What is new for Northwoods Drifter in 2026


Ralph Wehlitz doesn’t think much about the number. At 102 years old, he says it doesn’t feel all that different from being a couple years younger.
But for the folks who gathered at Polka Dotted Pie in downtown Merrill last Thursday, that number meant everything. Family, former students, and fellow model railroad enthusiasts filled the bakery to celebrate a man whose life has woven itself into the fabric of this Northwoods community for more than a century.
Born on June 4, 1924, Wehlitz has seen Merrill through Depression-era hardship, world war, and generations of change. His story is the kind that makes small-town Wisconsin what it is — quiet service, lasting relationships, and a basement full of miniature trains.

Wehlitz’s path to teaching wasn’t straightforward. Before he ever stood in front of a Merrill classroom, he stood in the deserts of North Africa and the mountains of Italy.
He served in World War II during some of the conflict’s most brutal campaigns. A bombing shell changed his life forever when shrapnel took his left hand.
Like so many veterans of his generation, Wehlitz came home and rebuilt. He enrolled at UW-Madison, earned his degree in education, and set his sights on a career that would touch hundreds of young lives over three decades.
“Learn to read,” he said when asked about his best advice. “Do a lot of reading. You develop a sense of language, and you improve your communication skills. Reading is basic and extremely important.”
For 31 years, he brought that philosophy into Merrill classrooms. The students who showed up at his birthday party — some now well into their own retirement years — are living proof that good teachers leave marks that last.

If you’ve lived in Merrill long enough, chances are you’ve heard about Ralph Wehlitz’s model railroad.
The massive display fills his basement, a sprawling landscape of miniature tracks, buildings, and scenery that took years to construct. Larry Mishkar, a friend from Duluth who made the trip down for the celebration, described the moment most visitors experience:
“When people get to the area where the model train starts, they stop and just take it all in because it’s amazing.”
Model railroading has deep roots in the Midwest, especially in communities like Merrill where real trains once defined the economy and landscape. For Wehlitz, the hobby became more than a pastime — it became a way to preserve something, to build something beautiful with one hand when the war had taken the other.
Friends and neighbors have made pilgrimages to that basement over the decades. For many Merrill kids, seeing Wehlitz’s layout was a rite of passage, a glimpse into what patience and passion can create.
Wehlitz’s birthday celebration wasn’t just about one man hitting triple digits. It was a snapshot of what makes Northwoods communities tick.
Downtown Merrill still draws people together — whether it’s the Merrill Lion’s Car Show and Parade rolling through Main Street or neighbors gathering at local spots like Polka Dotted Pie. These aren’t just events. They’re the glue.
Wehlitz’s life spans an era when Merrill was shaped by:
At 102, he’s watched all of it unfold. And he’s still here, still part of it.

There’s something quietly radical about Wehlitz’s approach to aging. He doesn’t marvel at the years. He doesn’t dwell on what’s behind him.
When asked about reaching 102, he shrugged it off with characteristic modesty. “I’m surprised, and I never thought I’d be over 100 years old, but I guess it doesn’t feel any different.”
Maybe that’s the real lesson — you don’t get to 102 by obsessing over the milestone. You get there by showing up. By reading. By teaching. By building something in your basement that makes people stop and stare.
The mix of people at his birthday says everything about the kind of life he’s lived. Family who love him. Students who remember him. Hobbyists who respect him. In a world that often feels fragmented, that’s a rare and beautiful thing.
Stories like Wehlitz’s remind us why the Northwoods holds onto its people. This isn’t a place where you’re just passing through.
Veterans, teachers, craftsmen — they put down roots here. They build model railroads in their basements and relationships that span generations. They show up for birthday parties at 102 because community still means something.
Merrill continues to celebrate these connections through parades, car shows, and simple gatherings at downtown bakeries. The city’s active event calendar reflects a commitment to keeping those traditions alive, even as the world changes around them.
As Wehlitz moves past his 102nd birthday, he leaves us with something more valuable than advice. He leaves us with an example — of resilience after loss, of dedication to young people, of finding joy in the details of a miniature world built with care.
That’s a legacy worth celebrating, whether you’re marking a century or just trying to make it through another Northwoods winter. Ya know?
Written by
Mike has been coming up or living in the Northwoods since his childhood. He is also an avid outdoorsman, writer and supper club aficionado.
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