Biographical History of Barton County, Kansas, Part 42

Author:
Publication date: 1912
Publisher: Great Bend, Kan., Great Bend Tribune
Number of Pages: 330


USA > Kansas > Barton County > Biographical History of Barton County, Kansas > Part 42


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Later a central energy system was installed.


In April, 1902, the Rock Telephone Com- pany was organized, and toll lines built con- necting the several towns in which The Lindas Lumber Company was operating lumber yards, for the purpose of placing the different yards in close touch with each other. In 1903 The Great Bend Telephone Company was organized taking over the properties of the Rock Telc- phone Company and the telephone interests of the Grimes company.


During all of this time the telephone in- terests of this section of the state, and espec- ially those in and around Great Bend before the above mentioned consolidation was made, have been in the hands of Dr. H. E. Lindas and under his management the policy of the company has always been one of advancement. The result of the company's efforts are shown in the many up-to-date features of the system that are found in few towns of Great Bend's size. The system as now being operated has all its wires in cables, most of them being un- derground, and the remainder will be there as soon as conditions are such as to make it possible. The exchange is located in one of the most modern buildings in Great Bend at the corner of Lakin and Main streets. Every convenience for the employees of the company have been arranged for in laying out the dif- ferent rooms for the switch board, operating rooms, offices, repair rooms, etc. Great Bend's history as far as the telephone part of it goes is far ahead of the times, but it is the inten- tion, backed by a firm determination on this company's part, to give the people of this sec- tion of the state the best that is possible in telephone communication, in both local and long distance service.


The people have seen this company's inter- csts grow from a private telephone system to its present high state of development and utility. This company has 4,500 subscribers all of whom are enabled at any time to talk with the outside world at a small cost and it must indeed be gratifying to Mr. Lindas, the manager of the company, to know that he has in his charge one of the best telephone sys- tems in this part of the country. Dr. Lindas invites the public to call at the company's of- fices and secure permission and a guide to show them the many intricate details that make up a modern telephone system. This in- vitation is open to the public and those who accept it will find that they owe this company all the support they can possibly give them for keeping their system right up to the minute in this branch of public utilities.


311


BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY


1


Home of William Werhahn, Biography Page 111.


Residence of William Mull, Pawnee Rock Township.


In the write-up of Mr. Mull and family fail- ure was made to mention all the members of the same. Grace May, the latest member of


the family was born March 17, 1912, some time after the first article, on page 118, was in type.


312


BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY


Claflin


T HE city is located on the Missouri Pa- cific Railroad, which was built during the years of 1885-86; the depot was built in 1887 and was cccupied by M. A. Cum- mings as agent who remained as such until his retirement from railroad work a few years ago. The first business building was erected by J. H. Cannon on the site now occupied by the J. A. Watson Co. He carried a small stock of general merchandise and also had a bank in one part of the same building. After a few yers Mr. Cannon sold his interests in the store to the Degens who enlarged the business and then in turn sold to B. J. Meyer & Co., who later sold to Watson & Tampier, Mr. Watson later taking over the interests of Mr. Tampier. From the time the depot was built the busi- ness enterprises were established to fill the needs of the people. The S. H. Chatten Lum- ber Co. soon unloaded a stock off building ma- terial and also coal. Jas. Williamson erected the first hotel in the city, the building now be- ing occupied by the postoffice and the Clarion office. The livery and feed barn was built by E. J. Ingersoll and did a good business under the different managers until the automobile put the horse and buggy out of business. The first line of drugs was placed in a small build- ing on the corner now occupied by the Evans- Mayo Mercantile Company by Dr. F. M. Camp- bell who remained in the business until his re- tirement from active business a few years ago. The Elmore Bros. put in the first stock cf hardware and implements but after a few years the E. R. Moses Mercantile Co. placed a much larger stock and the former company sold out. G. A. Dusenberry at one time run the hardware on what is now the Miller corner. The Farm- ers and Merchants State Bank was organized about 1892 under the management of O. B. Looney who was at that time the cashier of the institutian and remained as such until the


bank changed management. The present building was built expressly for the business. The Citizens State Bank was not organized un- til a few years ago but has built up a good business. The school house for District 80, was erected during the year 1889 and a few years ago an addition was built to it, but it being far too small to meet with the needs it was abandoned and during the year 1911 a new building costing $17,000, was erected which is a valuable asset to the town. In the early days the Methodist and Christian churches were built and during the past few years the German Lutheran and Catholic were erected.


