August G. Meiners
One of the most active and enterprising young men in public
life in Allamakee county is August G. Meiners, now in the second
term of his able service as clerk of the district court., He is a
native son of Iowa, born in Union City township, Allamakee
county, February 22, 1822, a son of J. Gerhard Meiners, born in
Prussia, Germany, in 1836. The father grew to manhood in his
native country and there married, following his occupation of
farming in Prussia and continuing his agricultural pursuits after
his arrival in America. He crossed the Atlantic in 1868 and came
direct to Iowa, making a permanent location in Union City
township. He here purchased a tract of raw land and opened up a
farm, later adding to his holdings until he now owns two hundred
and eighty acres, well improved and equipped in every particular.
He there reared his family of ten children and still resides upon
the homestead. He has survived his wife since 1891.
August G. Meiners grew up on his fathers farm and acquired
his elementary education in the common schools of Union City
township. He was later for two years a student in a German
Evangelical school in Minnesota and afterwards attended a
business college for two years and supplemented this by a year in
the State Normal School at Cedar Falls and during summer school
in the State University at Iowa City. He early turned his
attention to teaching and for ten years continued in this
occupation, teaching in rural schools, as principal of graded
schools and for three years as principal of the Waukon Business
College. In 1910 he was nominated and elected clerk of the
district court and after serving one term of two years was in
1912 reelected without opposition. He is still serving and is
discharging his important duties in an able, conscientious and
far-sighted way.
Mr. Meiners is still greatly interested in educational affairs
and does all that he can to promote public educational
advancement. He was one of the founders of the Farmers Institute
and served for two terms as secretary of the organization.
Fraternally he is connected with the Knights of Pythias and the
Modern Woodmen of America. He is well known in Allamakee county,
where he was born, reared and educated and where he has been
identified with important phases of public life since beginning
his active career. He has never been found faithless to a trust
and is upright, straightforward and honorable in all things, a
native son of whom the county has every reason to be proud.
-source: Past & Present of Allamakee County; by
Ellery M. Hancock; S. J. Clarke Pub. Co.; 1913
-transcribed by Diana Diedrich
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