Governor Dodge State Park
History
The First People
Shortly after the glaciers retreated to their
icy, Canadian home, humans moved into the area that is now Governor Dodge
State Park. Just as the parks scenic hills and valleys provide you
refuge from over-crowded cities, they once provided shelter from snow
and cold to the areas first human inhabitants.
More than 8,000 years ago, men and women made winter camps at the base
of rock overhangs enjoying the protection of the sandstone walls. As the
weather warmed, they moved into more open areas of what is now Wisconsin
and Illinois to hunt bison and other game.
Archaeological digs within the park verify the existence of human habitation;
stretching all the way from those first "campers" to the Fox,
Sauk, and Ho Chunk Indians, to present day campers.
Visitors to Governor Dodge will see interpretive panels in the Deer Cove picnic area describing the cultural history of the park and the Deer Cove Rockshelter excavations. These panels are also available online [PDF 1MB].
Miners
The lack of glaciation played a role in determining the first wave of
white people to hit the area. Large seams of lead ore lay near the earths
surface throughout the region south of the Wisconsin River. Miners from
Europe began arriving in the 1820s. One of the first finds was at
Jenkins Branch, which lay in Cox Hollow, just south of the present park
boundary. More
about lead mining [exit DNR].
As more and more miners arrived, conflicts broke out between the Europeans
and the Ho Chunks who had originally worked the mines. General Henry Dodge,
one of the original white settlers, was instrumental in establishing peace
in the area. Dodge was later appointed the first territorial governor
of Wisconsin.
Farmers
The next wave of settlers came to farm the land. The ridges in the driftless
area once supported vast, sweeping prairies. Those treeless areas were
more easily plowed than surrounding woodlands, and contained rich, black
soilprime land for agriculture.
Hardworking family farmers like the Stephens, Griffiths, and Pengellys
filtered into the park area in the mid and late 1800s. Throughout the
years, their farmsteads were handed down from one generation to the next,
or sold to newly arriving immigrants.
The State Park
In 1948, Iowa County presented one of these farmsteadsthe Henry
Larson estateto the State of Wisconsin. These first 160 acres provided
the nucleus for what was to become Governor Dodge State Park. Ten years
later an earthen dam was constructed across Mill Creek and Cox Hollow
Lake was created. The new park was well on its way to becoming one of
Wisconsins finest recreation areas.
As years passed, the state purchased neighboring farms to add to this
sprawling giant. Governor Dodge now contains 5,350 acres.
A second earthen dam was built in 1966, forming Twin Valley Lake. Beaches,
campgrounds, bathhouses, trails, shelters, and other facilities have been
constructed throughout the years to add to your park enjoyment.
Gone now are the buffalo hunters and their spears. Gone are the lead
miners and their picks. Gone are the farmers and their plows. But the
land that they changed remains. Traces of these men and women remain in
the stone arrowheads, crumbling rock foundations, and rusted barbed wire
that are still found throughout the parktraces that every year become
harder to find as the land struggles to restore itself to the wild, natural
area it once was.
For more information, ask Governor Dodge State Park, (608) 935-2315.
Last Revised: Saturday January 21 2012
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