Saturday, October 26, 2013



Warren Eugene  and Clara Emily (nee Bielenberg) Evans


Warren Eugene Evans, the son of Lukeman  (Lumen) F. Evans and Isobel Jeffery. Warren E. Evans was a Montana pioneer, a Powell County Clerk and prominent citizen of Deer Lodge who came to Montana with his parents when he was fifteen years old.  He was a member of the Montana pioneers and the Anaconda Elks lodge.

Born Feb 24, 1855 Rochester, Ohio - Died December 15, 1935, Deer Lodge, MT.

 Clara Emily Bielenberg, the daughter of Charles P. H. & Mary (nee Wilhema) Bielenberg was a public administrator of Powell County Montana since 1916 and owner operator of the Powell County Abstract Company. She was born and reared in the home in which she made here residence until her death. She attended public schools in Deer Lodge and graduated with a degree in Music from Rowland Hall at Salt Lake City in 1886.  She was a member of the Sons and Daughters of Montana pioneers, the American Legion auxiliary, Floral Chapter No. 46, Order of the Eastern Star and a charter member of the Business and Professional Women’s Club.

Born Oct. 24, 1870, Deer Lodge, MT. - Died July 23, 1950, Deer Lodge, MT.


Children of Warren Eugene  and Clara Emily (nee Bielenberg) Evans

AGNES MARY EVANS (1889-1950)
CHARLES LUKE EVANS (1890-1920)
HUGH KIRKENDAL EVANS (1893-1941)
CONRAD KOHRS EVANS (1900-1979)

Friday, October 25, 2013

GRANT REUNION and TEA

GRANT REUNION and TEA

In the mid 1700s our Grants left Scotland and arrived in Canada. In the two hundred and fifty years since, areas of our history became clouded, confused and even lost.

An interest in culture and history resulted in a decades long attempt to fill the many gaps. One of the persistent questions was, “Are ‘our’ Grants related to the Cuthbert Grants?”

In spite of the advances made restoring our history, it was not until the introduction of DNA testing that a definitive answer was provided. Some of our male Grants and some male descendants of Cuthbert Grant agreed to join the Clan Grant DNA Project. The results of those first tests declared there was “less than a 5% chance of a common ancestor in the last 4-500 years”. Effectively, the question was answered with another question: “If we’re not related to the Cuthbert Grants, who are we?” The same DNA results answered: We are the same line as the Chiefs of Grant. More specifically, we are the Glenlochy line (aka the MacRobbies) which traditionally holds that we descend from an illegitimate son of Robert Grant the Ambassador.

In 2011, the current Chief of Grant, Sir James Grant, stated his intention to visit Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, in July of 2012, to officially include the Cuthbert Grants as a Sept of Clan Grant.

Following that announcement, a request was made for an audience between our Grants and our distant kinsman, the Chief of Grant. The result is the Grant Reunion Tea with guests of honour, Sir James Grant the Lord Strathspey and Mrs. Judy Lewis; Friday, July 13, 2012, at the Fort Garry Hotel, Winnipeg, Manitoba. After a 250 year separation between our Grant families of Scotland and those of North America, this occasion is genuinely an historical reunion.

This reunion is open to all descendants of William Grant of Trois-Rivières and his relations. If you are uncertain whether you are a member of this Grant family, perhaps the website, http://www.william-grant-of-trois-rivieres-genealogy.ca/index.html , will help.

If you wish to attend this reunion, you will need to register. Please complete and return the following pages with your payment to: <---LINK

Anita Grant Steele

34 Hart Crescent

Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada

Y1A-4R4

Phone: 867-667-4675

E-Mail: anitas@northwestel.net

In the near future, these pages will be displayed on the above website and on Facebook.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame Nominee: Charles P. H. Bielenberg

CHARLES PETER. HENRY BIELENBERG

Born: 1 May 1846 in Holstein, Germany- Died: 31 Oct 1924 in Deer Lodge, Montana.


