1934 PIERCE COUNTY FAIR

 

The first Pierce County fair was held in 1884.  1934 was the 50th anniversary of the  Fair.  The Pierce County Agricultural Association sent out complimentary tickets to the fair to all persons who registered at the Pierce County Leader office showing their residence in the county to have been 50 years or more.

 

The Pierce County Leader printed a collection of stories of those early pioneers in the July and August 1934 editions of the paper.  The following is a sampling of those stories and a great insight into the early years of Pierce County.

 

 

 

 

Assembled by the Pierce Public Library Genealogy Help Group, Pierce, Nebraska – 2002.

 

Index of Names

 

 

Ahlman - 4

 

Babcock - 15 - 10                                              Bowen - 22

Bauman - 12                                                      Braasch - 5 - 21

Bell - 15                                                            Brandon - 4

Bennett - 30                                                      Breyer - 6         

Berge - 21                                                         Buckendahl - 6 - 7 - 21- 24 - 28

Bermel - 28                                                       Burkhard - 13

Birch - 4                                                            Buss - 14

Bouchie - 8                                                       

 

Carlson - 26                                                      Cones - 7- 8

Christensen - 14                                                Conrad - 22

 

Dean - 12                                                          Durfee - 8

Degner  - 16                                                      Dutcher - 8

 

 

Eike - 24                                                           Estel - 15

Eppler - 21

 

Fahrman - 14                                                     Fischer - 16 - 21

Fehringer - 13                                                    Frady - 9

 

Gay - 27                                                            Gould - 9

Gillespie - 10                                                     Graeser - 4

Gleason - 26                                                      Griebenow - 16 - 25 - 26

Gloe - 20                                                           Gruchow - 16

Goff - 31                                                            Gruett - 19

Goke – 30                                                         Grunwald - 26

 

Haas - 18                                                          Hilgert - 28

Hahn - 12 - 13                                                    Hoffman - 11

Hall - 8 - 9 - 27                                                   Hoskins - 27     

Hanson - 9                                                        Huebner - 22

Harris - 32                                                         Husak - 32

Heckendorf - 26 - 22                                          Husted - 14

Herbolsheimer - 7                                               Hutfless - 12

 

Kaiser - 23                                                        Kollmar - 14

Kerr - 21                                                            Kolterman - 4 - 16- 25 - 26

Kieckhafer - 16                                                  Korth – 16 - 22

Klug - 14 - 17 - 18                                              Kratochvil - 32

Knaak - 5 - 16                                                    Kuhl – 19 - 31

Koehler - 15 - 18 - 28                                         Kumm - 32

Koeppe - 9


 

Lambrecht - 31                                                  Lichtenberg - 15

Leake - 10                                                         Lierman - 16 - 19 - 26

Lee - 7                                                              Linstad - 16

Lehman - 4                                                        Luebke - 18

Leitzke - 17

 

Magdanz - 7 - 15 - 14 - 18  - 19 - 20 - 24 - 26        Meier - 28

Magdefrau - 18                                                   Melker - 30

Malzahn - 28                                                     Miles - 27

Manske - 16 - 15 - 19 - 24 - 26                            Miller - 18

Martischang - 13                                                Mitchell - 7

McDonald - 20

 

Neighbors - 24                                                   Nenow - 5

 

Otto - 21

 

Paul – 16                                                          Pfeifer - 11                                                        

Paulson - 15                                                      Prahl - 25 - 29

 

Raasch - 5                                                        Rohde - 22

Raubach - 12                                                     Rohrke - 5 - 23

Riley - 12 - 22                                                    Royce - 30

Roberts - 14                                                      Ruhlow - 5

 

Saeger - 25 - 26                                                Sherman - 27

Scheer - 16 - 21                                                 Silhacek - 7

Scheips - 27                                                      Splittgerber - 20

Schellen - 7                                                       Sporleder - 27

Schmeling - 14                                                  Stedry - 30

Schmidt - 14                                                      Streich - 29

Schulz - 16 - 19 - 24 - 28                                    Strelow - 29

Schwichtenberg - 27                                          Synovec - 29

Sharpe - 5

 

Tesch - 14                                                         Tomek  - 13

Turner - 30

 

Uecker  - 21                                                       Ulrich - 8 - 30

 

Verges  - 12                                                       Voecks - 31

 

Wagner - 5                                                       Wieser - 11

Weber - 13                                                        Winter - 5 - 23

Webster - 9                                                       Witte - 29

Wecker - 32                                                      Wittnebel - 23

Werner - 14                                                       Woodward - 4

 

Zach - 13                                                           Zibell - 13

Zellmer - 18


MRS. HERMAN AHLMAN

 

Among the oldest residents in the county is Mrs. Herman Ahlman, who as Miss Elizabeth Kolterman came with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Kolterman in 1869 from Watertown, Wisconsin, where she was born on Sept. 17, 1857.

 

She was married to Herman Ahlman on Oct. 19, 1877 and they immediately went to housekeeping on Mr. Ahlman’s homestead seven miles southeast of Pierce where she is still residing.  Mr. Ahlman died eleven years ago.

 

They were the parents of eleven children, 3 dying in infancy, those living are Paul, Mrs. Clara Lehman, John, Alma of Pierce, Arthur of Stanton, Albert of Norfolk, Lawrence of Hadar and Mrs. Ella Brandon of Salt Lake City.

 

Mrs. Ahlman experienced all the hardships of the early pioneer and helped in no small degree in the development of Pierce county.

 

Illness has prevented her from taking part in community affairs for the past several years, however, her interest has never waned and she enjoys visits with her many friends and her children who visit her frequently.

 

 

FRANK BIRCH

 

Frank Birch, now a resident of Foster, is one of the oldest settlers of Pierce county, having filed first on a timber claim and later on a preemption claim about six miles west of Pierce where he built a board shack, in which he lived for a time, and as his means increased he erected good barns and a fine home.  This place is now occupied by his son, Harry.

 

Mr. Birch is a native of St. Lawrence county, New York, where he was born on December 8, 1854.  His father was also a native of New York and was drafted into the army where he died as a result of wounds received in the battle of the Wilderness of 1863.

 

As Mr. Birch was only seven years old when his father died he was obliged to make his own way in the world, and was bound out for his board and clothes, getting only a scant amount of either.

 

He came to Pierce county in 1879 which has been his home since.

 

Mr. Birch was united in matrimony Jan. 30, 1884 to Miss Jane Woodward also a native of New York.

 

They are the parents of four children, Mrs. Minnie Graeser, Harry, (article is not complete).

 

AUGUST BRAASCH

 

August Braasch of Hadar was born at Ixonia, Wisconsin, Sept. 2, 1858.  He came to Madison county with his parents in 1866.  His father, Herman Braasch and Frederick Wagner were the first explorers of Madison county, who left their home in Jefferson county, Wisconsin, Sept 1, 1865 to look for new homes in Nebraska.  They came by way of St. Joseph, Mo., Omaha, Elkhorn City, Fontanelle and West Point.  At the latter place they hired a team to take them to the North Fork of the Elkhorn.  Eight miles above West Point the most advanced settler was found.  Passing on they reached their destination Sept. 15.

 

After selecting a location for a colony, they returned to Wisconsin to spend the winter in preparations for removal in the spring.

 

On the 14th of May, 1866, twenty-four families, consisting in the aggregate of about one hundred and twenty-five persons started to Madison county, under the leadership of Herman Braasch.  On the 4th of July they reached West Point, and on the 17th of July, 1866, having built numerous bridges across streams they could not ford, they arrived at the present site of Norfolk, on the North Fork of the Elkhorn, four miles above its confluence with the main stream.  Some of the men who came with Mr. Braasch were Martin Raasch, Gottlieb Rohrke, Charles Nenow, William Ruhlow and William Winter.  The colonists then arranged themselves on either side of the creek on quarter sections in the form of a rectangle, four times as long as wide, endwise to the creek, so that a compact settlement might be formed, that each man’s stock might have easy access to water, and that it might be easy for the whole colony to collected on either side of the stream in case of an attack upon them by Indians.

 

The first rude survey of these lands was made by William Sharpe with a pocket compass and a pair of harness lines.  After the laying out of the claims, the selection was made by lot, each settler taking as his the 160 acres corresponding in number to the number on a slip of paper drawn by him, blindfolded, out of a hat.  Thus did this colony of honest Germans recognize the equality of each with the other in his rights, and thus were many possible future bickerings, quarrels and envying prevented.

