Welcome to the Driftless
Welcome to the Driftless “Ancient.” “Primeval.” “Wild.” “Paradise.” “Canaan.” These were just some words used by the first white settlers in the 1840s to describe the land we know today as Richland , nestled in the Lower Wisconsin River Valley in the Western Coulees and Ridges , a portion of the area known as the Driftless Region (1, 2). No doubt similar words were shared in those early days and beyond, when Louis Jolliet and Father Jacquess Marquette traversed the Meskousing , or “Red Stone River” as it may have been known to local Algonquin, in 1673, or when Spanish explorer Hernando De Soto first gazed upon Miisi-Zibi , “Gathering of Waters,” as it was known to the local Ojibwe, in 1541 (3). Between these two warm rivers, colder rivers from beneath the earth have danced a delicate ballet with wind and sand for millenia, shaping the very foundations and bedrock of the land. The Driftless Period: Age of Stone & Water Let us turn now to a timeless ...