Small Towns, Wisconsin Southwest Region Fall 2015 | Page 24
In the early 1840s, things were not looking good in
Glarus. There had been several years of failed crops,
food was scarce, and much of the canton was in
deep poverty.
With more workers than available jobs, the
government decided to sponsor emigration to
America. Authorities created the Glarus Emigration
Society, which provided loans to help residents
purchase land in the New World. Men were offered
20 acres of land, rent free for ten years, after which
it would be purchased for ten shillings per acre. 193
volunteers decided to accept this offer.
Scouts were dispatched to find land suitable for
a colony. They searched through Ohio, Indiana,
and Illinois, but were unable to find anywhere they
deemed appropriate. Finally, they decided on two
square miles along the Little Sugar River in Wisconsin,
where they purchased 1,280 acres for $1.25 per acre.
At the time, the land was untamed wilderness, but
the valley and hilltops reminded them of Switzerland.
After a comedy of errors, in August 1845 the settlers
arrived at their new home.
After coming to America, 12 families lived in the
community’s only wooden hut. Many of the settlers
worked in nearby lead mines to survive the first
winter. After that winter, they purchased cattle from
Ohio and began dairy farming and cheese making,
a trade that many of them had learned back in
Switzerland. At its peak, New Glarus boasted an
astonishing 22 cheese factories, and became known
as the Cheese Capital of the World. Even today, New
Glarus boasts the largest concentration of specialty
cheese factories and award-winning cheesemakers
anywhere in the United States.
Did you know?
The Swiss Confederation (Switzerland) consists of a number
of cantons, which are semi-sovereign states. The Old Swiss
Confederacy was an alliance among the cantons of Uri,
Schwyz, and Unterwalden (see the story of Wilhelm Tell on
page 31); Glarus was one of several other cantons to join
by 1353. Switzerland is now a federal republic consisting of
26 cantons.
p.24
Small Towns, Wisconsin | 2015 Southwest Fall Edition | www.smalltownswisconsin.com | e. [email protected]