I
have told you of the Oldest German Settlement in Jefferson
Township, which is the Southeast part, sections 34 and 35. Now I
will try and give a short sketch of another one in the northwest
part of Jefferson, sometimes known as the “Clayton County
German Settlement”. As I have stated in the previous article
these all came to Northeastern Iowa. When that country began to
settle up and land rose in value they sold out and were seeking
cheaper lands. As there had been American settlers from Clayton
county that had settled in Madison county along after the war,
1866–67. A. M. Peters and others, and the Rock Island railroad
was building through from Des Moines; they heard of Madison
County as being noted for cheap lands and fertile soil, thus
they were directed this way.
Mr.
George Storck was the first to come to this county. He came in
1868, purchased a quarter section of raw prairie land in section
13, Madison township, and then returned to Delaware county,
where he was then living. In January 1870 returned to this land,
improved it and has lived there continuously ever since and now
owns 550 acres of the best land in Madison county.
Mr.
George Storck came to Clayton County in 1848 with his parents
when he was five years old, living there until he enlisted in
Company E 27th Regiment Iowa Volunteer Infantry
August 22, 1862, and was mustered out August 8, 1865. He was
promoted to corporal after the battle of Pleasant Hill,
Louisiana, where he received a wound in the shoulder. After the
war he returned to Clayton county and in 1867 to Delaware county
and then to Madison county in 1870.
Mr. Stark
served on the Board of Supervisors 1883-85 and made an enviable
record as a public officer. He has been connected with the
Madison County Mutual Insurance Company since 1880, first as
president and for many years as secretary which position he
still holds. Much of the success of the company was due to the
labors of Mr. Storck.
Gerhardt Storck,
a brother of George Storck came to Madison County in the spring
of 1870 and settled on the northeast quarter, section 9,
Jefferson, and has continued to live there and is considered one
of the prosperous farmers of that township, and owning 860 acres
Jefferson and Madison townships.
Ferdinand
Marquardt also came from Clayton county with Gerhardt Storck
then a single man, a brother-in-law of both Geo. and G. Storck.
About 1871 he bought the Southwest quarter section 3-77-27,
improved it and still lives there. He owns another farm in
Jefferson township and one near Dexter in Penn township.
August Bernau
came from Clayton County in 1872 settling in section 7 or the wi
widow of his son, William, now lives in owns a farm with 200
acres. August Bernau died in 1883, his son, William in 1894. His
son J. H. Bernau bought the northeast corner of section 23 in
Jefferson where his son, Elliott H. Bernau, is living now. J. H.
Bernau died in 1899.
John Westphal
also came from Clayton County in 1872 and bought 240 in section
3 Jefferson. He was Treas. of the Farmers’ Mutual Insurance
company at the time of his death in 1880. His widow owns 160
acres which she rents, and his son Herman Poland’s the 80
acres.
Reinhold
Kneuper, whom I mentioned in a previous article, and direct from
Germany to George Mueller’s in Union township, whom he had
known in Germany. Mr. Kneuper lived about that locality until
about 1874 when he bought the S. E. quarter section 8, Jefferson
township, his present home. He also owns the N. W. quarter,
section 16 and is a leading citizen of Jefferson township.
August Ziemann
came from Clayton in 1873, first renting of L. Renshaw and in a
few years bought the farm where he now lives, section 21, and
improved it. The added to his holdings until he now owns 280
acres.
Charles
Wishmeyer, was born at Urbana, Ill., came to Madison County in
1871 and bought the farm where he lived in the seventies, and
died in February 1907.
Carl Marquardt
and family came from Germany to Clayton county in 1859 and to
Madison county in 1873, buying a farm in section 9 where he died
in 1896. The farm is now owned by Gerhardt Storck.
H. E. Marquardt
came with his parents, in 1873, from Clayton and bought 80 acres
in section 9, later selling to Geo. Storck and buying a larger
farm in sections 4 & 5 Jefferson township, 220 acres. He has
been secretary of Jefferson twp. school board for several years.
Fred H. Meyers
came in 1872 with his stepfather, John Westphal, and about 1887
bought the S. E. qr. Section 21 and a few years ago purchased
the Sylvester Renshaw farm, now owning a half section of land.
Wm. Steinhaus
and his son Edward and their families came direct from Germany
in 1872 and lived here several years until about 1884 they went
to Nebraska.
August Prochnow
also came with the Steinhaus’ from Germany in 1872 owned 100
acres in section 10 and 15, dying about 1903 in a misers hut
with plenty about him.
William Buske
came in 1878 and later on the N. E. quarter section 8 and sold
his farm some ten years ago and is now living in Des Moines.
