by Lillian Locher Strittmatter, Stephen E. Locher and Bertha C.
Locher. Published in the Monticello Express July 2, 1986.
Anthony Stephen Locher was 14 when he left home to drive a
mule team in the Civil War. He was discharged one year later
when his correct age was determined. After establishing his
trade as a blacksmith, he married Caroline Bertha Meyer. His
blacksmith shop was located where the Schmidt hardware store is
now located. Succeeding generations have wondered how his
earnings as a blacksmith could support such a large family. He
often took a half of hog or a quarter of beef in payment for
services. The meat was cut in pieces and stored during winter in
the black shed. The sons often went hunting and brought home
rabbits and squirrels. |
The family always had a large garden and cellar filled with
as many as 1000 jars of canned fruits and vegetables. There were
family outings in the country to pick gooseberries, raspberries,
blackberries, wild grapes and apples. Big crocks of sauerkraut
were prepared. Heads of cabbage were wrapped with newspaper and
placed in a barrel. Carrots and turnips were kept in sand and
leaves. Fifty bushels of potatoes lasted all winter. When eggs
were cheap (8 cents a dozen) they would be purchased in a large
quantity and put in a crock of liquid water glass. Daughter
Bertha recalls going to the meat market for a 10-cent soup bone
and having enough meat left over for hash the next day. A
favorite dish served at the table was a large pan of hot apple
dumplings, accompanied by a pitcher of milk flavored with
cinnamon and sugar. |
Washday was Monday and a very big ordeal for the
large family. There were two big boilers on the hot kitchen
range, each one holding a shortened wooden broom handle used to
move the clothes about. Some clothes had to be hand rubbed on
the washboards. There were so many processes - soap water, rinse
water, bluing, starching, and hanging up to dry, then sprinkling
and, finally, many hours of ironing. The girls in the family
took turns remaining at home from school to help their mother
with the laundry.
Fuel was plentiful in fallen wood
chopped by Anthony and his sons. Caroline was a fine seamstress
and made the children's clothes. The older children had paying
jobs and contributed to the family's income. Six of the children
taught rural school at one time or another. Older brothers and
sisters helped younger ones further their education. And so it
was that one large family was able to manage! School
requirements in the 1890s and early 1900s were not as rigid as
today. This fact of life enabled Mary, John and Lawrence to
further their education in unusual circumstances. Mary dropped
out of school after the 6th grade. She then worked at the Hoag
Duster Company bunching feathers. After two years she wanted to
return to school with her own class. Professor Doran of the
Monticello schools allowed that she could try this, but she
would have to take "mental arithmetic" in addition to her other
studies. Mary re-entered school with her class and graduated
with them in 1895. |
Anthony & Caroline Locher |
Caroline Meyer Locher |
|
|
|
John Locher, 1877-1967 |
Fannie Locher McAleer, 1877-1967 & Frank Locher, 1881-1962 |
Clara Locher Schneider, 1882-1910 |
Another time that requirements were waived
occurred was when the oldest son John tried to enter Drake
University Law School. He had dropped out of school in the 7th
grade to go to work on a farm. Later, he successfully passed
tests to teach rural school and taught four winter terms at
$33.33 a month. He had a six-month course at Gem City Business
College at Quincy, Ill. Somehow; he passed the high school
equivalency tests required for law school. After he graduated
from Drake Law School in 1904, he returned to his hometown to
practice. Lawrence wanted to attend dental school at
Northwestern University, but he did not have the required high
school diploma. When he told the admissions office he had taught
rural school, she readily admitted him. The family members lived
most of their lives in Monticello were Mary, Minnie, John,
Frank, Clara, Fannie and Bertha. |
Mary (1875 - 1984) taught in the Monticello
Schools and clerked in the Monticello Post Office. When she died
at her home in Monticello in 1984, she was 109 years old, Iowa's
oldest citizen. Minnie (1875 - 1967), twin of Mary, clerked at
Doutrick's Dry Goods Store before her marriage to Matt Muller.
John (1877 - 1967) practiced law here all of his life. He was
active in Democratic politics and attended the 1932 and 1936
national conventions as a delegate. His family of five children
included Simon (1911 - 1985), who practice law with him; John
(1912 - 1967) a lawyer, and Non, a doctor, both of Cedar Rapids;
Paul, a teacher in Washington, D. C., and Lillian, who married
Ambrose "Andy" Strittmatter, who joined the family law firm here
in Monticello in 1952. Of these children only Simon and Lillian
remained in Monticello. Simon and Esther Hawkins Locher had five
children: Margaret (Jay) Welch of Omaha, Neb., Louise (Ronald)
Lankau of Houston, Tex., James of Mason City, Stephen of
Monticello, and Thomas of Omaha, Neb. The three sons all
followed their father and grandfather in the legal profession.
