USA > Nebraska > Custer County > History of Custer County, Nebraska; a narrative of the past, with special emphasis upon the pioneer period of the county's history, its social, commercial, educational, religous, and civic developement from the early days to the present time > Part 163
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JESSE BRADBURN, who is an enter- prising and careful farmer on section 7, town- ship 34, near Round Valley, Custer county, has practically spent his entire life in this part of the state of Nebraska. He was born at Elton, Custer county, August 1, 1886. His parents, Joseph and Mary (Lawton) Brad-
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RALLY E. HICKENBOTTOM AND FAMILY
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burn, came here in 1884 and bought a home- stead right. They had seven children and five of these survive, namely: Grace, who is the wife of Charles Fresch, a lumberman, of Glenville, Nebraska ; Jesse ; Wilbur, who was born September 4, 1892, lives at home; Ern- est, who is a farmer in Round Valley, married Permelia Ward; and Twila, who is the wife of George Martin, at present a worker in a munitions plant at Utica, New York.
Jesse Bradburn was educated in the coun- try schools in Custer county and the high school at Broken Bow. Farming and stock- raising have engaged his attention ever since.
RALLY E. HICKENBOTTOM. - The reader may well note the name that initiates this paragraph and then read the following story of a thrifty farmer who credits all he is and has to the opportunities of this western country.
Rally E. Hickenbottom was born in Jeffer- son county, Iowa, on the 4th of January, 1864, and is a son of Stephen and Caroline ( Taylor) Hickenbottom, the former of whom was born and reared in Kentucky and the latter of whom was a native of West Virginia. In the home circle of this excellent couple were twelve chil- dren, all of whom are living except three. Those deceased are Mrs. Mary Snyder, Ste- phen and Mrs. Margaret F. Bayles. The sur- viving children are Mrs. Prudence Pfoutz, William T., Mrs. Jane Eastman, Mrs. Sadie Moore, Mrs. Josephine Baker, Mrs. Johanna Jensen. Mrs. Belle Case. Rally E., and Jane. Stephen Hickenbottom was a farmer by voca- tion and he maintained a comfortable home for his family.
Rally E. Hickenbottom lived at home and worked on the farm until he was twenty-one years of age, and in the meanwhile he obtained a good common-school education that has stood him well in hand in later years. When he became of age his father gave him a span of horses, with harness and wagon, and started him out into the world. What became of the harness and wagon is not recorded, but it can safely be said that the team hauled him over the long road that eventually led him to his present home, more than thirty years ago.
In Jefferson county, Jowa, on the 4th of May, 1887, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Hickenbottom to Miss Lora C. Stallman, a daughter of Solomon and Hannah (Her- man) Stallman, of that county, her parents having been Pennsylvania people and both having been faithful members of the Presby-
terian church. Since that day the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hickenbottom has been blessed with seven children: Rally C. married Miss Frances Schreyer and they reside on a farm six miles north of Callaway. They have two children. Rally C. Hickenbottom was assigned to class No. 4 in the selective draft for service in the world war. Mrs. Lydia J. Volenweider lives with her husband on a farm near Oconto, and they have three children. Leslie A., a farmer near Callaway, was registered in the last draft and was assigned to class No. 2. The maiden name of his wife was Annie Lewis. Frederick J., who is associated with his fa- ther in the operations of the home farm, was classified in the first division in the war draft. Mamie D. and Mary C. were twins, and the latter died at the age of eight months. Mamie D. is the wife of Edmond K. Lichtenberger and they reside on a farm near Callaway. Della, who remains at the parental home, is a student in the Callaway high school. The boys of the family are all Republicans in politics and all are doing well in their initial activities in farm enterprse. The married daughters have ex- cellent husbands and are establishing comfort- able and ideal homes.
Mr. Hickenbottom came to Custer county in 1887 and located on Spring creek, where he rented land during the first year of his resi- dence in the county. He then purchased 160 acres on the Tallin Table, where he lived two years, and he then returned to Iowa. Two years of further residence in the Hawkeye state proved sufficient, and once more he turned his face westward and made his way to Custer county. At this time he purchased what was known as the old Chris Nelson homestead, and liere he has continuously main- tained his home to the present time. He has 600 acres of good land, and the property is so well improved, with an excellent array also of good live stock, that the fine farm home may consistently be said to face "easy street." Mr. Hickenbottom has placed himself in a sub- stantial financial position by means of his successful operations in agricultural enterprise and stock-raising. He and his sons are affili- ated with the Royal Highlanders and in politics he maintains an independent attitude, giving his support to men and measures meeting the approval of his judgment, irrespective of parti- san lines. He holds membership in the Calla- way lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. The Hickenbottoms are in every sense one of the first families of Custer county.
