A
Pioneers Tale -
Submitted by: Virginia Doudney
Chastain
BECK-MOORE - Peter
Beck was an early settler of
Lancaster County, Nebraska. He was
born 16 November 1828 in Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania, the son of
Conrad Beck. His family was of
German descent. On the 1st of
January 1850 he married Sarah
Moore, the daughter of John Moore
and Susan Nagle, also of Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania. Sarah Moore
was born 15 September 1824. For a
short time Peter and Sarah resided
in Latrobe, Pennsylvania but moved
to Lancaster in Grant County,
Wisconsin in 1861. In 1869 they
left Wisconsin to homestead in
Nebraska.
The family settled two
miles northeast of the town of
Hickman where Peter took up
farming. Land records indicate
Peter's homestead was in Section
22, Township 8 North, Range 7
East. It consisted of the 80 acres
on the South 1/2, Southeast 1/4 of
the section. The claim was filed
28 November 1969. The certificate
of purchase was dated 8 September
1875 and the patent date was
November 19th 1875. They remained
lifelong residents of the area,
living in town after 1891. Peter
died at home on 5 August 1916
shortly after the death of Sarah
on 15 May 1916. Both are buried in
the northeast corner section of
the Hickman Cemetery. Peter and
Sarah had 9 children.
Submitted by: Marcia Stewart
S. P. BENADOM - Our
subject is a descendant of the
Rev. John Benadom, the revered
founder of the United Brethren
Church. He was a native of
Germany, was quite a learned man,
and took pains to educate all of
his children. He came to the
United States and settled in Ohio,
and there, it is supposed, his son
George, the father of our subject,
was born.
He was reared and educated
in that State and became
prominently identified with the
educational interests of his
native State, being one of the
best mathematicians of his day,
and at the time of his death was
Professor of Mathematics in Mt.
Vernon College, Lancaster, Ohio.
He was also an active businessman,
and at the time of his death in
1834, was a contractor on the Ohio
Canal. His partner made way with
the funds and left his family in
impoverished circumstances.
His wife, whose maiden name
was Hannah Myers, was a native of
Ohio, and spent her last years in
Fairfield, that State, dying in
1838. She was a woman who filled
in every respect the perfect
measure of wife, mother, and
friend. Of her marriage ten
children were born nine of who
grew to maturity.
He of whom we write was
born near Lancaster, Fairfield
Co., Ohio, Nov. 13, 1826, and was
only eight years old when his
father died, and twelve years old
when his mother's death made him
an orphan, and from that time he
has made his own way in the world.
If his father had lived our
subject would doubtless have
received the education that he
craved, but the bright, manly lad
was forced instead to earn his own
bread by working on a farm.
He married in his
eighteenth year, and in 1846,
accompanied by his wife, he
started for the west, taking all
his effects in a wagon drawn by a
blind horse, having in his pocket
but $52, all the cash that he
owned. He located in Jones County,
Iowa, and was one of the pioneers
there, from that time taking an
active part in developing the
resources of Iowa, and was
prominently connected with the
organization of the State.
He states that at the time he
crossed the Mississippi River he
could count every building in
Davenport. It was some years
before a railway connected Olin,
the town where he located, with
the outside world, and Muscatine,
forty miles distant, was the
nearest market and depot for
supplies.
When he first located there
the country was so sparsely
settled that his patrons came from
fifteen to twenty miles to his
smithy. He continued prosperously
engaged as a blacksmith, having
entered into partnership with
another man when he first located
in Olin, for a number of years. In
1856 he took the contract to carry
the mails from Olin to Davenport,
and was appointed Postmaster by
Buchanan, which office he resigned
in 1862.
He resided in Iowa until
1868, and during that time had
witnessed the development of Jones
County from a wild, uncultivated
country to a well settled, wealthy
county. In the year just mentioned
Mr. Benadom sold out there and
came to Lincoln, to begin life
anew as a pioneer.
