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Watertown Goslings

 

Watertown may be the only city in the nation that claims the Mighty Gosling as a high school mascot.

 

The current Gosling mascot suit is thought to have been used for the past 25 years and has been placed into retirement.  The Watertown Athletic Booster Club is spearheading a project to replace the mascot suit with a brand new Gosling.

 

The Gosling tradition dates back to the 1800s when the Watertown Gosling was well-known up and down the East Coast.  Geese raised by local German farmers were specially fed to produce fattened livers.  The livers were turned into pate, a delicacy found on the menus of fashionable restaurants in many cities.  A menu in New York City would entice customers to the finest liver pate from the Watertown Gosling.  Such advertising made the city famous from coast to coast.

 

 

Why the Watertown senior high

sports teams are called goslings

 

      By Evelyn Rose; annotated by Ken Riedl

        Derived in part from Watertown Daily Times, 06 15 1977

 

Only a newcomer to Watertown would ask, "Why did the high school name its athletic teams the Goslings?"  Some newcomers think it has something to do with geese, the V's of handsome Canadas that honk their way over Watertown spring and fall as they follow the Rock River either to or from their nesting grounds near Hudson Bay in Canada and the Mississippi flyway for the journey south.  A good tail wind can bring the speed of these flying geese from their usual 40 miles per hour to nearly 70.

 

Many fly to Horicon marsh, a refuge, within a day's time from Wawa on the north shore of Lake Superior.  The Canada goose, Wawa to the Ojibway Indians, is the national bird of Canada.  Their flying wedges are of real interest to Watertown residents. 

 

<= Click upon to enlarge

 

A big goose marker in Wawa, 27 feet high, commemorates a last link in the Trans-Canada highway in 1960.

 

Other newcomers to Watertown don't wonder about the name "Goslings" at all.  They just know all football and basketball teams have a name and think Goslings is the name picked at random by Watertown High School.  Not so, and it is for the edification of newcomers and visitors this story is told. Long time residents are well aware of the illustrious place geese have played in Watertown's history.

 

Watertown's high school's yearbook, the Orbit, in 1919 made mention of the Blue and Whites, but from 1920 on, although they kept the blue and white school colors, the official name was always recorded as the Goslings.  Not only the team names, but the Cady Street bridge keeps alive the memory of a once thriving and unique industry centered in Watertown half a century ago. The bridge has the forms of geese in its ironwork.

 

An old world vocation grew to a great industry in Dodge and Jefferson counties, with the hub of the industry in Watertown.  The peak of the industry in Watertown was around 1917.  "Watertown Stuffed Goose" appeared on the menus of America's famous gourmet restaurants in the east.  It was listed in the dining cars of the Twentieth Century Limited and other cross country passenger trains, and on the elaborate menu cards of ocean liners, which before the jet age carried large numbers of passengers to and from Europe, often in luxurious surroundings.

 

According to the late Fred L. Holmes, historian and author of "Old World Wisconsin" and other historical books, the method of forced feeding, stuffing or "noodling" of geese, as the method was known, had its origin in Alsace in Europe over 200 years ago.  He learned this from Jefferson and Dodge county farmers who were in the ethnic groups who came from Germany in the late 1800's.  They brought knowledge of the noodling of geese with them.

 

Holmes also quotes Dr. William F. Whyte, a long time physician in Watertown well over 60 years ago as saying he believed this noodling was an ancient custom.  Dr. White, in his "Chronicles of Early Watertown" published in 1921 and reprinted in the Wisconsin Magazine of History writes: "stuffing geese is an ancient custom.  In the tombs of the sacred bulls of Egypt, which are 4,000 years old, I saw carved on the walls a pictorial, representation of the same process which made the Watertown farmers famous."

 

The call of Woode! Woode! Woode! assembled the flocks in Watertown in the beginning of this century as it did in Europe for generations before.  About 25 days before Christmas the goose was penned and force fed with noodles of barley, rye and wheat, to prepare for the Christmas markets in the east.  The proper method of noodling was highly specialized and the birds' flesh became firm and the livers large.  The livers were the delicacy known as pate de foi gras.  The originator of this delicacy was said to be a cook who prepared the noodled goose livers for the governor of Alsace long before the industry came to Watertown.

 

This method has long since been abandoned, both in Europe and in Watertown.  However, it is remembered because it put Watertown at the top of a unique industry 60 years ago.