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ROSCOE M. LEACH, one of the native- born sons of Custer county who has made a success of his farming and stock-raising operations, is located in section 10, township 2. His entire career has been devoted to work of an agricultural character and his property gives evidence of the presence of good management and skilled treatment. Mr. Leach was born on a farm northwest of Sar- gent, December 5, 1884, a son of Edward P. and Mary (Exley) Leach.
The paternal grandfather of Mr. Leach, William Leach, was born in Kentucky, from whence he went to Indiana, and there mar- ried Emily Henderson, a native of that state. They farmed in Johnson county for a time, but in 1859 removed to Lucas county, Iowa, where Mrs. Leach died April 22, 1875, her husband surviving until March 27, 1911, when he had reached an advanced age. Edward P. Leach was born in Johnson county, Indiana, and was still a youth when his parents re- moved to Iowa. He reached manhood there, but in 1883 left that state and came to Custer county, where he settled on a homestead. A man of marked industry, he succeeded in the development of a good and paying farm, but about 1903 his health failed, and he turned his attention to the monument business, at Sargent, with which he had been connected for some five years previously. He is one of the prominent and influential citizens of his community and has been a leader of the Democratic party there for some years. He has been frequently called upon for public service, having served as justice of the peace for the past four terms, as road overseer for two terms, and as a member of the board of school directors for the past twenty-two years. With Mrs. Leach, he belongs to the Meth- odist Episcopal church. They are the par- ents of five children, as follows: Charles, a farmer seven miles south of Sargent, who married Emma Niell; Roy, engaged in gen- eral merchandising at Sargent, who married Hettie Gatliff; Roscoe M .; Mabel E., the wife of Claude Athey, a farmer of the Broken Bow community ; and Verna, a far- mer three miles northwest of Sargent, who married Grace Towne.
Roscoe M. Leach was educated in the dis- trict schools near Sargent and was reared to manhood on the home farm. He took up farming on his own account when he entered upon his independent career, and has never followed any other vocation, being satisfied with life in the country and the results that his industrious and well-applied labor has brought him. He carries on general farming in a modern way and also raises stock to some
extent, and is accounted progressive and en- terprising by his fellow-citizens. His repu- tation for integrity in the community is of the best and while he has not been an office holder he has given his support to movements in a way that exemplifies his public spirit. Mr. Leach is a Republican, and his fraternal affiliation is with the local lodge of the Mod- ern Woodmen of America.
On August 30, 1909, Mr. Leach was mar- ried to Miss Elsie E. Gatliff, who was born at West Union, Custer county, August 9, 1889, a daughter of William and Sarah (Stone) Gatliff, and they have six children, born as follows: Berta, August 28, 1909 ; Elton, No- vember 29, 1910; Dale. April 10, 1912; El- wood, February 1. 1914; Vera, July 21, 1915; and Dotty, November 29, 1916.
DR. LEONARD C. HAYES. - Among the new developments which have been brought about by the endcavor of man to as- sist in the alleviation of the physical ills of humanity, a profession which is rapidly as- suming a recognized place is that of chiro- practic - briefly a system or practice of ad- justing the joints, especially of the spine, by hand, for the curing of disease. In this field, the first legally qualified and licensed chiro- practor to locate in Custer county was Dr. Leonard C. Ilaves, who since February. 1916. has been successfully engaged in practice at Broken Bow.
Doctor Hayes was born at Salem, Henry county, Iowa, March 31, 1882. a son of Law- rence Monroe Hayes and Mary Alice ( Breach) Hayes, and a grandson of John Wes- ley Hayes and Isaac Breach. His father was born at Salem, Iowa, in 1847, and there oc- curred his marriage to Miss Mary A. Breach, who was born in Belmont county, Ohio, in 1851. In the spring of 1885, with their chil- dren they removed to Chase county, Nebraska. There they resided on a homestead farm until 1895, when they moved to Lincoln, the death of Mr. Hayes occurring June 29. 1911, in that city, where Mrs. Hayes still makes her home. There were four children in the family, all of whom are living: Lillian, the wife of James Anderson, of Sheridan, Wyoming : Daniel \'., president of the Nebraska Normal School at Peru; Alvin C., a farmer of Aitkin, Minne- sota ; and Leonard C., of this review.
