Durand Property Management
Let us manage your Durand Rental Property
Having a successful rental property requires a lot of time, effort, experience and knowledge. Let us save you the time, effort and frustration that comes with gaining that experience.
As a full service Durand property management company, our team is responsible for taking care of all aspects of managing your rental real estate.
Start getting the returns you deserve!
Our market analysis helps landlords and us make data-informed decisions about their rental property, including rate estimates and other information so they can invest and manage their investment property more wisely.
- Get Optimized Rental Value for Your Property
- Gain Crucial Insight into Current Market Conditions
- Determine Your Cashflow from Monthly Rental Value
Get started with your FREE PROPERTY CONSULTATION by completing the form to the right.
Get started with your FREE PROPERTY CONSULTATION by completing the form below.
Free Property Consultation
Visit Durand
Durand is downriver from Eau Claire and the county seat of Pepin County. Durand is also locally known for the lynching that took place at the courthouse. The old lynch tree, courthouse, and seperate jailhouse where a local lynching took place still exist. The old oak tree on the lawn of the Durand Courthouse in Pepin County, now a museum, figured in the lynching of Ed Williams on November 19, 1881. Ed and his brother Lon, who specialized in stealing horses, but dabbled in other crimes—such as bank robbery and murder—were sometimes compared to the James Brothers. When two lawmen, ex-sheriff Charles Coleman of Pepin County and his brother Milton, who was under-sheriff of neighboring Dunn County, tried to arrest the two Williams brothers in Durand, the sheriffs were both shot dead before witnesses. The subsequent chase of Lon and Ed Williams ended in Nebraska with the capture of Ed. Lon escaped. Ed Williams was brought back to Durand for preliminary examination. When Ed Williams appeared in court, men, women and children from nearly all of Pepin and adjoining counties crowded the courtroom to view this notorious criminal. He gave his name as William E. Maxwell (Ed Williams was an alias), pleaded not guilty to the charges, waived an examination, and was committed for trial. The officers started to lead him back to his cell. Then someone in the crowd yelled, “Hang the son of a bitch,” and that is exactly what the angry mob did. A noose with a hangman’s knot was slipped over his head, and he was dragged out on the porch and across the lawn to the oak tree and quickly suspended in the air, with his handcuffs still on and a heavy pair of shackles hanging from his left foot. Later officers cut the body down and it was later interred in the Potter’s Field of the Durand Cemetery.