History of Sheboygan County, Wisconsin, past and present, Part 13

Author: Zillier, Carl, b. 1838; S.J. Clarke Publishing Company
Publication date: 1912
Publisher: Chicago : S. J. Clarke Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 461


USA > Wisconsin > Sheboygan County > History of Sheboygan County, Wisconsin, past and present > Part 13


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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John G. Pantzer located here in 1848, coming from Germany. He was one of the pioneer cigar manufacturers of Sheybogan.


David W. Halsted, Sr., a native of New York, came to Sheboygan in 1841, but a year later removed to Calumet county, where his son, David Wisner Halsted, was born in 1845.


Frank Stone came from Massachusetts with his parents, Lewis and Lucy (Howe) Stone, in 1848, and settled in Sheboygan, where the father engaged in merchandising on Eighth street.


Michael John Lynch, whose native state was New York, arrived in She- boygan in 1842 in company with John King. He was a contractor and is


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said to have built the first bridge across the Sheboygan river. He also did much contract work on street grading and improvement. He was appointed by Franklin Pierce collector for the port of Sheboygan and was a veteran of the Civil war.


Thomas M. Blackstock, with an aunt and three sisters, his mother hav- ing preceded him, arrived in Sheboygan in the spring of 1849. He first found employment in a hotel, then was engaged for six years in a drug store. In 1856 he was superintendent of construction of the Sheboygan- Fond du Lac plank road and served in that capacity until 1861. He then purchased the drug business of Dr. J. J. Brown, which he conducted until 1876. In 1875, however, he took an active part in the organization and establishment of the Phoenix Chair Company and within a year was chosen president and general manager of the company. Mr. Blackstock became one of the strong and influential men not only of Sheboygan but of this part of the state and was mentioned as a possible candidate for the governorship in 1892.


Joseph Schrage was one of the pioneer merchants of Sheboygan, locat- ing here in 1847 and opening a grocery store. He later built the Wisconsin House, well known to the early settlers. He eventually became one of the prominent merchants of Sheboygan.


Azael P. Lyman located in this city in 1846. With his brother George he had located in Sheboygan Falls in 1845 and established stores in Fond du Lac, Calumet, Berlin and Sheboygan. He became one of the prominent and influential men of Sheboygan and one of its first boatbuilders, in which he became well known.


Evan Evans was a settler here of 1845. For some time he worked at his trade of carpentry and for ten years was a toll keeper on the Sheboygan- Fond du Lac plank road. He later became a farmer.


William F. Zierath, a native of Germany, first came to Sheboygan in 1846, looking for a business location. He returned to Cleveland but in the following year purchased property here and was then joined by his family. He engaged in hotel keeping, as proprietor of the St. Clair House, which he operated until his death, which occurred in the latter part of 1870.


William Seaman, a native of New York, came to Sheboygan in 1845. William Henry Seaman, who became United States judge of the eastern district of Wisconsin, was a son of William and Arlisle Seaman, and came to Sheboygan with his parents in the winter of 1845-6. He was working in the Evergreen City Times office when the Civil war broke out. He en- listed as a private in Company H, First Regiment Wisconsin Infantry. He read law with C. W. Ellis of Sheboygan and later with J. A. Bentley and was admitted to the bar in 1868. In 1893 he was appointed to the United States bench.


Worthy McKillip came from the Empire state to this city in 1842 and engaged in the manufacture of lumber. He was soon after his arrival made deputy sheriff of what was then Brown county. In 1845 he built a large frame building on the corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Seventh street. Previous to this, however, he had served as register of deeds but on the completion of his building he engaged in the mercantile business.


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James and Margaret (Leland) Crocker came here in 1846. Their son, Silas R., followed them in 1853. He was a carpenter and worked on the first dredge that was used in opening the harbor in Sheboygan. He then became identified with the manufacturing interests of the city. In 1866, with others, he put up a sawmill on Pennsylvania avenue and began prep- arations to manufacture chairs.


Dr. John Julius Brown was one of the pioneer physicians of Sheboygan, locating here in 1846.


William Whiffen, a native of England, came to Sheboygan in the fall of 1845. He immediately purchased a farm in the town of Sheboygan Falls and lived there until 1875, when he returned to Sheboygan.


