The History of Waukesha County, Wisconsin. Containing an account of its settlement, growth, development and resources; an extensive and minute sketch of its cities, towns and villages etc, Part 162

Author: Western Historical Co., pub
Publication date: 1880
Publisher: Chicago : Western Historical Company
Number of Pages: 1050


USA > Wisconsin > Waukesha County > The History of Waukesha County, Wisconsin. Containing an account of its settlement, growth, development and resources; an extensive and minute sketch of its cities, towns and villages etc > Part 162


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SEYMOUR FRAYER, farmer, Sec. 36, P. O. North Prairie ; born in the town of Copake, Columbia Co , N. Y., Dec. 17, 1819 ; resided in his native state as a farmer until 1846 ; married Miss Bet- sey Plank, in Nov. 1842 ; their only son, Wesley D. was born in Feb., 1845. In 1846 the family set-


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TOWN OF. OTTAWA.


tled on 160 acres on Sec. 35, Ottawa, the only building upon it being a log house, where they lived nine years. Here the only daughter, Sarah, Mrs. Martin Helgesen, was born ; Mr. F. did good work with his breaking team for five years among the early settlers, when Wisconsin was a Territory, and when he could travel for miles without seeing a fence; wheat was drawn with oxen to the then village of Milwaukee, over rough roads and corduroy bridges ; after making a good home on his first location, Mr. F. sold 100 acres of it in 1868, bought where he now lives, and owns a first-class farm of 200 acres, well improved, with excellent buildings ; W. D. Frayer has spent his life in the county, attending in his boyhood the school organized by his father and others as District No. 9; Mr. F. has also taught several terms. Married Miss Abbie Shultis, of Columbia Co., N. Y., Sept. 30, 1869, by whom he has a daughter, Florence. Father and son are Republicans ; W. D. Frayer has been Assessor two years.


THOMAS E. JONES, farmer, Secs. 23, 24, 26, and 20; P. O. North Prairie ; is a native of Ottawa, born July 18, 1846 ; is a son of John Jones, who emigrated from England in 1843, he having married Miss Anne Jones in 1837, by whom he had four children-Thomas (died an infant) ; John (deceased); Thomas E. and Walter (deceased); his first wife died in 1863, he marrying again Miss Sarah Cobb, who died in 1874, Mr. Jones now passing his later days in a well-earned home. His son, the sub- ject of this sketch, is, like his father, a Democrat, and is a Presbyterian in religious belief. Was Assessor of his town in 1879, married in 1870 Miss Annie, daughter of John Burnell, one of the hardy pioneers of Mukwonago; they have five children : Chelsea E., born Aug. 18, 1871 ; Ellen A., born March 2, 1873; Walter D., born June 14, 1875; Emma, born Nov. 20, 1876 ; Calvin J., born Oct. 2, 1878. Mr. Jones is one of the enterprising young farmers of his native town, his management of the 234-acre farm having been in all respects successful.


DUNCAN MAULE, farmer, Sec. 15 ; P. O. Ottawa; born May 1809, in Perthshire, Scotland. His early life was spent on his father's farm and at shoemaking, emigrating to the United States in Feb., 1843. They came via the Erie Canal and the lakes to Waukesha Co. the next May. Unable to pay for a claim made in Ottawa, he pulled up stakes and located in Sullivan, Jefferson Co. Beginning here with but little, a yoke of cattle and a cow, he did good work among the timber of that town. Living in a log house they made steady progress, but, finally, to escape the infection of fever and ague, returned to Ottawa, where Mr. Maule engaged for the next eight years at his trade, and, during this time he bought 125 acres of his pres- ent farm, an old barn and a log house comprising the buildings. The reward of thirty-seven years of well directed toil may now be seen in the village of tasteful farm buildings erected by him, the first being a 14x54 foot sheep-barn, wagon and hog house 22x50, and main barn 30x64. His family for over twenty years lived in ordinary frame house, uow supplanted by a spacious and elegant farmhouse, built of the famous Cream City brick, this completing a set of farm buildings second to none in his town. Mrs. Maule was Miss Ann B. Reed, a native of Kinross, Perthshire, and married at Saline, Fifeshire. They are members of the Pres- byterian Church, of which Mr. M. is a Trustee. Mr. M. is an Independent Republican in political faith .


