History of the Society The first meeting to discuss formation of a new historical society for Sauk County was held June 2, 1905 at the home of H. E. Cole, 121 Eighth Street in Baraboo. The first public meeting of the society was held November 23, 1905 in the Y. M. C. A. building in Baraboo but due to "exceedingly stormy" weather the first annual business meeting was postponed until November 29 and was held at the home of the acting president H. E. Cole. Cole served as president until his death in 1928. Initially members were voted in but later the policy was changed to voluntary membership. The society was very active from its inception and had several speakers the first year and presented a display at the Sauk County Fair in 1906. By 1907 the society was given rooms in the basement of the new Sauk County courthouse to use as museum space. Money was allocated by the county board for display cases which were quickly filled to capacity. Also in 1907 the society with help from the State Archeological Society and Wisconsin Federation of Women' Clubs purchased the property containing the only man shaped effigy mound in Wisconsin northeast of Baraboo. The land was cleared, fenced and a plaque erected to mark the spot. The membership had grown to 65 by the end of 1907. In 1909 the society marked the grave of Chief Yellow Thunder and his mate on county highway A north of Baraboo and made an excursion to the lost settlement of Newport on the Wisconsin River in the north-eastern part of the county. In 1911 in lieu of an annual meeting an exhibit was staged at the courthouse with many of its rooms displaying artifacts loaned for the occasion. A quartet played old selections and several ladies dressed in "ancient garb." Ten cents was charged for admission with an additional five cents for tea if desired. $14.00 was raised and was put towards the purchase of a tablet to mark the site of the first church in the Baraboo valley. The tablet was finally unveiled in 1914 after sufficient funds were raised. It stood near the corner of Fifth and Broadway in Baraboo marking the spot of the first church erected by the Methodist Episcopal Society. In 1916 a tablet was erected at the bird mound near the south shore of Devil's Lake by the generous donation of President H. E. Cole. Also that year the society heard a talk of current rather than historical events with B. J. Johnson describing "something of the horrors of the war in Europe." In 1927 the society lobbied the City of Baraboo for the purchase of the historic 1850's D. K. Noyes house which the city owned at the corner of First and Ash streets. The Board of Education which controlled the property refused to sell and the house was demolished to make way for the removing of another house from across the street which was the site of the new High School building. (now the Civic Center). In 1938 purchased the Jacob Van Orden Mansion on Fourth Avenue in Baraboo as a new home for the ever-growing collection which had long since overcrowded the space in the courthouse. The museum is still housed in the mansion and celebrated 60 years of ownership in 1998. | 
| | The original Van Orden complex also included a house for Jacob Van Orden's mother, Jane. The neighboring stucco house to the west (right) was built in 1897 several years before the mansion. The barn between the two houses may be the oldest building on the site with parts of it dating to 1879 when the original Van Orden house was built on the site where the mansion stands today. | In the recent past the society has also identified and marked sites of circus history, marked the site of pioneer historian, William Canfield, sponsored three parades of Historic Homes in Baraboo, placed the Van Orden Mansion on the National Register of Historic Places and inaugurated Historic Preservation awards for residential and commercial structures. The Van Orden Mansion |