Alexander Hamilton Edwards came to Sheboygan in 1848 and after keeping the lighthouse for about a year became deputy register of deeds. He later was elected to the office of register. He also held the offices of clerk of the court and police judge, being in official positions for about twenty years.


Leopold and Francis Gutsch came to Sheboygan from Baden, Germany, in 1847, and established the Gutsch Brewing Company.


John Griffith, a native of New York, was a settler in Sheboygan as early as 1850 and one of the early merchants.


Isaac Brazleton came to Wisconsin from East Tennessee with his par- ents, Jacob and Margaret Brazleton, and settled near Milwaukee in 1835. In 1847 he removed to Sheboygan, where he carried on a meat market for a number of years.


Benjamin Orrin Coon, a native of New York, settled in the town of Ply- mouth in February, 1846, and was soon joined by his parents, James and Susanna Coon. By that time Hiram Bishop, Henry Gilman and Ira Brad- ford were making homes for themselves here.


Jonathan Leighton arrived here from the state of Maine in 1844 and em- barked in the lumber business, in which he continued twenty years. With his father-in-law, Aurin Z. Littlefield, he built a sawmill, which was known as the Littlefield & Leighton mill.


Evert Hartman was a pioneer of 1846, coming here with his parents, Derrick J. and Hattie Hartman.


Charles W. Pierce, who was born here in 1848, is the son of William J. Pierce, who came from England in 1844 and settled in Sheboygan.


Otto Schucht became a resident of the city of Sheboygan in 1849.


Hector North Ross was a pioneer teacher of this county. He arrived here from his native state of New York in June, 1847, and soon found work in the office of the Mercury. He had previously been admitted to the bar and the following fall after his arrival in Sheboygan he was elected to the office of county judge. The salary of the office at that time was small and in order to earn what he could he taught the village school in Sheboygan in the winter of 1849 and held the same position during the years 1852 and 1853. He purchased the Sheboygan Mercury in 1854. In 1870 he changed the name of the paper from the Evergreen City Times to that of the She- boygan Times.


Henry W. Minott located here in 1848 and was joined by his brother, Levi E., in 1849, and engaged in the manufacture and sale of furniture.


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Alban Kent was one of the early settlers of Sheboygan. He left the fatherland in 1833 and settled in Erie, Pennsylvania, from whence he came in the winter of 1844. He at once built a home and established a tailoring establishment, which was one of the first in the village. Later Mr. Kent opened a bakery and grocery on the shore end of the old north pier, where he carried on quite a business for four years, when his place was wrecked by the waves during a severe storm, when his stock and household goods were lost. He then resumed work at his trade and retired therefrom in 1889, at the age of eighty-one years.


Joseph Keller, a German, opened a blacksmith shop here in 1849 to which he later added wood and paint shops, a foundry and machine shops. He also started a brickyard and operated it some six years, when he sold and built what is now Factory B of the Crocker Chair Company, which he man- aged for three years and then sold to the Crockers.


Christian Raab came in 1848 from Germany and became a grain dealer and shipbuilder.


Ernst and Anna Rietow, natives of Germany, came to the United States in 1848 and settled in Sheboygan, where he carried on a furniture establish- ment until 1852 and then removed to a farm in the town of Wilson. In 1855 he returned to Sheboygan and engaged in the furniture business until his death, in 1868.


John G. Mayer, a native of Germany, established himself in Sheboygan as a merchant tailor in 1848.


William Kroos, Sr., a native of Germany, emigrated to the United States in the fall of 1842 and landed at New Orleans. From there he went to St. Louis, which was his home for a number of years. . Mr. Kroos took up his residence in the city of Sheboygan in 1847. He is living today, hale and hearty, at the age of ninety-four years.


Frederick Gustav Lintz, a native of Germany, arrived in the United States with his wife in 1847, and coming west located on land north of She- boygan City. His acres accumulated to a number over one thousand and he built a pier known as Lintz pier and did a big business in cutting and ship- ping wood, selling in one year $24,000 worth. He was liberal and helped many of the farmers in paying for their land. About six years after com- ing to this county he removed to Sheboygan City, where for over thirty years he did an extensive business in general merchandising and in lumber. He died in 1884.