 

While these preliminaries were being arranged, the families lived in their wagons, as they continued to do, while houses were built.  This was not so arduous a task as in some localities, for there was plenty of cottonwood timber on the Elkhorn.  All had neat comfortable log houses ready for occupancy before the approach of winter, which proved to be a very serious one.

 

It was here that August Braasch lived until 1884 when he took a homestead in Pierce county, about seven miles south of Pierce.  He was married to Miss Augusta Knaak in 1886.  Mrs. Braasch was born in Germany on March 11, 1866 and came to Pierce county with her parents when a small girl.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Braasch are the parents of eight children.  A few years ago they retired from the farm and moved to a very comfortable home in Hadar.  Both are enjoying good health.

 

 

   RICHARD BREYER

 

Richard Breyer, a well-known resident of Pierce was born February 12, 1864 in Germany and came to America with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Breyer when three years old, first locating in Wisconsin and emigrated to Pierce county in 1871.

 

Mr. Breyer took a homestead eight miles northeast of Pierce.

 

Mr. Breyer distinctly remembers the historic blizzard of 1888, there being huge drifts the next morning and cattle from neighboring farms standing on his place, some were frozen to death.  Deer and antelope wandered about the plains in large numbers but were seldom shot as people were too poor to buy guns and ammunition.

 

Times were terribly hard, Mr. Breyer recalls, taking wheat to Wisner, a three day trip and receiving thirty cents a bushel, and hogs, after they were dressed, the only way they could sell them at all, were sold for one and a half or two cents a pound.

 

Fuel was always a real problem on account of the severity of the winters, as there was nothing but raw prairie between here and the Missouri river, except a few trees along the creeks.  On winter they had thirty-one storms, some lasting two and three days.  At times they were compelled to spend the greater part of the day in bed in order to keep warm.

 

Comparing the times of those days with the present, Mr. Breyer stated they were much harder than now, but what little they did possess was without debt and no mortgage chasing in those days, as people did not assume one.

 

Mr. Breyer was married to Miss Alvina Buckendahl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buckendahl, natives of Germany, also pioneer homesteaders of Pierce county.  She was born on her parents homestead six miles east of Pierce on August 4, 1873.  She vividly remembers living in a dugout, with windows on the open side, and of bands of Indians coming to peer in the windows.  On one occasion when her parents were in town, the Indians came and her older sisters became frightened and hid while Mrs. Breyer was too young to know what fear was, she played with the Indians and had such a good time, however, she was severely reprimanded when her parents returned home.

 

She also remembers the Ponca's saying “Ponca’s Good”—while the Spotted Sioux saying “Uh! Uh! Bad.”

 

Mr. and Mrs. Breyer retired from their farm about thirty years ago and have a comfortable home in Pierce.  They are the parents of nine children, eight living, they are Mrs. Lena Herbolsheimer, William, Paul, August and Mrs. Margaret Silhacek, all of Pierce; Mrs. Bertha Schellen of Omaha; Rheinhold of Butte and Mrs. Rose Mitchell of Lincoln.

 

 

WILLIAM BUCKENDAHL

 

William Buckendahl was born in Germany on Sept. 29, 1859 and came to America with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buckendahl, Sr., in 1870, his father taking a homestead about 5 miles east of Pierce.  When Mr. Buckendahl reach maturity he took a homestead ten miles northeast of Pierce, later disposing of this place and bought a farm one-mile east of Pierce where he resided for a number of years, retiring twenty-five years ago and has since made his home in Pierce.  He is the father of eleven children, six living.

 

One son, Emil, received the D.S.C. citation for heroic action in France during the World War.  He rescued a wounded comrade in No Man’s Land.  He died in February, 1931, from tuberculosis contracted during the war.

 

 

DOUGLAS CONES

 

Judge Douglas Cones is one of the best known residents of Pierce county, and has been a leading attorney in this state for many years.  He is prominent in business and political circles, has served as a county attorney and also as district judge.

 

Mr. Cones was born on April 26, 1865 in Scott county, Iowa, the son of W.W. Cones, a pioneer of northeastern Nebraska.  His family settled in West Point in 1875, two years later moved to Wisner where Mr. Cones received his early education, afterward attended Oberlin college.  Mr. Cones was admitted to the bar April 31, 1889 and established an office in Pierce, practicing in the state and federal courts.  During his long residence in this county he has at all times been fighting for the best interests of the town and county and has many friends throughout the county and state.  He served as mayor for two terms in 1920-21.

 

Mr. Cones was married to Miss Grace Lee, a native of Sac county, Iowa, and they have one daughter, Mrs. Elmer Magdanz and a granddaughter, Virginia Magdanz.

 

Judge Cones is a staunch democrat and has been honored by his party as county attorney, judge in Ninth judicial district, and other official positions.

 

Mr. Cones has practiced his profession probably longer than any other man in the county and enjoys a splendid practice in the courts in this section of Nebraska.

 


WOODS CONES

 

Woods Cones, one of the best known men in the state, probably holds the distinction of being the oldest pioneer banker in the state, having founded the Cones State Bank, formerly called The Pierce County Bank in 1882 as its president, our county’s oldest and most substantial banking institution.  Under the careful guidance of Mr. Cones, this institution has grown and prospered and kept pace with the development of the county.  The Cones State Bank has unflinchingly stood the test of all financial flurries that have waved over the country.

 

Mr. Cones was born in Iowa City, Iowa, Oct. 17, 1858.  He attended college at Grinnell and Mount Vernon, Iowa and graduated at Illinois College at Jacksonville.

 

Mr. Cones was married to Miss Ida Ulrich and their only child, Miss Lorinda Cones, died in 1924 at the age of 20years.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Cones spend the summer season at their lodge at Nevis, Minn.

 

 

SCHUYLER M. DURFEE

 

Schuyler M. Durfee and his wife, Eva Hall Durfee, have both resided for 50 years in Pierce county.

 

Mr. Durfee came here as a baby with his father, in 1884 from Belle Plaine, Ia., and Mrs. Durfee was born here.  They are both alumni of Pierce High school, graduating in the same class of 1900.  They were married two years later on October 2 being only 19 years of age.

 

They have three children, Norman A.; living in Lincoln, and Caryl and Donald, both of who are spending the summer vacation at home.  Miss Caryl from her duties as teacher, and Donald from the Nebraska university.

 

 

MR. AND MRS. M. R. DUTCHER

 

Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Dutcher, prominent and well-known residents of Pierce are numbered with the early pioneers, who have helped to make history in this county.

 

Mr. Dutcher was born at Creston, Minnesota, and moved with his parents to Plainview where they were early homesteaders.  Mrs. Dutcher, formerly Miss Lucy Bouchie, was born at Montreal, Canada, coming to Pierce county with her parents, fifty-four years ago, when they settled on a homestead six miles northeast of Plainview.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Dutcher were married on March 29, 1883 and began housekeeping on a homestead four miles northeast of Plainview.

 

After leaving the farm, Mr. Dutcher was at different times engaged in the implement business, proprietor of a general merchandise store and cashier of the former Security State bank of Plainview, moving to Pierce about twenty-one years ago and since has been associated with his son Raymond in operating the Pierce Telephone exchange.  Both have lived in Pierce county continuously for over fifty-four years and maintain an active interest in the social and religious development of the community.

 

Mrs. Dutcher has the distinction of being the teacher of more Sunday school pupils over the longest period of continuous service of any person in Northeast Nebraska.  She still continues in this capacity.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Dutcher are the parents of four children, Mrs. William Koeppe and Raymond of Pierce; Ralph of Franklin, Minnesota and Lester of Ann Arbor, Michigan.

 

 

MRS. JAMES W. GOULD

 

Mrs. James W. Gould of Plainview is numbered among the pioneers of the county.  Her husband, the late James W. Gould came to Plainview on April 22, 1872 from Sheffield, England, with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Gould, who located on a homestead now a part of the town of Plainview, and where Mr. and Mrs. James Gould and son James W. resided until their deaths.  The place is still occupied by Mrs. Gould and sons, James Jr. and Eugene.

 

Mrs. Gould was keenly interested in the Diamond Jubilee and loaned articles for the exhibit.  The lovely sampler used in the Hall’s Variety Store window belonged to Mrs. Gould.  It is over 100 years old.  At the Historical exhibit she displayed a candle mold and an iron fluter among other articles.

 

Mrs. Gould as Miss Wiego Hanson, was born in Clippinge, near Copenhagen, Denmark, on January 31, 1866, and with her parents came to America in 1870.  She was married to Mr. Gould on November 11, 1895, they were the parents of seven children, the five living are, George G., county treasurer of Pierce county; Harold of Long Pine, Mrs. Helen Webster, James and Eugene of Plainview.

