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Amherst Junction, Wisconsin
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==History== Amherst Junction was created when the railroad first came through the county. It was a junction between two railroads: the [[Wisconsin Central Railroad (1871β1899)|Wisconsin Central]] and the [[Green Bay and Western Railroad|Green Bay and Lake Pepin]] railroads.<ref name="Gard">{{cite book |last1=Gard |first1=Robert |title=The Romance of Wisconsin Place Names |date=2015 |publisher=Wisconsin Historical Society Press |location=Madison, WI |isbn=978-0-87020-707-5 |page=9 |edition=2nd}}</ref> Until 1875, the community was referred to as Groversburg, presumably after the Grover family that held considerable property in the area.<ref name="Gard" /> But when a post office was established in March 1875, it was called Amherst Junction. It was not until 1911 that the village was incorporated. By 1914, the village had become an important buying and shipping center for potatoes. Many people traveling to the eastern and northeastern parts of the county would detrain in Amherst Junction and hire a rig from a livery in the village to take them to their destination. The village at one time had 36 businesses which included: five taverns, two hotels, two grocery stores, dancehalls, depots, feed stores, four potato warehouses, a blacksmith, a livery stable, a meat market, bank, hardware store, car dealership, a post office, a school, and a turkey processing plant. The Summit House, a fairly large hotel, was built in the village around 1872 or 1873 by H. N. Livermore. Since the hotel was a popular place to stay, eat and dance, Amherst Junction must have been a gathering center for many of the surrounding communities. The Summit House remained in business until 1939, when it was dismantled and its lumber was used to build a new home for the owner. At one time, the hotel was operated by Zilphia Moyers Een, the county's first woman hotel keeper.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.pchswi.org/archives/communities/amhjunction.html|title = Amherst Junction}}</ref>
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