Saturday, April 25, 2009

German Descent In Davenport & Scott County



View of Davenport, Iowa

The following paragraphs are from Chapter XXIX, History of Davenport and Scott County, Iowa, by Harry E. Downer. 2 vols. Chicago: S. J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1910.

THE GERMAN IMPRESS.

The earliest German immigration came to Scott county almost at the beginning of her history. From historic sources of unquestioned verity the population of Davenport in 1836 was about 100, consequently the history of the village cannot be said to have begun before that date. On may 15, 1836 the first German family came to this vicinity. It was the family of Carl Jacob Freitag (Friday) who with his wife and his three sons, Johann, Jacob and Gottlieb, had emigrated from Wurttemberg, pressed forward across the broad, western prairies, for the most part using a yoke of oxen for transportation, until he settled as a farmer in what is now Rockingham township, a few miles down the Mississippi river. Here in the new home three days later, a daughter, Caroline, was born to the German pioneer couple. In the year 1836 there also landed in America the Bomberg family which included Friedrich Ernst Bomberg, his wife and seven children......

Early in the year 1848 Davenport received an additional company of German immigrants numbering about 250, most of these coming from Schleswig-Holstein, where political conditions were intolerable. This stream of immigration continued, as those who had reached this land induced their friends and relatives to come. When finally the struggle of Schleswig-Holstein against Danish despotism had reached an unfortunate conclusion a larger immigration began in the years from 1851 to 1853. The German immigration was swelled by those coming from other German provinces, due to the reaction following the times of revolution in the fatherland. Until the beginning of the '1880s, a large stream of German immigration poured into this vicinity, which gradually became weaker, and although today comparatively few in the old fatherland think of emigrating it has never entirely ceased.

The Iowa census of 1890 gave Scott county a population of 43,164, of which 10,130, or very nearly one-fourth, were natives of Germany. If to this large number be added the German immigration of the twenty years following 1890 and the direct descendants of all those coming from Germany a strong showing is made for the strength of German-Americanism in this county. That not all descendants of Germans retain their German spirit is unfortunately true, yet on the other hand, it is pleasant to be able to state that in a large number of the sons and daughters of the immigrants of the '40s till '60s, the inherited spirit of the fatherland still is manifest and the love of the German language and the good old German customs has not died out. There has been no lack of continued commercial success for such true German-Americans. It is only necessary to mention here the descendants of several old forty-eighters and others more recent: Louis Hanssen's Sons, Christ Mueller's Sons, Ferdinand Roddewig's Sons, H. & H. Rohlfs, Wahle brothers, Peter Feddersen, Oswald, Walter and Herman Schmidt, Charles Naeckel's Sons, T. Richter's Sons, the sons of Henry Lischer, Alfred and Henry True, Henry and William Wiese, Ad. Eckermann, and others.

Reference

1. History of Davenport and Scott County, Iowa, by Harry E. Downer. 2 vols. Chicago: S. J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1910.
Viewed at the following website: http://www.celticcousins.net/scott/1910TC.html

JOHANNA "DOLLY" and HARRY CONRAD KOHRS



Children of Conrad Carston Kohrs & Anna (nee Mattausch) Kohrs

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Oakdale Cemetery, Davenport Iowa



HISTORICAL INFORMATION
Oakdale Cemetery was incorporated on May 14, 1856, in Davenport, Iowa, by a group of local businessmen. The original 40-acre plot has grown over time, and today the cemetery is composed of 78.3 acres. Jazz musician Bix Beiderbecke, who grew up in Davenport, is among the prominent local citizens interred in the cemetery.1

