin, September 2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
The sign of double prosperity, with two matching Harvestores towering above
previous farm structures and still, predict the bunker silos that co-exist there now.

15.1.15

Found: Indian Basket Maker, Northern Wisconsin

Found: Indian Basket Maker, Northern Wisconsin #5. Real Photo Post Card. Kruxo EKD circa 1923.
Our friend from Madison, Tom Jones, has been researching Ho-Chunk baskets and we thought of him when we dredged up this real photo post card portrait of a basket maker from the recesses of our collection. He has contributed to important books examining photographs of native peoples mainly People of the Big Voice: Photographs of Ho Chunk Families by Charles Van Schaik and For a Love of His People: The Photography of Horace Poolaw.

11.1.15

Santa Face, Holland, WI

Santa Face at Night, County CE, Holland, Wisconsin, 12.3.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Holiday decorations glow in the night in small towns in rural Wisconsin.
Beer signs on taverns are sometimes repurposed as Santa Claus as in this example.

6.1.15

Found: Bethesda Mineral Spring, Waukesha, WI

Found: Bethesda Mineral Spring, Waukesha, Wisconsin. Circa 1910s. © E. C. Kropp Co., Milwaukee. Written in cursive in fountain pen on the backside: "Dear Fran & family. This is a handy place & we all like it. I hope to feel better before I leave here. I will see the Dr. to-day. Take care of Babe. Best love, Stella."
Native Americans pointed early settlers toward the healing springs throughout Wisconsin. What became Bethesda Mineral Spring was one of them. Historian accounts explain that "people flocked to the spring, hoping to be cured by the magic waters." Cures included diabetes, constipation and other maladies were documented. But in time, Waukesha's many springs dried up. Nineteenth-century civilization--from out houses to pavement to overuse--made it impossible for the springs to replenish with rain water and then they were gone. No more water bubbling up from the ground. Increased demand for water from the growing city also required deeper and deeper wells which also drew from the water table. By the late 20th-century even the deep weels became contaminated with radium and were dangerous to citizens. What was once a paradise of more than 50 fresh water springs is gone and Waukesha is now asking that water be piped in from Lake Michigan.

24.12.14

Harvestore with Santa's Sleigh, Darboy, WI

Harvestore with Santa's Sleigh,
Highway 55 near Darboy, Wisconsin, 12.3.2014
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Holstein cows pulling Santa's Sleigh with a Harvestore silo towering nearby.

20.12.14

Found: Columbia County Jail, Portage, WI

Found: Columbia County Jail, Portage, Wisconsin.
© E.C. Kropp Publishers, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Circa 1906.
Postmarked Portage, Wisconsin, December 3, 1906 2 PM.
Written in fountain pen on front side:
 "Merry Xmas & Happy New Year. Metta."

13.12.14

Deer Corn Vendor, Combined Locks, WI

Self-Service Deer Corn Vendor,
Buchanan Road, Combined Locks, Wisconsin (May 2014)
© J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
Foraging for twigs, bark, grasses, and leaves is what Wisconsin's whitetail deer are designed to do. Outagamie is among the few Wisconsin counties where feeding deer is allowed. The well-meaning citizen mows the grass, paves the land, and trims back the shrubs where the deer could graze while feeding them corn offered by roadside deer corn entrepreneurs. Outdoor Life advises that, "Artificially fed deer wander off with a belly full of corn and slowly start starving to death as its digestive system struggles to digest the corn."