Leonard C. Hayes prosecuted his carliest studies in a sod schoolhouse in Chase county, Nebraska, which he attended from 1887 to 1895, and then he was given the benefits of at- tendance at the public schools in Lincoln, where
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DR. LEONARD C. HAYES
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FRED HAUCK AND FAMILY
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he was graduated in the high school as a mem- ber of the class of 1898. He then entered the normal school there. Leaving school in 1899, in the fall of that year he took employment as a clerk with the Western Union Telegraph Company, in Lincoln, and he was subsequent- ly promoted operator, then assistant manager, and finally was made manager of the com- pany's office at St. Joseph, Missouri. In 1907 he left the service of the Western Union and entered that of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, as station agent at Mars- land, Nebraska, but in 1910 he resigned his position to enter college at Lincoln, to study chiropractic. After graduating from the Ne- braska Chiropractic College, Doctor Hayes opened his first office at Omaha, in the sum- mer of 1913, and he enjoyed a very good prac- tice there until his removal to Broken Bow, in February, 1916. His practice here began to grow from the very start, and at the pres- ent time he usually treats from forty to sixty patients a day. Doctor Hayes is a member of the United Chiropractors' Association, the Universal Chiropractors' Association, and the Nebraska Chiropractors' Association. Po- litically he is a Democrat. He took member- ship in Yeoman Lodge, August 14, 1914, and at present is foreman of that lodge at Broken Bow. Doctor Hayes was converted by Harold Bell Wright and joined the Christian church at Kansas City, Missouri, in 1905. He re- mained a member of that church until his re- moval to Broken Bow, in 1916, when he became a member of the First Baptist church of this city.
At Omaha, in April, 1915, Doctor Hayes married Miss Helen Louise Cramer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Cramer, of that city, where Mrs. Hayes' father is a successful building contractor. There were six children in the Cramer family - Helen Louise, Mil- dred K., Clarence C., Charles, Margaret, and Richard.
PETER GEERSEN. - Among the lead- ing farmers and stock-raisers and extensive landowners of the vicinity of Sargent, few hold a more enviable position in the esteem of their fellow-citizens than does Peter Geer- sen. Mr. Geersen has been a resident of Custer county for only about four years, but during this period has added to the reputation established by him in Howard county, as a skilled agriculturist and a public-spirited citi- zen.
Peter Geersen was born at Kelso, Howard county, Nebraska, October 18, 1873, a son of Frank and Gertrude (Jensen) Geersen, the
former born in Denmark and the latter in Norway. Frank Geersen came to the United States about the year 1866 and took up a homestead at Kelso, Howard county, but sub- sequently moved to Dannebrog, in the same county, where he continued to be engaged in farming until his death, June 13, 1910. He was a Democrat in politics and he and Mrs. Geersen were faithful members of the Luth- eran church. Of their six children, five are living: Peter; Anna, the wife of John A. Johnson, a farmer of Dannebrog; Mary, the wife of Isaac Ohlund, a railroad man of Laramie, Wyoming; George, who is single and lives with his brother Peter near Sar- gent ; and Julia, the wife of Axel Hansen, a painter of Dannebrog.
Peter Geersen was educated at Dannebrog. in the public schools, and when he reached manhood followed in the footsteps of his father and devoted himself to agricultural pursuits. He remained as a resident of his native county until 1914, in which year he came to Custer county and bought, near Sar- gent, the property known as the George Brown farm, a tract in section 8, township 17. Here he has carried on general farming, mak- ing a specialty of breeding pure-bred Per- cheron horses, for which this farm has gained somewhat more than a local reputation. His operations have been extensive, his methods modern, and his manner of transacting busi- ness such as to stamp him indelibly as a man . of practicality as well as integrity.
Mr. Geersen was married at St. Paul, Ne- braska, March 6, 1901, to Miss Lillie M. Hood, a daughter of James A. and Emily (Shafer) Hood, pioneers of Nebraska, and they are the parents of six children, born as follows : Beulah, born July 3, 1902 ; Harold, born March 12, 1906; Lela, July 30, 1907; Marion, January 11, 1909; Albert, June 26, 1911; and Norma, August 24, 1913. Mr. Geersen is a Democrat. He is a member of the Modern Woodmen of America and the In- dependent Order of Odd Fellows, and at pres- ent is noble grand in the latter order at Sar- gent.