 

 

WILSON HALL

 

Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Hall, early pioneers with two small children, Lewis and Ida, left Williamsport, Pa., for Nebraska in the spring of 1871.  They visited relatives at White Pigeon, Mich., and Sioux City, Iowa, on their way.  Leaving Mrs. Hall and the children there, Mr. Hall and Mr. Frady, another old pioneer of Pierce county, came on to Pierce.  It was Mr. Hall’s intention to settle near Lincoln, but Mr. Frady convinced him of the merits of this part of the state.

 

After erecting shanties on their claims the men went back after their families.  Mr. Frady had a team and “top-buggy” as they were styled so the women folks and children rode in it and the men came by wagon, bring cows and machinery.  It took them three days to come from Sioux City.  The first night they camped on the open prairie, the second night at Logan, now Wayne, and the third day they reached Pierce where they camped at Willow Creek.

 

By fall they had built a two room sod house also shelter for the stock and put up hay for feed.  It was fortunate they were prepared for winter came on before the corn was husked and blizzards one after another followed.  Mr. Babcock, a neighbor, told Mr. Hall he needn’t prepare any shelter for his stock as the winters were so mild they could even go swimming.  That was true of the first winter this neighbor spent here but ’72 and ’73 were very severe ones.

 

In 1873 they had a good crop of small grain but grasshoppers came alter and the corn was taken also the gardens and fruit trees were destroyed.  They came like a cloud and settled down on everything green and when they passed nothing but bare stumps were left of the crops.  This happened three years in succession, although the third year they harvested half the crop, but prices were low.  Corn sold for ten cents and hogs a dollar a hundred.  They marketed them at Wisner, it taking two days to make the trip, going and coming.

 

They secured their winter’s supply of groceries, meager though they were, before snow fell.  After that they didn’t get to town and only received their mail once a week as neighbors took turns in riding horseback to Norfolk for it.

 

One of the early teachers was Charles Leake.  He had had whooping cough previous to coming here and needless to say not a child who had not had it escaped that sickness that winter.  Marion Hall, then a baby eighteen months old had it so severely that it caused her deafness.  At seven years of age she enrolled in the school for the deaf at Omaha and graduated in 1908, alter she went to Pittsburgh to work and then to Williamsport, Pa., where she worked in a silk factory.  In 1913 she was married to Charles Gillespie of Albany, Mo.

 

It is interesting to note how near to death’s door Lewis Hall has been on three different occasions and still lives to council with and bless brothers, sisters, children and friends.  When just a little to the was helping himself and feeding his sister what he called “sugar”  which he had found in an open trunk.  This was sugar of lead used for poison ivy.  Imagine the young mothers horror when she saw them!  She had some stewed pumpkin and she gave it to them with plenty of milk until she could go to the neighbors for help.  When they returned they found nature had taken its course for she had used the right antidote and their lives were saved.

 

In the early days the Willow Creek was forded and only a log thrown across it for pedestrians.  Lewis had on a pretty pair of new boots and he went skipping down the path to meet his teacher who was coming from town.  Just as he reached the middle of the stream his dog bounced across after him and knocked him off the log.  He went down three times before he was rescued.  The boots were never recovered which fact he bemoans to this day.  They were the proberbial red-top boots, a joy to every boy’s heart in those days.

 

The third time occurred when an epidemic of typhoid fever went through Pierce and Lewis and his brother, Robert, were two very sick boys.  The doctor shook his head and said “there’s nothing more I can do” and only a mother’s careful nursing pulled them through. 

 

Not many can remember the old town herd.  Most every family had a cow and a boy was hired to herd them on the prairies west of town.  A led cow with bell around its neck was the signal for everyone to turn their cows loose to be gathered up by the herd boy as he drove them to pasture and returned them about six in the afternoon.  This was Robert’s job for a few years.  Later he carried mail to Birch and Colbergen.

 

Other experiences of the pioneer days were Indian scares and prairie fires.  Many times have the people been called out to fight fire.  Some to plow fire guards and others with barrels of water and brooms and sacks to beat it out if it jumped the fire guard.

 

In 1879 Mr. Hall left the farm and conducted a general merchandise store, was also a coal dealer, and later engaged in the livery trade until failing health caused him to retire.  He died March 18, 1928 at the age of 82.

 

He served his community in the capacity of Justice of the Peace, Deputy Sheriff, County Judge, and for several years was a member of the school board.

 

 

CHARLES HOFFMAN, SR.

 

Mr. Charles Hoffmann, Sr., one of our oldest residents in Pierce county, was born January 18, 1865 in Beurbach, Nieder-Ostreich, Europe.  In the spring of 1871 he emigrated to America with his parents, Casper and Johanna Hoffman locating in Madison, Wisconsin with relatives, August Wieser and Mrs. Anna Pfeifer.  (The Pfeifer family later moved to Platte county, where Mrs. Pfeifer froze to death in a blizzard, while on her way to visit a sick daughter.)

 

Mr. Casper Hoffman, Charley’s father, learned of Pierce county through an aunt of the late Theodore Raubach that land could be had for homestead here.  He and Mr. Wieser went as far as Columbus by train and walked from there to Pierce.  Mr. Hoffman left Wisconsin because he wanted free government land.

 

The first night they stopped at Wetzel breaking and plowing camp.  At daybreak they started on their way again without waking anyone.  Two mules of the camp had gone astray in the night and since these two strangers in camp had left so early it was naturally thought that they were the thieves.  Five miles from the camp they were caught up with but of course the mules were not in their possession.

 

As Mr. Hoffman and Mr. Wieser came in the vicinity of Osmond they saw a herd of antelope trailing each other to their watering place in the North Fork of the Elkhorn.  Both decided they had gone far enough into the wilds of Nebraska so retraced their steps to Madison, Nebraska, where Mr. Hoffman took up three homesteads and three preemptions, one of himself and one for each of his sons, Vincent and Sylvester. (The latter being Frank Hoffman’s father).  Mr. Hoffman then went back to Wisconsin, bought a team of horses and covered wagon, loaded his family and migrated to Nebraska.  The family consisted of his wife, Vincent, who had served in the Austrian army as volunteer, Julia, the late Mrs. Wm. Hutfless of Plainview, Nebraska, Sylvester, deceased, and Charles, Sr.

 

At Marshalltown, Ia., Mr. Hoffman purchased a small horse and a saddle.  This saddle proved to be too small for a grown person so Charles was made the happy possessor of it and the horse which started him in his career as cowboy.  People were very kind to them.  Julia bought all the milk they wanted with a dime.  Nobody took it so she still had it when she came to Nebraska.

 

They crossed the Missouri at the then small town of Omaha on a ferry.  After camping out and traveling for six weeks the family arrived in Norfolk.  Here Mr. Hoffman learned that some other man had jumped part of his claim so he went on and stopped at a sod house on the Theodore Raubach homestead.  From there he went to seek homestead land but was unable to find anything suitable so he purchased the present Charles Hoffman, Jr. farm, 5 ½ miles southeast of Pierce from Charley Hahn for $1400.  This farm had an unplastered frame house  The machinery was included in this purchase.

 

The neighbors were Doc Verges to the North, Adam Bauman to the east, Theodore Verges and his father to the south, and James Dean to the west.  Old settlers recall them all.  Bill, Jarves’s son and Charles H. have become such fast friends that they have established a permanent office in the building across the street from the Farmer’s Grain elevator office.

 

Two team of oxen were later purchased which were used in plowing  and to haul grain to the nearest marketing places, Columbus and Wisner.  Other cattle were purchased and when the herd grew large enough Mr. Hoffman turned cowboy.  His range was as far as Willow Creek, a distance of six or more miles west.  His companion herders were Bill Dean and Webb Riley.  During the day the cattle were left to graze in a herd and at night they were separated and driven to their respective homes.

 

We think hog prices are low now, but Mr. Hoffman recalls when a dressed hog was sold and delivered to Columbus for $2 each.

 

He also remembers blizzards when the snow had full sweep through the county since prairie fires which burned for weeks at a time had cleared the country of all obstructions.  Snow came for miles until it drifted about a sod house, higher than itself and filled in creek beds in such a compact mass that it was possible to cross over with loaded wagon.

 

Grasshoppers also were plentiful then.  Sometimes they came in such hordes that it seemed to be a cloud of dust moving along the horizon.  When they landed they would not leave again until a favorable wind presented itself.  Sometimes they stayed for three days.  They ate the bark and leaves off the trees, nipped off the grain ears and did general damage to corn.