He came as far as East
Nebraska City, then the western
terminus of the railway, and
performed the rest of the journey
to Lincoln on a stage. Lincoln was
then but a small hamlet,
consisting mostly of log
buildings, and the greater part of
the surrounding country was wild
prairie land owned by the
Government and State. Elk,
antelopes and deer were plenty and
our subject being a good shot and
fond of hunting, killed a great
many wild animals.
In three nights he killed
twenty-one wolves inside of the
incorporated limits of the city, a
startling illustration of the wild
and unsettled condition of the
country that can scarcely be
credited to-day, twenty years
later, by one who passes through
these broad avenues of commerce
and sees on every hand indications
of wealth and prosperity in the
busy traffic going, in the fine
business buildings, and in the
stately, beautiful dwellings on
every side.
When he first came here Mr.
Benadom commenced dealing in furs,
and for twelve years handled all
the furs sold in Lincoln. In 1869
he entered into the business of
building dams, and in six years
time had constructed thirty-nine
dams in different parts of
Nebraska.
Some years after coming to
Lincoln he bought wild land, which
he improved, and he is now the
owner of 320 acres of
well-improved land in Thayer
County, and also owns other land
there. He erected two blocks in
the city of Carleton, one of which
he still owns, and he has erected
several houses in Lincoln.
Mr. Benadom has been twice
married. Fidelia Burroughs, his
first wife, was born in Vermont,
and died in Iowa in 1866, leaving
eight children--Almina, Emma,
Mary, George W., Alice, Wilfred
and two who died in infancy. The
second marriage of our subject,
which occurred in 1867, was to
Miss Hannah Jones and to them two
children have been born, but they
are now dead.
Mr. Benadom is a man of
sound principles, is trustworthy
as a citizen, and his character in
private life is unassailable. In
politics he is a stanch Democrat,
and at the same time a strong
Prohibitionist. Taken from : Biographical
Album of Lancaster County
Nebraska - Submitted by Phyllis
Jean Bryant
MARTIN - DEAHL - My
ancestors Casper and Elisebeth
Martin were settlers in Lancaster
County, Nebraska in Saltillo
Precinct on Sections 21 and 28,
along with Casper's brother John
and his family. Casper's parents
were Louis and Anna Elizabeth
(Warner) Martin who were born and
married in Hesse-Darmstadt,
Prussia.
Emigration records at the
Staats archive in Darmstadt,
Germany indicate that the family
came from the Ober-Ohmen area. In
1848, they emigrated with their
family to the United States.
Crossing on the Brig Frederica of
Oldenburg, the passenger list
shows the family included Adam and
Anna Martin (Casper's
grandparents), Ludwig and Anna
(his parents), Caspar, and his
siblings Mary, Grete, Johann, and
Gertrude. Casper, born 4 August
1836, would have been 11 years old
at the time.
In America, Casper's family
first resided in Allegheny County,
Maryland but moved north to
Somerset County, Pennsylvania due
to their Union sentiments. Casper
married Elisebeth Deahl 13
September 1857. Elisebeth was the
daughter of Andrew and Matilda
(Schultz) Deahl and granddaughter
of Baulshar Deahl and Adam
Schultz. She was born 12 January
1837 in Allegheny County,
Maryland. Her father's family had
come to America in 1834 from the
Frankfurt area near
Hesse-Darmstadt.
Soon after they married, Casper
and Elisebeth move to Somerset
County, Pennsylvania and farmed
there until 1864. They located
then to Macoupin County, Illinois,
buying a farm with Casper's
brother John. In the winter of
1879-1880, Casper visited Nebraska
and persuaded his brother to join
him in moving there. In the spring
of 1880, Casper and John brought
their families and purchased land
in Lancaster County.
The Chapman Brothers 1888
"Portrait and Biographical Album
of Lancaster County, Nebraska"
described Casper's home as "a
handsome residence, surrounded by
beautiful grounds, with many shade
and ornamental trees, fine groves
and orchards, comprising 130 apple
trees, mulberries, cherries, and
plums; choice grapes and other
fruits..."
