This branch of the Austrian Hesch family is descended from Johann Hesch and his wife Marya (Schlinz) Hesch, who came to America from Oberschlagles, Bohemia with three sons: Paul, Mathias, and Anton. +++Johann & Marya settled in Buffalo County, Wisconsin but moved to Pierz, Mn in about 1885. .+++Mathias settled in Waumandee, Wisconsin and moved to Pierz in 1911. +++Anton never married but farmed with his dad in Agram Township, where he died in 1911.+++And Paul, my great grandfather, settled five miles away, in Buckman, Minnesota. He died there in 1900.

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Saturday, July 30, 2011

Louis Hesch's wife Maria

In 1920, in Santa Fe New Mexico, there was an eight year old named Louis Hesch.   His parents were William and Teresita Hesch.  He had two brothers, Ruben and William, who were 9 and 10 years old.
  We're pretty sure William came from the German Hesch family who settled in Bruce, Ontario, Canada.
Eventually, Louis would marry a local woman named Mary Conklin.  


In the fall of 1943, a recruiter hired Louis Hesch to work as a drafter on a secret project in Los Alamos.


His wife Mary would become [for a time] the personal secretary to Enrico Fermi.  The pair [as well as everyone who worked at Los Alamos] were told not to talk to anyone about their work. 
Wait, here's an article Larry found that tells more about her (Louis is on his own):



RECALLING A GENTLE LIFE 
Santa Fe New Mexican, Jan 24, 1997


Maria Hesch called the paintings she did late in her life primitives, likening her work to that of Grandma Moses, because "her paintings tell stories,'' Hesch said in 1985.Telling stories was what Hesch wanted to do.She found it easier to speak through her paintings.


"She could paint the stories with more feeling than she could tell them,'' said her daughter, Bernice Chavez. Hesch, who died in 1994 at the age of 85, spent most of her life in Santa Fe, with the exception of a several years during World War II. 
Her narrative folk paintings speak of her childhood, about the history of Santa Fe that she lived, about places and events very dear to her heart. Most of the paintings were produced in the '80s, and spoke of a Santa Fe that she saw quickly changing.
Hesch's primitives cover the spectrum of seasons, from the fall harvest in Velarde to the Baile de los Cascarones at Easter time. They depict annual events such as decorations day at the cemeteries to food preparation for fiestas.
Taken as a whole, the series of 30 paintings illustrates Hispanic life and customs in the earlier part of this century in Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico. An exhibition of 20 of Hesch's narrative folk paintings opens with a reception from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 26, at the Museum of International Folk Art's Hispanic Heritage Wing.
A book based on Maria's paintings...available on Amazon.
Accompanying the paintings are short narratives written by Hesch.....'Spring Housecleaning' is a painting set inside the patio of Hesch's grandfather's house, which once stood on San Francisco Street near today's Vanessie restaurant. There was nothing between her grandfather's house and the Guadalupe Church across the Santa Fe River except her grandfather's alfalfa fields.In the painting are various people performing what was once an annual spring activity involving entire families and some hired help.Under the porch is a woman washing windows. Another woman washes the lace curtains and dries them on a stretcher so they won't have to be ironed. A boy beats on the carpets that are hung on the clothesline.
Hesch's sister, Josephine, is shown carrying water from the acequia.The mattresses are outside being aired, and little children crawl inside them to pull the wool out to be washed.
"Oh, they used to throw everything out and clean it furniture and everything!'' Hesch said in a 1985 interview. Hesch even included herself in the painting.
"I'm that little girl there playing in the ditch,'' she said. "I was the youngest and that's all I was good for!''.....Halford, who is a Santa Fe santera, said she and Hesch spent many hours together at Spanish Market selling their art. Over the years, the two became close friends.  
Hesch didn't begin to paint, however, until the 1950s when her children were almost grown. Her artistic outlet until that time had been primarily her embroidery and colcha work. Colcha is a traditional decorative stitchery that can be traced back to Spanish colonial altar cloths.  "She taught me how to do colcha,'' Halford said.  "She said to me one time,  "Why don't you make colcha?' And I said, `No, I don't have time to do one other thing'. I was too busy, you know. And she said, `You'll make the time.' Just like that, kind of bossy".  "Then she'd make the arrangements. "You come to my house at this time and I'll show you how to make colcha.' She was always teaching people,'' Halford said. 
Chavez believes that when her mother was a little girl growing up on San Francisco Street, she spent a great deal of time alone, playing make-believe by the irrigation ditch in her grandfather's back yard.
Hesch's father, James Conklin, III, died when Hesch was very young. Her mother, Peregrina Campbell Hesch, was forced to work outside the home to make a living....
...Her architectural drawing skills and her ability to deal with perspective, for example, developed from her service to her country during World War II. 
When the war broke out, Hesch had been married to her longtime sweetheart Louis Hesch for 10 years. They were in the midst of raising two children, Bernice and Victor, and Louis Hesch was working for the state's Highway Department. Louis was sent to Las Cruces to teach engineering and drafting for the war effort.
"Just on a lark, my mom took a class with him in drafting,'' Chavez said. "Then shortly after that, my dad got drafted and was sent to Los Alamos. It ended up that my mother could get a job up there, too, since she had taken this class in drafting.''  
The draftspeople were given disconnected bits and pieces of something much larger and very secret to work on, and after the war, the Hesches found out that they had worked on the casing for the atomic bomb.``When they found out what they were doing, it bothered both of them,'' Chavez said....After the war, the family moved back to Santa Fe. With her children practically grown, Hesch continued teaching herself art through her job at Santa Fe Book and Stationery Company. That was when, as Hesch said in 1985, "I got the nerve to start.''...... One of Hesch's legendary characteristics was her generosity....Chavez said her mother's most productive years were in the 1970s and '80s. By that time, she was in her 60s and 70s and known for her colcha work but she had developed a market for her landscapes...."She had her own following in her primitives,'' said her daughter. In fact, she had a hard time keeping up with the demand for her work...  "I think she was concerned about lost traditions in Santa Fe,'' Halford said. "She did the primitives because she wanted to keep it going, that way of life,'' Chavez said.  "Santa Fe is changing so fast. That was one of her big regrets, that some of the old ways were changing. She wanted to keep Santa Fe alive through her (paintings).  
"When they hang these primitives on the wall, these oldtimers will come to see it. They'll go home to their grandkids and say, `Go see this, because what I'm talking about is up there on the wall.'''


