๐บ๐ธ Edgerton is a city in Rock County and partly in Dane County in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. The population was 5,945 at the 2020 census. Of this, 5,799 were in Rock County, and 146 were in Dane County. Known locally as "Tobacco City U.S.A"., because of the importance of tobacco growing in the region, Edgerton continues to be a centre for the declining tobacco industry in the area.
History Originally called Fulton Station, Edgerton was named after a 19th-century businessman, Elisha W. Edgerton, or his brother Benjamin Hyde Edgerton, a civil engineer.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Edgerton was the centre of the tobacco industry in southern Wisconsin. At one time, there were as many as 52 tobacco warehouses dotting the streets of the city. Queen Anne style mansions along Edgerton's Washington Street testify to the wealth and prominence some merchants once had. The 1890s Carlton Hotel, once located on Henry Street, also once served as an additional reminder of the tobacco industry's influence. Although built by a brewing firm, the hotel (which burned to the ground in the 1990s) was frequented by tobacco buyers and sellers.
Edgerton Bible Case In 1886, Catholic parents in Edgerton protested the reading of the King James Bible in the village schools because they considered the Douay version the correct translation. The school board argued that Catholic children could ignore the Bible readings or sit in the cloakroom while the rest of the children listened to the reading of a Protestant version of the Bible. Because the school board refused to change its policy, several families brought suit on the grounds that the schools' practice conflicted with the Wisconsin Constitution, which forbade sectarian instruction in the public schools.
The circuit court rejected their argument, deciding in 1888 that the readings were not sectarian because both translations were of the same work. The parents appealed their case to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which on March 18, 1890, overruled the circuit court, concluding that reading the Bible did, in fact, constitute sectarian instruction, and thus illegally united the functions of church and state.
Seventy years later, when the U.S. Supreme Court banned prayer from the public schools in 1963, the Edgerton Bible Case was one of the precedents cited by Justice William Brennan.
Geography According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 4.14 square miles (10.72ย kmยฒ), all of it land. None of the area is covered with water, except for Saunders Creek, although the city is within a five-minute drive of Lake Koshkonong. Lake Koshkonong is the third largest lake in Wisconsin, and though very shallow, provides a place for water sports. Skiing, tubing, and fishing are common activities on the lake or the Rock River, which feeds it. The Rock River runs all the way to the Mississippi.
Annual cultural events Because Edgerton was once the centre of the tobacco growing region in Wisconsin, the community's annual celebration is called Tobacco Days. The community celebration includes live music, food, family entertainment, a craft fair, an open-air market, living history events and demonstrations, tobacco demonstrations, citywide rummage sales, a men's slow pitch softball tournament, book sales, a parade, and a car show.
The Sterling North Book and Film Festival, which takes place annually the last weekend in September, brings together authors and filmmakers with the community.
Tourist Industry The Sterling North Home and Museum is the childhood home of authors Sterling North and Jessica Nelson North MacDonald. North's most famous book, Rascal was set in Edgerton and he used the town as the setting for several of his books, referring to it as "Brailsford Junction".
The Pomeroy and Pelton Tobacco Warehouse, known as the T. W. Dickinson & Son Tobacco Warehouse after it was purchased by Weetman Dickinson, is on the National Register of Historic Places. It is the oldest free-standing brick warehouse in Wisconsin.
Edgerton is also known for its association with Pauline Jacobus. Jacobus and her husband, Oscar Jacobus, were responsible for the first artistic pottery created in Chicago in the mid-1880s. By 1888 the couple had moved their business to Edgerton. Although Oscar's death and an economic depression disrupted the business in the 1890s, Pauline Jacobus continued making pottery in Edgerton until the early 1900s' fire that destroyed her rural Edgerton home, "The Bogart". Much admired and sought-after as an American art form, "Pauline Pottery" is recognised in antique and art galleries throughout the world. A log cabin from the old Bogart site and the factory warehouse where Pauline Pottery was first made in Edgerton still survive.
Edgerton has a population of over 5,620 people. Edgerton also forms part of the wider Rock County which has a population of over 163,687 people. Edgerton is situated near Janesville.
๐ช๐ธ Vitoria-Gasteiz 42.842
๐ช๐ธ Vitoria Gasteiz 42.85
๐ฎ๐น Ascoli Piceno 42.85
๐บ๐ธ Schenectady 42.818
๐บ๐ธ Janesville -89
๐บ๐ธ Bloomington-Normal -88.985
๐บ๐ธ Bloomington -88.983
๐ธ๐ป Cojutepeque -88.933
๐ธ๐ป Chalatenango -88.933
๐ง๐ฟ San Ignacio -89.07
๐ธ๐ป San Salvador -89.178
๐ธ๐ป Antiguo Cuscatlรกn -89.233
๐จ๐ฆ Thunder Bay -89.246
๐บ๐ธ Hattiesburg -89.3
Locations Near: Edgerton -89.0667,42.8333
๐บ๐ธ Janesville -89,42.683 d: 17.5
๐บ๐ธ Beloit -89.017,42.5 d: 37.3
๐บ๐ธ Madison -89.383,43.067 d: 36.6
๐บ๐ธ Watertown -88.717,43.2 d: 49.7
๐บ๐ธ Rockford -89.039,42.273 d: 62.3
๐บ๐ธ Belvidere -88.844,42.255 d: 66.9
๐บ๐ธ Beaver Dam -88.833,43.45 d: 71.1
๐บ๐ธ Juneau -88.7,43.4 d: 69.7
Antipodal to: Edgerton 90.933,-42.833
๐ฆ๐บ Bunbury 115.637,-33.327 d: 17620.5
๐ฆ๐บ Mandurah 115.721,-32.529 d: 17564.1
๐ฆ๐บ Rockingham 115.717,-32.267 d: 17547.6
๐ฆ๐บ City of Cockburn 115.833,-32.167 d: 17532.2
๐ฆ๐บ Vincent 115.834,-31.936 d: 17517.1
๐ฆ๐บ Perth 115.857,-31.953 d: 17516.4
๐ฆ๐บ Wanneroo 115.803,-31.747 d: 17507
๐ฆ๐บ Guildford 115.973,-31.9 d: 17504.2