Casper was a member of the
Masonic Lodge. In Illinois, he was
Master of the Shipman Lodge for
five years and a delegate to the
Grand Lodge of Illinois at Chicago
from 1875-1879. In Nebraska, he
belonged to Lincoln, Nebraska
Lodge #19. He also belonged to the
Knights of Pythias Lodge in
Hickman, Nebraska and the Knights
of Honor Lodge #126 in Shipman,
Illinois.
He was a member of the
Democratic party and the couple
were charter members of the
Lutheran Church in Roca, Nebraska.
Casper and Elisebeth's children
were Howard L. Martin and Estella
(Mrs. James) Beck. They also had
four other children who died in
infancy.
Casper died at his home a
mile north of Hickman on 29 March
1908. After his death, Elisebeth
lived with her son. Elisebeth died
at the home of her daughter near
Newport, Nebraska several years
later on 10 November 1912. Both
are buried at the Roca Cemetery.
Casper's brother John married
Catherine Deahl (a sister of
Elisebeth) on 23 October 1863 in
Keyser, Maryland.
John and Catherine had 12
children, nine of which survived:
Matilda Elizabeth (Mrs. George
Louis) Emmerich, Sarah Ann Martin,
John Ernest Martin, Clare Mabel
(Mrs. Herbert Martin) Hanson, Mary
Estella Martin, Charles Elmer
Martin, Nellie Viola (Mrs. Henry)
Wissel, Maude Catherine Martin,
and Hilda Pearl (Mrs. Levi)
Weibel.
Several of Catherine and
Elisebeth's brothers settled in
Lancaster County also. George W.
Deahl settled in Saltillo in 1886,
buying land from his father for a
dairy farm. George married Hallie
May Mitchell, the daughter of
William and Margaret (Hooper)
Mitchell, on 12 February 1885.
Chauncey Deahl purchased his farm
in Saltillo Precinct in
1885.
He married Flora Bitinger,
daughter of Simeon and Sarah
(Wiland) Bitinger, and they had
two children Allen A. and Winne E.
John A. Deahl and his wife came to
Lancaster County, Nebraska in 1879
with his father's family and soon
bought bought 40 acres of school
land and 40 acres of railroad
land. John's wife was Susan Boger,
the daughter of Peter and Sally
(Peck) Boger. They had four
children: Edwin, Laura, Cora and
Jessie. Submitted by: Marcia
Stewart
MUNK - FETTERLY - SISSON
- WERTZ Abner MUNK and his
wife Mary Ann FETTERLY moved to
Nebraska in about 1868 as the
first recorded land transactions
for him are in 1868. Abner and
Mary were both born in Danube,
Herkimer County, New York where
they were members of pioneer
families of that county.
Seeking new land, they
moved their family to Nebraska
where they settled in the Bennett
area. Mary's aged parents, Jacob
FETTERLY and Margaret SISSON
FETTERLY made the move with them.
Abner was a farmer who quickly
erected a small claim cabin and
got busy working the land. Six of
his seven children made the move
with them.
Twin daughters were born to
them shortly after their arrival
but passed away within a week.
Abner, Mary, her parents and some
of their children are buried in
the Bennett Cemetery.
Abner's son, John Alonzo, wrote of
his life on the prairie in early
Nebraska. He recalled that
they had many Indian visitors
during their early years all of
whom were friendly, but speaks of
those settlers not too far down
the road who lost their lives to
hostile Indians.
He recalls long, cold
blizzards where they sat around
their little fireplace eating
popcorn, and many seasons of
barely making ends meet when they
nearly starved and had no
shoes. Later he became quite
the adventurer and had an
encounter while driving cattle
with the rather infamous Nebraska
rustler, Doc Middleton and his
gang.
Abner and Mary's children
include: George Wesley, John
Alonzo, Purl (male), Harriet,
William, Howard and Carrie.
Harriet passed away prior to the
move to NE. Carrie married John
WERTZ another early pioneer of
this area.
Here is just a bit of supporting
evidence: Abner moved the family
to Nebraska about 1868, according
to land purchases documented in
the Nebraska State Archives.
They show he purchased 80 acres
May 11, 1868. 1870 census - Alas,
this was unreadable....at least
the copy at my LDS center. 1880
census - Stockton, Lancaster Co,
NE: ABNER MUNK, 47 farmer, born
NY, parents born NY. Wife,
Mary 46, born NY.
