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Source: "Portrait and Biographical Record - Published 1894 by Excelsior Publishing Co., Chicago" Page 578
Galusha Mansfield, a merchant of Greenbush Village, is one of the very earliest surviving pioneers of that town. He
was born in the autumn of 1827, in the town of Lyndon, Caledonia County, Vt., and is a son of Thomas and Hannah
(Wright) Mansfield. At the age of thirteen years he removed with his parents to Lawrence County, N. Y. He received a
common-school education, and in 1848, when in the twenty-first year of his age, came to Wisconsin, settling in what
is now the village of Greenbush. The town bearing that name was then a wilderness of woods, with only an occasional
settler living in his log cabin. Prior to coming West, Mr. Mansfield had been engaged in teaching in his native
State, and in the winter of 1848-49, taught the first winter school in Greenbush. He subsequently taught several
terms in that town. At first he made "his home with a pioneer settler, Milo Hard, who lived some two miles west of
the village.
In the spring of 1852, Mr Mansfield was married in Kenosha, Wis., to Miss Mary Johnson, a daughter of Simon P.
Johnson. Mrs. Mansfield was born in the town of Lawrence, Lawrence County, N. Y., and came to Wisconsin with her
parents, at the time her husband came. Of this union two children were born, a son and a daughter. Wilder Wright
married Cassie Crane, and died May 7, 1883, leaving a wife and four children. The mother survived until September
12, 1893, since which time their children have lived with the paternal grandparents. Cynthia A. became the wife of
Franklin Hall, of Greenbush.
About the time of his marriage Mr. Mansfield engaged in farming in Greenbush, where he owned one hundred and twenty
acres of land. He subsequently gave his children twenty acres each, and in the fall of 1893 sold the remainder. In
1885, he began merchandising as a member of a joint-stock company. Their store was destoyed {sic} hy {sic} fire some
five years later, when Mr. Mansfield purchased the lot and erected a building on the old site, where he has since
carried on business alone. He keeps a stock of general merchandise and does a prosperous business.
Mr. and Mrs. Mansfield are members of the Free Baptist Church. In early life he was a Whig in his political views,
but joined the Republican party on its organization.
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