Prior to 1956, Town residents and visitors alike found
                   their way through Erin via landmarks and a
                   good sense of direction.
                          
                      According to life-long Town resident
                      Rosemary Burg, "If you were from the area,
                   you just knew which way to go." Beverly
                   Schroeder moved to Erin in 1954. Asked how
                   she found her way around the Town, Beverly
                   replied, "Well, I followed directions that went
                   something like 'go north, pass two streets,
                   turn right at the big barn, and we'll be the second farm on
                   the left." In the 1950's the Town population was
                   approximately 1,000 with more people per household
                   than today.

    Before they were officially named, roads were often referred to by
    where they led or by who lived along them. According to Beverly
    Schroeder, Donegal Road east of Hwy K was referred to as the "back
    road to Holy Hill." Rosemary Burg said Shamrock Road was called
    Whelan's Road for the Whelan family. Nancy Henke added that
    Galway Road was called Garvey's Road.

    Residents received mail through a box number on a rural postal route.
    Since rural routes wound through the Town and box numbers were
    prone to change, they were not a practical means for locating a home.
    Beverly Schroeder said her box changed three times, which made
    friends and relatives often wonder if she had moved.

    The Hartford Times Press, when reporting about the people and
    events in Erin, used rural route numbers, nearby family farms, or
    sometimes just "happened on a Town road" to describe a location.

    In 1956 a committee was formed to name the Town roads. County &
    State roads had already been named for several years. Dodge
    County had recently passed a county-wide Rural Building
    Identification and Road Naming Project. An April 1956 article in the
    Times Press encouraged residents to "learn their numbers" and
    explained how to use the new system to report an emergency.

    Life-long area resident Emmett Burg recalled that his mother, Mrs.
    Anne Burg, was a member of the committee. Other members included
    Agnes Whelan and Carolyn Kraft. Emmett Burg & Beverly Schroeder
    said the decision to name the roads was made to help emergency
    service providers more quickly locate residents who needed help. One
    can only hope those emergency responders were also "from the area"
    and "just knew which way to go." According to a story in the Times
    Press, the committee chose to name the roads "mostly after Irish
    localities."

    Town Board meeting minutes show that existing roads were still being
    named in the 1960's. Log House Road became official in May of 1967.
    Also in 1967, the Town voted to adopt a house-numbering system.
    Interestingly, the Town tax rolls show tax bills were sent to rural route
    addresses until 1978.

    2006 marks the 50th anniversary of the naming of our Town roads.
    Over the years our roads have been paved & widened, and street
    signs have been added. Ironically, as the author was gathering
    information for this story, more than once she was referred to a
    person she did not know, but was told where to find. "You know, you
    go south on 'K', turn left past the little cemetery. You know, it's the
    road that takes you out to St. Augustine Road...."
Fall in Erin
Looking east on Donegal Road,
west of Highway K & south of
Holy Hill
How the roads were named   by Kathy Gregorski
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