Clatlin has today two as modern stores as any city of its size could ask for, two banks that are substantial, two hardware stores, two hotels that offer the best of accommodations to the traveling public, three lumber yards, five elevators and two mills, also all of the vari- ous other businesses that make up a city of its size.


Among the early settlers who still live in this vicinity are J. S. Dalziel, W. D. Fairbairn, Frank Rcesler and W. L., J. R. and E. O. Jor- dan. These people can tell of some of the early experiences that they had to contend with.


The present city administration is compos- ed of the following gentlemen: Mayor, S. G. Earlenbaugh. Councilmen, W. B. Pickerill, W. C. Schumacher, D. J. Crowe, C. T. Mayo and J. W. Miller; City Treasurer, H. A. Staeber, Po- lice Judge, G. C. Gilstrap.


The first mayor of the town was H. E. Hill, who at that time was connected with W. B. Pickerill in the grain business, and who is now living at Larned, Kansas, and is in the same business there. Those who followed him as mayor of the town are as follows: J. F. Evans, Hez Gibler, C. T. Mayo, W. B. Pickerill, Clin- ton Gibler.


BERT FANCHER


O NE of the important agencies in making Claflin a live town is the Clarion, the newspaper owned and edited by Bert Fancher of that city. The Clarion has had a long career which has never been more pros- perous than it is at present. It fills its field creditably and there are few things of interest in that section of the country that are not duly chronicled by the Clarion. Under the able


position on the Daily Rustler. In 1907 he saw the chance which he had been looking for and bought the Claflin Clarion which he has since owned and edited. He was married in 1900 to Miss Lillie Sanner of Newton and they are the parents of two children, Gladys, 8 years of age and Gerald 6 years of age. Mr. Fancher is an active man in whatever he undertakes and is identified with the Elk, A. O. U. W. and Odd


313


-


-


OF BARTON COUNTY, KANSAS


BERT FANCHER


management of Mr. Fancher it is one of the best small town weeklies in the west and is an agency for good that the town could not get along without. Mr. Fancher is a thorough printer and the paper typographically is neat and well balanced. Mr. Fancher is yet a young man. He is 38 years of age. As a boy he learn- ed the printing trade in the offices at Newton and in 1904 he came to Great Bend to take a


Fellow lodges.He is also postmaster at Claflin and is serving his second term in that position. He is popular in his community and has work- ed and stood for those things which would be of benefit to the section of the state in which he lives. The Clarion will undoubtedly con- tinue to grow and prosper under his able management.


IRA HAMILTON CLARK


C ADIZ, Hamilton County, Ohio, was the the birthplace of Ira Hamilton Clark, of Great Bend, who was born in that town, in 1866. At the age of 11 years he move to Harvey County, Kansas, with his par- ents in 1875. When twenty-one years of age he published the "Independent' at Walton, Kansas. He owned this paper for two years, 1886 and 1887 and then established the "Inde- pendent" at Frederick, Kansas, in 1888. March 1st, 1889, he became a resident of Barton County when he established the "Dispatch" at Hoisington, remaining there as editor and owner of that paper for ten years or until 1899. He has always been one of the promi- nent men of whatever community he may have lived in and in Hoisington he was city clerk for one term, and Republican township com- mitteeman of Homestead township for five years. In 1899 he moved to Great Bend where he bought the Register. In connection with this paper he established the Daily Item in August, 1900. In 1908 he sold his two pa- pers to the Tribune Publishing Co., and re- tired from newspaper work. In 1905 he was president of the Southwest Kansas Republican


Editorial Association and for six years was a member of the Congressional committee of the Seventh district. He served for two terms as member of the Board of Education of Great Bend. He was married June 27, 1889 to Nellie G. DeLong at Walton, Kansas, and they are the parents of seven children, Mary Hazel, now Mrs. Walter Healzer, Bessie Margaret, Ethel Gertrude, Flora Janette, Dwight De- Long, Edna Louise, Elizabeth Lorene. Since retiring from the newspaper profession Mr. Clark has been in the land business and his duties have been such as to prevent his tak- ing as active a part in public affairs as in former years but his interest has never flagg- ed and he may always be found working for those things which will be of benefit to his town and community. Quiet and unassuming he has done much to forward the progress of Barton County. As an editor he was a writer of force and ready and capable of defending and supporting the things he believed in. Barton County has been fortunate in having him as a citizen and that he has many years of usefulness still ahead of him.


