Thursday, March 31, 2016

WISCONSIN: CADDIE WOODLAWN HISTORICAL PARK

As of 2015, I had never been to Wisconsin. Bob had been there several times for a continuing education seminar that he really liked, but those were the years when we had children at home, and I never got to go along. We decided that our trip to Minnesota in October 2015 was a great time to slip across the stateline so I could check Wisconsin off my list. After a bit of research, I determined that a visit to the Caddie Woodlawn Historical Park would be perfect.

On our way, we stopped for a few photos of the St. Paul Minnesota Temple. (Or was that on the drive to somewhere else? Hmmm.)
This temple was dedicated on January 9, 2000. I'll bet it was freezing that day. When we were there, however, it couldn't have been more beautiful.

We got back on the road and headed east on the 94 Freeway towards Menomonie, where we turned south on Highway 25. I added the green line to the map below to show what I think is the approximate location of the Minnesota-Wisconsin stateline and to prove that I did more than just put my big toe in Wisconsin:

Caddie Woodlawn is a historical fiction children's book written by Carol Ryrie Brink that I read and loved when I was nine or ten years old. Published in 1936, it received the Newbery Medal for Children's Literature that year. (The sign on the property erroneously lists the medal as being awarded in 1935.) Caddie Woodlawn was not actually a real person, but she was based on the author's grandmother, Caddie Woodhouse Watkins, who grew up in Wisconsin and whose home is now the anchor of this historical park.



We were there on an absolutely glorious day, the kind of day that I would have envisioned while I was reading the book--crisp autumn air, brilliant colors, chirping birds, and absolute solitude.

The minuscule cabin where the real Caddie spent her early years in the 1860s looks like a child's playhouse, but the real Woodhouse family who lived here had ten chldren:
It didn't take long for my First-World Guilt to kick in over having so many rooms in my house; appliances like a fridge, a washer, and a dryer; a closet for my clothes that is about the size of this house and plenty of clothes to fill it; central air and heat; etc., etc., etc. However, Caddie's family home trumps mine in the landscaping department.

Obviously some maintenance has occurred over the last 150  years or so, but this is still no castle:

Part of the interior is sectioned off, maybe to serve as a kitchen, a storage area, or a bedroom--I'm not sure which:


A ladder led to a dusty attic big enough for several children to sleep in:


A few bird nests testify that the house has been recently inhabited--although not by humans:


This particular structure isn't mentioned in the book Caddie Woodlawn, but it is picturesque in its own way.

We Southern Californians just couldn't keep from ooh-ing and ah-ing over the fall foliage:

There is an old water pump on the site. Pete and Bob discovered that it still works:


This mushroom looks like it's been growing ever since Caddie lived here:
I asked my son, a member of the American Mycological Society, what it is, and he suggested it could be what is known as an artist's conch, or more specifically ganoderma applanatum. Um, yeah. That was my guess too.

READING

I hope elementary school-aged children are still reading Carol Ryrie Brink's award-winning book Caddie Woodlawn. Although it's been 80 years since it was published, and even though it deals with the life of a child who lived over 150 years ago, I think tomboy Caddie's adventures are universal. Who wouldn't love a girl who befriends the local Indians, sneaks out at night, survives a fall through the ice, and has to deal with a "perfect" cousin from the East who comes to visit? Caddie is full of delightful surprises.

This is a wonderful book for young and older girls alike. It's fun to watch Caddie learn about herself. At the end of the book, she expresses a thought that fits us all:
"How far I've come! I'm the same girl and yet not the same. I wonder if it's always like that? Folks keep growing from one person into another all their lives, and life is just a lot of everyday adventures. Well, whatever life is, I like it."





4 comments:

  1. Caddie Woodlawn is a fabulous book I somehow missed reading as a child, but read about a decade ago for the first time. Are you sure ten kids can even fit in that house? Amazing!

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  2. It was nice to have the state bug hit you and have to find a reason to cross over the Wisconsin state line. It was a fun drive out.

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  3. As a teacher, I used to read Caddie Woodlawn to my 6th graders every year. There was one particular chapter that I couldn't get through without choking up, as it reminded me so much of my own father. Just recently, I decided to read Caddie Woodlawn aloud to my husband, and now he's falling in love with it. I haven't gotten to that chapter yet, but I've already teared up a couple of times. Cheesh, I'm getting too soft in my retirement. To all, this is a classic not to be missed.

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    1. Thank you for your comment, Kelley! This is one of those stories that really sticks with you. I love that you still have an emotional attachment to it!

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