 

On Dec. 28, 1890 Mr. Hoffman was married to Frances Hahn, daughter of Joseph and Margareta Hahn of Bavaria in Germany.  Mrs. Hahn, the mother, came to America after her husband died.  She also went through the hardships of Nebraska pioneer days.  Mrs. Charles Hoffman came to America in 1888.  Through pioneer days even until today her one and foremost thought has been her family which consists of eleven children, Mrs. Sophia Tomek, living four miles south of Pierce; Carl V., living on the old Zibell farm; Mrs. Agatha Weber, of Sheridan Lake, Colorado; Mrs. Wm. Fehringer of Bandon, Colorado, Agnes, who is engaged in school work; Andrew, living on the old Wichman farm south of Pierce; Berthold, Sylvester, Raymond and Julia, who are at home; and Frances, who is a registered nurse at Norfolk, Nebraska.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman are still living on the old home place which they and the family love.

 

VINCENT HOFFMAN

 

Vincent Hoffman was born in Austria, July 19, 1850.  He came to America with his parents and homesteaded with them one and one-half miles north of Hadar, where he now lives.

 

When he was 21 he bought the farm where Charles Hoffman now lives.  He married Mary Burkhard at West Point, Nebr., January 28, 1881.  Twelve children were born to this union, five have passed on.  Six children live in the county, and one, Mrs. Frank Zach at Humphrey, Nebraska.  The children residing here are:  Joseph, Julius, Mike, Mrs. Eugene Martischang, Mrs. Ignaz Zach and Margaret, who lives at home.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 1931 at which time they had a family reunion.

 

They own a nice home in Pierce, but prefer life on the old home place.  They enjoy good health, a get a great deal of pleasure visiting with their children and friends.

 

Mr. Hoffman was 84 years old last July, and Mrs. Hoffman, 77 years on Sept. 12.

 


MRS. LYDIA HUSTED

 

Mrs. Lydia Husted, a native of Bradford county, Pennsylvania, where she was marred to Wm. Husted in 1880 and three years later they came to Pierce county taking a homestead eight miles south and one mile east of Plainview.  Later they sold this place and moved to a farm eight miles southwest of Pierce where they lived until their retirement twenty-one years ago when they moved to Pierce.

 

On December 4, 1931, Mr. and Mrs. Husted celebrated their golden wedding anniversary, Mr. Husted suffering a stroke a few days later which resulted in his death on Dec. 27, 1931.

 

Mrs. Husted relates the many hardships of those days, blizzards, prairie fires and the terrible homesickness that at times seemed unbearable, how she had longed to see her mother, who was ill, but distance and lack of money made the trip back east impossible and she never again saw her mother after they left to seek a home on these Nebraska plains.

 

Their first home was a “soddy” the roof was of boards and then covered with sod, and they were real comfortable in it.  The stables were built of willow poles and the roofs were covered with straw and slough grass—and they seldom leaked.


Mrs. Husted is the mother of four daughters, Mrs. Fred Kollmar of
Millboro, S.D., Mrs. John Magdanz of Pierce and Mrs. Cassie Christensen of Brunswick.  Mrs. Eva Roberts, another daughter, died a number of years ago.

 

Mrs. Husted is still very active and makes her home with Mrs. John Magdanz in Pierce.  She frequently visits at the homes of her other daughters and enjoys visiting with her many friends.

 

 

ALBERT W. KLUG

 

The subject of this sketch, Albert W. Klug, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Klug, was born on March 6, 1873 on the old homestead now owned by him and rented to Eric Hitz.  The house in which he and incidentally his eldest daughter, Gertrude Schmidt were born, still exists and is now the home of Mrs. Werner in Pierce.

 

Mr. Klug’s parents with four older children emigrated from Wauhasha County, Wisconsin, in 1871.  In the covered wagon train were a Mr. Schmeling and family, a Mr. Buss and a Mr. Fahrman and others.  One of the Schmeling girls was the mother of Mrs. Henry Tesch and grandmother of Mr. Buss, grandsons now living west of Pierce.  In this wagon train which made the trip in seven weeks, was one ox-team, owned by Mr. Schmeling, the balance was made up of horse teams and cattle.  Henry Klug an older brother and the Schmeling girls made most of trip on foot, driving the livestock, including some sheep.

 

Mr. Klug’s grandmother, Mrs. Henrietta Koehler and her three daughters had come to Nebraska the year before to keep house for her two sons, Frederick and Ferdinand Koehler, who had homesteaded here before.  These two young men walked first to Minnesota from Wisconsin.  Not finding what they wanted they started back to Wisconsin, but soon changed their minds and landed in Nebraska.

 

Mr. Klug now owns 360 acres of land homesteaded by his father, grandmother and uncle, Fred.  These old deeds from the United States as well as one from the state of Nebraska to Mrs. Klug, can be seen at the Diamond Jubilee, Sept. 21 and 22.

 

Mr. Klug’s parents were the first to build an all-frame house, others had soddies, caves, and houses made of clay and straw with the thatch roof.  He can remember however the time the old sod house barn gave way to a frame barn and a new straw shed was built for the cattle.  Mr. Fred Magdanz, father of Mrs. H. J. Manske was the architect and carpenter of the new barn.  The lumber, mostly cottonwood was hauled from Bazile Mills.  Mr. Klug can remember the kidding H.J. Manske got about calling for Mr. Pickerols mail, meaning (Mr. Hecht)..  The Indian scare, where all the white’s left their houses and spent the day and night in the slough was caused by Mr. Hecht or some other farmer living along the trail leading to Norfolk calling to a neighbor who passed by before daylight to bring him some tobacco.  Mr. Klug well remembers the day the news got to the farmers that President Garfield had been shot.  It was not by radio, but days after it had happened.  Albert remembers the first day in school in spite of all the candy the teacher, Rev. P.S. Estel could scrape up.  Albert did not go back to school until his sister, Mrs. Emil Lichtenberg, two years younger also went.  He also recalls one of his first teachers on the hill, Dist. No. 3, was A. J Babcock.  But the biggest kick he got out of riding his Indian pony without saddle or bridle to Pierce after groceries and tobacco, doing the guiding all with his long legs.  He got so proficient that he rode the pony in races standing with his bare feet on the ponies bare back, until one day while showing off for the benefit of some larger boys and girls, he took a tumble and he showed off no more.  The picture of this pony and the rider will be on display at the Diamond Jubilee, Sept. 21 and 22.

 

Well does he remember the snow storm of ’88.  His father was away from home on his first and only visit to his old home in Wisconsin, and Henry, the oldest brother was out in the storm but found shelter in a sod shanty at the Paulson place, now owned by John Bell.

 

These were the good old days you hear about, the younger generation has no conception of the hardships the pioneers had to endure, but these old pioneers got more joy out of life than the present generation with their radios, automobiles and airplanes.

 


MRS. FRED KNAAK

 

Mrs. Fred Knaak, a well-known resident of Pierce was born in Naugard, Germany, on Jan. 27, 1872 and came to Pierce county in 1881 with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kieckhafer, who took up a homestead near Foster.  Her father and brother, Robert, were lost in the blizzard of January 12, 1888, when they started after the cattle and drifting with the storm were frozen before they could find shelter.  Their bodies lay on the prairie from Thursday night until Sunday when searching parties found them in the snow.

 

Fred Knaak and Miss Eliza Kieckhafer were married on March 29, 1894, and lived on a farm near Foster until their retirement ten years ago when they purchased and moved into a modern cottage in Pierce.  Mr. Knaak died eight years ago.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Knaak had no children, but a niece, Miss Linda Schulz has made her home with them for a number of years.  Mrs. Knaak has been in failing health, but always enjoys visits from her many friends and relatives who frequently visit her.

 

 

MRS. WILLIAM KORTH

 

Mrs. William Korth is numbered among our oldest pioneers, she being 84 years old.

 

She was born in Pommern, Germany, Jan. 10, 1850, and came to Pierce county with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul in 1872 and has lived here continuously since.

 

Her maiden name was Miss Wilhelmina Paul and she was married to Wm. Korth and they homesteaded five miles east and one mile north of Pierce, the farm is now occupied by her son, Ernest.

 

They experienced all the hardships of the early pioneer, the grass hopper scourge, and the blizzard of 1888.

 

Mr. Korth died thirteen years ago.  She is the mother of seven children, one daughter, Mrs. Henry Fischer died several years ago.  Those living are August, Ernest, William, Mrs. Ernest Fischer, Mrs. Emil Scheer, all of Pierce and Robert of McLean.

