Category Archives: Allen County

Gottlieb Friedrich Wilhelm Michael Traub

Gottlieb Friedrich Wilhelm Michael Traub
b. 9 April 1866, Bingen, Adams County, Indiana, to Gottlieb and Maria W. (Aumann) Traub
d. 17 February 1922, Hancock, Houghton County, Michigan

m. 13 May 1896, Aurora, Kane County, Illinois
Anna Rosina Muschler
b. 6 November 1870, Aurora, Kane County, Illinois
d. 2 January 1938, Hancock, Houghton County, Michigan

Children with Anna Rosina Muschler:

  • Anna Maria
  • Gotlieb Georg
  • Lydia Henriette
  • Clara Bertha
  • Wilhelm Andreas
  • Edna Louise
  • Arthur Carl

Gottlieb emigrated from Adams or Allen County in 1868 to Crete, Will County, Illinois. He attended Concordia College in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and Concordia Theological Seminary in Springfield, Illinois. Gottlieb and his father were both Lutheran ministers who relocated frequently.

Submitted by:
Carol Koty
Mukwonago WI

Gottlieb Traub

Gottlieb Traub
b. 2 August 1842, Goppingen, Heiningen, Germany, to Gottlieb and Jacobine (Widmann) Traub
d. 1 July 1900, Aurora, Kane County, Illinois

m. 17 June 1864, Decatur, Adams County, Indiana
Maria W. Aumann
b. 13 September 1847, Adams County, Indiana
d. 6 February 1902, Fort Wayne, Allen County, Indiana

Children with Maria W. Aumann:

  • Gottlieg Friedrich Wilhelm Michael
  • Lorenz Gustav
  • Heinrich Friedrich Wilhelm
  • Wilhelm Christoph
  • Friedrich Wilhelm
  • Marie Emelie Friedericke
  • Emilie Lizette Elise
  • Anna Maria
  • Louisa “Luella”
  • Wilhelmine T.
  • Friedrich C.

Gottlieb Traub came directly to Indiana from Concordia Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri, to minister at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church of Allen and Adams counties. He immigrated in 1868 to Crete, Will County, Illinois.

Submitted by:
Carol Koty
Mukwonago WI

William Tennis

William Tennis
b. 30 September 1832, Fort Wayne, Allen County, Indiana, to Samuel S. and Jane (Crow) Tennis
d. 14 March 1914, Kingfisher County, Oklahoma

m. 5 September 1878, Forest City, Iowa
Laura C. Westbury
b. 6 July 1860, Forest City, Iowa
d. 15 May 1937, Kingfisher County, Oklahoma

Children with Laura C. Westbury:

  • Lloyd A.
  • Lillie E.
  • Jennie
  • Sam
  • Bertha
  • Mabel
  • Everett
  • Nora
  • Angie

William was the first settler in Norway Township, Winnebago County, Iowa, in 1856. He spent four years, 1860-1864, in Colorado with two partners mining for silver and gold. They were isolated from the world and lived off the land. Arriving in Denver, Colorado, still a tent city, to record and claim their mine in 1864, they discovered that there had been a Civil War but that it was now just over.

William lost the Humboldt silver mine, the largest silver mine in Colorado, when papers were destroyed in a house fire in Forest City, Iowa, in 1892. He and his family then migrated to Kingfisher, Oklahoma, where he again homesteaded during the Oklahoma Land Rush. He never had the chance to return to Denver, Colorado, to renew the burned papers showing his one-third ownership in the Humboldt mine due to his large family of seven children by 1893.

Laura (Westbury) Tennis was a fourth cousin to Gene Stratton, the original “Tom Thumb”. She was the midwife for at least six of her grandchildren. After William’s death in 1914, she made her home with one of her sons.

Submitted by:
Glen R. Tennis
San Angelo TX

Samuel S Tennis

Samuel S Tennis
b. 14 January 1790, Pennsylvania
d. 15 September 1888, Forest City, Winnebago County, Iowa

m. 25 March 1831, Fort Wayne, Allen County, Indiana
Jane Crow
b. 17 April 1806, Pennsylvania
d. 24 April 1886, Norway Township, Winnebago County, Iowa

Children with Jane Crow:

  • Philip
  • Eliza married B. F. Wellman
  • William (1832-1914) married Laura C. Westbury
  • Joseph Tennis (1837-1909) married Carrie Belle Johnson
  • Mary married J. J. Kewley
  • Harriet Catharine “Kate” (1841-1942) married George Washington Strong
  • Lora married H. S. Botsford
  • Samuel W. (d. 1864)
  • Elsa Ann (1850-1908) married Egbert D. Skinner
  • Margaret

Samuel resided at Eel River Township, Allen County, Indiana, and Union Township, LaPorte County, Indiana. In 1859 he emigrated from Indiana to Forest City, Winnebago County, Iowa, and in 1861 he moved to Norway Township, Winnebago County.

