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Ezra
Cornell
Stacker Park, Cornell
Ezra
Cornell was the man who founded the City of Cornell, Wisconsin,
but actually never lived here. Cornell was born in 1807
in New York State of Quaker parents. He was a farmer, inventor,
businessman, statesman, and a philanthropist. He became
a line building contractor and invested his earnings in
the Western Union telegraph system, which he helped organize.
Ezra
Cornell was the founder and benefactor of Cornell University
located in Ithica, New York. While looking for lands to
help the University, Cornell often visited Jean Brunet''s
trading post and home. During the last year of the Civil
War in 1866, Cornell located and surveyed the lands in this
area around Brunet Falls and the Chippewa River. He was
so impressed with the area, and with the advice of his close
friend Jean Brunet, he purchased vast tracts of land and
waterpower. He hoped to establish mills and manufacture
lumber in order to create a market for the vast timber on
these over 100,000 acres. The purpose being to assist Cornell
University.
In
1867, he organized the New York Manufacturing and Improvement
Company to further his plans to build a mill and town at
Brunet Falls. Cornell prepared a map of the future village,
which is very similar in all details to the plat of this
city today. Cornell died in 1877 before his plans could
be realized. On his death bed he gave all his land, the
waterpower, and the site of Brunet Falls to Cornell University
as a rich endowment. Brunet Falls was later renamed Cornell
in his honor.
Chippewa
County Historical Society
Historic Sign #42
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