Julius Kroos is a son of William Kroos, Sr., and was born in the Ever- green City in 1857. He is president of the Bank of Sheboygan, one of the strongest financial institutions in the state of Wisconsin.


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CHAPTER VI


OFFICIALS


LIST OF COUNTY OFFICIALS BROKEN BY LOSS OF RECORDS-COMPLETE LIST OF SOME OF THE COUNTY OFFICIALS AND PARTIAL LIST OF OTHERS-BOARD OF SUPERVISORS AND ITS MEMBERS FROM 1870 TO DATE-MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATURE.


COUNTY COURT


The general government in the act organizing the territory of Wiscon- sin provided for probate judges to adjudicate estates of deceased persons, those of minor children, and others not capable of attending to their own business affairs; hence, the office of probate judge was maintained under that title until the year 1850, when it was changed to county judge, and the court to that of county court. Unfortunately, the writer has no record of those early courts nor of the names of the men who fulfilled the duties of the office. From the year 1860, when the county records were burned, the following have served as county judges :


COUNTY JUDGES


1860-George W. Weeden 1866-Edward Gilman


1874-Bille Williams


1894-Simon Gillen 1898-Andrew Gilbertson 1902-Paul T. Krez


COUNTY CLERKS


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1853-James T. Kingsbury 1855-1860-August Pott 1861-H. Van Tilborg


. 1863-Frederick Zimmerman 1869-George Thies 1871-Carl Zillier


1877-Frederick Hoppe 1883-Emil Nehrlich


1893-Jacob F. Miller 1895-R. B. Melvin .


1901-Edward B. Mattoon (Re- signed in March, 1908, and unexpired term filled by C. W. Fischer) 1909-August G. Meyers 1911-C. W. Fischer


COUNTY TREASURERS


1848-C. T. Moore 1849-Thomas Lapham


1851-W. Smith 1853-George W. Weeden


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HISTORY OF SHEBOYGAN COUNTY


COUNTY TREASURER


1855-William W. King


1857-John Gee


1861-Francis Geele


1887-A. L. Swart


1865-S. B. Hogan


1867-Julius Wolff


1895-Henry Walvoord


1871-W. Schwartz


1899-Joseph Pfeiffer


1873-William Ashby


1903-C. H. Schulz


1877-J. M. O'Hearn


1907-W. H. Barragar


1881-George W. Bradford


1911-Charles M. Ries


CLERK OF THE COURT


1846-J. Rankin


1847-C. P. Hiller


1848-E. S. Goodrich


1849-E. S. Goodrich


1877-Felix Benfey


1851-A. H. Edwards


1883-Simon Gillen


1855-Jacob Quintus


1889-Thomas O'Hara


1857-Flavius J. Mills


1893-L. T. Bishop


1859-William Elwell


1895-B. F. Heald


1861-Edward Gilman


1899-M. M. Gilman


1863-J. B. Coleman


1905-A. P. Croghan


DISTRICT ATTORNEYS


1846-D. U. Harrington 1847-David Taylor


1848-J. R. Sharpstein and W. R. Gorsline 1849-E. Fox Cook


1871-Conrad Krez


1879-George T. Sumner


1881-John Q. Adams


1883-Dennis T. Phalen


1887-A. C. Prescott


1889-Simon Gillen


1895-Willard Cole


1897-Frederick Vollrath


1899-Theodore Benfey


1905-Edward Voigt


1911-W. B. Collins


SHERIFFS


1846-T. C. Hornor 1847-J. H. Comstock 1849-G. H. Smith


1851-Godfrey Stamm


1853-John D. Murphy


1854-William Kaestner (to fill vacancy ) 1855-Julius Wolff


1857-Cad W. Humphrey 1859-George Thies


1861-Frederick Aude


1863-W. G. Mallory 1865-M. Winter 1867-William Scott 1869-Louis Otte 1871-W. M. Root