Charles Peter Henry Bielenberg was born in Wevelsfleth – a fishing village in the province of Holstein – at that time a possession of Denmark, - now Germany, on May 1, 1846. In July 1854, the Bielenberg family immigrated to the United States and settled in Davenport, Iowa. Charles Bielenberg attended the public school of Davenport Iowa until 1864. On May 7, 1864, at the age of eighteen, Charles enlisted in the 44th Regiment Infantry Iowa Volunteers. He was mustered into the U. S. Army on June 1st, 1864 in Davenport Iowa (1). The 44th Regiment did garrison duty at Memphis and La Grange, Tennessee (2). At the end of his enlistment on September 15, 1864, Charles Bielenberg returned to Iowa. On January 21, 1865 he re-enlisted, this time in the 8th Regiment Infantry Iowa Volunteers. He was deafened and taken ill during the bombardment of Mobile Alabama and the siege of Spanish Fort. In August 1865 he was hospitalized at Montgomery, Alabama from August-October and was sent back to Davenport to recuperate. He was honorably discharged on December 18,1865 (1).

At the close of the war, Charles Bielenberg headed west to seek his fortune in the Montana Territory where his half-brother, Conrad Kohrs, and his twin-brother, John N. Bielenberg and his youngest brother, Nicholas J. Bielenberg had begun to establish themselves. In the spring of 1866, at the age of twenty, he traveled to Montana by way of steamboat departing from St. Louis up the Missouri River and arriving at Fort Benton of the Montana Territory. Having no money to pay expenses for any other means of travel, Charles Bielenberg walked to Helena, arriving there on June 10, 1866. From Helena he went onto Virginia City to be employed in one of Conrad Kohrs’ butcher shops butcher shop for three months. In the fall of 1866, Charley Bielenberg came to Deer Lodge and opened the “City Market” butcher shop, with Nicholas Bielenberg and Conrad Kohrs as partners in the business. Here he went into the butchering and meat cutting business and operated the City Market in Deer Lodge for 30 years (1). In 1873, Charles Bielenberg become associated with his twin brother John Bielenberg, engaging in the stock business, raising horses and cattle. The firm of Bielenberg & Brothers was known all over the Territory. Their stock was of the highest grade, and always brought the best prices in Chicago, to which they shipped each year several herds (3).

Charles Bielenberg remained in the cattle business with his twin brother Johnny Bielenberg, until John's death in 1922. It was shortly there after that Charles Bielenberg resigned from his position as foreman of the Kohrs & Bielenberg ranches. It is said that Charles furnished many free cowhides for floor coverings in miners shacks and cabins. The ranch was known as the Bielenberg and Brother (1). Mr. Bielenberg was a member of the Grand Army of the Republic (G. A. R.) of which he has been patriotic instructor for several years, the Society of Montana Pioneers, the Elks, No. 289 of Anaconda and the Kiwanis club of this city. His position as patriotic instructor of the Grand Army was a beloved duty to him. Having the financial means he considered himself better able to bear the expenses of spreading patriotic doctrine around the state than the Grand Army with its dwindling membership (3). Mr. Bielenberg was married in 1869 to Miss Mary Wilhelma, of Iowa, and has three children: Clara, Katie and Charles O. Bielenberg (3). A room was set aside as the Patriotic Room in the Powell County, Courthouse in his honor and the G. A. R. He furnished a grand piano (square Steinway) in the room for public use. The piano remained there until 1964 when the room was needed for other purposes. His patriotism also was evident when he enlisted in Captain Stewart's Company No.12, August 12-24, 1877, for the Nez Perce Indian uprising .In an application for a Civil War pension he listed as distinguishing marks and scars a : scar on left forearm from a bite by a pet bear (1).