 

 

GUS LIERMAN

 

Gus Lierman of Hadar is one of the first, if not the first pioneer of Pierce county, who came from Watertown, Wisconsin with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lierman in the summer of 1869.  Others who accompanied them in their ox-train were the families of John Manske, Ludwig Gruchow, Michael Manske, Ludwig Lierman, Linstad and Herman Degner.  They overtook the Frederick Kolterman and Carl Griebenow families on the way, they traveling together the rest of the journey.

 

Upon reaching Council Bluffs the ox-teams became rebellious and would not go on the ferry, after considerable difficulty, Mr. Lierman then a boy of seven, who had one ox-team as pets, was selected to coax them on the ferry and was successful, after the first trip they had no more trouble with the oxen.  They saw many freighters who also crossed the ferry there, one of them with a fine team of horses who became frightened on the ferry and ran away at the pier and over the man who was driving them, he dying a few minutes.

 

They continued their journey, arriving at West Point on the 4th of July, then on up to Norfolk where they assisted friends with the harvest and in the fall Mr. Lierman’s father took a homestead just west of Hadar.  They built a house, dug into a hillside with logs on the open side.  The barns were built the same way, and they were very comfortable all winter.

 

Mr. Lierman experienced the grasshopper scourge, when they were so numerous, that when they were flying they would completely obstruct the sun and they took everything in their path, even the leaves on the trees.  They always traveled with the wind and the last grasshopper raid, the wind changed suddenly when they settled on the ground, laid their eggs and when they hatched, although they were so tiny a person could not see them, they made a sizzling noise in the grass, when almost matured and read to fly, tiny lice infested their bodies and they all died in a short time and grasshopper raids were ended.  They never came the same seasons, if they took the small grain, corn was raised, and if the corn was taken the small grain was left thus they always had a partial crop.

 

Mr. Lierman well remembers of the Indians coming through in great bands, and the oxen had a dreadful fear of the Indians.  If there were Indians within a three mile radius, the oxen could small their trail, get rebellious and leave the prairie trails and run across the prairies in every direction.

 

Speaking of the hard times now as compared to those days, Mr. Lierman states they are not to be compared.  Most people in those days, in spite of all the hardships, were compelled to stay for they were so poor they could not go back where they came from.  A few returned to their old homes, but those who remained made good and lived to enjoy the fruits of their labors.

 

Mr. Lierman was born at Watertown, Wis., on Dec. 8, 1862 and has resided on his father’s homestead since 1869 except for 4 years he resided in Hadar.  Since the death of Mrs. Lierman he as returned to the homestead where he lives with his two sons, Julius and Gilbert and daughter Miss Hattie Lierman.  He has two other daughters, Miss Otellie Klug of Enola and Mrs. Mary Leitzke of Hadar.

 

For 30 years he was county assessor in South Branch precinct, and a school director for 17 years in District No. 15.

 

 

MRS. ALVINA LUEBKE

 

Alvina Koltermann Luebke was born Febr. 18, 1869 in Wisconsin.  At the age of 2 ½ years she came overland in a covered wagon to Nebraska with her parents.  They arrived here in October, 1871, and spent that first winter at the home of Fritz Poul, nine miles southeast of Pierce.  In the spring they moved to the farm now occupied by Ed Miller.  In 1877 they bought the farm now occupied by Mitchell Haas and built a sod house.

 

In 1889 she married William Luebke a blacksmith  and wagon maker.  They had twelve children, eight of whom are living, Mr. Luebke died in 1915.

 

Mrs. Luebke recalls many experiences of her early days here and tells of hearing how her father helped Christian Magdefrau across Dry Creek, north of Pierce.  She says that Mr. Magdefrau horses were so thin that they could not pull the wagon through the mud.

 

She has many heirlooms, which are valued highly.

 

 

HERMAN MAGDANZ

 

Herman Magdanz, one of Pierce county’s best known and most successful citizens was born in Germany on Oct. 11, 1864, emigrating to America with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Magdanz, Sr., when very young, first locating in Wisconsin and coming to Pierce county in 1870, his father taking a homestead two and a half miles northeast of Pierce, which is still owned by Mr. Magdanz and now occupied by Rudolph Zellmer.

 

Mr. Magdanz experienced the many incidents of the early day the blizzards which usually lasted three days, they could not get out of the house to do their chores and would melt snow for drinking.  When the blizzard of 1888 struck, Mr. Magdanz was half way home from town on foot and he said he could see a black cloud that appeared to be on the ground and without further warning it was upon him and a wagon track in the snow was his only guide and with difficulty he finally reached his home.

 

He related the grasshopper raids, which came in great numbers, and completely hid the sun from view and if they were not hungry they would settle on the grain and leave without doing any damage.

 

Mr. Magdanz herded cattle and sheep all along Willow Creek and for miles around, the slough grass being so tall a youngster could scarcely see out.  He remembers of herding sheep, the Carl Klug, Fred and Ferdinand Koehler and Magdanz families having them all in one herd when one of the severe three day blizzard came, the sheep ran into the ravines of Yankton slough and after the storm they began looking for the sheep.  They finally came upon a lone sheep all humped up and standing on the bank of the ravine being all drifted level full of snow, so they commenced digging in the snow, when they got down about 6 or 8 feet they found their sheep all bunched together and when the opening was made they all hopped out one after the other, unharmed.

 

The first corn sheller was a spade and a pail and so efficient did the pioneers become in the art of shelling a large amount was shelled in a day.

 

To compare present day problems with those of pioneer days, Mr. Magdanz relates of their poverty, where often they had no money to buy food with, but in that event they went to their merchant in Norfolk or Wisner and they always received food to be paid for when they had money and no creditor ever lost a cent, and a note or mortgage was unheard of, but a man’s word was never broken.

 

Mr. Magdanz relates the difficulty in training oxen to drive.  They would yoke a wild ox with a tame one, then hitch them to a pole or heavy timber and just turn them loose on the prairie.  They would run for miles and after a day or two they were played out and pretty well broke.  Mr. Magdanz was married to Miss Ida Kuhl.  When 6 months old she came with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kuhl from Wisconsin in 1870 and who homesteaded on Willow Creek on the farm now owned and occupied by Mrs. Magdanz’s brother, William.  She remembers how afraid the cattle were of the Indians, they would snort and kick their haunches in the air and run for miles.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Magdanz are the parents of our children, Mrs. Linda Gruett, Ernest, Mrs. Esther Schulz and Elmer, all of Pierce.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Magdanz retired from the farm 21 years ago and are living in a very comfortable home in Pierce.

 

 

HERMAN J. MANSKE

 

Herman J. Manske is one of the pioneer residents of Pierce county, with his brother, William of Pierce and Gus Lierman of Hadar he holds the distinction of the longest continuous residence in the county.  The length of an ox-team and wagon is the only difference in time of residence, as they all came in the same ox-train from Wisconsin.

 

Mr. Manske was born in Germany on April 21, 1861, coming to America with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Manske when seven years old, first locating in Wisconsin and in the spring of 1869 they started in covered wagon and ox-team for Pierce county, reaching West Point on the fourth of July.

 

They camped about a mile from town and in the evening when fireworks were displayed they wondered what it was all about for they had never seen or heard of such a thing. 

 

Mr. Manske’s parents homesteaded on a farm two miles northeast of Pierce now owned by his brother William.

 

His father purchased the farm just south of his homestead from the government in 1870 for $2.25 an acre where Mr. Manske lived after his marriage to Miss Bertha Magdanz and which was their home until eighteen year’s ago when they moved to town.  Fifteen years ago Mr. Manske sold this farm for $250 per acre.

 

Mr. Manske can relate interesting as well as humorous stories of those early days.  He laughingly remarked of their journey from Wisconsin, of himself and an older brother driving the fastest team in the “train” and eager for adventure.  They would call from their wagon, “Vat roat to Raskey? As there were sometimes several trails across the prairies and they did not know which one to follow.

 

He further relates of a family by the name of Hecht, living near them and it was customary when one settler went to town, to bring provisions for the entire neighborhood—so on one occasion when Mr. Manske and a brother were going to town, among other things they were to ask for mail for the “Hecht” family.  As they were all Germans, but were getting better versed in English, Mr. Manske being quite apt, when he went to the post office to get the mail he asked “Is there mail for “Pickerel”—“Hecht” translated into English in “Pickerel” of course, there was not mail for “Pickerel’s”.

 

Mr. Manske vividly remembers of the Indian scares, blizzards and the early trials of the pioneer.  His father died shortly after their residence in the county.  In the tax record of 1870, his mother was rated as the wealthiest person in Pierce county, her assessed valuation was $779.00 and her taxes were $19.67.