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1853-Edward Elwell


1855-George S. Graves


1857-Crosby W. Ellis


1859-Conrad Krez


1863-E. B. Treat 1865-J. H. Jones


1865-A. H. Edwards


1867-August Pott


1871-A. H. Edwards


1891-Charles S. Weisse


1883-Bernhard Bruecker


1885-George W. Bradford


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HISTORY OF SHEBOYGAN COUNTY


SHERIFFS


1873-Frederick Hoppe 1875-John Sandrok 1877-Joseph Schrage 1879-Louis Otte


1881-Wendel Pfeil


1883-Wilbur M. Root


1885-Frederick Goerlitz


1887-Henry G. Mueller


1889-Fred Mueller


1891-Phil Doherty


1893-A. Lebermann


1895-William Grashorn


1897-David L. Mantz


1899-Henry Buchen


1901-Albert Suemnicht


1903-H. A. Arpke


1905-H. A. Zurheide


1907-H. Kiefer


1909-A. A. Hoehne


1911-H. C. Hoppe


REGISTERS OF DEEDS


1839-Charles D. Cole 1844-W. W. Kellog


1845-John Keller


1846-E. H. Howard


1847-W. R. Gorsline 1849-J. T. Kingsbury 1851-M. M. Flint


1853-Charles Adolphi


1855-Charles Meyer 1859-Joseph Weiskopf


1863-Wenzel Kunz


1865-A. Mahlendorf 1869-Nathan Cole


1871-E. Clarenbach


1879-Albert Mahlendorf, Sr.


1880-Valentine Detling


1887-Frank W. Margenau 1891-A. J. Mallmann 1895-Harvey Klotsch


1901-Henry Walvoord


1905-Louis G. Cornelius


1911-Edwin Koellmer


COUNTY SURVEYORS


1849-James Hanford 1851-M. Martin 1853-H. S. Hilton 1855-Horace Cleaves


1859-James Hanford 1861-W. H. Paine 1863-H. G. H. Reed


1867-G. Marquardt 1875-L. Tibbitts


1877-S. A. Simpson


1881-Louis Bode


1883-S. A. Simpson


1893-Otto B. Joerns


. 1895-Louis Bode


CORONER


1849-E. S. Thorp 1851-R. Phillips 1853-H. S. Hilton


1854-Charles H. Woodard (to fill vacancy) 1855-James Berry 1857-August Telgener 1859-Joshua Brown 1861-August Krueger 1863-James Berry


1867-Julius Leber 1869-R. G. Bennett 1871-James Berry


1881-Julius Breitzmann


1882-Frederick Schnellen 1885-Carl Osthelder 1887-William O. St. Sure 1889-A. W. Bock 1895-N. S. Goodell 1903-Peter Feagan


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HISTORY OF SHEBOYGAN COUNTY


SUPERVISOR OF ASSESSMENTS


1902-J. A. Zinkgraf 1905-A. P. Pauly


1911-H. C. Maurer


SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS


1862-A. W. Whitcomb 1882-A. F. Warden


1864-H. A. Forbes


1887-James Leahy


1866-Edward Drewry 1891-Martin Hughes


1868-J. E. Thomas


1893-A. J. Strassburger


1870-W. E. Cody


1897-George H. Drewry


1872-E. A. Little


1903-Otto Gaffron


1874-M. D. L. Fuller


1905-J. E. Kennedy


1876-George W. Weeden


1911-H. C. Dornbush


1878-B. R. Grogan


The reader will have noticed that names of county officials are given in the above list prior to 1860. These were obtained by searching through the files of newspapers.


BOARD OF SUPERVISORS


1870


Wilson, George W. Weeden, chairman; Greenbush, Erastus Keach; Her- man, Ludwig Luecke; Holland, Peter Daane, Jr .; Lima, Thomas Walsh; Lyndon, H. L. Hutchinson; Mosel, William Wippermann; Plymouth, C. W. Prescott; Mitchell, Phelin Hughes; Rhine, Eric Tallmadge; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, Abraham Laycock; Sherman, John P. Carroll; Sheboygan, William Ashby; Sheboygan Falls, Henry Tidman; Sheboygan Falls village, John P. Robinson; city of Sheboygan, first ward, Francis Geele; second, J. O. Thayer; third, J. C. Reich; fourth, William Demand.


