#FlashbackFriday with the Historical Society: Main Street in Mid-20th Century

Here is this week’s #FlashbackFriday with the Whitewater Historical Society!

Pictured here is Whitewater’s Main Street in the mid-twentieth century, looking towards the Hamilton House and the White Library building. Notice that the street is lined with rather stately-looking elm trees. However, Dutch Elm Disease began spreading rapidly across the country from New England in the 1930s and ’40s, reaching Whitewater in 1957. Despite the aggressive pruning and spraying efforts employed, the disease quickly decimated Whitewater’s elm tree population.

Join us next week for more from the Whitewater Historical Society collections!

(3737P, Whitewater Historical Society)

The Whitewater Historical Society collects, preserves, and interprets the history of Whitewater and the surrounding area. Be sure to join us next week for more from the Society’s collections. Please “like” us on Facebook, and check out our website at whitewaterhistoricalsociety.org!​ 

Notice of Application for Aquatic Plant Management Permit

Editor’s note: The following notice was provided by the City of Whitewater.

August 6, 2021

The City of Whitewater intends to apply for a permit from the Wisconsin DNR to treat up to 100 acres of water in Cravath Lake and Trippe Lake with aquatic herbicides to control cattail, willow, reed canary grass, and typical agricultural weeds. The proposed treatment would occur between August 23, 2021 and September 3, 2021. The City of Whitewater will conduct a public informational meeting on the proposed treatment if five or more individuals, organizations, special units of government, or local units of government request one. The meeting would give interested parties a chance to learn more about the proposed treatment from the permit applicant. The City of Whitewater is not required to, but may change the proposed treatment based on information provided by citizens attending the meeting. Any request for a public meeting on the proposed treatment must be made within five (5) days after this notice is published. The request must specify the topics to be discussed at the meeting, including the problems and alternatives, and must be sent in writing to Eric Boettcher at eboettcher@whitewater-wi.gov and to the Wisconsin DNR, to Heidi.bunk@wisconsin.gov.

This public notice is required by Chapter NR107, Wisconsin Administrative Code.

Common Council Gives City’s Final Blessing on Proposed TIDs

By Al Stanek
Whitewater Banner volunteer staff
whitewaterbanner@gmail.com

The use of Tax Incremental Financing (TIF), a common economic development tool, appears to be moving forward as the Whitewater Common Council formally designated the boundaries and project plans for five new Tax Incremental Districts (TIDs) at its August 3 meeting.

TIF financing allows a municipality to create economic development districts (TIDs) in which the amount of tax revenue generated within a designated part of the city is temporarily frozen for the units of government that are listed on tax bills sent out by the city. Those units of government include the city, the county or counties, the school district and area technical colleges that collect taxes for property in a given TID.

Any new tax revenue generated within a TID during its life can be used to pay for infrastructure improvements, developer incentives and the costs of administration.

Earlier this year the City closed all of its previous TIDs and distributed any excess TID funds proportionately to all participating units of government. The additional revenue generated by new construction within those previous TIDs will now be available for general purposes by the city, the Whitewater Unified School District (WWUSD), Jefferson or Walworth County depending on where development occurs, and one of the two Technical College Districts that serve Jefferson or Walworth County.

Final approval of the proposed new TIDs rests with a Joint Review Board consisting of representatives from all involved units of government. The board is scheduled to meet on August 11 to consider this action.

“Establishing boundaries and project plans for these new districts is one of the last steps in a process that really began nearly two and half years ago,” said Whitewater City Manager Cameron Clapper. “We are already seeing activity in several of the proposed new TIDs,” he added.

Examples cited were a Kwik Trip store near the roundabout on the city’s east side as well as another proposed retail establishment in that area and another Kwik Trip at the intersection of STH 89 and STH 59. There are also indications of a potential new development in the downtown Whitewater area as well as a proposed new development on the city’s northwest side.

Information on the boundaries and specifics of the project plans are available at https://www.whitewater-wi.gov/532/2021-Tax-Increment-District-Development.