 

In order to preserve this interesting ethnic contribution to Watertown's history, The Watertown Arts Council, in 1969, sponsored the preparation of a display for the pioneer barn on the Octagon House grounds, with an accompanying history of a once thriving and nationally known industry.  With the cooperation of Fred Rumler, then the city's only remaining person with knowledge of this method used in preparing the geese for market, and Walter Pelzer, a Milwaukee Museum taxidermist, a fine African-Toulouse goose was noodled and mounted for presentation to the Watertown Historical Society.  The mounted goose display, shown daily in the pioneer barn on the Octagon House grounds, has been viewed by nearly 150,000 visitors since its presentation in 1969.

 

The Gosling athletic teams preserve this unique heritage of a Watertown industry in a most hearty and active way.  Newcomers and visitors to Watertown, when next you go to a basketball game and see the team emblem near the gym entrance, do not think of the figure as just a merry gosling, but as the emblem of a part of Watertown's heritage.  Sometimes at a high school homecoming football game, note a huge paper constructed float of a goose, its head nods and its eyes blink when the home team makes a touchdown for the Goslings and for Watertown's heritage.

 

1917

04 09       NEW FIRE TRUCK FEATURED GOOSE PAINTINGS

The city’s new triple combination pumping engine, hose cart and chemical engine motor truck has arrived at the city hall fire station.  It is a mammoth gray bodied affair with the Watertown goose painted in various portions upon the sides of the driving seat.  The truck was built by the Seagrave Company of Columbus, Ohio, and represents an expenditure of $8,150. 

 

08 17       MASCOT FOR CO. E.

           Gosling sent to members as parting gift

 

The members of Co. E left for Camp Douglas today.  They have one mascot in the shape of a little fox terrier.

 

Saturday morning they will receive another.  Whether it will be received as heartily as the dog is a question.

 

From all indications it will be royally welcomed, for in Camp Douglas at the present time are mascots of all descriptions, from a goat to a gold fish. 

 

The Gosling is a Watertown product for which this city is famous.  It is the gift of the Watertown Poultry and Pet Stock Association.        The Watertown News, August 17, 1917

 

09 01       COMPANY E’s GOSLING

Mascots come and mascots go, and where there are envious attempts on the part of rival companies to boost their mascots as the real for-sure-enough wonder of the camp, such attempts are short lived, for Company E’s gosling is the real attraction in the mascot line at Camp Douglas.  It was a happy thought on the part of the Watertown Poultry and Pet Stock Association to send us this bird, which will go to Waco with the company, and with his “expert” military knowledge, he will no doubt be an attraction of equal importance there.    Watertown REVEILL-“E,” publication of Watertown’s Company E, Fifth Wisconsin Infantry, September 1, 1917

 

2007

11 16       WATERTOWN GOSLING MASCOT RETIRES

Watertown may be the only city in the nation that claims the Mighty Gosling as a high school mascot.  In 2007 the then current Gosling mascot suit was thought to have been used for the previous 25 years and was placed into retirement.

 

The Watertown Athletic Booster Club spearheaded a project to replace the mascot suit with a brand new Gosling.

 

The Gosling tradition dates back to the 1800s when the Watertown Gosling was well-known up and down the East Coast. Geese raised by local German farmers were specially fed to produce fattened livers. The livers were turned into pate, a delicacy found on the menus of fashionable restaurants in many cities. A menu in New York City would entice customers to the finest liver pate from the Watertown Gosling. Such advertising made the city famous from coast to coast.

 

Many might ask what is fierce and competitive about a baby goose. These creatures are tenacious and fearlessly take on any foe. Inside their bills are little sharp teeth that serve well in defending themselves.

 

Gosling athletes do well to model this never-give-up attitude against fierce competition.

 

The Gosling mascot is found in the first high school yearbook, The Orbit, in 1913. The teams were known as the Goslings during the 1920s and 1930s. The familiar drawing of the Watertown Gosling was first created by former art teacher James Ptaschinski in 1961.

 

The Gosling has been modified over the years and appeared on jackets, book covers, tote bags and other memorabilia.

 

12 14       NEW GOSLING MASCOT SUIT

The Watertown High School Gosling mascot suit will be displayed one final time for a fund-raising event at Piggly Wiggly in Watertown.  Watertown High School student athletes from various sports teams will be dressed in their respective uniforms bagging groceries for customers.  A new design has been made for the new suit and will be created by the same company that made the Milwaukee Brewers Klement’s Racing Sausages.  The new suit will cost about $4,000.

 

 

 

Cross References:

                Watertown Gosling Mascot Retires, 2007

 

The earliest use of the word “gosling” when referring to Watertown High School students is believed to be in the August 7, 1885, issue of the Watertown Gazette.  “A raid by the Marshal on the steps of Union School house No. 2 some evening about 9 o’clock would create a panic among the young “goslings” which congregate there.  It has become quite a resort for young ladies and gentlemen of late after dark.”

 

 

 

 

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