By the end of the night, everything would be gone. The town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin, would be burned to ashes. As many as 2,500 people would be dead.
But on that Sunday morning, October 8, 1871, 7-year-old John Kramer had no idea what was about to happen.
It had been a tough but exciting year for the Kramers. John, his parents, and his 9-year-old brother, Mike, had come to the U.S. from Germany in the 1860s. They eventually traveled west and settled in Wisconsin.
Thousands of new immigrants made the same trip west in the 1860s. They were lured by cheap farmland. They wanted to carve a new life out of the American wilderness.
And what a wilderness it was!
In the 1860s, most of Wisconsin was covered with forests. Those forests held towering trees, howling wolves, and sharp-clawed bears.
For centuries, these woods were mostly left alone by humans.
By the time the Kramers arrived, though, big changes were happening.
By the end of the night, everything would be gone. The town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin, would be burned to ashes. As many as 2,500 people would be dead.
But that morning, October 8, 1871, 7-year-old John Kramer had no idea what was about to happen.
It had been a big year for the Kramers. John, his parents, and his 9-year-old brother, Mike, had come to the U.S. from Germany in the 1860s. They later moved west and settled in Wisconsin.
Thousands of new immigrants made the same trip west in the 1860s. They were lured by cheap farmland. They hoped to make a new life in the American wilderness.
And what a wilderness it was!
In the 1860s, most of Wisconsin was covered with forests. The trees were tall. There were wolves and bears.
For centuries, these woods were mostly left alone by humans.
By the time the Kramers got there, though, things were changing.
By the end of the night, everything would be gone. The town of Peshtigo, Wisconsin, would be burned to ashes, and as many as 2,500 people would be dead.
But on that Sunday morning, October 8, 1871, 7-year-old John Kramer had no idea what was about to happen.
It had been a challenging but exciting year for the Kramer family. John, his parents, and his 9-year-old brother, Mike, had come to the U.S. from Germany in the 1860s. They eventually traveled west and settled in Wisconsin.
Thousands of new immigrants made the same trip west in the 1860s, lured by inexpensive farmland and hoping to carve a new life out of the American wilderness.
And what a wilderness it was!
In the 1860s, most of Wisconsin was covered with forests that held towering trees, howling wolves, and sharp-clawed bears.
For centuries, these woods were mostly left untouched by humans.
By the time the Kramers arrived, however, major changes were happening.