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103:(later a state legislator), son of Peter Lavies. The post office itself moved with changes in postmaster, with the final location being at the intersection of what are now Howard and Forest Home Avenues, across the road from Honey Creek. In 1887 the population of the service area of the post office was estimated at 129.
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The post office was finally discontinued May 31, 1908. The Root Creek
Farmers and Gardeners Exhibit, later to become simply known as the Root Creek Fair, started in fall of 1914, and continued on through 1939. The nearby District #10 public school would be known as "Root Creek School" from 1915 until
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Post offices in the state of
Wisconsin. Alphabetically arranged, with population" in "Historical review of the state of Wisconsin. Its industrial and commercial resources. Descriptive and biographical. Embracing the cities and towns of Madison, Racine, Appleton, Oshkosh, Manitowoc, Fon-Du-Lac,
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church was built named
Evangelisch-Lutherische St. Johannes-Gemeinde zu Root Creek, Wis. (St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church of Root Creek, Wisconsin). By 1848 there were four churches, and the area became a nucleus for a few businesses catering to the nearby farming community, almost all
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Wisconsin
Gazetteer: Containing the Names, Location, and Advantages, of the Counties, Cities, Towns, Villages, Post Offices, and Settlements, Together with a Description of the Lakes, Water Courses, Prairies, and Public Localities, in the State of Wisconsin, Alphabetically
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By 1957, the area formerly known as Root Creek had been divided among five municipalities, and portions of the region once served by a single post office would be assigned to seven different zip codes. Only a handful of abandoned cemeteries such as Lavies
Cemetery remain.
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post office just on the other side of the river, he moved it northeastward to a site adjacent to his tavern, at what is now the junction of South 76th Street, Forest Home Avenue, and Cold Spring Road. In 1846, a
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Kenosha, Janesville, Watertown, Beloit, Sheboygan, Portage, Jefferson, Baraboo, La Crosse, Menasha, Sparta, etc. Containing a mailing, shipping, and expressing guide to every post-office in the state
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Vol 25, Nos. 3 & 4 (Fall-Winter 2002); pp. 66-67
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572:Categories
545:87°59′53″W
542:42°58′14″N
476:Trostville
466:Root Creek
378:Brown Deer
343:West Allis
312:Greenfield
119:References
97:postmaster
56:Root River
52:plank road
49:Janesville
33:Greenfield
17:Root Creek
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317:Milwaukee
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62:History
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