British Hollow, Wisconsin

British Hollow, Wisconsin
Unincorporated community
British Hollow, Wisconsin
Coordinates: 42°42′21″N 90°41′12″W / 42.70583°N 90.68667°W / 42.70583; -90.68667Coordinates: 42°42′21″N 90°41′12″W / 42.70583°N 90.68667°W / 42.70583; -90.68667
Country United States
State Wisconsin
County Grant
Elevation 823 ft (251 m)
Time zone Central (CST) (UTC-6)
  Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
Area code(s) 608
GNIS feature ID 1562221[1]

British Hollow is an unincorporated community originally located in the northeastern corner of the Town of Potosi, Grant County, Wisconsin, United States.[1]

History

The first white residents were Terence Coyle and his family, who built a cabin there and were in permanent occupancy by the spring of 1832. In 1836, when Grant County was organized, it was made a separate precinct from the rest of Potosi, and named Pleasant Valley, a name which it still held at the time of the passage of the original (1848) Constitution of Wisconsin. It is unclear where the name "British Hollow" came from; it may have been to distinguish this settlement from the nearby Dutch Hollow, whose inhabitants were primarily Germans in origin.

Map showing the "precinct" of Pleasant Valley and others, and the town ("congressional townships") boundaries in 1843

At one time British Hollow (sometimes shortened to British) (which by 1848 also included most of Harrison, Grant County, Wisconsin and the north half of Paris, Grant County, Wisconsin townships) had several stores, a brewery (which went out of business about 1885), and a hotel. The old "precinct" was abolished by 1860; and by 1900, British Hollow had declined to one store (with post office), one church, one school, and three saloons.[2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 "British Hollow, Wisconsin". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  2. Holford, Castello N. History of Grant County, Wisconsin: Including Its Civil, Political, Geological, Mineralogical, Archaeological and Military History, and a History of the Several Towns Lancaster, Wisconsin: The Teller Print, 1900; pp. 135, 539-540


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