Children: George 24,
veteran surgeon (veterinarian),
Alonzo 21, William 18, Pearl 17,
Howard 15, Carrie 13. All
children born NY. 1900 census -
Bennett, Lancaster Co, NE: ABNER
MUNK, b. June 1832, 67, born NY,
parents born NY.
Farmer. Wife, Mary, born
Aug. 1833 in NY, age 66, parents
born NY. Has born 8
children, 6 of whom are living.
She is listed as a "carpet
weaver". (could that room
size loom Grandma Velvick had be
hers?) 1910 census - Bennett,
Lancaster Co, NE: ABNER MUNK, 77,
born NY, parents born NY, Mary 76.
Submitted by: Beverly
Zuerlein
BEALL -
GRIM - KOONTZ - SHATTO - WITHROW
George W GRIM, farmer and Justice
of the Peace, was born in OH about
1835 and moved with his parents,
Joseph and Mary GRIM to Sullivan
Co. MO. around 1840. He married
Catherine SHATTO December 18, 1853
in Sullivan Co. MO. Catherine,
daughter of Daniel and Catherine
STITLE SHATTO, was born in OH
about 1836 and arrived in MO
around 1839. George and Catherine
GRIM migrated to Lancaster Co in
about 1864. This date is
based on the birth of their 5th
child Henry born about 1865, he
was their first child born in NE.
George and Catherine had 12
children and later moved to OK
sometime after 1890.
GREER - William T. GREER
was born in Moultrie Co. IL.
Enlisted 1 Nov. 1861 in Co. M 10th
Il. Cavalry. Was medically
discharged 31 May 1862.
Moved to Lancaster Co. in 1865 and
homesteaded near
Hickman.
Two infant sons George W.
and Thomas J. are buried in a
cemetery near Hickman. The
rest of the family move to Saline
Co. near Wilber in the mid
1880s. The family is listed
in 1870 Fed. census Lancaster NE
M593 R830 Pg144 and 1880 Fed.
census Lancaster NE T9 R752
Pg 47.
I have a partial
description of the Homestead
location. William T was my
Grandfather and died before I was
born. I do have other family
information.
Submitted by: Glenn Greer
16426 SE 21st Place Bellevue WA
98008
BROOKS - SYKES
My Great-great grandparents,
John and Elizabeth Brooks were the
first to homestead in Firth. They
came from England, landed in New
York from there, were in Iowa a
very short time and came to
Nebraska in 1869.
Grandfather was in the
Civil War and my uncle John
William Brooks was a drummer boy
in the Civil War. There was a
tribute to him published in the
Nebraska State Journal on February
16, 1909. He served from July 1863
to August 1865.
His sister Augusta Rebecca
married my Great Grandfather
George Sykes on April 18,1871.
They all lived their lives out in
different parts of Nebraska. My
grandfather and grandmother John
and Elizabeth Brooks are buried in
Wyuka Cemetery here in Lincoln. I
am very proud to be a part of both
families. Submitted by: Cynthia
(Sykes) Smetter
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EUGENE F. SULLIVAN
STORY (CLAN BROHILL)
I am the daughter of Eugene and Mary
Laura Meistrell Sullivan. I was born
on Oct 13, 1930 on the family farm
on section 25 Denton Precinct
Lancaster County Nebraska.
I have very little memory of my
grandfather Eugene Francis Sullivan
even though I was 8 years old when
he died in March of 1939. In 1999 I
started to research my ancestors.
This is the Eugene Francis Sullivan
story.
Eugene was born about 1850 according
to his death certificate. Death
certificate listed place of birth as
“County Clark” Ireland. This
obviously should be County Cork.
Place of birth was actually the
village of Lehanebeg on Beara
Peninsula County Cork Ireland. This
fact is probably 100 percent
correct. He came to the United
States in 1859 with his older
brother Mortimer (Murty) and a
younger sister Hanora (Hannah).