COOL, huh?  

Kelzenberg

Now, Kelzenburg's a name that pops up over and over in Hesch and Morrison Co history, but the Kelzenberg name was even less likely to be included in books than Hesch was, it seems.   The best I can do here (and still get stuff done around the house today) is to post the relevant items I have in my Gen file and let you take it from there, ok?


Let's start with Theodore & Katherina, early Kelzenbergs with the good sense to settle in Buckman:  


See their son Hubert on the census there?  



Birth: Mar. 6, 1870, Germany
Death: Jun. 27, 1958


Services At Buckman For Hubert Kelzenberg


Funeral rites were held at St. Michael's church, Buckman, Monday, June 30th, for Hubert Kelzenberg, 88, who passed away at the St. Cloud hospital at 3:30 p.m., Friday, after a month's illness due to cancer. Officiating at the rites at 11 o'clock, with interment in the Buckman cemetery was Rev. Robert Schulzetenberg.


Pallbearers were two grandson, Alfred and Leon Kelzenberg and four grandnephews, Leander Brausen, Hubert Grundhoefer, Alfred Grundhoefer and Galen Mueller.


He was born in Germany March 6, 1870 and settled at Buckman for 80 years, having resided in St. Cloud the past 8 years. He married Anna Roos at Buckman; she preceded him in death, 1919.


Following are the five sons which survive: Henry, Buckman; Hubert and Gilbert, St. Cloud; Theodore, Minneapolis; and Herman, Columbia, South Carolina.


There are twenty grandchildren.
 I started looking for the family on the various plat maps I have of Buckman township.  Couldn't find them in 1892, so they were probably renting land at first. The 1885 census above has Muellers living on one side and Dehlers living on the other.  Sounds like the area near CB Buckman's land, so west and north of town. Here, tho, is the 1902 Buckman township plat and "T. Kelzenberger" owns 80 acres a mile south and 2 miles east of Buckman.  Trivia: Did you know  that the little square on each acreage was where the house/buildings were located?
One of Hubert's sons, Henry, married Olivia Dehler.  They were the Kelzenberg couple I knew best:
Birth: Apr. 13, 1909
Death: Oct. 11, 1995

Olivia Kelzenberg

Olivia Dehler Kelzenberg, age 86, a resident of Buckman, MN died October 11, 1995 at the St. Cloud Hospital.

