Calamine, Wisconsin
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Calamine,_Wisconsin an entity of type: Thing
Calamine is an unincorporated community in the town of Willow Springs in Lafayette County, Wisconsin, United States. The Cheese Country Trail runs through the community, as does the Pecatonica River. The community is home to 100 year old St. Michael Church, within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Madison. Next to the church is the Willow Springs township hall which was the former one room school house until 1961, when the new Willow Springs school opened. Many scholars were produced between its walls.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Calamine, Wisconsin
rdf:langString
Calamine, Wisconsin
xsd:float
42.74250030517578
xsd:float
-90.16194152832031
xsd:integer
25540965
xsd:integer
1028297954
xsd:integer
608
rdf:langString
GNIS feature ID
xsd:integer
889
rdf:langString
Calamine, Wisconsin
rdf:langString
Calamine
rdf:langString
Wisconsin#USA
rdf:langString
CDT
xsd:integer
-6
xsd:integer
-5
xsd:string
42.7425 -90.16194444444444
rdf:langString
Calamine is an unincorporated community in the town of Willow Springs in Lafayette County, Wisconsin, United States. The Cheese Country Trail runs through the community, as does the Pecatonica River. The community is home to 100 year old St. Michael Church, within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Madison. Next to the church is the Willow Springs township hall which was the former one room school house until 1961, when the new Willow Springs school opened. Many scholars were produced between its walls. Formerly Calamine was a bustling community with prosperous mines and farms with an active rail road. The rail road was operated by the Milwaukee Road RR and switched at Calamine, either going north to Slateford and Mineral Point or West to Belmont, Ipswich and Platteville. In the 50’s and 60’s large cattle trains would unload Texas cattle in the spring at Calamine and Slateford to be hauled to Kenyon Cattle Company’s pastures. Stores, hotels, blacksmiths, and taverns thrived. For many years local farmers hauled their milk to the Calamine cheese factory to be made into famous Swiss cheese with holes in it. Later the Cornland fertilizer plant was built and supplied farmers for miles around with granular and liguid fertilizer, making the nearby Pecatonica River bottoms top producers in non flood yearsNorth of Calamine there was a popular swimming hole known as the “Mill” on the Pecatonica River named after a prehistoric grist Mill which was burned to the ground during the Blackhawk war. Fourth Cavalry troopers from Fort Defiance were unable to extinguish it and through the procedure somehow discovered this great swimming hole.
xsd:integer
1562506
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4654
xsd:string
608
xsd:double
270.9672
xsd:string
-5
-6
<Geometry>
POINT(-90.16194152832 42.742500305176)