Their parents were Eugene and Mary
Sullivan according to the biography
of Eugene in the book “The Portrait
and Biography Album of Lancaster Co.
Nebraska” published in 1888.
Knowing the approximate age of
Eugene, Mortimer and Hanora, I
consulted a genealogist Riobard
O’Dwyer, who wrote a book of
families “Who Were Your Ancestors,
Allihies Parish.” Mr. O’Dwyer felt
that he indeed had the family
history living in Lehanebeg. I
subsequently contacted Father Liam
Comer in the village of Allihies and
obtained the baptism records for
Mortimer and Hanora from St.
Michael’s church in Cahermore.. Mr.
O’Dwyer felt that Eugene’s baptism
had simply not made it into the
church records. There were other
siblings, Jeremiah, Mary and John
but I can find no record of them
beyond their baptisms.
The family story was that Eugene and
Mary Sullivan in Ireland had
children, but then Mary died and
Eugene had remarried and either
before or shortly after the birth of
a child, Eugene had died and the
stepmother had the children leave as
she could not care for them all.
However, since Mortimer was age 18
and surely would have been working,
it would seem that perhaps she sent
them to the US knowing that they
would have a better life. Family
story says that Hanora being only 5,
was placed in a convent orphanage in
Massachusetts and Eugene got a job
at age 9 sweeping floors in a
factory.
The 1860 census of New Bedford
Massachusetts has Mortimer and
Eugene living with Jeremiah and Mary
O’Brien and children. It is my
belief that Mary O’Brien was Mary
Sullivan (clan Brohill), the sister
of the senior Eugene in
Ireland.
Eugene probably went to Houghton Co.
Michigan in 1863. He is believed to
be on the 1870 census living in a
boarding house. By 1870 his brother
Mortimer had married Mary Lowney and
little sister Hanora was living with
them in Houghton Co Michigan.. Later
Hanora married Mark Lowney in
Houghton Co Michigan.
On August 18, 1872 Eugene married
Bridget Sullivan in Fall River
Massachusetts. Bridget was the
daughter of Jeremiah (clan Ukirre)
Sullivan and Catherine Clifford.
Bridget was born in Ballydonegan
(Beara Peninsula) in January 1857
Bridget is listed on the 1870 census
in Houghton Co. Michigan with her
father Jeremiah and Catherine,
although this Catherine may not have
been her mother. Why Eugene and
Bridget went back to Fall River to
marry is unknown, but Bridget’s
father Jeremiah had married Margaret
Hurley there in November 1871 after
the death of Catherine..
Eugene and Bridget did not stay in
Massachusetts long because their
first child Mary Ann was born in
Calumet Michigan on October 7, 1873
and died on March 15, 1875. The next
child Murtagh (Murty) was born on
Oct 29, 1875 also in Calumet.
In July 1877 Eugene brought his
family to Lancaster Co. Nebraska and
purchased 160 acres of land on
section 25 Denton Precinct from the
Burlington and Missouri Railroad.
The other three quarters of this
section were purchased by John R.
Sullivan, Timothy F. Sullivan and
Bridget’s father Jeremiah U.
Sullivan.
After moving to Lancaster Co Ne at
least eight more children were born.
Anna was born July 1878, Timothy Oct
1879, Kathryn Feb 1882, Mary Ellen
April 1885, Eugene July 1887,
Loretta Oct 1889, Bernadine Aug 1892
and Jeremiah June 1894. It is
possible that there was one more
child because the 1888 biography
says that eight children were born
but only five survived. The dead
would have been Mary Ann, Anna and
one other unknown. Many years later,
Timothy married Estella Boland,
Kathryn married John M. Sullivan,
Mary Ellen married Marland Baughman,
Loretta married Francis McCarthy and
Jeremiah married Evelyn Sullivan(?).
Bernadine died at birth.
Eugene and Bridget raised their
family on the NE quarter of section
25-9-5 Denton Precinct. A census of
District #66 school in 1881 shows
that Murty was five years old and so
assume that all the children
received a limited amount of
education. The school building was
built on the western boundary of the
section halfway between the corners.
The land was given by Timothy F.