FRED HAUCK has been a resident of Cus- ter county for thirty years and during this time has developed a career that has been as honorable as it has been satisfying. He has identified himself with movements that have been progressive and constructive, and at all times has conducted himself and his activities in a manner that has gained him the good will and respect of his associates and ac- quaintances.
Mr. Hauck was born in Germany, Decem-
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HEINRICH KROEGER AND FAMILY
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ber 13, 1855, a son of Peter and Selma ( Mil- ler) Hauck, who passed their entire lives in Germany. The father was a member of the agricultural class, and was an industrious worker who was honored in his community as a home-loving man, and who was respected because of the success he made of his under- takings, he and his worthy wife having been devout members of the Lutheran church. They became the parents of twelve children, of whom four are living: Christ, who is en- gaged in farming in California: Selma, who is the wife of Fred Bresh, of that state ; Fred, who is the subject of this sketch ; and Volun- tine, who is the proprietor of a transfer busi- ness at St. Louis. Fred Hauck was educated in the public schools of Germany and was reared to habits of thrift, industry, and integrity. He was brought up as a farmer and followed that vocation in his native land until he reached the age of thirty-two years, at which time he immigrated to the United States and made his way to Custer county, Nebraska. He was originally the owner of a tree claim in Sher- man county, which he sold, and later he home- steaded a tract in Custer county, which he also sold. He then bought his present farm, a valuable tract which he has brought to a high state of cultivation, and on which he has numerous improvements that are of modern type and that add to its value and attractive- ness. Mr. Hauck was by no means a rich man when he came to Custer county ; in fact, he had little capital except that represented by his abiliy and other personal attributes, but his work has been so well done and his affairs so capably managed that he is now accounted a well-to-do man, and is placed among the substantial agriculturists who have made their own way. His present holdings approximate 780 acres of good land, on which he does gen- eral farming in an intelligent, intensive, and modern way. in addition to which he has been successful in his activities as a raiser of cattle and hogs, of which he ships many to the mar- kets each year.
May 5, 1888, Mr. Hanck married Miss Anna Beck, of Sherman county, she being a daughter of Hans Beck, an early settler of that county. To this union there have come ten children : Charles, who is engaged in farming in Custer county ; Henry, who is his father's assistant on the home farm; Rosatte, who is the wife of Vern Fleming, a farmer of Custer county ; Kate, who is the wife of Toney Devish, of this county; William, who is on the home place ; Minnie, who is the wife of Arthur Salone, a farmer of Grant, Nebraska ; Selma, who is the wife of Charles Foster, a
farmer and stock-raiser of Custer county ; and Dora, Gertie, and Floyd, who remain at the parental home. The family belongs to the Lutheran church, and Mr. Hauck is a Demo- crat in his political allegiance.
DALE P. STOUGH will be remembered by citizens of Custer county as a member of the bar of this county from 1911 until 1915. He came to Broken Bow in 1911 and asso- ciated himself with Judge James R. Dean, who is now serving as supreme judge of Ne- braska. Mr. Stough was reared at Creston, Iowa, and for five years had been a member of a Sunday-school class under the tutelage of Rev. W. L. Gaston, editor of this Custer county history. Mr. Stough attended the University of Nebraska in 1908-9 and in 1911 he ' was graduated in Creighton College of Law:
During his residence in Custer county, Mr. Stough took an active part in numerous lines of activity pertinent to the county's affairs. He served as secretary of the Broken Bow Merchants' Federation for more than three years, resigning when he went to Lincoln, in 1915, as secretary to the chief justice of the supreme court. He was secretary of various political committees and clubs, including the Sixth District Democratic Congressional Com- mittee, Wilson and Marshall Club, in 1912, and other political bodies. For three years he was clerk of St. John's Episcopal parish and superintendent of the Sunday school. He served two years as secretary of the Custer county Sunday School Association. Since leaving Broken Bow, Mr. Stough has been author of numerous articles and is now en- gaged in editorial work on a history of Hall county, similar to this history of Custer county.
Mr. Stough was united in marriage in June, 1913, to Miss Cassie Mary Beeler, of Daven- port. Iowa, and their first home was in Broken Bow. Their only child, Ida Mildred Stough, was born in Broken Bow, in 1914. Mr. and Mrs. Stough are now residing at Grand Is- land, Nebraska, where Mr. Stough holds the position of official court reporter of the Eleventh judicial district.
