 In 1850, Pioneer African-American families began arriving in this area when Cahrles and Caroline Shepard and Isaac and Sarah Shepard arrived from Fauquier County, Virginia. The Shepards came with William Horner, the great-nephew of their former owner, Sarah Edmonds, who had freed her former slaves in her will. Later, the Shepards purchased land from Horner at $1.50 per acre, becoming the first African-American land owners in this integrated farming community called Pleasant Ridge. The community grew to include over 50 African-Americans who were joined by German, English and Irish farmers. Together, these Pleasant Ridge farmers built a log school in 1873 and a log United Brethren Church in 1884. In 1898, the younger generation of African-Americans built a community hall where they hosted an annual community barbecue. The African-American cemetery, one mile west on Slabtown Road, is one of the few remnants of this remarkable community. Erected 1998Grant County Historical Society Erected 1998Highway 35 and Slabtown Rd., 5 miles west of Lancaster, Grant County Wisconsin
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