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Worden
Township was the twenty-sixth created by order of the county
board, May 13, 1883. It was named in honor of
Zephaniah Worden, a well known local
Civil War hero. On April 4, 1876 the Township of Thorp was
organized. The present Town Worden was part of this township. On May
13, 1893 Worden Township was created by an Ordinance of the Clark
County Board. Ole Samuelson was the first chairman of the town and
is credited with initiating its formation since he approached the
county board with a request to have the area divided from Thorp
Township.
Worden consists of
township No. 28 R. 4 west. It is
bounded by the town of Thorp on the north, the town of Butler on the
south, the town of Reseburg on the east, and Chippewa County on the
west. It is divided into thirty-six square miles. The North Fork
River flows about through the center of it from the north to the
south, and the Wolf River cuts off a strip of the western part.
Ole Samuelson was elected chairman when the initial
town meeting was held, the first Tuesday in April, 1894 at Gorman
School which later became Busy Bee School.
Zephaniah Worden
Zephaniah Worden was a popular mail
carrier in the pioneer Thorp area. He had blue eyes, a dark
complexion, dark brown hair and when he was full grown, he stood 5'
8" tall. Before serving with the Union Army in Company F of
Pennsylvania's 45th Regiment, Unit #2287 during the Civil War,
he was a laborer who resided in Tioga Co., Pennsylvania. He
enlisted September 2, 1861 and enrolled as a Private Oct. 1, 1861,
at the age of nineteen in his home county. July 18, 1863, he was
promoted to Sergeant. October 10, 1863, he was severely wounded
during the battle at Blue Springs, Tennessee and credited with
"Distinguished Service". On January 1, 1864, he re-enlisted and
September 30th of that same year, was taken prisoner at Pegram's
Farm, Virginia but was later paroled. He was mustered out of
service July 17, 1865 in Alexandria, Virginia. The papers of a
prominent Pennsylvania Historian, Samuel Penniman Bates, indicate
that May 1, 1865, Zephaniah Worden was promoted to Full Sergeant,
First Class.
February 20, 1870, "Zeph"
married Eunice Aurelia who was born May 20, 1852 in
Baraboo, Monroe County, Wisconsin to George Hickcox and Eliza Saloma
(Greenslett) Murray.
Because of his
distinguished service during the war, he was granted a Land Patent
of 160 acres on April 1, 1882 (Document #2295). This
parcel of land is located in Section 29N 4W Section 36 (which is old
Thorp & Worden Township). His property was the entire SW 1/4 Section
of Section 36, some 160 acres.
Eunice (Murray)
Worden died January 9, 1928 and Zephaniah died February 19, 1935.
They are both buried in section 67, lot 21 of the Washington State
Veterans' Home Cemetery of Kitsap County, in Retsil, WA.
Sources: Centennial
History of Worden, Township, WI; Dean Samuelson's family records,
Zephaniah Worden's Military Records from
the
"History of the Forty-fifth Regiment, Pennsylvania Veteran Volunteer
Infantry, 1861-1865", Williamsport, Pa., Grit Pub. Co., 1912,
Census and Family Records, Digital Archives of Pennsylvania, Eau
Claire Land Records, WI Marriage Records, Washington State Veterans
Home cemetery records compiled by Teresa Trimm.
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