Fred Roggemann
came from Clayton in 1873 and remained until 1875 when he sold
his farm in section 8 to Lewis Neindorf and left the County.
Mr. Neindorf,
who came to Jefferson Township in 1874 and later bought 100
acres of Wm. Buske making a farm of 320 acres now owned by his
heirs, Mr. Neindorf dying a few years ago.
Chris Heitman
came to Madison county in the early seventies and bought the S.
W. quarter section 9 which he sold in 1885 or 86 and moved to
Nebraska.
Ferdinand
Jensen came to Madison county in 1883, a few years later bought
the S. W. quarter section 9 of P. D. Lienmann and later sold it
to N. Boos and bought a farm where he now lives in section 4.
Conrad
Fundinger came to Madison county in 1881 buying the N. E.
quarter section 16, which he still owns.
B. B. Lienemann
came from Germany to Jackson county, Ia. And in 1882 to Madison
county buying quite a large farm in sections five and six
Jefferson township. His son, John, lived in section 24 a few
years and later moved to Arkansas. B. B. Lienemann died some
years ago about 1901. His sons Peter and Brachtel live on the
old farm.
Fred Thomas who
I have mentioned before lived a few years on the farm on by
Conrad Fundinger to whom he sold in 1881 and went West.
Lewis Vaudt,
came to Madison county in 1885 from Stuart, Ia., Rented a year
or so and bought 40 acres in section 15, his present home, and
later 160 more in section 9, and now owns 275 acres of land. His
sons, A. J. And Albert, attending the farms, and a son William,
lives in Jefferson township, later bought a farm in the
Shambaugh neighborhood.
Carl Radke came
from Germany to Madison county in the early 80s and a few years
later bought a farm in section 10 where a son Otto, resides. Mr.
and Mrs. Radke are both dead. Herman Radke also lives in
Jefferson Township.
George Lentz
came to Madison County from Germany and 1891, living on a farm
in section 20 for about ten years when he and his son, Henry,
moved to South Dakota. His son John lives on a farm that he
bought recently of the Niendorf estate section 8.
Nicholas Boos
bought the Chris Heitman farm, southwest quarter section 6, in
1898 of Ferd Jensen, and is living there today.
Frederick E.
Meyer came from Germany several years ago, living for a time in
Penn township, then at Vanmeter, and about 1885 married Ida
Storck, a daughter of Gerhardt Storck, and lived on one of Mr.
Storck’s farms until his death about 1903. He was clerk of
Jefferson township for several years.
Henry Wehrkampf
came from Clayton county in the 80s and owned a farm in section
4 which he sold about 1898 to Ferd Jensen and returned to
Clayton county.
Ferdinand
Dallman came in 1875 from Wisconsin and later bought the north
half of southwest quarter, section 10 living there until after
the death of his wife a few years ago. He sold his farm about
1903-04 and with his daughter and her husband moved to Dakota.
William Kading
also came from Wisconsin to Madison County, lived here a year or
so and moved to Adair as also did a family by the name of
Crumnie who with the Kadings and Dallmans had come from
Wisconsin. They are prosperous farmers in Adair County. When
they came to Madison county in 1875 they had one team and wagon.
Also for a few years there lived to families among the
settlement by the name of Kahre. They have gone to North Dakota,
I believe.
Thus I have
given a brief sketch of the German settlement in Jefferson
township and one family and Madison township, covering a
territory of four miles square. There are others among them but
the principal owners of the farms are Germans.
I am indebted
to George Storck for much of the information and possibly some
were left out, unintentionally on my part. I have not mentioned
the names of Cudliff, John and George Brooker lived in this
community since about 1868 for the reason that they married
American wives and never associated much with the Germans, but
will speak of them in “The Clayton, a settlement in Madison
County”.
It will not be
amiss to say something about the settlement of Germans as to
their character and citizenship. Originally they left the old
country to better their conditions. They were well drilled in
the school of labor and economy, and arriving in a country of
opportunity quickly prospered, as their beautiful homes,
capacious barns, and well cared farms indicate as a rule the
members of the settlement as well as of most to German
settlements, are honest, industrious people, strictly attending
to their own affairs, paying for everything they get, and
getting everything desirable that their homes will afford;
paying their share of the taxes and seldom if ever appearing in
the criminal or even civil courts, and never found in the poor
house, thus making good citizens and doing their share to make
the community and country prosperous.
The
Germans are not ambitious in a political way as their minds do
not run in that direction but whatever duty they are called upon
to perform in local or county affairs they do it faithfully,
honestly and to the best of
Published in the May 3, 1907
edition of The Winterset News and edited for clarity and
spelling. |