1871


Wilson, George W. Weeden, chairman; Greenbush, N. H. Roberts ; Her- man, Frederick Arpke; Holland, Peter Daane, Jr .; Lima, Timothy O'Con- nor; Lyndon, H. A. Forbes; Mitchell, Phelin Hughes; Mosel, William Wip- permann; Plymouth, Enos Easterman; Rhine, Julius Wolff; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, Jacob Reis; Sheboygan, William Ashby; Sheboygan Falls, Henry Tidman; Sheboygan Falls village, John E. Thomas; Sherman, John P. Carroll; city of Sheboygan, first ward, John Sandrok; second, Joseph Keseberg; third, August Froehlich; fourth, W. B. Darling.


1872


Wilson, George W. Weeden, chairman; Greenbush, N. H. Roberts; Her- man, Ludwig Luecke; Holland, Peter Daane, Jr .; Lima, Thomas Walsh; Lyndon, E. C. Butters; Mitchell, C. W. Humphrey ; Mosel. William Wipper-


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HISTORY OF SHEBOYGAN COUNTY


mann; Plymouth, Enos Eastman; Rhine, Julius Wolff; Russell, John Kee- nan; Scott, Jacob Reis; Sheboygan, G. A. Willard; Sheboygan Falls, Henry Tidman; Sheboygan Falls village, N. C. Farnsworth; Sherman, John P. Car- roll; city of Sheboygan, first ward, John Sandrok ; second, John O. Thayer ; third, J. C. Reich ; fourth, A. Trester.


1873


Wilson, George W. Weeden, chairman; Greenbush, Olney Higgins; Her- man, Ludwig Luecke; Holland, J. H. Van Ouwerkerk; Lima, Thomas Walsh; Lyndon, S. D. Hubbard; Mitchell, C. W. Humphrey ; Mosel, Charles Wippermann ; Plymouth, C. W. Prescott; Rhine, Julius Wolff; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, Jacob Blanshan; Sheboygan, G. A. Willard; Sheboygan Falls, Henry Tidman; Sheboygan Falls village, Albert Dennett; city of She- boygan, first ward, John Sandrok; second, John O. Thayer; third, Charles Grasse; fourth, Henry Scheele.


1874


Sheboygan Falls, John E. Thomas, chairman; Greenbush, William H. Clark; Herman, Friedrich Hasche; Holland, Anton Van De Wall; Lima, Thomas Walsh; Lyndon, Norman C. Harmon; Mitchell, C. W. Humphrey ; Mosel, William Wippermann; Plymouth, Enos Eastman; Rhine, Julius Wolff; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, Israel J. Smith ; Sheboygan, G. A. Wil- lard; Sheboygan Falls, Henry Tidman; Sherman, John P. Carroll; Wilson, Michael Trimberger; Sheboygan city, first ward, John Sandrok; second, John O. Thayer; third, Charles Grasse; fourth, Henry Scheele.


1875


Sheboygan Falls village, John E. Thomas, chairman; Greenbush, Erastus Keach; Herman, Henry Luecke; Holland, Anton Van De Wall; Lima, Thomas Walsh; Lyndon, Norman C. Harmon; Mitchell, Hugh Lynch ; Mosel William Wippermann; Plymouth, Asa Carpenter; Rhine, Julius Wolff ; Russell, John Keenon; Scott, Israel J. Smith; Sheboygan, G. A. Willard; Sheboygan Falls, Edward Heidenreiter; Sherman, John P. Carroll; Wilson, Carl Reich; city of Sheboygan, first ward, James H. Mead; second, John O. Thayer; third, Charles Grasse; fourth, Joseph Weiskopf.


1876


Lyndon, S. D. Hubbard, chairman; Greenbush, Erastus Keach; Herman, Ludwig Luecke; Holland, Charles Rogers; Lima, A. D. De Land; Mitchell, Hugh Lynch; Mosel, William Wippermann; Plymouth, William Schwartz; Rhine, Julius Wolff; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, Israel J. Smith; Sheboy- gan, G. A. Willard; Sheboygan Falls, Edward Heidenreiter; Sheboygan Falls village, Israel Adriance; Sherman, James White; Wilson, Carl Reich; city of Sheboygan, first ward, Michael Winter; second, James Bell; third, Charles Boehme; fourth, G. Dieckmann; fifth, Matthew Meyer.