Andy and Lillian Locher Strittmatter had three children: Susan
(Eric) Sandeen of Laramie, Wyo., Ellen of Muscatine and Nick of
Monticello. |
Simon Locher, 1879-1909 |
Frank (1881 - 1962) had a music store on First Street and
later a second hand furniture store. He and Lawrence were
enthusiastic members of the Monticello baseball team. Frank's
son, Francis, lives in Connecticut and his son Gerald in New
Mexico. Clara (1882 - 1910) taught rural school before her
marriage to Ike Schneider, who managed a drug store. Their two
daughters, Janice (Carl "Moon") Olsen and Virginia (Larry)
Robertson still live in Monticello. The Robertson's son, Jim is
a veterinarian in California. Fannie (1883 - 1965) worked at
John Perrine's Cage before her marriage to Jim McAleer, who had
a meat market. |
Minnie Locher Muller, 1875–1967.
|
|
Charles Locher, 1886-1972, with his mother |
Harry Locher, 1890-1940 |
Dr Joseph Locher, b. 1884, married Lucille Jungk |
Bertha (Born 1892) is 93 years old and still lives in her
Monticello home. After Business College, she worked in the
office of Hall Manufacturing Company. Subsequently, she was with
Franklin Equipment Company, serving as secretary-treasurer for
many years. The other family members pictured above lived their
adult life away from Monticello: Simon, with the railroad in
Waterloo, Lawrence a dentist in Farley; Joe and Earl dentists in
Dubuque; Leo an engineer in Columbus, Neb., where he still
lives; Harry, a lawyer in Dubuque; and Charles, an employee of
the telephone company in Dubuque. |
The Lochers have been lifelong members of the Sacred Heart
Church in Monticello. Six generations ago, the family attended
services in the frame structure on South Maple Street that was
destroyed by a tornado in 1878. Anthony's family then worshiped
at the old stone church on Seventh Street until the new brick
church on Sycamore Street and was built in 1914. Stephen E.
Locher is married to Annie Muller Locher, our city librarian. He
and Nick Strittmatter, both practicing attorneys in Monticello,
represent the fifth generation of Lochers living in Monticello
today. Nick and Anne Strabala Strittmatter's two sons Alexander
and David are the sixth generation. |
Dr. Earl Locher |
Dr. Lawrence Locher, b. 1888 |
The Locher family home on North Cedar St. in Monticello, Iowa. |
Joe, Leo & Earl Locher |
Johann Baptist Meyer, Caroline's father, 1826-1855 |
Constantina Gaswsenschmid Meyer, Caroline's mother,
1829-1877 |
Caroline Meyer Locher was the daughter of Johann Baptist
Meyer (born 11 Dec 1826 in Schneisingen, Aargua, Switzerland)
and Constantina Gassenschmid (born 15 Oct 1829 in Vöhrenbach,
Baden, Germany and died 1877 in Monticello). Her parents were
married about 1855 in Cincinnati, Ohio before they moved to
Dubuque. Caroline was born on 13 May 1856 at Sherrill's Mound,
Iowa and lived in Dubuque for a time. Her father worked as a
painter and accountant and died on 23 Feb 1865 of cancer. Her
mother then married Johann's brother, Anton Meyer, a beer
brewer. Caroline, her mother and step-father and three brothers,
John, Albert and Joseph, moved to Monticello when she was very
young. |
Caroline's maternal grandparents were Dr. John Evangelist
Gassenschmid (born 13 Dec 1795 in Burg, Birken, Kirchzarten,
Baden, Germany and died in 1866 in Baraboo, Sauk Co., WI) and
his wife Fidelia Kirner Gassenschmid (born 17 April 1794 in
Bregenbach, Baden, Germany). He was originally a veterinarian
and then a practicing homeopathic physician. He would make house
calls in Ohio and Wisconsin and his grandson would come along
and serve as his English translator. They were married on 16 Feb
1823 in Vöhrenbach, Baden, Germany and came to America about
1849 where they first settled in Cincinnatti. |
Dr. John Evangelist Gassenschmid, 1795, 1866, & Fidelia
Kirner Gassenschmid, b. 1794. |