
Highlandlake and Mead
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780738596013
Publication Date: 01/21/2013
Today, Mead is a vibrant Little Town with a Big Future, but when Lorin C. Mead homesteaded 80 acres in 1871, it was nothing more than virgin prairie with a small spring-fed pond he named Highland Lake after Sir Walter Scott's poem The Lady of the Lake. In 1873, he completed the Highland Ditch and enlarged the pond into a reservoir. The availability of irrigation water attracted additional settlers, and soon a village named Highlandlake sprang up along the shore. In late 1905, a promised railroad bypassed Highlandlake and instead established a beet dump along the eastern border of Paul Mead's farm. Paul, the son of Lorin C. Mead's brother Dr. Martin Luther Mead, immediately platted a new town, naming it after his father. Mead thrived until the Great Depression, during which several businesses were lost, including both banks. For almost 60 years, the town struggled to overcome the resultant losses until finally, in the 1990s, families rediscovered Mead's quaint charm and rural beauty.
Choose options

Highlandlake and Mead
Sale price$24.99
New Releases
Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution
Amanda Vaill
Hardcover
Sale price$36.00
Shattered Dreams, Infinite Hope: A Tragic Vision of the Civil Rights Movement
Brandon M. Terry
Hardcover
Sale price$35.00
Motherland: A Feminist History of Modern Russia, from Revolution to Autocracy
Julia Ioffe
Hardcover
Sale price$35.00
