The following family members are resting at the Oakdale Cemetery:
_______________________________
Bielenberg, Gesche, 1804-1886
Bielenberg, Claus, 1819-1901
_______________________________
Kohrs, Henry, 1830-1917
Kohrs, Johanna, 1833-1919
Kohrs, Mary, 1860-1930
Kohrs, Bertha, 1865-1961
_______________________________
Kohrs, Frank, 1876-1956
Kohrs, Hilda Marie, 1885-1922
Kohrs, Frank W, 1920 -1980
_______________________________
Kohrs, Robert, 1896 -1935
_______________________________
Kohrs, Conrad C., 1868-1908
Kohrs, Anna M., 1877-1943
Kohrs, Dollie J., 1899-1970
Kohrs, Harry C., 1904-1960
Kohrs, Ruth C., 1904-1959
_______________________________
Kohrs, Harold, 1898-1955
Kohrs, Irma
Kohrs, John J. 1932-1951
_______________________________
Gehrmann, Wm. H., 1858-1933
Gehrmann, Helen Kohrs, 1863-1954
Gehrmann, William Conrad, 1889-1965
Gehrmann, Anita Paula, 1891-1975
Gehrmann, John Henry, 1892-1985
Gehrmann, Edna Marie, 1892-1985
_______________________________

References

1. Oakdale Memorial Gardens: Retrieved on April 18th from the following website: http://www.cem.va.gov/cems/lots/oakdale.asp

First National Bank & Davenport Saving Bank



Title: First National Bank
Photographer: Hostetler, J. B.
Studio Name/Location: Hostetler Studio, Davenport, Iowa
Date: Original ca. 1900-1907
Description: Photograph of the First National Bank/Davenport Savings Bank located at the southwest corner of Second and Main in Davenport, Iowa. Other businesses in the building are Louis A LeClaire's & Co. Publishers, Telephone Exchange, and the Davenport Safety Deposit Company. To the left is a sign for Dr. J.W. McKee Dental Parlors, and to the right is the Sommers & LaVelle clothing store. Also visible in the photograph is a telephone pole, a gas street lamp, and horse and buggies. A young boy sits on the steps in front of the building, and three men stand on the corner. This building was torn down ca. 1908-1910 to make way for a newer building.
Location Depicted: Southwest corner of 2nd and Main, Davenport, Iowa
Repository: Richardson-Sloane Special Collections Center, Davenport Public Library, 321 Main Street, Davenport, Iowa 52801
Repository Collection: Hostetler Studio Collection
Object Description: 1 negative : glass, b&w ; 10 x 8 in.
Original Database: This record is from the Upper Mississippi Valley Digital Image Archive, http://www.umvphotoarchive.org, a collaborative project of cultural heritage organizations in the Iowa-Illinois Mississippi River region.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK, DAVENPORT IA
The First National Bank of Davenport, Iowa was organized June 27, 1863, with a capital of $100,000.  The banks organization papers were the first to be filed in Washington under the national banking act, and would have had the first charter issued, but for some informality in the papers which required them to be returned for correction.  This loss of time placed it at No. 15 on the list.  Its first board of directors were Royal L. Mack, Geo. S. C. Dow, Thos. Scott, J. E. Stevenson, Geo. H. French, James Armstong, Frank H. Griggs, John Schmidt, Austin Corbin.  Its first president was Austin Corbin, who was succeeded in the presidency by Ira M. Gifford, Hiram Price, James Thompson, Chas. E. Putnam and T. T. Dow.  The first cashier was Ira M. Gifford who was succeeded by D. C. Porter, Wm. H. Price, D. C. Porter, L. G. Gage and John B. Fidlar. Future directors included Walker Adams, James Thompson, T. T. Dow, A. Burdick, Henry W. Kerker, L. Schricker, J. E. Stevenson, L. C. Dessaint, Nat. French, August Steffen, Henry Kohrs.1




Title: Davenport Savings Bank
Photographer: Hostetler, J. B.
Studio Name/Location: Hostetler Studio, Davenport, Iowa
Date Original: ca. 1912-1920
Description: Photograph of the Davenport Savings Bank building, formerly known as the McManus building located at 200-208 Main Street (northwest corner of 2nd and Main) in Davenport, Iowa. Other businesses in the building are Myers Modiste, Pennsylvania Lines, Anchor Line, Tri-City Feature Film Exchange, and Dr. Stuck.
Location Depicted: 200-208 Main Street, Davenport, Scott County, Iowa
Subject: Davenport Savings Bank (Davenport, Iowa)
Notes: Dates and location determined from the Davenport city directories 1902-1913.
Repository: Richardson-Sloane Special Collections Center, Davenport Public Library, 321 Main Street, Davenport, Iowa 52801
Repository Collection: Hostetler Studio Collection
Object Description: 1 negative : glass, b&w ; 10 x 8 in.
Original Database: This record is from the Upper Mississippi Valley Digital Image Archive, http://www.umvphotoarchive.org, a collaborative project of cultural heritage organizations in the Iowa-Illinois Mississippi River region.

