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Around
the turn of the century and for several decades afterward, crokinole
was one of the most popular games in North America.
The earliest known crokinole board
to date was built by Eckhardt Wettlaufer of Sebastopol, Ontario,
Canada (near Tavistock) as a fifth birthday gift for his son,
Adam, who was born on December 31, 1871.
"The family remembered that
it hung on a bedroom wall, rarely used", according to Michael
Bird and Terry Kobayashi in their book A Splendid Harvest: Germanic
Folk and Decorative Arts in Canada. The board now resides at
The
Joseph Schneider Haus Museum in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada
as part of their Harvest Collection.
 
The Wettlaufers were early settlers
at the southeast corner of Lot 21, Concession 4 in Sebastopol,
South Easthope Township (now Perth East). It is believed they
were the first Wettlaufers to arrive, settle and build in Upper
Canada. Their first frame home was built c. 1858. A brick home
was built in 1877 and the old building was turned 90° and
used as a wagon shop, and cider mill. This is where Eckhardt
earned his renown as a woodworker and folk artist, building and
decorating wagons, sleighs, and earning a patent on a cider press.
His July 3, 1888 patent gear wooden pattern can be viewed at
Quehl's Restaurant in Tavistock. The cider mill was demolished
in 1979 and the house removed in 1993.
On January 30, 1870, Eckhardt married
Catharine Kalbfleisch at Sebastopol and their only son, Adam,
was born December 31, 1871. Catharine is said to have baked the
communion bread for Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church until
wafers were introduced in July, 1873. Eckhardt was on the building
committee for the new brick church which was built in 1886. He
donated the four-face bell tower clock that was custom made in
Zurich, Ontario. This clock is the "only one in Perth County
on a sacred edifice" according to W. Johnston's History
of Perth County.
Eckhardt also held a position on
the church council in the early 1890's.
Catharine died in 1892 and is buried
in the Trinity cemetery. Eckhardt passed away in 1919 and his
headstone can be seen in the "middle cemetery" of Trinity,
marked "E.W." on the map.

Catharine, Adam, & Eckhardt
c. 1885 |

Adam Wettlaufer, c. 1878
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Eckhardt Wettlaufer was a farmer,
woodworker, wagonmaker and cider maker but, it appears that it
was almost unknown that he was a noted Canadian folk artist.
In the last part of the 19th century, Mr. Wettlaufer was noted
as a wood craftsman and for eight or nine months of the year
he turned out hand-made wagons, buggies and sleighs. Among the
existing memorabilia of his handiwork are beautifully crafted
and hand-painted children's wagons. It is recalled by descendants
that he made five special wagons for his grandchildren, each
bearing the child's name. One is included in the Harvest Collection
at the Schneider Haus in Kitchener. Another sample of his expertise
in carving is a hardwood cane that bears his name in reverse
standout letters on the shaft. Also surviving is a hand-made
wooden stepladder that was ornamentally painted and varnished
by the late craftsman.
When not making vehicles, and wooden
articles, Eckhardt Wettlaufer operated a cider mill. He designed
and patented the cider press, then had a local foundry make the
metal parts. On July 3, 1888 a patent was granted for his main
press in the cider mill. A wooden pattern of one of the cog wheels
is on display in Old Joe's Room at Quehl's Restuarant in Tavistock.
Later, in November of 1898, a patent was issued to "Eckardt
Wettlaufer, of Sebastopol, Province of Ontario, Gentleman"
for a "new and useful cider mill". Dominion of Canada
patent no. 61576. He built and sold copies of this smaller mill
to other entrepreneurs.
During the autumn, the factory
turned out nothing but cider and apple butter. The cider press,
weighing at least a ton, was located on the second floor of the
mill with many drive shafts and pulleys driving the machine from
a steam engine located on the ground floor. Apples were elevated
to the third floor by means of an outdoor elevator, run down
from there into the press, and the cider collected on the main
floor through a series of pipes and cider vats. When Eckhardt
died in 1919, the wagon-making skill died with him, but son Adam
and grandson Oscar expanded the cider mill and operated it until
1944 when milk production on his nearby dairy farm became more
profitable than pressing farmers' apples into cider for four
cents a gallon.
SEBASTOPOL TODAY
The World Crokinole Championship
may be the only remaining link to the Eckhardt Wettlaufer family
hereabouts. The old cider mill was demolished in 1979 and the
brick house removed for its building materials in 1993. The property
was sold to Trinity Lutheran Church and the former site completely
levelled. Today, nothing remains of the once busy and important
crossroads business and residence, only the memory of a Canadian
folk artist and craftsman recognized long after his life's work
was complete.
Historic photographs courtesy of Tim
Mosher. Historic facts compiled by Bill Gladding, editor/publisher
of The Tavistock Gazette. Details from an essay by Tim Mosher;
the Kitchener Record article by Gerald Wright; and from the files
of The Tavistock Gazette.

© 2002 World Crokinole
Championship, Tavistock, Ontario, Canada
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