Rock County Sheriff’s Office Accepts Applications for Police Explorer Post


The Rock County Sheriff’s Office is accepting applications from young adults age 14-20 for the
Rock County Sheriff’s Office Police Explorer Post.

Law Enforcement Exploring is the preeminent career orientation and experience program for
young people contemplating a career in law enforcement or a related field in the criminal justice
system. The program provides young adults, who are at least age 14 and have completed eighth
grade, but not yet age 21, with a personal awareness of the criminal justice system through
training, practical experiences, competition, assisting with special events, and other activities.

Obtain an application on the Rock County Sheriff’s Office
website: https://www.co.rock.wi.us/police-explorer-program
Please return completed applications to Deputy Anacker at
zachary.anacker@co.rock.wi.us by August 27, 2021.

To learn more about Law Enforcement Exploring, visit
https://www.exploring.org/law-enforcement/.
We encourage young adults interested in a law enforcement
career to seize this outstanding opportunity to experience
firsthand what it’s like to be a law enforcement officer.

Whitewater is Well Represented in Janesville PAC Production of James & the Giant Peach, Jr. – Aug. 5-8

2018 Summer Theatre Camp - James and the Giant Peach, Jr.

By Tom Ganser

Whitewater is well represented in the upcoming Janesville Performing Arts Center Kids production of “James and the Giant Peach, Jr.,” at the JPAC Center Aug. 5-7 at 7 p.m. and Aug. 8 at 2 p.m.

Taking to the stage are Whitewater Unified School District actors Anderson Waelchli, Marco Wence, and Ella Willman.  Jim McCulloch directs the play and Lori Heidenreich adds her talents as musical director and choreographer.  2021 WHS graduate Carter Waelchli serves as production assistant.

Based on Roald Dahl’s enduring and popular novel, the play focuses on a boy who befriends a colony of eccentric giant bugs who live inside a gigantic peach, and their travels around the world,

Based on one of Roald Dahl’s most poignantly quirky stories, “James and the Giant Peach JR.is a new take on this “masterpeach” of a tale.  Featuring a wickedly tuneful score and a witty and charming book, this adventurous musical about courage and self-discovery is destined to be a classic.

When James is sent by his conniving aunts to chop down their old fruit tree, he discovers a magic potion that grows a tremendous peach, rolls into the ocean and launches a journey of enormous proportions. James befriends a collection of singing insects that ride the giant piece of fruit across the ocean, facing hunger, sharks and plenty of disagreements along the way.

The delightful play explores themes of found family, standing up to cruel people, and the frightening but exciting period of childhood.  It is filled with surreal visuals and is unflinching in its depictions of childhood peril, but brings its long-suffering child protagonist a hard-earned happy ending.

For more information about the play or to order tickets, visit JanesvillePAC.org or call (608) 758-0297.  Reservations are required. JPAC is located in the former Janesville High School/Marshall Junior High School Building at 408 S. Main Street in Janesville.

This Week’s Garage Sale

Cruise on Over for Great Deals
Garage Sale at 640 Stonefield Lane, Whitewater
Friday, August 6, 3 pm-7 pm
Saturday, August 7, 8 am-12 pm
Featured Items:
Household Goods
Clothing/Coats
Small Furniture
Waterski Equipment
Garden Supplies and Tools
Kitchen Items
Games and Toys
And MORE!

Questions: Contact Kim at 608-201-2151

Obituary: Dr. Carolyn E. Wedin, 81


Carolyn E. Wedin died on July 28, 2021, at Regions Hospital in St. Paul, Minnesota. She was 81. Carolyn blended many facets of her life with tenacity and charm: devoted member of her large family, loving mother and grandmother, accomplished author, lauded professor, generous mentor, world traveler, silver-tongued radio commentator, spirited keeper of Swedish heritage in Northwestern Wisconsin, skilled Swedish/English translator, passionate sports fan. It is impossible to celebrate only one dimension of Carolyn’s shining life.