DAVENPORT SAVINGS BANK
The Davenport Savings bank was the next to be incorporated and it opened its doors for business on April 1, 1870, with a capital of $12,000. The incorporators were Judge James Grant, C. E. Putnam, Abner Davison, James Armstrong, James Thompson, Ira M. Gifford, S. F. Smith, Thomas Scott and Francis Ochs. The capital stock has been increased from time to time until it is now $300,000. Of this sum but $35,000 has been actually paid in in cash, the remaining amount having been paid in from its earnings. During the forty-one years of the bank's existence it has had but five presidents. C. E. Putnam, the first president, was succeeded in 1884 by Walker Adams. In 1888 Anthony Burdick was elected and continued in the office until 1905, when he was succeeded by William O. Schmidt, who held the office until his death, in August, 1908. It is interesting to note that Louis Haller has served as vice president for thirty-six years, from 1874 to the present time. Francis Ochs, the first cashier, was succeeded by R. Smetham in 1874. In 1879 Charles N. Voss, now president of the German Savings bank, became cashier, serving until 1885, when succeeded by J. B. Meyer. Henry C. Struck, the present incumbent, succeeded Mr. Meyer in 1892. The present officers are: directors, Louis Haller and Henry Kohrs, who have served since the organization of the bank forty years ago, Anthony Burdick, John F. Dow, Henry C. Struck, W. H. Wilson, August E. Steffen, John W. Gilchrist, and Theo. Krabbenhoeft; president, John F. Dow; vice president, Louis Haller; cashier, H. C. Struck; teller, Otto L. Ladenberger; assistant teller, A. Brunig; attorney, W. H. Wilson. The total amount of surplus and undivided profits at the time of the last public statement was $294,363, and the deposits, $4,016,442. 2

References

1. Celtic Cousins. Retrieved 06 December 2008 from http://www.celticcousins.net/scott/historyofdavpart3.htm

2. Celtic Cousins. Retrieved 06 December 2008 from http://www.celticcousins.net/scott/chapter25.html

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Davenport's German-American Heritage Center



Renovation gives Standard Hotel new life as German Heritage Center

Once home to drug addicts and prostitutes, the Standard Hotel has been given a new life. On May 27, the German American Heritage Center will open its doors to the public with a traditional MAIFEST celebration according to board member Harlan Meier. The $1.8 million dream is becoming a reality after years of planning. About six years ago Scharlott Goettsch Blevins persuaded a handful of people to join her in creating a center to preserve the heritage of the German immigrants who helped establish this part of the country. ``If this generation doesn't preserve our heritage, it will be gone forever,'' he said. ``Many people think of St. Louis as the gateway to the west. The Quad-Cities was also a gateway. Those who settled in Nebraska, Dakotas and Iowa would come here before starting their journey.'' The former hotel was the perfect location for such a center because it stands in what was once the hub of German life in Davenport and most likely was a place of refuge for many immigrants. Standing at a fourth floor window of the former hotel, German American Mr. Meier ponders about how many people, German immigrants specifically, stopped at the same window to admire the view of the Mississippi River throughout the building's 132-year history. It would be impossible to guess how many over-nighted in the hotel at the foot of the Centennial Bridge on the corner of 2nd and Gaines streets, he said. It is likely the hotel was the first stop for newcomers after landing near where John O'Donnell stadium now stands. Mr. Meier guesses that many immigrants were German since the area was heavily settled by Germans. They would be attracted to the hotel because it was built and owned by Germans. The original three-story west wing was built in 1868 by an unknown person who called the hotel Germania Haus. In 1875, the building was bought by John Frederick Miller who expanded to the east as well as adding a story.Mr. Miller kept the name Germania Haus and added a likeness of a Roman goddess who was said to protect the ground called Germania. As the former hotel's history is being stripped to make way for the new, the past becomes evident in the charred ceiling rafters and the tongue-and-groove floor that still mark the size of the old hotel rooms. ``They were small, but probably comfortable for then,'' Mr. Meier said. Throughout the next 100 years the building continued to provide shelter; however, the clientele changed dramatically as did the neighborhood. Rooms were rented by the hour and became a haven to undesirables and parts of society that had hit rock bottom instead of those who were seeking a better life, Mr. Meier said. Today the building is in the pathway of renovation, Mr. Meier said. [The restoration includes bringing the exterior of the building to its original\par likeness during the turn of the century - circa 1898.] Businesses and organizations have been supportive in the group's efforts to rejuvenate the building and create a place for the community and tourists to visit and learn. For those wanting to learn more about the association a web site has been created at www.germanamerheritage.org or by calling 322-8844. ``One of our goals is to have a place to preserve grandma's things,'' Mr. Meier said. ``To preserve her history and our families' histories. Someday we'll have German language classes, family trees...perhaps a floor devoted to women of German heritage. The women were very significant in the profitability and success of the German family.''


