For a small community, just west of I-90 between Madison and
Janesville, Edgerton has more than enough activities all year to rival a
city three times its size! With Rock River and Lake Koshkonong just
minutes away, two huge city parks, (one with lighted baseball/softball
diamonds, the other with a swimming pool complex), two museums,
(Sterling North and Albion), a Carnegie Library (recently renovated and
enlarged), and several festivals
during the warm months, not too many people wonder what there is to do.
Add to these the choral, band and drama presentations at the school’s
acclaimed Performing Arts Center, and you have yet another dimension to
year-round entertainment for all ages.
About a century and half ago, a determined group of landowners
persuaded a railroad to lay its tracks through what is now Edgerton,
instead of a few miles further south. This land deal resulted in the
seedlings of a community which, watered and fertilized by a series of
successful tobacco crops and the ability to ship this crop by rail, grew
into the city once nicknamed "The Tobacco Capital of the
World". Over 55 tobacco warehouses , both frame and brick, lined
the main streets and railroad tracks. The town boasted several fine
hotels which were full to overflowing when tobacco buyers from all over
the country and Europe conducted business with the local dealers and
growers. Sadly, no hotels remain, but several yellow brick warehouses
are a testimony to our city’s hey-day.
Other industries that helped Edgerton grow were Willson-Monarch
Laboratories, manufacturing and selling pharmaceutical and home care
products throughout the mid-west door-to-door; Highway Trailer which
began as a wagon-works and ended up with a wide-line of heavy and light
equipment; and Nunn-Bush Shoe, constructed in the midst of the 1930s by
those who needed jobs, and which would, subsequently, become life-long
makers of quality shoes. These industries, too, are gone.
Ironically, the first "industry" in the Edgerton area is
the only one that has survived….tobacco. And the heritage of this
crop, unique to the upper Mid-west, and those who work long and
back-breaking hours growing it, are honored each July. As are the other agriculture of the area – including
cash crops such as corn and beans , and, of course, dairy farms and milk
production.
Edgerton has surely changed over the past 150 years! Industries rose
to prominence and faded or moved, but other businesses have taken their
places as major players in our economy – the hospital, lumber yard,
Green-Tek (plastics), IKI (aerosol filling), Sav-a-lot (distribution),
AM Mailing. The west-side Industrial Park is full; the new north-side
Business Park continues to grow.
What was once the main shopping area for day-to-day necessities
(groceries, banking, hardware, floral shop, pharmacy, medical clinics)
has slid around the corner onto North Main St. where it reaches to the
north city limits. "Front Street" (West Fulton) now boasts attractive
antique shops, arts, crafts and boutiques, and a pottery, restaurants
and pubs, and is gradually undergoing an historic face-lift. The jewel
of downtown, which has been designated as an historic "Warehouse
District", is the recently renovated century old-railroad depot.
It now serves as offices of the Edgerton Area Chamber of Commerce and
tourism information center, as well as the Pauline Pottery Museum and
Edgerton Area History Museum.
The depot itself was named to the National Historic Register in 1997.
(Information on museums may be obtained by contacting the chamber office
at 608-884-4408)
Here it is, a thumbnail sketch of Edgerton’s history. We hope you
will be a part of its present and future, and join us in what we do best
– enjoying life in our small part of the world…."Honoring the
Past - Building the Future".