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Wisconsin Hometown Stories

Juneau County: Major Attraction

Glacial waters left vast areas of poor land that became a major attraction for the county.

Aired 04/17/2014 | Rating TV-G

Wisconsin Hometown Stories

Juneau County: Major Attraction

Clip: Special | 8mVideo has Closed Captions

Glacial waters left vast areas of poor land that became a major attraction for the county.

Glacial waters left large areas of poor land that ironically became a major attraction. Wisconsin’s National Guard used it for a training camp. The Ho Chunk Nation performed ceremonial dances in a natural amphitheater carved by the water. Hydroelectric dams created the vast Petenwell and Castle Rock flowages. And the Necedah Wildlife Refuge helped to save the endangered Whooping Crane.

Aired 04/17/2014 | Rating TV-G

Wisconsin Hometown Stories is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin

Juneau County: Camp Douglas History

Video has Closed Captions

Starting as a railroad lumber camp, Camp Douglas was built and rebuilt with pride. (7m 47s)

Juneau County: Cranberries

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Advances in growing the native cranberry created an iconic Wisconsin industry. (5m 46s)

Juneau County: Early History

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Native Americans, railroads, and glacial waters affected Juneau County's early history. (11m 48s)

Juneau County - I Hope To Do Something Brave

Video has Closed Captions

Early Civil War volunteers fought with distinction as part of the Iron Brigade. (6m 45s)

Juneau County: The Drainage Dream

Video has Closed Captions

The failure of wetland farming led to the establishment of the Necedah Wildlife Refuge. (9m 29s)

Juneau County: Two Governors

Video has Closed Captions

The county produced two governors: Mauston’s Orland Loomis, and Elroy’s Tommy Thompson. (11m 35s)

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