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HISTORY OF SHEBOYGAN COUNTY


1877


Sheboygan, Carl Zillier, chairman; Greenbush, Erastus Keach; Herman, Frederick Hasche; Holland, Charles Rogers; Lima, Thomas Walsh; Lyn- don, Eugene McIntyre; Mitchell, Hugh Lynch; Mosel, Peter Augustine; Plymouth, Asa Carpenter; Rhine, George Gessert; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, F. Hazelton; Sheboygan, August Zschetzsche; Sheboygan Falls, Ed- ward Heidenreiter; Sheboygan Falls village, W. H. Prentice; Sherman, James White; Wilson, Carl Reich; city of Sheboygan, first ward, William Elwell; third, J. Mogenson; fourth, G. Dieckmann; fifth, Charles Grasse; city of Plymouth, first ward, H. W. Fisher; second, George W. Barnard.


1878


Sheboygan, Carl Zillier, chairman; Greenbush, Erastus Keach; Herman, August Selsemeyer ; Holland; Charles Rogers; Lima, Thomas Walsh ; Lyn- don, Eugene McIntyre; Mitchell, James Hughes ; Mosel, Peter Augustine; Plymouth, Asa Carpenter ; Rhine, Valentine Pfeil; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, John Ruch; Sheboygan, August Zschetzsche; Sheboygan Falls, Hiram Smith; Sheboygan Falls village, John E. Thomas; Sherman, James White; Wilson, George W. Weeden; city of Sheboygan, first ward; William Elwell; third, John Mogenson; fourth, C. B. Henschel; fifth, Charles Grasse; Ply- mouth ; first, H. W. Fischer; second, George W. Barnard.


1879


Sheboygan, Carl Zillier, chairman; Greenbush, Erastus Keach; Herman, August Selsemeyer ; Holland, Charles Rogers; Lima, A. D. De Land; Lyn- don, Eugene McIntyre; Mitchell, James Hughes; Mosel, Peter Augustine; Plymouth, George W. Bradford; Rhine, George Gessert; Russell, John Kee- nan; Scott, John Ruch; Sheboygan, August Zschetzsche; Sheboygan Falls, Hiram Ashcraft; Sheboygan Falls village, John E. Thomas; Sherman, James White; Wilson, Carl Roehrborn; city of Sheboygan, first ward, William El- well ; third, James Mogenson ; fourth, C. B. Henschel; fifth, Charles Grasse; Plymouth, first ward, J. W. Taylor; second, William Schwartz.


1880


Sheboygan, Carl Zillier, chairman; Greenbush, John Dennis; Herman, August Selsemeyer ; Holland, E. C. Oliver ; Lima, A. D. De Land; Lyndon, Eugene McIntyre; Mitchell, Simon Gillen; Mosel, Peter Augustine; Ply- mouth, George W. Bradford; Rhine, T. C. Sharpe; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, John Ruch; Sheboygan, William Ashby; Sheboygan Falls, John Dietsch ; Sheboygan Falls village, G. H. Brickner; Sherman, James White; Wilson, Carl Roehrborn; city of Sheboygan, first ward, William Elwell; third, John Williamson; fourth, J. M. Kohler ; fifth, Fred Nagel; Plymouth, first ward, J. W. Taylor; second, William Schwartz.


1881


Sheboygan, Carl Zillier, chairman; Greenbush, John Dennis; Herman, J. Bodenstab; Holland, E. C. Oliver; Lima, T. O'Connor; Lyndon, Eugene


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HISTORY OF SHEBOYGAN COUNTY


McIntyre; Mitchell, Simon Gillen; Mosel, Peter Augustine; Plymouth, H. Wheeler; Rhine, T. C. Sharpe; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, John Rich; Sheboygan, C. M. Limprecht; Sheboygan Falls, John Kaestner; Sheboygan Falls village, J. E. Thomas; Sherman, James White; Wilson, Carl Reich; city of Sheboygan, first ward, William Elwell; third, Charles Boehme; fourth, J. M. Kohler; fifth, Fred Nagel; Plymouth, first ward, H. W. Fis- cher ; second, George W. Barnard.