References

1. Dreams Across the Divide: Stories of the Montana Pioneers

2. Scott County Men in the Civil War. Retrieved 12 April 2010 from
http://www.celticcousins.net/scott/civwarrosters.htm

3. Col. Charles P. H. Bielenberg, Noted Character, Is Dead. Anaconda Standard, Anaconda, Montana. November 2, 1924.

4. Deer Lodge Notes; Anaconda Standard,: 11-02-1922; Volume: XXXIV; Issue:60; Page: 4; Anaconda, Montana

Friday, September 20, 2013

Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame Nominee: Nicholas J. Bielenberg


NICHOLAS JOHN BIELENBERG


Born: 8 June 1847, Holstein, Germany- Died: 06 July 1927 Deer Lodge, Montana


Nicholas John Bielenberg was born in Wevelsfleth – a fishing village in the province of Holstein – at that time a possession of Denmark, - now Germany, on June 8, 1847. In July 1854, the Bielenberg family immigrated to the United States and settled in Davenport, Iowa. Nicholas Bielenberg was given the usual public school privileges, but his lively interest in all practical affairs led him to shorten his period of study and join in the vocational activities in which his father and brother were engaged, that of a butcher (1). In 1863, at the age of sixteen, Nicholas traveled to Chicago Illinois to serve an apprenticeship in the butchering business, remaining there through the winter of 1864 (2).

In the spring of 1865, at the age of seventeen, he traveled by way of steamboat up the Missouri River, departing from St. Louis Missouri and arriving at Fort Benton June 18, 1865. Upon reaching the territory, Nick’s half-brother, Conrad Kohrs and brother Johnny Bielenberg “staked” him in the purchase of a butcher shop in the mining town of Blackfoot City. In Blackfoot he settled until 1870, when Nick left this gold mining camp to pursue the butcher business at Helena, remaining there for two years until 1872. 1n March of 1873, Nick sold his "Blackfoot City" butcher shop to Simpson and Company and purchased the Prowse Ranch on Dempsey Creek, becoming the “Figure Five" Ranch (3). In 1877, Nick pursued the meat packing business in Butte, handling beef in wholesale quantities with the construction of a cold-storage warehouse. This large butchering business eventually was named the Butte Butchering Company, which became one of the leading industries of its kind in the northwest. In February 19, 1879, Nick Bielenberg became one of the first members of the Montana Stockgrowers Association (3).

In 1883 Nick Bielenberg, with his half brother Conrad Kohrs and brothers, John N. W. and Charles P. H. Bielenberg, became involved in an extensive cattle operation - including the famous "DHS Ranch (3). Also in 1883, Nick became associated with J. K. Mallory and D. D. Walker in a livestock and butchering operation forming “Bielenberg and Company" in Anaconda (3). Nick Bielenberg is credited as the first stockman to feed or winter beef in the Big Hole Valley. In 1884 he went into the sheep business, at first alone, then in partnership with Joseph Toomey. This business grew to enormous proportions, handling in one year over 130,000 head of sheep. Their flocks were to be found in all parts of the State, and in addition to their own they bought and shipped a great many herds throughout the Northwest, operating from Washington Territory to North Dakota (2). It can be safely said that Nick Bielenberg and associates were the fathers of the sheep industry in Northern Montana with the first of any importance within the State (2).

An active Republican, Nick Bielenberg was a delegate in 1892 to the national convention at Minneapolis. Nick, a friend and confidant of Theodore Roosevelt, was a delegate to the National Progressive Convention, held in Chicago in August of 1912 that nominated Roosevelt for president on the "Bull Moose Party" (3). Nick was an active participant in the development of the City of Deer Lodge. He contributed funds for the completion of the Deer Lodge Chapter House of the Deer Lodge Womens' Club as a memorial to his daughter, Augusta Kohrs Bielenberg, who passed away in 1901 (3).

Nick Bielenberg was a member of the Masonic fraternity, in all of its bodies; also of the Elks. In the Masonic Order he was a member of Deer Lodge, lodge No. 14, Valley Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M., Ivanhoe Commandery, No. 16, Knights Templar and Algeria Temple of Mystic Shrine. He was the first treasurer of the Ivanhoe Commandery, when chartered in 1916. He was also a member of the Society of Montana Pioneers. Nicholas J. Bielenberg and Annie Bogk Bielenberg of Deer Lodge, Montana had five children Alma, Howard, Augusta, Anna and Claude (4).

Nick Bielenberg was a member of the Masonic fraternity, in all of its bodies; also of the Elks. In the Masonic Order he was a member of Deer Lodge, lodge No. 14, Valley Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M., Ivanhoe Commandery, No. 16, Knights Templar and Algeria Temple of Mystic Shrine. He was the first treasurer of the Ivanhoe Commandery, when chartered in 1916. He was also a member of the Society of Montana Pioneers. Nicholas J. Bielenberg and Annie Bogk Bielenberg of Deer Lodge, Montana had five children Alma, Howard, Augusta, Anna and Claude (4).