Sullivan. On June 5th 1905 a parcel
of land was given by Eugene F.
Sullivan to the Catholic Bishop of
Lincoln and a church was erected on
the eastern boundary of the section.
This church was known as the
Sullivan Settlement Church and
services including baptisms and
marriages were held there. After
Denton grew into a village, the
church known as Sullivan Settlement
church was disbanded and the
Sullivan’s started attending St.
Mary’s church in Denton. The church
on the Sullivan land was moved
across the road and was used as hay
storage and at some point the hay
caught fire and the church building
was destroyed. The district # 66
school operated until the 1950’s.
The last child was Jeremiah who was
born June 25, 1894. Julia Hanley
Sullivan was the midwife who
attended the birth. After the birth
Bridget was left alone to rest, but
unknown was the fact that the
umbilical cord had been cut wrong
and Bridget died from hemorrhage.
Burial was in Calvary Cemetery in
Lincoln. At this time the oldest
child, Murty was 18 years old. To
care for the family, Anna, the
daughter of Murty and Mary Lowney
Sullivan moved into the home to help
Eugene with his large family.
It is not known if Eugene had mental
and drinking problems before
Bridget’s death but a May 31, 1899
article in the Lincoln Evening News
gives an account of an episode. A
March 1, 1906 article says Eugene
had been committed again to the
asylum for the fourth time. The
first article has a statement from
his brother Murty saying that Eugene
had been injured in a blast. Would
assume this was while he worked in
the copper mines in Houghton Co
Michigan. Eugene is listed as in the
asylum on the 1900 census Yankee
Hill Precinct.
Evidently Eugene had a profitable
farm as on March 12, 1892, he and
his brother Murty purchased the N
1/2 of section #30 of Yankee Hill
Precinct. On Oct 20, 1910, Eugene
sold his son Murty J. Sullivan one
half of his share and the other half
went to son Timothy who was living
in Spokane Washington at that time.
Timothy then sold his acres to his
brother Murty J.
On May 12, 1914, Eugene S. Sullivan,
the son, married Mary Laura
Meistrell in St. Mary’s church in
Denton and they moved to the farm
that had been in the family since
1877. Evidently the senior Eugene
moved to Lincoln at this time and
lived with his brother Murty, and
children Anna and Margaret. The 1920
census of Lincoln Ne shows Murty and
Eugene at 2103 S. 13th street with
Murty’s daughters Anna and
Margaret.
Eugene F. Sullivan died March 11,
1939 while living at 1520 Van Dorn
Street of a sudden heart attack.
Information was given by his son
Eugene. I believe information given
on the mother is incorrect.
Born in Ireland in 1850 and dying in
Lincoln Ne. in 1939 was quite an
achievement. From all accounts I
have read about copper mining on the
Beara Peninsula, I can only assume
that he was working in the mines
when he left for the US at age nine.
Beara is a beautiful land, with a
temperate climate and it must have
been a shock to be in Michigan where
they have about 200 inches of snow
each winter. Houghton Co Michigan is
adjacent to Lake Superior and must
have seemed somewhat like the Beara
that they had left. I can only
assume what they must have felt as
they came to Lancaster Co. Nebraska.
The prospect of owning land after
being paid so little for such
dangerous work must have been the
powerful drive that brought them
here.
Teresa Sullivan
September 2006
I have sources for the great
majority of facts presented above.
Will gladly share these sources with
any interested parties.
Dsull88075@aol.com
JEREMIAH
U. SULLIVAN
I am Teresa Sullivan,
granddaughter of Eugene Francis
and Bridget Sullivan Sullivan.
Bridget’s father was Jeremiah
U. Sullivan and this is his
story.
Jeremiah was born in 1828 in Coom,
a little village on Beara
Peninsula, Co. Cork Ireland. His
parents were Jeremiah Sullivan and
Margaret Harrington. This branch
of Sullivan’s was of the clan
“Ukirre”. When I started
researching, I wondered about the
significance of the initial “U” in
Jeremiah’s name. I now believe
that it comes from the clan
Ukirre.
