Then in October of the same year another crew marked all the section corners in the township, walking through the woods and swamps, measuring with chain and compass.
[3][4] This survey produced a map which shows some sort of road already arcing roughly along the course of future highway 73 on the high ground east of the Black River, an "Indian Camp" on the east bank of the Black in sections 21 or 22, and a cabin on the west bank in section 4.
[5] When done, the deputy surveyor filed this general description: This Township is well Situated for agricultural purposes(?)
Perry's Creek which runs through the Eastern part of this township has a Saw Mill on the NE 1/4 Section 35 and many(?)
)[6]An 1873 map of Clark County showed a "highway" reaching up from Neillsville through Weston to Greenwood and beyond.
Another wagon road ran east from 73 along what is now County H for a mile, then wandered south, crossing Cawley Creek.
A rural school was where H now meets Reesewood and another where Chili Road now crosses G. A dozen settlers' homes were marked west of the Black, but much of the land there was still in large blocks, owned by lumbermen and speculators, with the largest shares held by Blakeslee & Austin, Thayer and Kingman, and Samuel Marsh.
Large chunks of unsettled land were still held by Davis and Starr Lumber Company and Coburn..[11][8] By 1906 Weston had its current six by six mile footprint, with Seif split off as a separate township.
"[13] Globe was another small rural community that developed a few miles west of Christie to serve local farmers.
The 1918 History of Clark County described Globe as "...ten miles north of Neillsville in the center of a prosperous farming community.
The plat map shows a cheese factory on what is now Panther Creek Road south of Christie.