Center keeps heritage alive

A Bush for president sticker on the bill of his cap, a corn grower's emblem on his jacket, praises for the German American Heritage Center being completed in Davenport -- are symbolic of Harlan Meier's life. Mr. Meier has spent his life promoting, either a product or an organization, in addition to running a large farming operation. ``The more I had going for me the happier I was,'' Mr. Meier said. The only regret is that I didn't spend more time with my children. Looking back, well I've had quite a life.'' It started on a farm settled by his grandfather in 1900. He grew up during The Great Depression never learning they were poor, but learning the value of hard work. As a boy on the farm he would ride the grain binder cutting oats that would be bundled then put into shocks. Later he and his father would bring the shocks in on a horse drawn hayrack for threshing. His father's job would be to pitch the bundles into the thresher, while Mr. Meier carefully put the straw into stacks that would shed water. His reward for helping his father was to visit his aunt in Davenport where he could use the shower with hot running water, ride bicycles on pavement and wash a nickle bag of potato chips down with a nickle bottle of pop. It may not sound like a great reward but it beat washing in a galvanized tub on the back porch and using a building with two holes and a Sears and Roebuck catalog. In his spare time he'd peddle his bike around neighboring farms and sell garden seeds. Doing so would earn him a watch or another ``gift'' from the seed company. After serving in Korea, Mr. Meier attended Iowa State University, but his mind was on farming. He farmed in partnership with his father, then with his son. He retired from farming in 1993, but works part time as a grain trailer salesman. His goal when he started farming in the 1950's was to farm 1,000 acres and be worth $100,000. Those were lofty goals for a young man back then, he said laughing at the memory. By 1972 he was farming 2,000 acres in three counties, including the farm homesteaded by his grandfather in 1900. ``I was young, ambitious and foolish,'' Mr. Meier said. ``I did everything could to make an honest dollar. If you really want to farm today, you have to have a job in town and salt away money earned on the farm.'' During his farming career, he had a successful chemical supply and grain bin business. The chemical supply business started when he bought a old Studebaker truck and installed a model A drive line in it to slow it down. That enabled him to spread pounds instead of tons. He got a contract with a fertilizer company and cleaned out the chicken house -- he was in business. While selling bins and supplying fertlizer along with farming 2,000 acres would have been enough for most men, Mr. Meier was active in the corn promotion board, served 15 years with the Iowa Corn Growers and National Corn Growers, was on the U. S. Meat Export Federation Board and the U. S. Feed Grain Council. ``If you have a passion for agriculture, you have to make it better for the coming generation,'' he said. ``I believe strongly in these groups, someone has to speak for them. Without those lobby groups, agriculture would be much poorer.''Visiting Korea on a food-safety mission 44 years after the war ended, Mr. Meier said he saw first hand what freedom and help can do. The two-lane dusty streets traveled only by a few men and maybe horse that had survived pulling a cart he remembered had turned into a 12-lane highway with Mercedes and Hyundais speeding by highrises. Mr. Meier's passion is not just for agriculture, but for the past as well. Mr. Meier isn't a founding member of the organization, but he's a vocal member. He's taken on the task of helping build the organization's membership and helping raise money to see the work is completed on the once proud establishment known as the Germania Haus owned by J. F. Miller and later the Standard Hotel. ``I like to make people aware of what is being done,'' Mr. Meier said. ``The heritage center is important to people on both sides of the river. Heritage is important. The best way to learn about someone is to ask about their heritage. Start asking questions, people enjoy sharing information. Preserving history, it's not something you realize the importance of when you're young.'' [Mr. Meier has demonstrated that typical hard work ethic that was brought from the old country by so many of our German immigrant ancestors as a Board Director of the German American Heritage Center. Through his support and enthusiasm, the Center is becoming a reality. It is hoped that many other Americans throughout the mid-west with German ancestors will join in with such enthusiasm and support of the German American Heritage Center's opening. Information on the MAIFEST will be forthcoming.