314


BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY


THE GREAT BEND TRIBUNE.


I T is with considerable satisfaction that The of Barton County and we hope that in the Tribune presents the Biographical History future the experience gained in arranging this edition may be utilized in the preparation of auxiliary volumes that will be a complete and accurate account of the county, its events of historical interest and of its citizens. No book of this sort can be as complete as its com- pilers would like to make it but as it is the book represents a great deal of detail work and expense.


The Tribune is one of the oldest institu- tions of Barton County, established in 1876, and in the years that have gone by has enjoyed its small share of prosperity and its years of adversity. Through it all the key-note of op- timism and belief in the future of the county as expressed in every issue by its founder, Judge C. P. Townsley, has been preserved and The Tribune of today has seen the county become one of the richest and most substan- tial farming communities in the world and has seen this optimism and belief substantiated.


Elsewhere will be found an account of the founding and growth of the Tribune and the changes in ownership. The present owners and publishers are Will Townsley and War- ern Baker.


Warren Baker was for a number of years superintendent of the city schools of Great Bend and later moved to Eldorado. Since 1909 he has had the business management of the paper. His family consists of his wife and two children, Vernon and Lucile.


Will Townsley is known to practically all the people of the county having been born and raised in Barton County and being raised in newspaper work. He is married. His family consists of his wife and baby daughter, Helen.


The standing of The Tribune is well de- scribed by the following article from "Retail Equipment," one of the larger trade journals of the country, which has been investigating trade conditions generally :


"The Tribune, of Great Bend, Kansas, is published every afternoon except Sunday, with a weekly edition on Friday. The tendency as well as the evolution of the modern newspa- per toward a conservation of energy and ef- fort is well exemplified in the career of the


Tribune. The Tribune was founded in 1876. Since then it has incorporated the Great Bend Weekly Register, Great Bend Daily Item, Great Bend Rustler and the Morning News. I do not know what were the character and character- . istics of these defunct newspapers, but it is a universal law that the fittest survive, and in the survival of the Tribune amid the wreck of its contemporaries, we have really an ex- cellent evening newspaper, edited by Mr. Will Townsley, one which covers the local field fully; that goes into the homes in Great Bend, is read and appreciated. Great Bend has a population of five thousand, and ninety per- cent of these are subscribers and readers of the Tribune. On the six rural routes leading from Great Bend, eighty per cent of the people take the daily Tribune and fifteen per cent the weekly Tribune. In the other parts of Barton County and surrounding counties con- tiguous to Great Bend, the daily only reaches ten per cent of the population, while the week- ly Tribune is taken in by fifty per cent. Of course the discrepancy is due to the diversity of rural postal delivery facilities. The Weekly is disappearing on the trail of the rural free delivery, and as a consequence of it Mr. War- ren Baker, the business manager of the Tri- bune, informs me that the combined circula- tion of all the papers in the territory which his papers cover, including one weekly in Great Bend, is less than the combined circu- lation of the daily and weekly Tribune, with rates only one-fifth as much as the combined rates of the other papers. Barton County, I am told, is the greatest wheat county in the world, and its farmers are as a class correspondingly wealthy, cwning their own homes and farms, there being one automobile to every eighteen of population, men, women and children. Great Bend has three departments stores ten grocery and provision stores, four banks with deposits amounting to two million dollars. There are other material indications of wealth and prosperity in abundance in Great Bend."


Press Work.


In order to facilitate the issuing of this volume the press work has been done by Gunn & Wattson.