WILLIAM REID, of William Reid & Son, nurserymen and farmers, Secs. 25, 26 and 21 ; P. O. North Prairie ; born Sept. 3, 1820. in Dundee, Scotland ; served a five-years' apprenticeship as a mechanic, and worked in his native land until the fall of 1852, when he came with his family to America; spent a year in Montreal, and October, 1853, located in Milwaukee. In 1855, Mr. Reid bought 85 acres of his homestead, upon which his family located the following May ; during the ensuing twelve years, Mr. Reid followed his trade in the car-shops at Milwaukee, passing each Sunday with his family, his wife and boys running the farm ; his first experience as a nurseryman was in the successful growing of the Isabella and Connecticut grapes ; this encouraged him to begin a nursery on a small scale about 1860, and he has con- stantly and successfully increased it ; he has the Concord, Hartford, Prolific, Janesville, Northern Musca- tine, Isabella, Diana, Connecticut, Michigan, Clinton, Delaware, Iowa, Elvira, Martha, Lady, Allen's Hybrid, Croton, Champion, Worden, Crevling's and Rodger's Hybrids, numbers 1, 3, 4, 9, 15, 19 and 53 ; has recently introduced the Black Eagle, Concord, Chatless, Goodadel and Brighton ; his average crop is two tons of grapes ; his stock of thrifty and hardy three and four year old apple trees is very extensive, and includes all standard summer, winter and fall varieties ; the most popular pear, plum, cherry and crab trees are also grown here; also evergreens, the Norway spruce, balsam, fir, Scotch pine, hemlock, Austrian pine, red cedar, arbor vitæ, etc., etc. ; these are from four to six feet high ; his first evergreen, a noble Scotch pine, grown from seed planted seventeen years ago, still stands before his house; the stock of shade and ornamental trees is also complete, as is that of the flowers and shrubs of every description ; annuals, perennials, everlasting flowers, gladiolas, tulips, peonies, etc. ; this is a nursery of which the county may well be proud, as it is the only one, except that at Pewaukee. Mr. Reid's successful work here for the past twenty years is a strong guarantee of his ability to select and cultivate wisely and well ;


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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES:


he warrants all stock true to name, and assures all patrons that everything ordered of him will be delivered promptly and in good condition ; that his prices will be as low as those of any reliable dealer in the country ; all orders promptly attended to, and all letters of inquiry promptly and cheerfully answered, if addressed to William Reid & Son, North Prairie. Mr. Reid was a steadfast Abolitionist and is a stalwart Republican. The family attend and support the Presbyterian Church, of which he has been Trustee. His spacious and elegant residence was built in 1872. Mrs. Reid was Miss Mary Porter, born in Arbroath, Forfarshire. They have eleven living children-William, Alexander, David, George, Thomas, Isabella, John, Jessie, Joseph, Samuel and Charles.


HENRY WEINER, farmer and merchant; P. O. Dousman; born near Mentz, Germany, May 16, 1827 ; was educated in the Fatherland, and came with his parents, Nicholas and Phedas M. Weiner, to America in 1843; they arrived at Ottawa in June and found the three Link brothers in a log house, built on the line of Secs. 4 and 8; these with the two Weiner families and that of Mr. Mund- chau, all lived for several weeks in the 14x16 cabin The father of Mr. Weiner bought and built in Ottawa that summer; he died Dec. 16, 1847, his wife surviving till Aug. 10, 1856; this left Henry alone, as his only sister died in 1846; on the 9th of June, 1851, Mr. Weiner married Miss Anna Derr, a native of Germany, and a resident of Columbia Co., Wis. In 1868, he built the only store and saloon in Ottawa, near his residence. He now carries a good stock of dry goods, groceries, hats and caps, boots and shoes, patent medicines, notions, etc. ; his 270-acre farm is well improved ; is a member, with his family, of the Roman Catholic Church of Ottawa, holding and resigning the offices of Treasurer and Trustee. Mr. Weiner is a steadfast Democrat, and has filled many different positions with credit, serving as Constable, Justice of the Peace, Supervisor, and making an unfading record as Chairman of Ottawa during the war ; filling the quotas promptly and well, and, in spite of the petty malice of certain parties, held the office a number of years; after the war was then Assessor for seven years, refusing re-election; was Chairman in 1870, '71, '76, '79, and now honors the same position. In 1870, Mr. Weiner lacked only 62 votes for the County Treasurership. A life work like this is best told without attempt at eulogy. Mr. and Mrs. Weiner have ten children-John, Margaret and Mary, now married; Magdalena, Henry, Joseph, Aug- ustus, Anna, Philip and Michael.