Born in Frederic, Wisconsin to parents Reuben and Ruth Hane Wedin, she was the youngest of eight siblings. She valued education her entire life, beginning in a one-room country school at Round Lake and Frederic High School (1957). She pursued higher education at Gustavus Adolphus College (1961), the University of Kansas (1964), and the University of Wisconsin (1976), earning B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees in writing and literature. Throughout her life she expressed her love of music on cornet and with her beautiful voice. She was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and earned recognition for her academic accomplishments from prestigious organizations such as the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, which twice named her as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow (1961 – 63) and a Dissertation Fellow (1975 – 76).

Carolyn was part of the first generation of women who broke into university teaching on a large scale. Her early teaching at the historically black Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina inspired her focus on African American literature.  When in 1965 the Klu Klux Klan burned a cross on the campus and her front yard to oppose the Civil Rights Movement at Shaw, Carolyn was the first to include black literature in the curriculum. In 1966, she joined the faculty of the University of Wisconsin – Whitewater, where she stayed for the remainder of her career. She taught and wrote about the literature and social justice work of people including James Baldwin (“James Baldwin,” 1980), Jessie Faucet (“Jessie Redmond Fauset,” 1981), and Mary White Ovington (“Inheritors of the Spirit: Mary White Ovington and the Founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People,” 1997).

As testament to her professional success, she was selected as a fellow of the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin, a Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Silesia in Poland (1991 – 92), and a Fulbright Roving Scholar in Norway (1996 – 97).  She also served interim appointments as a University of Wisconsin System Administrator (1975 – 76, 1980, 1981), as a Lecturer at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden (1985 – 86), and as Senior Research Associate at the University of Wisconsin System Institute on Race and Ethnicity (1992 – 93). She accepted the title of Professor Emeritus at UW-Whitewater upon her retirement in 1996.

Carolyn was a prolific author and commentator.  In addition to writing her memoir Teacher: Step Outside (2017), other books, and voluminous contributions to journals, newspapers, and encyclopedias, she often shared her perspectives on Wisconsin Public Radio. She cared deeply for the community where she grew up and so, following her retirement from UW Whitewater, she returned to Frederic in 1998. She continued to teach and write, and her lively participation throughout the area included classes in drama and writing through Frederic Community Education and the Swedish Club of Western Wisconsin. Her deep knowledge and love for local history led her to write a book about her grandmother and mother, “A Story of Immigration” (2013), and to translate and edit Louis Ahlstrom’s memoir “Historiska Skildringar” (with Inger Berggren and Stefan Sylvander). Ahlstrom was a key leader in the early immigration to West Sweden and Trade Lake; the book appeared in 2010 as “Historical Sketches: Fifty-five Years in Western Wisconsin 1869 – 1924.”  Carolyn was an enthusiastic supporter and organizer of cultural and educational institutions and events, and a keen local tour guide for friends and relatives from far and wide.

Carolyn’s family, friends, and students will remember her as a nurturer-extraordinaire who used many means and methods to encourage growth and joy in life, from hosting holiday smorgasbords to reviewing manuscripts.  She crossed many boundaries—as a woman in academia, as white scholar of African American literature, as sometimes expatriate, as intrepid traveler—providing a role model for others. A woman of extraordinary empathy, she always met people in the present moment and knew just what to say or do. Her energy for encouraging others to break through any perceived limitations was boundless, and through every new venture or challenge she would say, “I hope you are journaling about it!”  

Carolyn is survived by her husband, Anthony Rolloff, her children Monika Byrd (Shane), Mario Sylvander (Carmen), and Brendan Sylvander (Jill), and six grandchildren – Amanda Creden, Samuel Creden, Laken Sylvander, Henrik Sylvander, Milo Sylvander, and Sylvie Sylvander.

Those whom she leaves behind will never forget her wit, intellect, grace and undying love and care for them. Memorial services will be Saturday, August 7, at 2 p.m. at Zion Lutheran Church of Trade Lake (11841 County Road Z, Frederic, Wisconsin).

Memorial donations may be made to the Gustavus Adolphus College Fund to provide scholarships (https://gustavus.edu/giving/waystogive.php  Gustavus Adolphus College, Office of Advancement, 800 West College Avenue, St. Peter, MN 56082, 1-800-726-6192).