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Brittingham Rune Stone
One of the most remarkable of these stones is carved with Viking runes in honor of Thomas Brittingham, Jr., located near the far end of the knoll. The Brittingham family has long been among the most generous benefactors of the University of Wisconsin. Indeed, Eagle Heights Woods, at the far western end of the Preserve, would not belong to the university or be part of the Preserve at all if it were not for the far-sighted generosity of Thomas Brittingham, Jr. He acquired the Eagle Heights Woods property after the death of Edward Young—former owner of the estate at the base of Picnic Point—and gave it to the university to benefit future generations forever. This same man was responsible for creating one of the university's most remarkable scholarship programs in the 1950s: "the Brittingham Vikings," which brought students from Scandinavia to study in Madison at the expense of the Brittingham family. The program proved immensely successful and popular, and is no doubt one of many reasons why UW-Madison continues to have one of the leading Scandinavian Studies Programs in the United States.
082906 Learn more about the Brittingham family in a UW-Madison online history exhibit... See an image of the Brittingham rune stone dedication at the UW Digital Collection...
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| 03/15/2012 |