Misc. Notes
Obituary: Died, in this city Dec. 24, 1877, of heart disease, Elias D. Gumaer, aged 62 years. Mr. Gumaer was born in the town of Manlius, Onondaga County, N.Y. 1815. In 1828 he went south with his father, who was a large contractor on the Chesepeake and Ohio canal and other public works. He attended school in Washington awhile and then returned to New York state and took charge of his father’s farm, but the humdrum of a farmer’s life did not suit his ambitious taste and he returned to Washington, and secured a prominent position in the Government Document room, which he held for 16 years. While thus engaged he conceived the idea of an envelope in which to enclose letters and was the first man to make one in America, and each envelope was made separately. The House Committee of Ways and means afterwards provided him with a small sum of money to make a machine with which he could cut a ream of paper at a time. He owned a large plantation 4 miles from Washington, and after resigning his clerkship, conducted this and was a claim agent for several years. Becoming tired of southern life, he sold out and came west in 1849, settling at Winneconne, which at that time was only an Indian trading post. Here he laid out the first village plat of Winneconne. He lived there until 1859, when he moved to this county. The “Deacon,” as he was familiarly called by everybody, was a good neighbor, a kind husband and father. He was liberal to a fault, both to his family and friends. While in Winneconne he gave the ground for two churches and their parsonages besides materially aiding in in building them. Last spring he had a paralytic stroke, from which he never recovered, and no doubt brought on the disease which finally closed his early career. His funeral was largely attended by our citizens who wished to pay their last respects to an old settler.
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