From this neck of the woods

Local historian writes books to preserve history

More stories from Hayley Jacobson

In the library, the sound of a ballpoint pen scribbling extensive notes gathered from a growing pile of newspapers can be heard; the room hums with whispered conversations. The smell of old newsprint fills the workspace, mixing with the scent of fresh-brewed coffee.

“An author can’t do anything in the morning without having a cup of coffee first,” Brian Blakeley, a local author and historian, said.

Blakeley is currently writing a three-part series focusing on the history of Eau Claire, starting from the town’s beginning and working his way toward the present.

He spends his time researching in different places, Blakeley said, but he always takes notes by hand.

Blakeley received his doctorate degree in British History from Duke University in North Carolina, but before all that he was a part of the first class to graduate from Memorial High School. His wife, Mary, was in the year below him. Just after finishing high school, Blakeley enrolled at the Eau Claire State Teachers College, which is now known as UW-Eau Claire.

The two moved to Texas where he taught at Texas Tech University for 35 years, and, in doing so, gained an appreciation for writing, Blakely said.

“We were expected to write,” Blakeley said. “It was part of our job.”

While working for Texas Tech University, he wrote about the history of the British colonial offices, and also co-wrote a book with one of his colleagues called “Documents of English History,” which was in print for 30 years.

As well as his books, he has published countless articles, Blakeley said.

Once he retired, Blakeley and his wife moved back to Eau Claire and kept busy by hiking, walking, reading and tending their tree farm, which Blakely inherited from his parents.

They joined a logger society, and about eight years ago attempted to hike the Appalachian trail. They were both 70 at the time and had to turn back after Brian Blakeley’s knee gave out, but this has not stopped them from walking around the neighborhood daily.

Blakeley could not shake the urge to write.

With the help of his wife, Blakeley wrote his first book after retirement about their families and how they got to where both families reside today. He called it, “Ordinary People: A Study of Our Blakeley and Mierow Ancestors in America.”

The book starts with the Blakeley family arriving in Connecticut in 1635, and Mary Blakeley’s family landing around New York in the 1840s.

The writing of this book led Blakeley to take a closer look at where people were from, and how the history of the town had an effect on the history of the people living there, Blakely said

After that, he moved on to a more ambitious project — recording the history of Eau Claire in a three part series.

The first book starts in the logging era and ends at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution where the second book picks up. The second book, which Blakeley hopes will be out this coming fall, will focus on the time between the Industrial Revolution and both world wars, ending in the 1950s. The third book will pick up from the 1950s onward and end by taking a look at Eau Claire today.

Most of his sources, especially for the contemporary events he studies for the books, come from newspapers and microfilms he finds at the public and university libraries, Blakeley said.

While Blakeley writes and researches, his wife supports him in her own way, she said.

“I go with him to the library quite often,” Mary Blakeley said. “I am his editor, proofreader and moral support.”

Blakeley believes people are conditioned by two things: family and place, he said.

He said he has felt a strong connection with Eau Claire, not only because it is where he grew up, but because it is where his family is from.

It is why he has chosen to write about the history of Eau Claire specifically, he said.

Blakeley said he hopes the second volume of the history series will be out in September, while the third is already underway. They do not have a rigid daily schedule, but Blakeley knows he would like to finish the series, he said.

Jacobson can be reached at [email protected].