HEINRICH KROEGER. - No better il- lustration of the value of industry, persever- ance, and the intelligent management of one's resources and interests could be found than the career of Heinrich Kroeger, now one of the representative farmers of the Mason City locality of Custer county. Coming to this coun-
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try with absolutely no capital except that rep- resented by his native ability, he has made the most of his opportunities and has so well di- rected his activities that he is to-day in a position of independence, the while he is re- spected and esteemed as a well-to-do and sub- stantial citizen.
Mr. Kroeger was born in Holstein, Ger- many, February 13, 1856, and is a son of Au- gust and Margaretta ( Folkmier) Kroeger. Mr. Kroeger's father was a native of Germany, where he spent his entire life with the excep- tion of seven years, when he was in the Danish army as a musician, playing a single-valve horn. By trade a weaver of cloth, during the harvest seasons he acted as a hand in the field, and he thus rounded out a useful and fairly successful career. He and his wife, who also died in Germany, were members of the Lutheran church. They had five children, of whom four are living: Heinrich, of this sketch : Maggie, the wife of Theodore Liehs, who is individually mentioned on other pages of this volume; Mary, the wife of William Trent, of Buffalo county, Nebraska ; and Fred, a resident of Colorado.
Heinrich Kroeger received his youthful ed- ucation in the public schools of Holstein, Ger- many, and was twenty-six years of age when he immigrated to the United States. His first settlement was at Comanche, Iowa, where he secured employment at plowing, at a wage of twenty-five cents a day. At that time he could not speak English, and his efforts to get ahead were greatly hampered by this fact, but he rapidly learned to speak the language of his adopted land and was thus able to get better employment. Eventually he obtained a position in a saw mill, where he worked about two years, and during his stay in Iowa suc- ceeded in saving $400, which he brought with him to Custer county in 1884. In that year he homesteaded 160 acres of land, and sub- sequently he bought a timber claim, for $600, and planted many trees. From a start of ah- solutely nothing. Mr. Kroeger has built up his fortunes until to-day he is the owner of 1,280 acres of valuable Custer county land, all secured through legitimate business channels and through the medium of his own ability and hard work. When he came to Custer county Mr. Kroeger made his home in a little sod house, which hoasted of the barest neces- sities of life. To-day he owns four sets of modern buildings, equipped with the latest ap- pliances and conveniences. Mr. Kroeger is a general farmer and a skilled one, and he also raises white-faced Hereford cattle, of which he has a herd of eighteen head. with a thor-
oughbred bull at the head, and in addition to this he breeds a good grade of hogs, having twenty-four at this time. In politics Mr. Kroe- ger is independent, and his religious belief is that of the Lutheran church.
In 1878 Mr. Kroeger married Miss Doris Ifepner, who was born in Germany, and to this union there have been born three sons, all of whom are engaged in agricultural opera- tions on their father's land, and all of whom are married and the heads of families. Will- iam, the eldest, has two children - Bertha and Bessie ; Frank has three children - Edwin, Edith, and Elaine; and John has three children - Irene, Raymond, and Glenn.
THOMAS TEAHON .- The story in these paragraphs contains a splendid tribute to Irish thrift and energy. The sons of Ire- land have always made good in America. The opportunities of the west have always come to their hand to meet universal improvement.
The name in the headline belongs to Thomas Teahon, a prominent resident in the section southwest of Anselmo. He was born in Ireland, in 1860. He is the son of Patrick and Elizabeth (Donahue) Teahon. The par- ents were very estimable people of Irish line- age, who came to America in 1885, attracted by the free land to be obtained through the homestead or pre-emption laws. They were
the parents of eleven children, and on the family roster are inscribed the following names : John, a Custer county farmer; Thomas, the subject of this sketch ; Mary, de- ceased : Patrick, who was killed in a railroad accident in Deadwood, S. D .; Jerry, a Custer county farmer ; Joseph, deceased : Johannah Skinner, a resident of Thermopolis, Wyom- mg: Nelly lives in Alliance, Nebraska ; Mike lives in New York, where he is connected with the Metropolitan Insurance Company; Ted, a Custer county farmer ; and Elizabeth, who is deceased.
The family are staunch Roman Catholics and the men for the most part are independ- ent voters, paying little attention? to party affiliation.
Two marriages enter into the life of Mr. Teahon: His first wife was Bridget Mc- Gowan, who became the mother of five child- ren : Vernie was killed by lightning: Louis was killed by a horse falling upon him ; Clara Beal lives in Colorado ; the fourth child died in infancy, and the fifth child, Agnes, lives in York.
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