Mass of Christian Burial was October 13 at St. Michael's Catholic Church in Buckman with Father Ron Dockendorf officiating. Burial was in the parish cemetery.

Olivia was born in Lastrup, MN on April 13, 1909 to John and Margaret (Zenner) Dehler. She graduated from St. Francis High School in Little Falls, MN in 1919. She was a graduate of the St. Cloud Normal School (college) and taught in District # 17 West of Buckman. Olivia was a great supporter of education while working as a homemaker and mother. Her special intersts were cooking and quilting.

Survivors include her husband, Henry of Buckman; children, Alfred and wife Donna (Sahr) of Shoreview, MN, Norman and wife Barbara (Carli) of Spring Lake Park, MN, Leon and wife Jean (Sitzman) of Watertown; Lou Ann and husband Del Hoppe of White Bear Lake, MN, Dennis and wife Beverly (Hoheisel) of St. Cloud, James and wife Sue (Williamson) of Rochester, MN, Ollie and wife Kim (Doring) of Brooklyn Park, MN, Reuben and wife Sandra (Gross) of Chanhassen, MN; 17 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren; brothers and sisters, Julia Brixius, Sr. Herbert OSB, Armella Otremba, Herbert Dehler, Rita Stumpf and Margaret Tschida. She was preceded in death by her parents; brothers, Alfred, Henry, Edwin, Lawrence and Roman; sisters, Alma and Marie.

Casketbearers were her grandchildren, Rob, Tony, Peter and Debra Kelzenberg, Steve Hoppe and Lynn Jurek.

Olivia's family, kids and sibs, sound like a who's who of Buckman ☺.

The two faces I know for sure are Gibbs and dad, on the right.
I think that's Hubie on the left, and another brother?
Two of Henry's brothers were Hubert (Hubie) and Gilbert (Gibbs), who were dad's friends from home when we lived in St Cloud.  Gibbs and his family lived a couple blocks south of us, and I think Hubie was close too, but I don't know for sure. Anyway, Gibbs was the one who played St Nick and scared the beejeebers out of me when I was 5.  Still traumatized, more than 50 years later.
  

Any other Kelzenberg info we should include?

Monday, July 25, 2011

A tale of two Mischkes and more

A few years ago, if I'd seen this article (from the Princeton Union newspaper), I would have recognized only two of the men, even tho Kelsomberg is a mis-spelling (and so BTW, is Segum). 
"H" was most likely Hubert Kelzenberg (1870-1958), who was married to Anna Roos  (1885-1919), and Frank Mischke is certainly familiar to us as the owner of the hardware store in Buckman.  This Frank had to be the original one who died suddenly 10 years later.    
Edward Seguin M.D. was the Buckman town doctor.  I assume "J.E.Dufort M.D." was a professional friend.  Does anybody recognize "G. Knot"?

I have no idea why men from Buckman were lollygagging in Princeton "for some time" in the spring of 1903, unless they were fishing (?) at "the lake".  
And don't you wonder which doctor was the  "little Doctor"? 


And here, from the Bemidji Daily Pioneer in 1908, is a Mischke who's not familiar.  The setting in Fredrichschafen, Germany was a town Larry and I found lately loosely connected with mom's family, the Jansons, not Heschs.  
Whoever "Captain Mischke" was, it was assumed that readers were aware of him, it looks like.  For sure, the world became aware of the Zeppelin airship. 
(More tidbits that were saved because of a Buckman name searched online.  
THANKS to the normal thankee ☺)

Friday, July 22, 2011

A birthday?

Just so you have enough time, my birthday is this coming Thursday.  I adore semi-sweet chocolate, clean smelling perfume and mystery novels without blood and gore.  Oh, and greetings in the comments--I LOVE that, too!