315


OF BARTON COUNTY, KANSAS


INDEX


C


Adams, Williams Varner. 172


Albert


79


Albion Township 56


Alefs, Jacob .305


Amend Brothers


67


Amerine, Fred B


100


Andress, Charles 251, 252


Arkansas Valley Telephone Co. 310


B


Baldwin, Lutellus 251


Bales, John Frank


84


Banta, Judge D. A. 286, 287


Banta, Dan Worth. 256


Baptist Church, Great Bend. 235


Barbecue 60


Barton County Flour Mill 288


Batchman, Albert Fred. 186


Claflin


312


Button, Chas. E 142


169


Bauer, John C. 120


Cole, Elrick C. .


60, 75


Beaver Township 55


Belt, Francis 161


Berscheidt, Johnl 84


Bessler, George Lewis. 173


Bidleman, Robert Arthur. 136


Bird, Daniel Green 105


Birdseye View of Great Bend. 270


Blizard of 1871.


41


Blood Creek Settlers


56


Boese, John


128


Bosse, J. H. D


209-211


Bosse, Milton


210


Both, Julius


106, 107


Bowman, William H. 164


Boughan, Patrick


309


B. P. O. E. 277


Brack, Peter 280


Brack, Jacob B.


81


Brack, Peter C .. 81


Brewer, Thomas Henderson. 159


Brinkman Family 77


Brinkman, J. V ..


77


Brinkman, Mrs. J. V


77


Brinkman, Chas.


78


Brinkman, Louis 78


Brown, Orris Albert 128, 129


Brougher, Ira D.


141


Buckland, Edward Grant. 102


Buffalo Bill 152


Buffalo Township 51


Building Court House.


225


Bunting, W. R. 296


Batchman, Frank N. 303


Byers, Hugh B. .302


Campbell, Henry James. 306


Caraway, Leslie James. .192


Catholic Churches 38, 235


Census of 1872 30


Central Normal College. 230


Chapman, E. L. 279


Chapman, G. L. 65,


278


Christian Church, Great Bend. 235


Christian Church, Pawnee Rock 154


Christian Church, Hoisington 196


Cheyenne, Bottoms 295


Cheyenne Township 56


Citizens State Bank, Ellinwood. 207


Citizens National Bank, Great Bend. 249


Clarence Township 53


Clark, Ira H. 313, 63


Clark, James W.


47


Clements, Archie B.


48


Clevelnd Township.


56


Cole, Thomas Oakley


127


Comanche Township


54


Comfort, Samuel B.


303


Congregational Church .233, 262


Connett, Dr. A. H. 281, 282


Cook, A. 66


Cook, Henry C 94


Cornelius, Roy


202


Coss, John Edward. 84


Coursing Clul


253


Court House Views 213-215


Crane, George W. 297


D


Damm, Louis 301


Dawson, O. W. 75, 76


Deckert, Andrew J. 123, 124, 268


Deckert, Peter J. 171


Denbo, John W. 303


Dewey, Ed. W. 19


Diffenbacher, C. F 300


Dirks, Jacob A. 71


Dirks, J. P.


168


Dodge Family


80


Dodge, E. J. .21-24, 80, 272


Donovan, John 97


Drehle, Henry 111


Dry Creek Stock Farm. 110


Dumkow, Fred 178


Duncan Bottling Works. 285


Dundee Valley Farm .301


Bauer, George


316


BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY


E


Earliest Explorations 7


Elks Building 276


Ellin wood 203-211


Elliott, Mrs. F. E. 132


Ernsting, G. H ..


204


Essmiller, Diedrich


138


Essmliler, Henry


175-176


Essmiller, William


108


Eureka Golden Rule Stock Farm. 193


Eureka Township


53


Everitt, John 99


Everitt, Henry Smith 164, 165


Evers, Otis


190


Evers, John


66


Evers, Boyd


167


Ewing, James R.


174, 175


Ewing, F.


181


F


Fairview Township 55


Fairfield Farm 301


Fancher, Bert .312, 313


Farmers & Merchants State Bank. 156


Fee, William James


125


Fenn, August. 99


Fire Company 260


First Christmas Tree


24


First National Bank


278


First Settlers


240


Fish, Arthur L. 126


Flick, James H. 160, 161


Fort Zarah


17


Fossil, Mr.


274


Frost, Luther


25


Frey, Kate A.