 

 

Mr. Manske is still actively engaged in business, being owner of the Home Filling Station and having many other holdings.  He is an enthusiastic golfer and may be seen there whenever weather is favorable.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Manske are the parents of six children all who reside in Pierce, Gus, Henry, Otto, Julius, Mrs. Fred Gloe and Mrs. Julius Splittgerber.

 

 

J.B. MCDONALD

 

County Judge J.B. McDonald was born in Chatham Hill, Smyth Co., Virginia, on Sept. 23, 1861, and came to Pierce county with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James V. McDonald in 1884.

 

Mr. McDonald was deputy postmaster from 1893-97 when he was employed in the H.H. Mohr lumber yard from 1897 to 1908 when he was elected county clerk.  He resigned that position in 1914 to accept the postmastership and served until 1923.  Served as city clerk in 1924. He was elected county judge in November 1926 which position he still holds.

 

Mrs. McDonald, whose maiden name was Jessie Kerr, was born in Scotland and came to Pierce county with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Kerr in 1882, her father taking a homestead and timber claim four miles south of Foster.  They experienced the trials of the early pioneer.

 

Mr. and Mrs. McDonald were married on July 9, 1901 and are the parents of two children, Mrs. Katherine Berge of Norfolk and Howard at home.

 

 

MR. AND MRS. ALBERT OTTO

 

Albert Otto a well-known pioneer of this community has lived in Pierce county since 1869, coming directly to this county from Prownsberg, Pommerian, Germany, where he was born June 4, 1859, thus being ten years old, and he lived here continuously since.

 

Mr. Otto was married to Miss Dorothea Buckendahl on Nov. 24, 1881 and they went to housekeeping on a farm northeast of Pierce, retiring several years ago, when they moved to Pierce.

 

They have in no small way contributed to the betterment of this county, endured the hardships and privations of those days and are now enjoying the fruits of their labors.  They are the parents of ten children, three dying in infancy.  Those living are Mrs. George Scheer, Herman, Gustave, Mrs. Henry Miller, Mrs. Alice Braasch and Lawrence of Pierce and William of Magnet.

 

 

JOHN RAASCH

 

John Raasch of Hadar came to Pierce county in 1869 from Ixonia, Wisconsin with his parents, at the age of 12 years.  He homesteaded four miles south of Pierce where he resided until fifteen years ago when with Mrs. Raasch they retired and moved to Hadar.

 

Mr. Raasch was born June 21, 1857.  Mrs. Raasch was born April 30, 1861 and came with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Braasch from Wisconsin to Madison county in 1866, where she resided until her marriage to Mr. Raasch on Nov. 12, 1882.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Raasch are the parents of eleven children, Mrs. Clara Fischer, Paul, Mrs. Rieke Uecker, Mrs. Dora Eppler, Anton, Louis, George, Elmer, Rudolph, Erhart and Hubert.

 


W. W. RILEY

 

W. W. Riley, a member of one of the earliest families in Pierce county, is almost a native Nebraskan, as he was only 4 years old when he came here with his parents in the fall of 1870 from Iowa.

 

He recalls how during the grasshopper raids they took turns sweeping the grasshoppers off the cabbage plants with old brooms and brushes.  All they were able to save were two rows of cabbage.

 

Mr. Riley is a progressive farmer and stock breeder and also engages extensively in Shetland ponies, that are shipped to various parts of the United States.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Riley are the parents of two children, Mrs. Margaret Bowen of Pierce and Hubert of Seward.

 

They have traveled extensively in this country as well as abroad and take an active interest in the affairs of the community.

 

 

MRS. HERMAN ROHDE

 

Mrs. Herman Rohde of Pierce holds the signal distinction of being the first white child born in Pierce county, the second being the late Richard Korth, son of Carl Korth and the third Mrs. W.A. Saeger.

 

Mrs. Rohde was Miss Bernadine Conrad, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Conrad, who homesteaded one-half mile west of Hadar in 1869.  Mrs. Rohde was born on July 4, 1870.  She with her two older sisters walked from their homestead home to the Lutheran parochial school at St. Paul’s church north of Norfolk, a distance of 6 miles across the prairie.

 

She vividly recalls the time when she attended the district school when the teacher, Miss Martha Heckendorf and Mrs. Rohde and sisters stopped at the August Huebner home, aunt and uncle of Mrs. Rohde and the Indians were in the dug-out and Mrs. Huebner who was so frightened, as Mr. Huebner was away, had given them almost all she had in the house, still they persisted in staying, when Miss Heckendorf looked into the little window of the dug-out they became frightened, thinking many more “whites” were about, they dashed out of the dug-out.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Rohde were married on April 16, 1893.

 

Mr. Rohde was born near Watertown, Wisconsin and came to Pierce county with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. August Rohde, who homesteaded six miles south of Pierce in 1871.  His sister, Miss Bertha Rohde taught school for several terms in district 8, north of Pierce.

 

Mr. Rohde’s parents lived in a dug-out and they experienced the scourge of grasshoppers, prairie fires and blizzard which proved a menace to these early settlers.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Rohde are the parents of two children, Edwin, who resides on a farm south of Pierce and Mrs. Agnes Wittnebel of North Lake, Wisconsin.

 

 

MRS. MINA ROHRKE

 

Mrs. Mina Rohrke, of Hadar, is a daughter of an early Nebraska pioneer family and has been a resident of Pierce county over 50 years.  She came to America with per parents Mr. and Mrs. Carl Winter, from Germany in 1864.  It took them seven weeks to cross the ocean, quite a contrast to the trip which is made now in nearly as many days.

 

The family settled near Ixonia, Wisconsin, but two years later joined a group of pioneers who started in May 1866 to homestead in Nebraska.  They arrived near where Norfolk now is on July 12 and made a home there where Mrs. Rohrke lived until her marriage to David L. Rohrke in 1880.

 

The young couple went to live on their own farm 3 miles west of Hadar, where they lived for 45 years and experiencing the hardships of the early pioneers.  In 1925 they moved to Hadar, where in 1927 Mr. Rohrke died.

 

Mrs. Rohde is now 72 years old and is in good health and enjoys the companionship of her many friends.

 

 

REINHOLD W. ROHRKE

 

R. W. Rohrke was born near Hadar, Nebr., Dec. 11, 1873.  He parents first settled in Wisconsin, coming later by covered wagon to Nebraska.  His father was a blacksmith and farmer.

 

Mr. Rohrke attended school under difficult circumstances, often walking six miles to reach the neighboring school.

 

He was married to Anna Maria Kaiser on July 24, 1879(?).  To them were born six children.

 

Mr. Rohrke has been a resident of Pierce county for over 60 years and has lived on his own farm since 1897.

 

He served for 21 years as a school director in District 15, which was first known as District 1, the first to be organized in Pierce county.  He was road supervisor in South Branch precinct for two years.

 

He remembers early hardships including the fear of Indians, the prairie fires and grasshopper invasions, but feels the present depression is the hardest to bear.  He recalls his mother telling of how she broke sod with an ox team and crude plow.

 

He is in failing health due to an accident suffered three years ago when he was kicked by a horse.  His hobby has always been fine horses.

 

 

FRANK SCHULZ

 

Frank Schulz, a resident of this community for sixty-one years was born in Pommerian, Germany, on Jan. 22, 1858, and with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Schulz, came to America in 1873 and lived with his brother on the place now occupied by John Raubach.

 

Mr. Schulz took a timber claim ten miles northeast of Pierce, which he sold and purchased the farm east of Pierce now owned by his son, Arthur.

 

On April 13, 1883 Mr. Schulz was married to Miss Bertha Manske, whose parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Manske homesteaded in 1869 on the farm a half miles east of town, known as the old William Buckendahl place.

 

As the grasshoppers had taken all the crops and no work was available here, Mr. Schulz and two boys walked to Omaha to secure work, there being only a few houses in Omaha then, they stopped at a house and asked where the depot man lived and they were ordered off the place under threat of being shot.  Hitchhikers in those days were not welcomed, which is more or less comparable to present day conditions.  They continued to Council Bluffs where they secured work for a short time.  He had earned $7 which he carried in his pocket, one day when the cattle got in the wheat field he ran after them to chase them out when discovered he had lost his purse with the $7 and all hunting proved to no avail, and the year following they found it in the stubble field, the grasshoppers had chewed up the purse but as the money was in silver it was not ruined.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Schulz moved to Pierce in 1891 and at various times Mr. Schulz has been engaged in business.  Mrs. Schulz died fourteen years ago.  Of their seven children the six living are Arthur and Mrs. Ernest Magdanz of Pierce, Mrs. Wm. Eike of Randolph, Frank of Omaha, Paul of Beloit, Kansas, and Mrs. Chas. Neighbors of Cashmere, Washington.

