Benjamin Nute

Benjamin Nute (August 12, 1800 – December 1, 1877) was a farmer and businessman from Milford, Wisconsin, who served a single one-year term as a Democratic member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from Jefferson County during the 1849 session (the 2nd Wisconsin Legislature).

Background
Nute was born in 1800 in Farmington, New Hampshire. He spent some time in the boot and shoe industry, first in Boston and then in Utica, New York. He married Sarah Brooks in Utica in 1824, and their son Benjamin Jr. was born there. In 1837 he moved to Wisconsin Territory, becoming the first white settlers in what would become Milford (it was originally part of the Town of Aztalan). In 1840, he and frequent partner William Lamphear built a sawmill on the south side of the Crawfish River, and Nute built a 15-room hotel in the Milford village on the road to Aztalan proper. The first (wooden) bridge across the Crawfish, built there at the mill ford with funding from the Town of Aztalan was known as "Nute's Bridge". Nute would operate the hotel until selling out in 1858.

Public service
In 1839, he was elected a county assessor. At the time he took office in the Assembly in January 1849, succeeding fellow Democrat Wales Emmons, he was reported to be 49 years old, a farmer from New Hampshire, and to have been in Wisconsin twelve years. For the 1850 session he was replaced by Abram Vanderpool, yet another Democrat.

Personal life
In 1852, he was one of the three experts chosen to judge vegetables at the Wisconsin State Fair (then known as the "Wisconsin State Agricultural Society Annual Cattle Show and Fair") in such categories as "Best six heads of cauliflower", "Best twelve parsnips" and "Largest pumpkin". In 1859, he was elected a vice-president of the Jefferson County Agricultural Society.

Nute moved to Waterford before 1870, when he was elected "Supervisor" in the 1870 municipal election. In March 1877, he and partners bought and remodeled a sawmill and wooden products factory in Waterford. Nute died in Waterford on December 1, 1877, not long after his wife; they left three sons and three daughters behind.