292


Frey, Louis P 292


Fruit, Henry


44


Fugate, James M. 10


G


Gagelman, William 137


Gagelman, Henry .304


Gainsford, Jim .242, 243


Gallon, John P. 185


Geil, Andrew


165, 166


Geil, George Adam 109, 110


German American State Bank. 91


German Lutheran Church, Ellinwood 208


German Lutheran Church, Great Bend .236


Gibson, Jim 151


Gilson, Chris 283


Golden Grain Farm 111


Government Building 275


Grant Township


56


Great Bend 212


Great Bend City Hall 220


Great Bend High School. .231


Great Bend Hotel


Great Bend Ice, Fuel and Storage Co. 293


Great Bend Mills 291


Great l'end Officials. 213-221


Great Bend Town Company 22


Great Bend Township. 52


Greenwood Farm


114


Gruber, Anton 101


Gruber, John 100


Gunn, Charles L. 288


Gunn, Levi 95


Gwinn, Samuel H. 305


H


Harders, George R. 137


Hart, George W. 180


Hartman, Henry A. C. 201


Hartshorn, Lucy Hull. 187


Hartshorn, William W 187


Hedrick, Sevier H. 104


Heizer


78


Heizer Creamery


79


Heizer Diary


262-267


Heizer, D. N.


20, 283, 255-261


158


Hitchcock, Frank


221


Hoge, John Allison


.135


Hoisington


194-202


Hoisington, A. J.


43, 281


Hoisington, Incidents of. .63, 64


Holmes, Clarence E.


72


Holmes, Harry Hoard


176, 177


Homestead Township 55


Hooper, Charles A. 277


Howell, Charles B.


189


290


I


Independent Township 56


Indian Fight 10-14


Inman, Major Henry 12


Inman's Tales 151


Irrigation


38


J


Johnson, Amos 82


Johnson, Chris


114, 115


Johnson, Thomas I 117, 118


Jurgensen, Hans


109


K


Keenan Estate 121


Keenan, Michael James 125, 126


Kerr, W. H. 70


Kidder, Homer H. 14


Klepper, Nicholas W 85


Koopman, Christian


127


Kramer, Frank 47


L


Lady Barton 253


Lakin Township


52


Langford, Abraham L. 104


Leader, Ellinwood


Lewis, John F


206


45, 74


Lewis, William M.


163


Le Roy, Mrs. Katie.


112, 113


Lile, John


.120


Lind Hospital


200, 201


Lippincott, Grant


158, 159


Logan Township


55


Logan, D. R.


304


Lowrey's Island -12


Luse, D. C ...


253


Ludwig, Fred C.


242


.71


Hulme, George H.


Herald


317


OF BARTON COUNTY, KANSAS


M


P


Maher, Samuel 48, 222


Maneth, Ferdnand C. .188, 261


Marker On Santa Fe Trail 151


Otte, Williamn Christ. 105


Mausolf, August 130


Pascce, John West 271, 272


Mausolf, John A.


140


Pascoe, Paul James


183


Maybach, William H.


134


Patent for Great Bend


270


Mayors of Great Bend.


270


Patterson, Mrs. Isabel


141


Pawnee Rock 145-164


148


Merritt-Schwier Creamery Co.


96


Merten, Albert N


81


Merten, Frank


103


Merten, Robert 241


Methodist Church, Great Bend. 234


Methodist Church, Hoisington 197


Mehodist Church, Pawnee Rock. 149


Meyer, August .184


Meyer, Henry 192


Miller, Daniel, Sr 307


Miller, Henry 139


69


Missouri Pacific Shops


197


Mitchell, Tom


88


Monument Day, Pawnee Rock. 155


Morris, T. L.


21, 162


Morrison, John Tullis .307


Morrison Hotel


71


Moses, Amasa C. and Family 86-93


Moses Brothers


87


Moses Brothers' Mill.


90


Moses, Arthur H.


91


Moses, Cassius M.


.92, 240


Moses, C. L.


88


Moses, E. W.


.88, 89, 91


Moses, Lincoln E.


93


Moses, Seward E.


92


Moses, Will 91


Moses Homestead


92


Moses, George


27, 48


Moses, E. R., Jr .248


Moses, E. R., Sr. 247, 248


Moses, E. R. Mercantile Co., Great Bend ... 245


Moses, E. R. Mer. Co., Hoisington .... 198, 246 Mount Aubrey 12


Mull, William 118


Murphy, Patrick Emmet


306


McDonald, James Thomas 182


McDougal, William S 155


McFarren, S. J.