 

 


MRS. W. A. SAEGER

 

Perhaps no other person in Pierce county holds the unusual distinction of being born in Pierce county and also to have lived on the same place the 64 years of their life which Mrs. W. A. Saeger can boats of.  She was born on Oct. 6, 1870 on her parent’s, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Griebenow’s homestead, her maiden name was Miss Amanda Griebenow and their only child.  She was born in a log cabin which was located where her present home now stands.  She was the third white child born in Pierce county.  She distinctly remembers the Indians, bands were usually from 50 to 200, the largest she remembers of seeing was between six and seven hundred Ponca’s that came from the reservation, they could usually be seen at daybreak coming over the hills with their Indian ponies and some on foot.  They had long poles tied on the sides of their ponies with animal skins, and sometimes Indian babies tied to the ponies, at night fall they would pitch their tee-pees.  Often the squaws had their babies tied on their backs.

 

The Ponca Indians would stop at the door of their long cabin and say, “How, how, Ponca, Goot!” which meant, “Good morning, Ponca’s good!”  They wore suits made of animal skins and wore a read blanket.

 

At one time Frederich Kolterman, grandfather of Mrs. Saeger, living on an adjoining homestead, poisoned wolves and they had been dead for several days in the hills north of the Griebenow home when the Indians found them, they dressed them and prepared them and held a feast, and in their crude way of preparation, none became ill from the feast of “poisoned wolves.”  Another time Grandfather Kolterman gave them a dog, an old squaw came out of the tee-pee, hit the dog over the head with a club and set about to dress it and that was also a feast.

 

Rattlesnakes being numerous in those days, but the Indians had remedies  for their bites and seldom did a rattlesnake bite prove fatal, however, an Indian Princess died as the result of a rattler bite and together with all her jewels and finery with great ostentation, she was buried in the hills on or near the Fred Prahl place southeast of Pierce.  They mourned for a month had their war dances and had all manner of commotion.

 

As a little child, Mrs. Saeger made a little tent out of old sacks and sticks in which she had her doll and other toys, when the Indians happened along and she was so afraid, they picked it up and handed it from one to another and would take her doll, however, they laughed as only an Indian could. 

 

The fear of the Indian could never be entirely overcome, even so often they would come to their places with all kinds of knives to sharpen them on her father’s grindstone and always they wondered whether they would scalp them.

 

Indian scares were not uncommon at one time—word was sent from one settler to another that the Indians were coming had already killed some settlers, and Mrs. Saeger then a small baby, was wrapped in a blanket and together with her parents, the Kolterman’s, Magdanz, Manske families and others, ran for shelter in the old Yankton slough northeast of Pierce and hid among brush and plum thickets and remained there a night and part of a day.  However, the Indians never came, the report proved to be a hoax.  Those were the fears of the people who have made history in Nebraska.

 

Mrs. Saeger started to school in Sept. 1875 and school was held in their log home for 2 years, the first teacher was Miss Josephine Heckendorf.  Herman Magdanz also attended school in the log cabin.

 

In 1877 the school house (Dist. 8 north of town) was built, the first director was John Wright; treasurer, Carl Griebenow and moderator was Frederick Kolterman.  For five years Mrs. Saeger was the only pupil in the school, then Emil and Harry Grunwald moved to the farm now owned by Chas. Chilvers and they attended.

 

Miss Amanda Griebenow was married to William A. Saeger, a native of Oconomowac, Wis., on Jan 16, 1895.  They are the parents of seven children, two dying in infancy, those living are Elmer of Norfolk, Mrs. Zelda Carlson of Omaha, Clarence, Mrs. Veronica Gleason and Ruth of Pierce.   

 

 

AUGUST SCHWICHTENBERG

 

August Schwichtenberg, a well-known resident of Pierce county was born in Pommerian Germany, Nov. 23, 1850, coming to America when 17 years old from Ixonia, Wis., with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Johann Schwichtenberg in 1871, his father taking a homestead 3 ½ miles east of Hadar in Wayne County.

 

They made the trip from Wisconsin in a covered wagon, others in their group were the Carl Klug, Fred and Ferd Koehler families.

 

It required six weeks to make the trip, they crossed the Missouri river on a ferry at Council Bluffs.  Omaha had a population of 800 at that time and 16th street was the main street of Omaha.  They drove their cattle across from Wisconsin, and most of the distance was made on foot, which was the case with many of the pioneers, for riding across the prairies in a wagon was not a pleasure trip.

 

In 1872 Mr. Schwichtenberg took a homestead 3 ½ miles east of Hadar.  On July 23, 1876 he was married to Miss Marie Lierman, who had come to Norfolk with her parents with the second train of emigrants from Wisconsin.  They were married in the church at Norfolk.

 

In 1880 he sold the homestead for $1000.00 and he and his wife and son Julius went to Missouri with the intention of locating there, however, they soon returned and purchase his present farm of 200 acres, 3 miles north of Hadar, paying $1500 for it.

 

He improved the place with fine buildings, and Mr. Schwichtenberg states he has never experienced a complete crop failure.

 

He was director of school district No. 7 for 45 years, and during that time hired thirty-five teachers, the first teacher was Miss Nora Miles, a sister-in-law of Dr. Gay of Pierce.

 

He help organize Christ Lutheran church in Norfolk in 1872 and in 1883 helped organize Immanuel Lutheran church in Hadar of which he is a charter member, he served as president of the congregation for two years.

 

He served as county commissioner of Pierce county from 1900 until 1907.

 

His wife died March 14, 1922 and since then he has spent the winters in California.  In 1927 he traveled over Europe with a touring party of 200.

 

Twelve children were born to them, the five living are Julius in Omaha; Mrs. Alma Scheips, Pierce; Otto, Norfolk; Eleanor Hoskins, Long Beach, California and Martin living on the home place.

 

Mr. Schwichtenberg took out his citizenship papers at the age of 21 years and they were signed by President Grant.

 

 

MRS. IDA HALL SHERMAN

 

Mrs. Ida Hall Sherman came with her parents to Pierce county over sixty years ago from Lycoming county, Pennsylvania.  She grew to womanhood in this community, attended our public school and teaching in the rural schools.

 

After graduation at the Peru State Normal School she taught in the intermediate grades in our Public School

 

She was married to Frank Sherman of Montoursville, Pa., where they resided for 6 years.  Later they moved to a farm near Gordon, Nebr.  They now reside on a farm one mile south of Pierce.

 

Three children were born to this couple, Robert of Salina, Kansas, who is employed by the Beebe Runyan Furniture Co. of Omaha, and Milford and Marguerite who are at home with their parents.

 

 

WILLIAM SPORLEDER

 

William Sporleder one of the oldest residents of this community is a native of Germany and came to America when nineteen years old.  When a lad of ten years he herded cattle in a neighboring village, in Germany people do not live on farms, but in little villages and go to and fro to do their farm work, he received $4 a season as a herdsman when 10 years old, $16 a year wages when fifteen years old and $30 a year when nineteen years old.

 

A friend of his was leaving for America and in order to escape three years of military service they would sneak out of the country, and his friend offered to pay his expenses so they started.  Mr. Sporleder having only one change of clothing, he packed up a nap sack with his few belongings and left for America.

 

They first located in Illinois and he owned his friend $773.00.  He got work and paid his debt and sent money to his brothers and parents in Germany, they all coming to America as soon as he could earn sufficient funds for their passage. 

 

Mr. Sporleder was married in Illinois, and in 1874 with his family moved to Carroll, Ia.  In 1884 Mr. Sporleder purchased land seven miles east of Pierce from J.H. Brown, through Gurdon Wattles, a real estate man from Carroll, Iowa.

 

When they first arrived in Pierce county, they lived with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buckendahl, Sr., until their buildings were completed.  He paid $80 for a team of oxen which he used to farm.

 

He distinctly remembers the blizzard of 1888, the sun was shining and the day was mild, and Mr. Sporleder had just watered his stock, when suddenly it appeared as a cloud was on the ground and the storm was upon them.

 

John Bermel was at their home and they decided to get the children from school which was nearby, when they met them and got them safely to their home where they remained all night.  Early the next morning Wm. Schulz came looking for his daughter, Ida, the late Mrs. Fred Hilgert.  People had worried throughout the night as to the fate of their children, but the fury of the storm was so great it meant death to venture out in it.