Bohemia, depicted as a Rose


 Iustitia  et Pietate [inuen et delineavit],  ca 1677, by Bohuslav Balbinus, Prague 
 
An exquisitely engraved map of Bohemia depicted as a flowering rose.  The copperplate engraving on laid paper portrays the stem of the rose that begins at Vienna and blossoms into a flower with Prague as its center and with Austria, Moravia, Bavaria, Silesia, and Messina on its leaves.  At the head of the map, which is in color; is a crown, an heraldic lion (the arms of the Emperor Leopold I), a distance scale, and a compass.  The numbers seen of the petals of the rose refer to different regions of Bohemia.  The text, in part, at the bottom of the map reads 'The Rose of Bohemia, bloody for all centuries, where more than 80 great battles have been fought'.  The cartographer, Balbinus was a Jesuit scientist devoted to Bohemia.  The map is rated Excellent with no apparent flaws noted and measures approximately ( 10.8" x 15.4"  - 30 x 41.2 cm). 


Feels kinda strange to think our ancestors lived with such strife, and it's even stranger that anyone considered constant bloody battles as NOBLE.
Found at Cartographic Associates, online.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The Pohlkamp family

It looks like a lovely evening out there--nice low evening sun setting beyond the living room windows, and a perky breeze thru the birch trees.  A clear sky, too, for the first time in a week or so.
When I opened the front door a few minutes ago, there were two bunnies sitting on the lawn.  They looked my way, but it was too hot to run.  As tho they thought, "Hell, the human will never come out here anyway--we're sloggy but we're safe".
They were right.  It feels like 114 out there, like the bathroom feels after you took a long HOT shower, and the air is just that thick, too. Eww! So ...how 'bout if I stay in the A/C and write about the Pohlkamps--in particular the bunch I remember from when I lived there.
I heard this week from Julie Pohlkamp, who grew up in Wisconsin but spent some vacations in Buckman with her grandparents, William and  Mary (Mischke) Pohlkamp, and with her Aunt Marie and Uncle Lambert's family, on the farm kitty-corner from Roman and Emily Dehler.


According to Family Search and Find a Grave, Bill's parents were Theodore and Josephine (Wilkomeier) Pohlkamp.  She died in 1943, and he died in 1949. They're buried in Pierz.

 March, 1982

William Theodore Pohlkamp      
                                                     
Pierz - Services for William T. Pohlkamp, 87, Pierz, formerly of Buckman, who died March 22 at Kamnic Apartments in Pierz, will be at 10:30 a.m. Thursday in St. Michael's Catholic Church in Buckman, with the Rev. Richard Heid officiating. Francis and Leo Pohlkamp will serve as lectors. Burial will be in the parish cemetery.

Casket bearers will be Kevin, Mark, Daniel, Meinrad, Terry and Nick Pohlkamp.

William Pohlkamp was born Jan. 1, 1895 in Iowa, son of the late Theodore and Josephine Pohlkamp. He married Mary Mischke May 20, 1919 in Buckman. His wife preceded him in death April 10, 1969. He farmed until 1948 in the Buckman area. He also managed the bowling alleys in Buckman; drove the Buckman school bus for many years, and was employed by Tri-City Construction for four years.

Survivors include his sons, Francis of Middleton, Wis., Leroy of Elk River, and Maurice of Janesville, Wis.; and sister, Mrs. Cecelia Heurung of Little Falls.

Two sons, Clair and Lambert, preceded him in death.

Mary and Bill Pohlkamp c 1968


Julie's grandma Mary was Frank Mischke's sister.   Frank owned the Hardware Store in Buckman, and happened to be on the 1925 baseball team photo front row with his brother-in-law Bill Pohlkamp, remember?  

Bill and Mary had five sons, mentioned above.  The only one I knew in the early 70s was Lambert and his wife Marie (Stangl) Pohlkamp. 



July, 1978
Lambert Pohlkamp

Mr. Lambert Pohlkamp, 55, of Route 2 Pierz, died Wednesday at St. Gabriel's Hospital.

Funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at St. Michael's Church in Buckman with Rev. Alfred Stangl and Rev. Richard Heid officiating. Burial will be in the parish cemetery.

Mr. Pohlkamp was born Nov. 17, 1922 in Buckman, the son of William and the late Mary Pohlkamp. He married Marie Stangl Sept. 1, 1948 in Pierz and they farmed all their lives in Buckman Township. Mr. Pohlkamp was a member of St. Michael's Society.