References

1. An Illustrated History of the State of Montana. Miller, Joaquin. Publisher: Chicago, The Lewis pub. Co., 1894.

2. Dreams Across the Divide: Stories of the Montana Pioneers

3. Silver State Post, Deer Lodge, MT. December 6th, 1979.

4. A History of Montana. Volume 2. Helen Fitzgerald Sanders, Chicago: Lewis Pub. Co., 1913

MAMMOTH SLAUGHTER HOUSE FOR BUTTE


MAMMOTH SLAUGHTER HOUSE FOR BUTTE

BIG COMPANY IS ORGANIZED WITH CAPITAL OF MILLION
TO DO THE WORK

Herald Special Service

Butte, Mont. Feb. 5 – A mammoth slaughter and packing establishment is to be built here by a company organizing with a million capital. Montana’s ranges furnish thousands of cattle for eastern packing centers and the dressed beef is shipped back to the state. They propose in the future to do this at home. In addition to several wealth stock raisers the company will consist of Joe Toomey, Deer Lodge, John Gerdts, Garrison, Senator Conrad Kohrs, Charles, Nick, John Bielenberg, Frank Conley, Tom McTague, of Deer Lodge. Final plans will be completed at a meeting.


Paper: Grand Forks Herald, published as Grand Forks Daily Herald; Date: 02-06-1906; Volume: 25; Issue: 86; Page: 2; Location: Grand Forks, North Dakota

Thursday, September 19, 2013

The "S 6" Ranch is Sold Deed Filed Conveying Property to D. D. Walker from Bielenberg &Walker.

Headline: The "S6" Ranch is Sold Deed Filed Conveying Property to D. D. Walker from Bielenberg &Walker. The Anaconda Standard; Date: 11-11-1903; Volume: 15; Issue: 62; Page: 7; Location: Anaconda, Montana.

The "S 6" Ranch is Sold

Deed Filed Conveying Property to D. D. Walker

From Bielenberg &Walker

It Brings Eighty-Two Thousand Dollars

Special Correspondence of the Standard. Dillon, Nov. 10. By a deed filed in the office of the clerk and recorder yesterday title to one of the biggest ranches in Montana passes from Bielenberg & Walker Company to D. D, Walker. The amount of transaction aggregated $82, 000. The ranch consists of 12, 000 acres of meadows and grazing land, and is considered one of the finest properties in the entire state. It is situated between the towns of Fox and Wisdom, and it is of such proportions that it annually cuts about 20, 000 tons of wild hay.

Bielenberg & Walker were early to recognize the possibilities of the basin as a feeding ground, and it is stated that these gentlemen were the first to feed cattle in that section during the winter months. That was nearly twenty years ago, and the gentlemen have kept up the industry ever since and helped develop it to the extensive scale it has reached to-day. Last year, it is asserted about 1, 700 head of cattle fattened on the ranch, and the current report is that about the same number will be fed this year. The statement is made that Mr. Walker will continue in the same lines as the company did, and use the basin as a maturing ground for the large number of cattle he owns. The “S6” ranch, as it is called, is well watered, well fenced, controls thousands of acres of the finest summer pasturage, and as a stock ranch is unexcelled in the entire state.


TITLE:BIG HOLE VALLEY, BEAVERHEAD COUNTY, MONTANA. STACKING HAY

Call number:lc-usw3- 008028-d [p&p] Reproduction number:lc-usw3-008028-d (b&w film neg.)

Medium:1 negative : safety ; 3 1/4 x 3 1/4 inches or smaller. Created/published:1942 aug.?

Creator: Lee, Russell, 1903- photographer. Part of:farm security administration - office of war information photograph collection (library of congress) Repository:library of congress prints and photographs division washington, d.c. 20540 Digital id:(digital file from intermediary roll film) fsa 8d08235 Other number:g 537 Card #:owi2001010611/p