Jeremiah was baptized on April 17,
1828 and had a brother Daniel born
in April 1826 and a brother
Cornelius born in December 1833. I
have not researched these two
brothers. I know nothing of
Jeremiah’s early years, but assume
that he worked in the copper mines
in the vicinity of Allihies
Ireland. The 1870 census of
Houghton Co. Michigan says that he
was a miner and it is known that
the Michigan mines only employed
experienced miners.
On August 26, 1854 in St.
Michael’s church in Allihies,
Ireland, he married Catherine
Clifford “vel” Bryan. This
marriage record indicates that she
had the surname of Clifford at one
time and also the surname Bryan.
She was probably married once
before her marriage to Jeremiah.
It is known that his wife
Catherine O’Brien died on July 9,
1871 at the Atlantic Mine in
Houghton Co Michigan. She is
buried in Forest Hills Cemetery
and her death is recorded in St.
Ignatius Church records.
The story passed down by the
family said that Bridget’s mother
died in Ireland before Jeremiah
and Bridget came to the US. My
feeling is that Jeremiah and
Catherine Clifford Sullivan and
Bridget came to the US together in
1862. The date is from Jeremiah’s
land contract dated July 11, 1877
for land purchased in Lancaster
Co. Nebraska. Whether Jeremiah
came directly to Michigan is not
known, but a lot of Beara families
immigrated first to Fall River and
New Bedford, Ma. Jeremiah’s intent
to naturalize was signed in
Houghton Co Michigan on Oct 4,
1867. This record is with the
Lancaster Co. records. It is not
known if Jeremiah and Catherine
Clifford had any children other
than Bridget.
After Catherine’s death on July 9,
1871, Jeremiah lost no time before
remarrying.
He married Margaret Hurley on Nov
12, 1871 in Fall River, Ma. A
daughter, Mary, was born there on
May 15, 1873 and Margaret Hurley
Sullivan died three days later of
“confinement”. Mary later married
in Lancaster County to William
Rooney and the marriage license
says that Mary’s mother was Kate
Foley. I have no idea why Mary
thought her mother was Kate Foley
instead of Margaret Hurley.
After Margaret’s death, Jeremiah
again lost no time in marrying. On
Oct 14, 1873 in Fall River, he
married Julia Hanley Sullivan.
Julia had previously been married
to a Cornelius Sullivan in
Ireland. He had died from miner’s
consumption leaving Julia with two
small daughters, Mary and
Margaret. Julia was from Reentrisk
on the Beara Peninsula, her
parents being Patrick Hanley and
Mary Sullivan (clan Uohni).
Jeremiah and Julia did not stay in
Massachusetts long because their
first child Margaret was born July
25, 1874 in Houghton co. Michigan.
Can not find any more records of
children born before the couple
came to Lancaster co. Ne on July
11, 1877.
On July 11, 1877 Jeremiah U.
Sullivan (his mark) signed for the
purchase of 160 acres of land on
the NW quarter of section 25 of
Denton Precinct from the
Burlington and Missouri River
Railroad. The contract says that
he was from Castletown Ireland and
had been in the US for 15 years
and had just arrived from Red
Jacket, Michigan. (This was the
old name for Calumet, Michigan.)
It is believed that Julia Hanley
Sullivan had come to the US
shortly after the death of her
husband, Cornelius, with her
sister Margaret Hanley and Julia’s
daughter Mary and Margaret’s son
Tim. It is unknown when Julia’s
daughter Margaret came to the US
but the 1880 school census of
school district #66 lists Julia’s
daughter Mary and Maggie at age 13
and 11 respectively and Jeremiah
and Julia’s daughters Mary and
Maggie at age 7 and 6. The 1881
census of that district also
includes Tim Hanley at age (it
appears) 8.
Four more children are known to be
born to this couple in Lancaster
Co. According to the 1900 census
they were: Lizzie born Sept 1879,
Julia born May 1882, Katie born
June 1884, and Ella born May 1887.
It is possible there were others
also. Julia’s daughters, Mary and
Margaret married John Cody and
Robert Walker respectively.