Survivors include his father, William Pohlkamp; his wife, Marie; six sons, Meinrad, Leo, Nicholas, William and Joseph, at home; Terence, of St. Paul; nine daughters, Mrs. Emmanuel Bridget Marquez of Hawaii; Jean, Margery, Lillian, Colette, Carol, Cheryl, Michelle and Paula, at home; three brothers, Francis of Middleton, Wisc.; Leroy of Elk River; Maurice of Jamesville, Wisc.; and one grandchild.

Mr. Pohlkamp was preceded in death by one brother, Clair, in 1957.

Pallbearers will be: Meinrad, Terence, Leo, Nicholas, William and Joseph Pohlkamp. Honorary bearers will be Ray Herold Sr., Tony Sitzman, Joe Lanners, Ray Kahl, Roman Dehler and Ted Funk.

 


Julie sent other photos, but I'd like to get names for the people shown before I post them.  If you're interested, check back here, ok?


YAY, JULIE!!


Two days later--Sue emailed to say that her grandpa Joe's sister Catherine Suess married Frank Pohlkamp.  They had seven kids (4 boys and 3 girls) and farmed in Buckman township, tho she's not sure where.  According to FamilySearch, Frank was Bill's brother.

Oh, and speaking of Bill the Buckman ball player in that 1925 photo--he had a chance to play for the St Louis Browns, but was needed more on the farm.  Just as well--they weren't the winningest team ever...






Now for some of the pics Julie sent:
(I think EVERY farm house had that same framed copy of the Last Supper on the dining room wall, right?)
Nope, I don't know any names here--but I think they're all Pohlkamp cousins.  If you recognize any faces, let me know, ok?

Same here, but I expect the older couple is Bill and Mary.  Anybody know for sure?

Monday, July 18, 2011

Another great vintage map...

...which answers the burning question, "Where exactly did Buckman get electricity from in 1940?"
Oh man! Larry found a huge bunch of maps on the U.S. National Archives website.  I adore maps, ya know?  The specific map he directed me to was (no surprise) Morrison County, and it's gorgeous. 

Here's the map of Little Falls from that set, with sponsoring business cards around the edges.  It's a  glimpse of business in the county seat before WWII.  (Just think, dad would have been 27 that year, mom was 25 and working in the cities. They hadn't met yet.  All my grandparents were alive in 1940, and Buckman was a boom town, on it's way UP.  Pierz was still fighting over schools, and the second rectory dynamiting was 12 years in the future.  Prohibition was only a memory by 1940, and Math Hesch was busy writing the Buckman News for the Little Falls and Pierz papers.  Wow).
   Here's the map used by the census takers in 1940, tho no homes are marked, just roads and physical features.  Still, those features seem different from what we knew when we were kids.  Just look at all the school houses scattered every few miles...and how much land was swampy.  Check the Mississippi below Little Falls to see a mill that was still working on water power, in 1940.  Look where the railroads ran, and what river/stream drained which lake.  Can you find the Weiling or the Green Schoolhouse, or Vater, or Center Valley?  They were all going concerns then.

THIS is the map I want to draw your attention to, tho.  The two halves don't align like above.  It's ok, cuz I'm trying to highlight where Buckman's power came from, and that evidently, other towns didn't have it yet.  The little T's with a curved line between 'em indicated High Lines...probably a NEW term then, huh?  
There was a family story that mom's dad, Anton Janson, experimented early with electricity to power jobs around the farm (like silo filling, etc).  I was  skeptical, thinking WHY would MP&L run lines THERE (see the little red circle?), rather than other areas first?  But look!  They did, and the story has WAY more veracity now.
Thanks again, Larry ☺x3

Oh YAY! More Center Valley info:

Whenever someone leaves a comment on any post on the blog, Larry and I get an email about it.  
Today, a woman who lives near Center Valley left TWO comments on THIS POST about the trip Sue and I took a couple summers ago to find the old store site.  I love that the info isn't being lost--it's here, online, thanks to people like her.


THANKS CHARLOTTE! ☺

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

How come they chose *Saskatchewan?