1882


Sheboygan, Carl Zillier, chairman; Greenbush, G. S. Putnam; Herman, Frederick Hasche; Holland, Henry Walvoord; Lima, A. D. De Land; Lyn- don, Eugene McIntyre ; Mitchell, J. F. Murray ; Mosel, Charles W. Prescott; Rhine, T. C. Sharpe; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, John Ruch; Sheboygan, G. A. Willard; Sheboygan Falls, John Kaestner; Sheboygan Falls village, B. F. Heald; Sherman, James White; Wilson, Carl Reich; Sheboygan city, first ward, William Elwell; third, Charles Boehme; fourth, August Trill- ing; fifth, Fred Nagel; Plymouth, first ward, George W. Barnard; second, E. A. Streblow.


1883


Sheboygan, Carl Zillier, chairman; Greenbush, G. S. Putnam; Herman, August Selsemeyer; Holland, Henry Walvoord; Lima, Christian Oeder ; Lyndon, W. A. Barber; Mitchell, J. F. Burke; Mosel, Peter Augustine; Plymouth, Charles W. Prescott; Rhine, T. C. Sharpe; Russell, John Kee- nan; Scott, John Ruch; Sheboygan, O. Gearlds; Sheboygan Falls, George Whiffen; Sheboygan Falls village, J. H. Reysen; Sherman, James White; Wilson, W. Springborn; city of Sheboygan, first ward, William Elwell; third, Charles Boehme; fourth, August Trilling; fifth, Fred Nagel; Ply- mouth, first ward, William Fischer ; second, J. L. Santee.


1884


Sheboygan, William Elwell, chairman; Greenbush, G. S. Putnam; Her- man, August Selsemeyer; Holland, E. C. Oliver; Lima, T. O'Connor ; Lyndon, C. N. Harmon; Mitchell, J. F. Burke; Mosel, Peter Augustine; Plymouth, Asa Carpenter; Rhine, T. C. Sharpe; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, J. W. Liebenstein ; Sheboygan, O. Gearlds; Sheboygan Falls, George Whiffen; Sheboygan Falls village, E. Foster; Sherman, James White; Wil- son, W. Springborn; Sheboygan, second ward, Joseph Keseberg; third, P. Martin; fourth, August Trilling; fifth, Fred Nagel; Plymouth, first ward, William Fischer; second, M. D. L. Fuller.


1885


Sheboygan, William Elwell, chairman; Greenbush, G. S. Putnam; Her- man, Ludwig Luecke; Holland, E. C. Oliver; Lima, A. D. De Land; Lyn- don, C. N. Harmon; Mitchell, John Bowser; Mosel, Albert Erdmann; Ply- mouth, Asa Carpenter; Rhine, T. C. Sharpe; Russell, John Keenan; Scott,


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HISTORY OF SHEBOYGAN COUNTY


J. W. Liebenstein; Sheboygan, August Zschetzsche; Sheboygan Falls, George U. Whiffen; Sheboygan Falls village, B. F. Heald; Sherman, W. H. Foley; Wilson, William Springborn; city of Sheboygan, second ward, Christian Ackermann; third, P. Martin; fourth, F. W. Margenau; fifth, H. J. Friedrichs; Plymouth, first ward, John Kaestner; second, W. Schwartz.


1886


Sheboygan, William Elwell, chairman; Greenbush, G. S. Putnam; Her- man, Henry G. Mueller ; Holland, E. C. Oliver; Lima, A. D. De Land; Lyn- don, E. McIntyre; Mitchell, John Bowser; Mosel, Albert Erdmann; Ply- mouth, H. Krumrey; Rhine, George Wolff; Russell, John Keenan; Scott, J. W. Liebenstein; Sheboygan, August Zschetzsche; Sheboygan Falls, George U. Whiffen; Sheboygan Falls village, Charles S. Weisse; Sherman, W. H. Foley; Wilson, W. Springborn; city of Sheboygan, second ward, Christian Ackermann; third, J. Mogenson; fourth, F. Margenau; fifth, Ernst Lutze; Plymouth, first ward, John Kaestner; second, W. Schwartz.




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