Although his time in Jefferson County was brief, it did have a lasting impact on the economy of the state due to the actions of his wife, Anne. While living on a farm in the vicinity of Lake Mills, Wisconsin, Anne had the idea to enlist their neighbors and the neighbors' cows in a cooperative to manufacture cheese. The neighbors agreed and provided Anne with their milk, which Anne then manufactured into cheese. The finished cheese was then distributed to the various cow-owners who could trade it for other goods in nearby markets. Her venture was described as the first dairy cooperative in the United States, and the first commercial cheese factory in Wisconsin.[2]
^Carter, George W. "The Booth War in Ripon", in Proceedings of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin at Its Fiftieth Annual Meeting Held December 11, 1902 Madison: For the Society, 1902; pp. 169-172
^Journal of the Assembly of Wisconsin: Annual Session, A.D. 1861. Madison: R.A. Calkins & Co., State Printers, 1861; p. 6
^"Necrology 1874-1875" in Report and Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, for the Years 1873, 1874, 1875 and 1876. Vol. VII Madison: E. B. Bolens, State Printer, 1876; p. 468