I found this photo on a website called  Shorpy, "The 100-year-old photo blog"    (A vintage photography blog featuring thousands of high-definition images from the 1850s to 1950s). 
If you click to enlarge, you'll be able to read all the info, probably the most compelling part of which was "FREE! 160 acres of Western Canada Farm lands".  No, we don't know that Joe Sand saw this particular vehicle, but I assume Canada has been advertising in Minnesota 
for more than the last 50 years.
I'm curious how this thing was used--at fairs maybe, or in parades, or did they just drive it around?
................................
*Sorry, the post title refers to Grandma's brother 
Joe Sand and his wife Antonia Poser, 
who left for Canada soon after they were married in 1908.  

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Godfrey brothers from the Orphan Trains



 
George Godfrey, born 1904 in New York City.
He was 16 here.

Henry Godfrey,
 born in 1906 in New York City.
He was 14.


This week, Larry found a stunning website called Orphan Train Riders of New York (Midwest).  It's children from New York orphanages who were adopted by families in Minnesota mostly.  The kids are listed alphabetically, but of course they're not ALL there.  I found only one Hesch adoption listed:

Thomas Grey (birth name)  Tommy Hesch (foster/adoptive name)
 NYFH Rider to Little Falls, MN

...but I know dad had two adopted brothers whose birth names were George and Henry Godfrey.  On the 'Riders' pages, I found a Godfrey, just not ours.


 George Godfrey with baby Mike,
c 1914.
Richard Henry Godfrey (birth name)
1878 CAS Rider to St Charles, MN




It seems almost as tho kids were distributed like candy at a parade, but the orphanages in NY did try to keep track of them.  The idea was to give abandoned kids a chance, which they sure didn't have in the crowded NY orphanages.  I think most of the kids were better off in Minnesota than destitute in NYC. I hope most of them felt that way, too.
From census records we know that George stayed with the family till he was at least 26, but Henry left as soon as he could.  We have no idea what happened to either of them, or if they used the name Hesch. I really hope their lives were good. 

Thursday, July 7, 2011

How much history do we need?

Oh, dear, sometimes I find a good quote online and do a quick screen-capture, thinking I'll use it right away and REMEMBER where I found it.  Well, duh.  My memory is iffy in the best circumstances, but if something sits in my files for weeks, it's a total provenance toss-up.
This, for instance, I marked "Vol 1, Creameries"....(probably from that History of Farming in Minnesota book Larry found).  Anyway, it explains a lot:




Remember the cheese factory east of Rice that dad used to point out?  It was at the top of a rise, and there were two very tall pines in the yard.  There's a house there now, and no pines. It's too bad that so much history just dissolved, ya know?  It was there in the background of mom and dad's lives, a landmark at least and a place to buy cheese at best...but whoever built it saw it as a needed industry and a good way to make a living in the middle of all those farms.  
On the other hand, I follow something called The History Blog online, and it seems like there are thousands of "incredibly important" ruins all over the world.  It makes me wonder if EVERY SINGLE ONE really needs preserving?   How much more do we honestly need to know about medieval London or Rome...or, ya know, rural Rice?  
No answers here...I remember the Cheese Factory Corner and just hope that someone else does, too.  That'd be enough, I suppose...

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Heschs and Quilts


I don't know that any Hesch women were really into quilt-making.  Gramma made a few, but it was never an art form for her--it was practical, and a good way to use scraps of fabric.


Heschs did, however, have the good sense to marry quilters--like dad's Uncle John who married Aunt Ket, not to mention Ket's son Johnny Boy who married Alice Jansen.  How do we know that?


Well! Larry found some interesting family history in a book about quilting in Minnesota.  This is info we wouldn't know if it wasn't for quilting and LARRY ☺!



Who was that man?

For years, I Thought I knew who all three of these people were.  The photo was taken in September 1947, the day dad's sister Fronie Hesch married Leo Karasch.  I've always imagined the wedding reception was held at the Karasch farm by the river, where Aunt Fronie and Uncle Leo lived all the years they were married, but it was more likely held at her parents' farm, east of Royalton.  (Maybe someone will let me know).  
The man on the left is my mom's dad, Anton Janson.  He would have been there as a relative by marriage.  
I thought the man in the middle might have been Anton's brother Wendelin, or maybe Sebastian, but my Janson relatives don't think so. 
Might he have been Leo's relative?  Mike Karasch (Leo's dad) had died the summer before, in 1946, so it's not him, either.


