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.

: : : : : : : : : : : :

Sunday, January 27, 2019

Three sisters

This is so cool: Every once in awhile, I hear from someone who's found new connections, or unknown photos from years ago.  (It's especially fun when I recognize someone I wouldn't have known before we started the blog). And, in a little town like Buckman, almost everybody's related, so they all "pertain".

For instance, I never met these three women (that I know of). Don't they look pleased to be together, and wouldn't you love chatting with them?  They look like they KNOW what was going on in Buckman, too.

No, they're not Heschs, tho they were friends and neighbors: (L to R they are) Caroline Dengel Mueller, Elizabeth Dengel Bolster, and Mary Dengel Stepan.
Mary, on the right, was our faithful corespondent Chris's grandma (Thanks, Chris, and Linda!)  Looks like the 1920s or so.  If you're interested in the family, check here on the Find a Grave website.  We've posted other links and connections here, too--just scroll down to Dengel or Stepan in the left column.

Oh, and here're a couple interesting autobiographical pages about early Buckman from the “anecdotal autobiography” of Lawrence Mueller:

"I was born October 26, 1910.   My father Nick H. Mueller lived in Pierz with my mother, Caroline [Dengel], and Marcus, who was my older brother.  My father was a saloon keeper, something my mother did not appreciate because our living quarters were immediately behind the saloon.  My mother thought that this was not the ideal place to bring up two sons.

With his savings and the money earned from the saloon, my father paid $5000 for a farm of 120 acres one mile south of the village of Buckman.  My mother was not happy until we moved to the farm when I was five years old. My father had been in a partnership with his brother, Peter Mueller, in Royalton before he set up his own business in Pierz.  Brother Marcus (Mark, as he was commonly known) had been born in Royalton in 1908.

The one and only incident I remember from living in Pierz was an accident.  I was climbing on some beer barrels in the storage room when I fell and hit my right eye on the edge of a barrel.  This inflicted a cut, the scar of which is still visible today. I remember being apprehensive about this cut, as I tearfully asked my parents if the eye would have to come out.  They assured me that it would heal.

Our move to the farm:  The trip to the farm was a 7- mile trip, and it was made in two parts, one being my father and brother in a horse-drawn wagon loaded with furniture and household necessities, the other was my mother and me following in a horse-drawn buggy.  Tops and Doll pulled the wagon; Duke pulled our buggy. The only casualty of the trip was our dog Prince, a small tannish-brown terrier who was following our “parade.” Prince was attacked by a large dog and mauled badly, and he had to be destroyed.

Arriving at the Nick H. Mueller farm, the first building was the blacksmith shop which stood at the roadside.  The shop was to become the garage for our Model-T Ford which father purchased a year later. The farmyard was dominated by a large frame house painted yellow.  The house had four bedrooms. One of the first of many improvements to be made on the farm was to paint the buildings. The house was painted white with green trim; the barn and other buildings were painted red with white trim.  The granary was a log granary and was the first of the buildings to be replaced. The next change was the remodeling of the barn, which had huge doors on the east and west sides so that a loaded hay rack on a wagon could be driven through the barn and unloaded into the haymow.

The biggest rebuilding project was the house in 1921.  The two large bedrooms upstairs were made into three bedrooms; closets were added to all bedrooms; the stairway was moved from the middle of the house (making a larger kitchen); an addition was built for the stairways (upstairs and down to the cellar) and for the pantry; and a new entryway was built.

From the farm we could easily see the village of Buckman, the ‘town’ as it was called by all in the area.  About 150 people lived in town; farms surrounded the town, scattered in no special pattern. The country roads were one mile apart, thus dividing the land into sections, each containing 640 acres.  The roads were either north/south or east/west; few were surfaced, and those few were graveled. All other roads were dirt. In a way, the story of my life begins in the fall of 1916, my first school year.

Our family worshiped at St. Michael’s Roman Catholic Church in Buckman.  One Sunday afternoon, after vespers at the church, the parents with school-age children gathered for registration at the school, which was affiliated with the church.  Next to St. Michael’s, the school (a yellow brick building) was the largest building in town, with four large rooms and one smaller room used at times for a library and at other times for one or two high school classes that were taught there.

In Room #1 I met Sister M. Marina O.S.B., who was to be my teacher for the next two years (grades 1 and 2).  When she introduced me to Sister Marina, my mother called Sister’s attention to my mis-shaped right ear, which had always been an embarrassment to me.  Sister put me at ease by remarking that she liked little boys who had crooked ears. Such little boys were much better students; they always paid attention in class and often were smarter than others.  Sister Marina became my friend for life. I cannot ever forget my first teacher, even after my mother had introduced me as her “baby.” My brother Mark, who was two and a half years older than I, had taken his first year of school in Pierz, and went to third grade one room ahead of me in school.  Mark and I were never in the same room in school.

My two years in Room #1 passed uneventfully.  I well remember the cards that introduced us to the alphabet, letter by letter, until we had met them all, A to Z.  A little anecdote or story from the teacher fixed each letter firmly in our minds. In a similar way we learned all the numerals.  Since all students were of German parentage, our classes were taught in German. The transition to English came gradually, and it is not now possible to say in which grade that happened.  Textbooks were in English, except catechism, which was in two languages..."

Looks like grandson needs the computer 😛
See ya later!

No comments:

Post a Comment