DAVID P. WILLIAMS, farmer ; Sec. 16; P. O. Dousman; born in Breconshire, South Wales, March 2, 1825 ; received a common-school education, and was for twelve years employed in the Garth flouring mills, as agent, his account averaging £7,000 per annum; came to the United States in June, 1869, with his family ; had married the widow of John Powell; she was a daughter of Rees Williams, and was born May 17, 1829, in Breconshire, Wales. Mr. W. has owned two different farms since his res- idence in Ottawa, and has recently bought, and will build upon, 80 acres owned by Wm. D. Owens. Mr. and Mrs. W. are members of the Congregational Church, of which he has been a member for the past forty years, and is now deacon. In 1874 and 1875, Mr. Williams served his town as Treasurer ; he is a Democrat. There are ten children, the two youngest born in Ottawa; David, James, Ellen, Mary, Maggie, Jane, John, Bessie, Hannah and Rees; Sarah died July 21, 1877.


W. J. D. WILLIAMS, farmer ; Secs. 9 and 16; P. O. Dousman ; born in Merionethshire, North Wales, 1820; came to America in 1842, his parents having died in Wales ; spent the first year in New York State, and early in June, 1843, reached Ottawa, buying 200 acres of his present farm of the Government, built a log house, and, like the poor but plucky man, he began working by the day and month for Edgerton, Dousman and other early settlers; a beginning like this is sure of a reward, and his prog- ress was steady, enabling him to devote himself to his own farm ; here his motto was always, "Come boys," instead of "Go boys," and the result is a splendid 371-acre farm and homestead in Ottawa, 360 acres in Delafield-one of his farms containing 80 and the other 280 acres-besides 90 acres in Jeff Co. His large and tasteful brick residence is a good contrast to the log shanty of early times; while his 35x45 basement barn, with one now building (34x70, with 18-feet posts and two drive-floors), furnishes ample room for his stock and produce ; the other farms are also well equipped with buildings, he having built a large brick house, in 1879, on the Delafield farm. He married Miss Elizabeth Davis, a native of Wales, who settled in Delafield nearly forty years ago; they have four living children, Mary, John, Lizzie and Moses ; the family are members of the W. C. M. E. Church ; politics Republican.


ERRATA.


Vernon Tichenor furnishes the following correction of the sketch entitled "Post office and Postmasters " of the village of Wankesha: "You say that Mr. Barstow moved the post. office from Mr. Jackson's house, which stood near the present site of the Episcopal Church, to the vicinity of Charles R. Dakin's store. Allow me to correct you. In 1839, Mr. Jackson held the post office in his log dwelling-house, on what is now Mill street, very near where Barney street now joins Mill street. The exact location I cannot give, as all trace of it has been removed. Mr. Jackson, within a year or two after that, erected a frame dwelling-house on the present site of the Congregational Church, at the corner of East Division and Mill streets, to which place he removed the post office, and there held it until he died. The identical building has been since moved to the rear of the Congregational Church, and is now owned by Milo Putney.


MARTIN FIELD, attorney at law, Mukwonago; born in Chester, Windsor Co., Vt., Dec. 9, 1814 ; received an academic education ; remaining with his parents, Stephen and Mary Field, on their farm in Chester until May, 1836 ; that month he reached Chicago, in company with Ira Blood and W. C. Chapin, both Vermonters ; Judge F. had learned surveying of his father in boyhood, and during the summer of 1836 Mr. Blood and himself were employed in surveying out-lots in the then village of Chicago; going to Milwaukee, Mr. Blood and himself remained but a comparatively brief time, reaching the Indian village of Mukwonago early in October, 1836, and were soon after employed by the proprietors, Sewell Andrews, H. H. Camp and Edward Meacham, to survey out the village plat; Mr. Field's first claim, made on Sec. 23, was under the protection of the Anti-Speculators, Claim Association; here he built a log house, where he kept " bachelor's hall " for three years ; began the study of law soon after his settlement in Badgerdom ; was admitted to practice at the Circuit Court of Milwaukee Co., and soon after to the bar of the Supreme Court of the Territory. Judge Field is a sturdy and outspoken Republican, of Whig antecedents; has served thirteen years as Town Clerk, seventeen as Justice of the Peace, and other minor positions; was elected County Judge of Waukesha Co. at its organization, and served fourteen years, having civil jurisdiction four years ; during the war he was Assistant Government Assessor. Judge Field married Miss Sarah P. Meacham, a descendant, on her mother's . side, of the famous Hyde family, and born in Springfield, Mass. The Judge is fresh, alert and healthful for a settler of forty-four years ago, and has for many years past given all his time to the management of his large fortune, accumulated almost wholly in Wisconsin.


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