According to family tradition, Samuel had a previous marriage to a woman who was the mother of Philip.

Samuel was elected county judge in Winnebago County, Iowa, in 1863 and re-elected in 1865 and 1867. When that position was abolished in 1867, he became the county auditor for one year.

Samuel’s son, Samuel W., died on 9 June 1864, while serving during the Civil War. He was marching with Company B of the Iowa Volunteers en route to Memphis, Tennessee.

Submitted by:
Kay Shoenwalk Shariff
Casper WY

Johann Georg Streckfuss

Johann George Streckfuss
b. 3 March 1814, Windsheim, Bavaria, Germany, to Johann and Margaretha B. (Schneider) Streckfuss
d. 12 December 1880, Okawville, Washington County, Illinois

m. 16 May 1847, Willshire Township, Van Wert County, Ohio
Margaretha Blaseneck
b. 17 August 1818, Rosstal, Bavaria, Germany, to Michael and Margaretha Barbara (Steignmann) Blaseneck
d. 19 May 1882, Davenport, Scott County, Iowa

Children with Margaretha Blaseneck:

  • Christiana Frederika (b. 1849) married Bruno Miessler
  • Erhardt August (1851-1867)
  • Johann Freidrich (1852-1924) married Maria Eirich
  • Johann Adam (1855-1899) married Amalie Mennicke
  • Katharina Dorothea Louisa (b. 1858)
  • Maria Catharina Elisabeth (1860-1869)

Johann and Margaretha Streckfuss immigrated to Adams Township, Allen County, Indiana, from Willshire Township, Van Wert County, Ohio, in 1856 and emigrated from Indiana to Okawville, Washington County, Illinois, in 1860.

Pastor Streckfuss was a student under Pastor Loehe in Germany, 1844-1845, and was sent to America in 1846, landing in New York on 8 May. On Easter Sunday 1847, he was installed as pastor of the German Lutheran congregation in Van Wert County, Ohio.

Later in 1847, Johann traveled by buggy with Pastor Adam Ernst of Marysville, Ohio, to Chicago for the founding of the Missouri Synod. At that meeting, Streckfuss was examined and accepted as a charter member. In 1856 he moved to Allen County, Indiana, where he served as pastor of the Holy Trinity and Martini Lutheran churches until his removal to Illinois in 1856.

Two family bibles that belonged to Pastor Johann Georg Streckfuss are now housed at Concordia Historical Institute, 801 DeMun Ave., St. Louis MO 63105.

Submitted by:
Willis Braun
N. Ridgeville OH

George Conrad Nill

George Conrad Nill
b. 16 July 1837, Fort Wayne, Allen County, Indiana, to Conrad and Barbara (Pfeiffer) Nill
d. 29 October 1889, Toledo, Lucas County, Ohio

m. 16 January 1866, Columbia City, Whitley County, Indiana
Anna Sophia Stevens
b. 24 July 1843, Huron County, Ohio
d. 30 August 1922, Fresno, Fresno County, California

Children with Anna Sophia Stevens:

George resided in Fort Wayne, Allen County, and Columbia City, Whitley County, Indiana. He moved to Toledo, Lucas County, Ohio, in 1872.

Submitted by:
Marya D. Nill
San Carlos CA

Louis McKee

Louis McKee
b. January 1888, Fort Wayne, Allen County, Indiana, to Jefferson and Ida B. (Crutchfield) McKee
d. 28 September 1962, Monroe, Michigan

m/1.
Blanche Whetsel

m/2.
Betty [–?–]

Children with Blanche Whetsel:

  • Vernon A.
  • Hazel

Louis emigrated about 1932 from Allen County, Indiana, to Newport, Michigan.