 

On June 14, 1885 a terrible storm of tornado proportions took Mr. Sporleder’s barn which was built of posts and boards and carried it a distance of a half mile.

 

Mr. Sporleder distinctly remembers the hail storm on Sept. 29 of 1881 or 1882 during the Fair which was held south of town on the west side of the road, when hail stones were the size of a goose egg, it was so unusual, as the sun was shining and the stated it was a pretty sight with the hailstones sparkling against the sun.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Sporleder retired from the farm twenty-five years ago and moved to Pierce.  Mrs. Sporleder died eight years ago, his daughter, Mrs. Richard Malzahn and Mr. Malzahn live with Mr. Sporleder since the death of Mrs. Sporleder.  Of his ten children, the eight living are John, Henry, Mrs. H.C. Buckendahl, Mrs. Louise Koehler, Mrs. Albert Koehler, Mrs. Carl Meier, Mrs. George Malzahn and Mrs. Richard Malzahn.

 

 

THEODORE STREICH

 

Theodore Streich, was 61 years of age August 15.  He was born on a farm northeast of Pierce, and has spent his lifetime in this county.

 

In 1898 he was married to Miss Emma Witte of Bazile Mills, and took his bride to his farm home northwest of Osmond, where they lived until a year ago when they retired to live in Osmond.

 

They had four sons, two of who died in infancy.  One son, Julius lives on the home place which has been owned by the Streich family for forty-two years.  The other son, John, also farms nearby.

 

 

FRANK STRELOW

 

Frank Strelow, a prominent business man of Pierce is numbered among our pioneers and has done his share in the development of Pierce county.  Mr. Strelow was born in Braunsburg, Pommerania, Germany on June 26, 1867.  In April 1882, with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Strelow, he emigrated to America, the voyage requiring 14 days.  They came immediately to Pierce county, first locating near Hadar, where they rented a farm for five years and then bought a farm northwest of Pierce where they lived until 14 years ago when Mr. Strelow entered the business of the Pierce Hardware and Implement Co. with which he is still actively engaged.  The Strelow farm is now owned and occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Prahl, Mrs. Prahl being a sister of Mr. Strelow.

 

Mr. Strelow served as assessor of Pierce county for a term, filling the office with credit and honor.  He is a member of Zion Lutheran church and always has taken a keen interest in all church activities.  He is the father of 11 children, one son Julius is a Lutheran minister in Litchfield, Ill., and another son Elmer, also a theological student, will graduate next spring.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Strelow occupy a very fine home in the west part of Pierce.

 

 

FRANK SYNOVEC

 

Frank Synovec, one of Pierce county’s well-known farmers, came here at the age of 16 years in 1884.  His father, Frank Peter Synovec, and mother and seven children, made the trip from Yates county, Nebraska in a prairie schooner.  Soon after arriving here they built a sod house which was their home for a number of years.

 

He recalls herding cattle, as many as 500 heard at one time.  Three months of schooling in the winter was all they had and pupils furnished the books.

 

In 1896 he was married to Anna Stedry.  Three children were born to this union.  Mrs. Clara Goke, living northeast of Pierce, and Laura and Allen, both at home.  This worthy couple lived for thirty-six years on the farm they now occupy.

 

 

MRS. HASON TURNER

 

Mrs. Hason Turner is numbered among the early pioneers of Pierce County.

 

She was born in Heuvelton, N.Y. on Feb. 18, 1859.  Shortly after her marriage to Mr. Turner on April 16, 1882 they came to Pierce county and settled on a homestead five miles east of Plainview.  As Mr. Tuner traveled for a St. Louis firm, Mrs. Turner stayed on the homestead, sometimes going to town to board during his absence.

 

During the blizzard of 1888 the teacher, Miss Loye Royse, who was teaching in the Thompson district near the Turner homestead, lost both feet as the result of being frozen and three of the pupils with her perished.

 

Mrs. Turner is a prominent member of the Eastern Star and past worthy matron.

 

Mr. Turner died Febr. 25, 1934.

 

They have three children, Mrs. Belle Bennett of Mt. Vernon, Iowa; Marshall of Pierce and Mrs. Laura Melker of Hannibal, Missouri

 

 

WILLIAM C. ULRICH

 

William C. Ulrich is one of Pierce’s most progressive business men and ranks second in years of service to this community.  He has conducted the City Meat Market for the past 34 years and prior to ownership assisted his father, the late Charles Ulrich, who conducted the meat market for twenty years, until his interests were purchased by his son, William.

 

Mr. Ulrich was born at Norfolk on March 18, 1880, and when a year and a half old moved with his parents to a homestead taken up by his father on Willow Creek, where he resided until his parents moved to Pierce in 1885.

 

Mr. Ulrich has always been industrious.  As a small boy he served as mail messenger between Pierce and Colbergen, riding a pony and making the trip Tuesdays and Saturdays, receiving $1.19 a trip.  He also worked in the beet fields in 1893 and 1894 when the largest beet field in the word was just east of Pierce.

 

Mr. Ulrich has always been interested in the best interests for the community; has served in various offices of trust; and at the present is a member of the city council and the fair board.

 

Mr. Ulrich has extensive land holdings in various parts of the county.

 

He was married to Miss Ella Goff and they are parents of three children, Mary, a student nurse in Lincoln, and Robert and William, at home.

 

 

MR. AND MRS. FRANK VOECKS

 

Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Voecks, who only recently moved to Creston, Nebraska, with their cons, still call Pierce county “home” as is evidence by a letter received from them, in part follows:  “We saw a notice in the Pierce Leader that anyone who has lived in Pierce county for fifty years or more would be give honor seats at the County Fair this year.  Mr. Voecks and I are wondering whether you would include those who have lived in the county that many years or more or those who still reside in the county?”

 

“Both Mr. Voecks and myself have lived in Pierce county until March 7, 1924, when we moved to Creston, Platte county, Nebr.  I have lived in Pierce county fifty-two years and Mr. Voecks has lived in Pierce county fifty-seven years as we were both born and raised there.

 

“I was born and raised on the old Lambrecht homestead, which is located ten miles west of Pierce.  My father and mother, the late Mr. and Mrs. August Lambrecht moved to the homestead October 31, 1878, my brother, Ernest A. Lambrecht, Co. Commissioner of Pierce county, owns the old homestead now.  Father and mother are buried on the homestead, father gave one acre of it for a cemetery, it being called the “Tawney Cemetery”, there they lived until their deaths and endured all the hardships of those early days, prairie fires, droughts, blizzards, sickness and death.  I lost two brothers in two days of diphtheria.

 

“I well remember the blizzard of 1888.  I was almost six years old then, my oldest sister, now Mrs. Henry Kuhl of Plainview, had gone to school that day and when the storm came father went after her.  They arrived home safely but were all covered with fine snow just like flour.

 

“Mr. Voecks’ father and mother homesteaded nine miles southwest of Pierce in 1876 the late Mr. and Mrs. William Voecks.  The place is now owned by my husband’s brother, Richard Voecks.  There is where Mr. Voecks was born and raised fifty-seven years ago, so we both have lived in Pierce County over fifty years.

 

“Respectfully ours,

“Mrs. Frank C. Voecks, Creston, Nebr.

 

Mr. and Mrs. Voecks, who have helped in the development of Pierce county are justly entitled to a seat of honor at the Pierce County Fair although now removed from our midst.

 

 

FREDERICK WECKER

 

The subject of this sketch, Frederick Wecker, has been a resident of Pierce county for over 60 years, having come here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Wecker when a baby a year and a half old.  He was one of 10 children.  The family homesteaded between Pierce and Hadar and Mr. Wecker attended school on the Ahlman farm.

 

He tells of their first home being just a hole dug in the ground with a sod roof and when the creek raised it would fill with water.  Their second house was a long house built from timbers along the creek.

 

His father while farming also followed his trade of carpentering and when Frederick was a young man was in a position to start him out on a farm of his own near Osmond.  He batched there for two years and on December 23, 1893 was married to Mary Kratochvil.  To this union 10 children were born, 4 of who are living.  They are Mrs. Anna Kumm, Wausa; Mrs. Clara Husak, Stanton; Mrs. Lilian Harris, Plainview and George who lives at home.

 

Mrs. Wecker died on December 2, 1931, and Mr. Wecker and George keep house together and farm 160 acres.  He has lived 43 years on this same farm.

 

Mr. Wecker tells vividly of the grasshopper raids and how for two years they lost all crops due to the grasshoppers.

 

His father, Nicholas Wecker was well-known around Pierce, having been county treasurer for about eight years.