Any educated guesses?

Saturday, July 2, 2011

A Curious Buckman Mystery

OK, we've discovered how St Michael's Catholic Church got its name, but I think we've neglected to mention who BUCKMAN was named for:


1892 plat
Just north of the Paul Hesch farm was a large tract of land that was owned by one Clarence B Buckman.  I'm not sure he ever actually lived there.  He wasn't the homesteading type, but he hired people to run cattle and grow crops there.  In the devastating tornado of 1886, his buildings were damaged and an employee died.  I don't know, either, how involved Clarence was in town business.  He wasn't part of village incorporation in 1903, but the place was already called Buckman by then.


Here's his Wikipedia bio:
 Clarence Bennett Buckman, (April 1, 1851 – March 1, 1917) a Representative from Minnesota; born in Doylestown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania; attended the public and normal schools; moved to Minnesota in 1872 and settled in what is now known as Buckman; engaged in agricultural pursuits and in the lumber business; appointed justice of the peace in 1873; member of the Minnesota House of Representatives 1881 – 1883; served in the Minnesota Senate 1887 – 1891 and 1899 – 1903; elected as a Republican to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth congresses (March 4, 1903 – March 3, 1907); unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1906; deputy United States marshal 1912 – 1917; resumed the lumber business in Little Falls, Morrison County, Minnesota; died in Battle Creek, Michigan, March 1, 1917; interment in Oakland Cemetery, Little Falls, Minnesota.
 A person named Buckman from Bucks County implies quite a long family history here in the United States, I assume.  It's interesting that the Dehler family also came from Bucks County, Pennsylvania.  They homesteaded just east of Clarence's land--probably some connection, I'd think.  Oh, and the Buckman Hotel in Little Falls was built by our man Clarence, too.



But all that's a digression--the MYSTERY involves Clarence (on the right) and a man I never heard of before last night:  Hanford L Gordon.  I found these two curious photos on the Minnesota Historical Society's website, photos taken in 1910 by Nelson, in Little Falls.  The two pics are really only remarkable if they're together, ya know?  They had to be friends, since the grouchy-looking, less serious one is matted and signed by both men.  




SO, Larry and I researched Hanford Gordon.  Turns out he was a Civil War Veteran who was back in Minnesota in 1910 for an Old Settlers Reunion, which Clarence probably attended too.  
Here's a bit of that highlighted webpage:



Hanford Lennox Gordon married Miss Sylvia Smith, of Ceres, PA, in February of 1858. Their daughter, Ada, was born in 1859. In the autumn of 1859, they headed west and settled in Clearwater, in Wright County, Minnesota. 
Hanford was a member of a local militia unit known as the Clearwater Guard. The unit was created in case a defense might be needed against the local Indian population. The Clearwater Guard met in a building owned by Lewis Mitchell. When war broke out, 8 of the 54 members enlisted in the First Minnesota. The others seven were George Fuller, Charles Geer, Lewis Geer, Lewis Mitchell, Alex Hyatt, Ellet Perkins and Carrol Clifford.  On May 21, 1861, Hanford Gordon left behind life as a 24 year old husband, father and attorney and took up the life of a soldier. The eight men from Clearwater were kept together and placed in Company D of the First Minnesota Infantry. Hanford was promoted to corporal. 
So, the Gordons lived in Clearwater, Mn before and after the War between the States.  Hanford was a war hero by the time CB met him, then.  They were both state senators, but not at the same time.  Hanford was 15 years older than CB.  Both lived in Minneapolis for a time in the 1880s, too.

Perhaps Hanford Gordon was CB Buckman's lawyer, and they became friends.  If these pics were taken by Nelson, then CB had invited Hanford to visit in Little Falls...OR  

Added August 2013:  Looking thru old Little Falls Herald newspapers that're now online, I'm finding references to a T C Gordon living in LF.  Hanford's son maybe?  That'd explain a lot ☺

Larry found a whole page with pictures of 270 members of the First Minnesota .  

Ahh, look--from Mitchell's 1915  History of Stearns County, Minnesota:



Now we know (more)!
......................
BTW, here's one of those books, "Legends of the Northwest" , a book of poems 
by Hanford Lennox Gordon, digitized by Google.