.61,


62


McGill, Tobias


97


Mckinney, Frank Gillmore. .186


McMullen, John 206


N


Newcombe, Calvin Quincy 309


New Jerusalem Church. 149


Newspapers 60


New Years Reception 238, 239


Nimocks, George W. 300


Nuttleman, Fred 289


0


Odd Fellows Cake .237


Officials of Barton County. 35


O-Ton-Sone-Var


152


R


Railroad Y. M. C. A. .199, 200


Rock Hotel .161


Rogers, William H. 93, 94


Ruhe Bros


177


Russell, W. H. 137


S


Santa Fe Depot 267


Santa Fe Trail


3


Schaeffer, Henry 188


Schmidt, Paul 85


Schneck Home 170


Schneck, Paul Francis 169


Schneck, Melissa Ann


169


Schneider, Carl 268


83


Schcentral, 297-299


Schools of Barton County


231


Schuelke, Frederick


93


Schultz Christian S. 119


Schultz, Henry


123


Schultz, Samuel C. 122


Schwier, Henry 102


Seeley, George L. .293


Seibert, Andrew .301


Selle, Gustav 179


Shafer, Max C.


301


Shaffer, Frank P. 101


Shaw, Jim 88


Shaw, Dr. Simeon .289


Sheriffs, First Seven.


217


Sheriffs of Barton County.


217


Smith, Edward L. .


206


Smith, Newton Philip 159,


160


Soderstrom, J. W.


172, 173


Sod House, Last in County


259


South Bend Township


54


Southern Hotel 269


Sowards, Marion F 294


Sowards, W. W.


44


Spaniol, Francis


116


54


Peoples State Bank, Ellinwood. 207, 208


Peoples State Bank, Hoisington. 198, 199


Plankenhorn, Louis 133, 134


Pleasant Dale 297-299


Political History 58


Post Office, Great Bend . 274, 275


Powell, Alfred L.


82


Presbyterian Church, Great Bend.


235


Q


Quivera


7


Pawnee Rock Park.


Pawnee Rock State Bank.


157


Pawnee Rock Township.


Mecklem, L G.


68


Mennonite Colony


50


Olmitz 79


Otte, William 166, 167


Schneider, Joseph


Miller, Jake


318


BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY


Sportsmen's Association 271


W


Stone, T. L .. 269


Street Scene, Great Bend. 223


Walnut Creek Mill. 224


St. John's Episcopal Church 233


St. Mary's Academy. 230


St. Rose Hospital. 226-230


T


Warnken, Jost


183


Weathers, Josiah Clinton


131


Weltmer, Don A.


290


Wemmergren, A. A.


221


Werhahn, William


111, 311


Tilton, John F. .243, 244


Wheatland Township


55


Towers, George 56


Townsley, C. P.


61, 308


Township Elections


58, 59


Trauer, Fred


124


Trester, Bert


104


Winget, James Sheldon.


191


Tribune 61, 314


Winstead, T. E.


285


Troillet, Joseph H.


69


Tucker, George Washington.


129, 130


Tucker, John Oliver


.132, 133


Wolf's Mill


205


Woodburn, Gustavus A. 83


93


U


Y


Yeo. Samuel Gibson


83


Union Township, 55


York, Eldridge 136


United Brethren Church. 196


Unruh, Benjamin H .. 72


Z


Unruh, Henry Benjamin. 136


Zieber, Wilson M. 173 ,174


Unruh, Tobias B. 302


Zutavern, Louis


216


53


Walter, Joe 65


Warner, William T


163


Warren, Fred W


24


Tammen, Herman 113


Taylor, Richard 273


Thies, Joseph 143


White, Thomas Henry 178


Williams, Steven J. 164


Willis, P ]


161


Wilson, George P


193


Winstead, W. W


66


Witte, Henry 115


Wolf, Frederick Henry. 116, 117


Tyler, Edwin .37, 42, 95


Typer, Mollie .237


Worden, C. B.


Walnut Creek 11


Walnut Township


#371 77





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