Jeremiah and Julia’s children
married: Margaret to John Quinn,
Lizzie to Marcus Amen, Julia to
Alphonus Mauel, Katie to Williams
Smith and Ella to Arthur DeShayes.
Jeremiah lived a long life dying
on December 5, 1915. He would have
been 87 years old. His probate
record is very interesting. Julia
lived on for several years dying
on March19, 1918. Both are buried
in Calvary Cemetery in Lincoln Ne.
Teresa Sullivan Sept 2006
Dsull88075@aol.com
I have documented sources for most
of the above. Will gladly share
with anyone interested in this
family.
Mary TIPTON(?) GRIM
WITHROW
Twice widowed mother of George and
several of her other children also
resided in Lancaster Co.
Francis KOONTZ,
stone cutter, was born about 1840
in France. He married Julia Ann
BEALL about 1865. Julia was born
in IA about 1838. She was the
eldest of 9 children. Frank and
Julia KOONTZ moved to Lancaster
Co. in 1869/70 from
IL.
Julia's parents: Robert
and Caroline WITHROW(?) BEALL
were neighbors of the KOONTZ'S
according to the 1870 census for
Lancaster Co. NE. The BEALL family
migrated through Sullivan Co. MO
as well. Robert was a farmer by
trade. He was born in IN in
about 1812. Caroline was born in
OH about 1815. Clemenz KOONTZ, s/o
Frank, was born in 1869. He
married Malissa Ann GRIM, d/o
George, in 1891 at Lancaster Co.
NE. Malissa was born in 1870 at
Hickman, NE. Submitted by: David
Lewis
This is a copy of the
obituary that appeared in the
Plattsmouth Journal, Jan. 19,
1920 and reprinted in the Eagle
Beacon.
George A. MAYER, father of
Mrs. Henry Wetenkamp, died at his
home in Lincoln Dec. 22, 1919. Mr.
Mayer was one of Nebraska's
pioneer settlers. In last Sunday's
Star appears an interesting
article too lengthy for
reproduction here, which tells of
his coming with his wife and
eldest son to Nebraska in 1850,
traveling over the unbroken
prairies of Wisconsin, Iowa and
Nebraska, in a covered wagon drawn
by two yoke of oxen and two
cows.
After six weeks of arduous
traveling they stopped at
Plattsmouth, where they farmed
for three years. Then Mr.
Mayer bought 160 acres seven miles
east of Lincoln on Holdrege street
for 300, part of which was paid in
gold dust received in exchange for
a yoke of oxen. In 1865 he filed a
homestead claim on 160 just across
the road. In 1868 the first school
of Lancaster county was organized
and held in Mayer's two room log
cabin. The Mayer's were always
friendly with the Indians, who
call Mr. Mayer "Good Buck.". At
one time, when the Mayer children
were without shoes, the father
obtained moccasins from a tribe of
600 Indians who were camped on his
farm in exchange for some onions.
He also traded them a rooster for
his first butcher knife.
Lincoln at that time composed of
only a dozen houses and was known
as Salt Basin. The first train
that ever run into Lincoln was a
great curiosity. The family stood
outside the house and waited
expectantly for the whistle, the
first one they had ever heard. Mr.
Mayer was one of the twenty-three
men who voted in the first
election held in Lancaster county.
The old home farm where a family
of six children was raised, was
sold in 1910 and Mr. Mayer moved
to Lincoln where he spent the
remainder of his life. The funeral
was held Dec. 24th at the home,
2825 I street, in charge of Rev.
R. M. Badger, the remains being
buried at Wyuka.
Mr. Mayer is survived by three
sons and three daughters, H. W.
Mayer of Walton, Nebraska; W. L.
Mayer, of Beatrice; M. J. Mayer of
Denton; Emma B. Mayer, and Mrs. E.
E. Mann, of Lincoln and Mrs. Henry
Wetenkamp, of Eagle. - Eagle
Beacon.
I am descended from Mrs. Elmer
Ellsworth Mann. Her son, Hubert
Reynolds Mann was my
grandfather.
Submitted by Lesley M. Adams
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