Museum - Velkommen
The mission of the Stoughton Historical Society is to bring together those interested in Stoughton's history, and to collect, preserve and display objects and documents that illustrate that history. The Historical Society is a volunteer-run self-supporting not-for-profit organization. The Stoughton Historical Society was organized in 1960 and is a public charity 501 (c)(3).Our Museum is open Saturdays, 11:00am to 3:00pm during the summer from Syttende Mai weekend in mid-May to Labor Day.
We are located at 324 S. Page Street, Stoughton, WI.
Suggested donation: $2.00 per person. We welcome you to step inside this 1858 Greek Revival former church to view our displays illustrating Stoughton area history. We can also schedule private group tours if you are unable to visit us during our regular hours. Call 608-873-4797 and leave a message. The 2025 season will open May 16th with the featured exhibit "
Stoughton's Depot and Agricultural displays
".
Museum is closed until May 16th 2025.
Syttende Mai Weekend special hours:
Friday May 16th 1:00 - 5:00
Saturday May 17th 10:00 - 5:00
Sunday May 18th 11:00-1:00 and 3:00 - 5:00
Then Saturdays only May 24th thru August 30th, 2025
Features:
Military History
1925 Fire Truck, built in Stoughton
Norwegian Folk Craft
Luke Stoughton Family artifacts
Victorian Era Dresses
Antique dolls and toys
Vignettes:Doctors Office
School
General Store
Old Kitchen
Living Room
If you are not able to visit us in person, click through our museum photos below to view many of our displays.
We invite you to visit us soon!
Stoughton Railroad Depot
Stoughton Railroad Depot was built in 1913, the Depot was remodeled in 1923 and again in 1945, only to be closed in the 1970's. In 1990, after two years, hundreds of volunteer hours and thousands of dollars in donations, the Depot was restored by Stoughton Historical Society members. The Depot now serves as an annex for the Historical Society, a public meeting space and headquarters for the Stoughton Chamber of Commerce. A display of railroad memorabilia will interest railroad and train enthusiasts of all ages. The Historical Society's extensive collection of farm tools, industrial items, as well as cutter and wagons built by the T.G. Mandt and Stoughton Wagon companies will remind the visitor of days gone by.
See our Depot Museum History webpage: Click here
2025 Syttende Mai Weekend special hours at the Depot:
Saturday May 17th 10:00-3:00
The Stoughton Historical Society Depot Museum Annex will be permanently closing after Syttende Mai weekend. Some items will be moved into displays at our museum on Page St and the Historical Society is still exploring future options to house larger items from Stoughton's early history.
The revival of rosemaling in the Norwegian-American community is often credited to Per Lysne. He was born December 8, 1880 in Laerdal, Sogn, Norway. His father, Anders Olsen, was an artist whose work was recognized at the Paris Exposition in 1893 and it was from him that Lysne learned rosemaling.
Lysne immigrated to Stoughton, Wisconsin with his wife in 1907 when he was 27 years old. He worked in the Stoughton wagon factory as a painter and decorator of wagons adding fancy striping and scrolls to the finished wagon boxes. When the factory closed during the Depression, Lysne took up his artist's brushes and turned to rosemaling.
Rosemaling (rose painting)
The Norwegian folk art of "rosemaling" is a style of decorative painting on wood that uses stylized flower ornamentation, scrollwork and geometric elements in flowing patterns and dates back to the early 18th century in Norway. Designs were originally adapted from church carvings and these developed into unique regional styles named for the region in Norway where the style developed. Rosemaling was an art of rural people and self-taught painters traveled from place to place painting in homes. Household objects and furniture were decorated with colorful designs to brighten the dark homes in the days before electricity. By 1870, tastes had changed and rosemaling almost completely disappeared in Norway. Detail of lid of 19th century trunk repainted by Per Lysne Much of his early work consisted of retouching the faded rosemaling on old dowry chests that had been brought from Norway by the ancestors of friends and neighbors. In the 1930's the popular press discovered his work and he was visited by newspaper and magazine correspondents. In the November 1933 issue of Vogue magazine, several of his pieces were featured in an article about Ten Chimneys, the Wisconsin home of famous theatrical couple Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. The publicity created a timely marketing opportunity which Lysne used to expand his folk painting and interior decorating business across the region.
Sometime in the 1930's Per Lysne developed the rosemaled smorgasbord plate that became his signature piece. The large platters inscribed in Norwegian and hand painted with bright floral designs on white, ivory, cream or light yellow wood plates were his most popular and successful item. He was able to produce them in large quantities and with relative speed. And they could be shipped easily through the mail opening a national market for his work. Public exposure eventually led to orders from Marshall Fields in Chicago and other retail outlets. He engaged several Stoughton woodworkers to make plates and other wood items to his specifications.
By the early 1940's, his work was in such demand, visitors to his back yard studio were told they would have to wait up to a year for a rosemaled plate.
He rarely gave lessons choosing only a few to receive direct instruction. His daughter-in-law, Louise Lysne was one such student beginning in about 1935. She recalled how Per taught her to rosemal by holding her hand in his and guiding it through the strokes.
Per Lysne continued to paint his distinctive designs until his death in 1947. His adaptations of the traditional Norwegian art for 20th century American tastes produced rosemaling with a fresh, inventive spirit that is enjoyed more than fifty years later. For his pioneering artistry and marketing success, he is credited by those who came after him as the "Father of American rosemaling."
The Stoughton Historical Museum has an exhibit devoted to Mr. Lysne's work, as well as many fine contemporary pieces by Stoughton artists including Ethel Kvalheim, chronicling the changes in rosemaling techniques, patterns, colors and paints throughout it’s evolution.
Bibliography
Fossum, Gladys H. Rosemaling - The Norwegian Folk Art. 1964.
Holmes, Fred L. Old World Wisconsin: Around Europe in the Badger State. Eau Claire, WI: E.M. Hale & Co., 1944. 100-01.
Lovoll, Odd Sverre. The Promise Fulfilled : A Portrait of Norwegian Americans Today. New York: University of Minnesota P, 1998. 228-33.
Martin, Philip. Rosemaling in the Upper Midwest. Madison: Wisconsin Folk Museum, 1989. 20-25.
Nelson, Marion, ed. Norwegian Folk Art : The Migration of a Tradition. New York, NY: Abbeville P, Incorporated, 1995. 190-94.
"Reunion in Genesee." Vogue 1 Nov. 1933: 51-52.
Romnes, Bjarne. "Rosemaling in America." Rosemaling - An Inspired Norwegian Folk Art Mar. 1956: 47-48.
Stewart, Janice S. The Folk Arts of Norway. Grand Rapids: Nordhus, 1999. 87-103.