Submitted by:
Dawne Slater-Putt
Huntertown IN
E-mail: dslaterput@aol.com

Samuel Marquart

Samuel Marquart
b. 17 April 1839, Perry County, Ohio, to Jonathan and Catherine (Bashore) Marquart
d. 22 May 1923, Lake Arthur, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana

m. 17 February 1861, Fontanelle, Adair County, Iowa
Susanna Emerson Miller
b. 7 August 1845, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, to George and Mary Jane (Histe) Miller
d. 23 November 1902, Lake Arthur, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana

Children with Susannah Miller:

  • Ida A. (b. 16 August 1863) married George B. Baker
  • Samuel Lorn (14 May 1867–18 July 1870)
  • Oran Glen (b. 16 November 1869) married Edith Mae Segrist
  • Emerson Lavern “Vern” (b. 5 September 1886) married Lelia Vencent August

Samuel immigrated to Marion Township, Allen County, Indiana, with his parents when he was four or five months old, in the fall of 1839. He moved to Marshall County, Indiana, in 1850 but soon afterward moved back to Allen County, Indiana. He joined the George Miller family in moving to Fontanelle, Somerset Township, Adair County, Iowa, in the summer of 1857.

In 1866, Samuel’s brother, Frederick and his son Daniel W. Marquart, joined Samuel in Fontanelle, where Daniel married Sam’s wife’s sister, Mary Etta Miller, on 18 March 1868.

In February 1898, Samuel, with his nephew Daniel W. Marquart, and ten other men, organized a party to go to the Klondike gold fields. They tried to get through to Dawson by way of White Horse Pass, but snows in the mountains proved too great an obstacle. They returned without reaching the gold fields.

Submitted by:
Virgil V. Marquart
Fort Wayne IN

Daniel Whitaker Marquart

Daniel Whitaker Marquart
b. 16 February 1848, Marion Township, Allen County, Indiana, to Frederick (1820–1886) and Anna Marie (Whitaker) Marquart
d. 11 September 1900, Louisville, Kentucky

m. 18 March 1868, Fontanelle, Adair County, Iowa
Mary Etta Miller
b. 7 August 1847, Columbiana County, Ohio
d. 11 June 1932, Norman, Cleveland County, Oklahoma

Children with Mary Etta Miller:

  • Gertrude Eve (1870–1931)
  • Vide Alma (1872–1956)
  • Webb E. (1875–1880)

Daniel was nearly four months old when his mother died in June 1848, and he was raised by his two grandmothers. He enlisted in the U.S. Army at age 16 by falsifying his age and served during the Civil War in Company H, 91st Regiment, Indiana Infantry. He was 5 feet 3/4 inches tall when he enlisted and had black eyes, brown hair, and dark complexion.

In 1866, Daniel and his father left Allen County Indiana to join his uncle Samuel Marquart in Fontanelle, Adair County, Iowa, where Daniel married Mary Etta Miller, who was the sister of Daniel’s Uncle Samuel’s wife.

A biography in an 1884 history of Guthrie and Adair counties, Iowa, states that Daniel “followed school teaching and various other occupations for several years, after which he assisted his father in the post office.” His father was postmaster from 1868 to 1870 and from 1872 to 1882. Daniel then operated a general merchandise store until he moved to Greenfield in January 1878 to serve as Adair County auditor from 1877 to 1883.

When President Harrison declared the Oklahoma Indian Territory open for settlement in 1889, Daniel, with his uncle, Samuel Marquart, and cousins, Oren and Eugene, were in the crowd waiting to enter at noon. Eugene developed a terrible thirst and patronized a man who was selling water from barrels on his wagon at twenty-five cents per cup. After several cups, the others talked Eugene out of his thirst.

In October 1889, D. W., then postmaster, was unanimously elected mayor of Norman, Oklahoma. In February 1898, D. W. and his Uncle Samuel, along with ten other men,
organized a party to go to the Klondike gold fields. They undertook to get through to Dawson by way of White Horse Pass, but snows in the mountains proved too great an obstacle, and they were forced to return without reaching the gold fields.

While visiting a doctor in Louisville, Kentucky, in September 1900, D. W. Marquart died, not having reached the age of fifty-three, but having held many positions of honor during his short life span.

Submitted by:
Virgil V. Marquart
Fort Wayne IN

William “Willie” Gorham

William “Willie” Gorham
b. 13 May 1867, Fort Wayne, Allen County, Indiana, to Marquis de Lafayette and Eunice (Thatcher) Gorham
d. 27 March 1941, Hamilton, Ravalli County, Montana

m. 14 September 1931, Ravalli County, Montana
Julie V. Borell
d. before 1941, Ravalli County, Montana

William emigrated from Allen County, Indiana, to Darby, Ravalli County, Montana, in 1890 to search for gold. There were no known children.

Submitted by:
Robert E. Gorham
Dallas TX