January 9, 2000
By Pam Berenger, Dispatch/Argus Staff writer
Copyright 2000, Moline Dispatch Publishing Co.

Visit Davenport's German-American Heritage Center at: http://www.gahc.org/

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Corner of 2nd Street and Harrison Street, Davenport, IA (1907)



Photo by Frederick J Bandholtz (1877-19__), August 26, 1907

The original is a gelatin silver print, 10-inches high by 47 inches wide.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

People's Meat Market




From Upper Mississippi Valley Photo Archive: (http://www.uppermississippivalleyphotoarchive.org/)

Photographer: Grossheim, Oscar (1906). Photograph of the interior of People's Meat Market located at 323 East 2nd Street in Muscatine, Iowa. In the back of the room, three men wearing aprons stand behind the counter. Large pieces of meat hang on the wall to the left, and shelves stocked with canned goods are on the right. A sign on the wall to the left reads "We buy for cash & sell for cash Ask for anything but credit! All meats delivered C.O.D." Location Depicted 323 East 2nd Street, Muscatine, Muscatine County, Iowa


There exists no known photographs of Henry Kohrs first meat market/ butcher shop in Davenport Iowa to inform us as to what the establishment looked like inside. Fortunately, we can view photographs of other meat market/ butcher shops that were in the area surrounding the quad cities to give us a glimpse of what it may have looked like inside. In 1857, Henry opened a meat market on Harrison Street between 2nd and 3rd Streets supplied from a small slaughterhouse on West Second. This land and slaughter house was later purchased by Henry and it was here that he established the Kohrs Packing Plant. Meanwhile at the market on Harrison Street, he began making his rounds in an old horse drawn wagon to serve local customers. Henry continued this for almost twenty years, and in 1875 he branched. out into the business of packing and shipping meats, establishing the Kohrs Packing Company. 1

From the memoirs of Helen Kohrs Gehrmann, we have a delightful description of the market and dwelling at 310-312 West Second. "In the rear part of the market was a small room with an ice-box about 8 feet by 4 feet, lined with zinc, with two doors on top. The meat was kept refrigerated there. In front of it were two steps and father took a short nap there every afternoon while we girls stood watch for customers. The back room was also the workroom and in the center was a large block of wood called a 'rocker'. Above this ‘rocker’ were four shining blades with double handles and two men would walk around the chopping block, mincing the meat for sausage. There was also a bench with a stuffer for sausage. The basement was used for curing hams and bacon. There was the sausage kitchen in the rear of the market and it was here that grandmother "Geshe" held sway, cooking blood sausage, head cheeses, and other delicacies. Back of the sausage kitchen was the barn, and back of the grocery store was the smoke house where a big barrel was used to smoke bologna and other small things. There was an outside stairway from the second story. Near this stairway was a well with spring water and an iron pump. This well served the whole house and was still running in 1878 when some remodeling was done." 1.

References

1. The ancestors and descendants of the Bettendorf-Kohrs and related families : a memorial to William Edwin Bettendorf, 1902-1979 by Darlene Ward Paxton; L T Sloane. Decorah, Iowa : Anundsen Pub. Co., 1984.

Interior N. M. Burgland's Meat Market



From Upper Mississippi Valley Photo Archive: (http://www.uppermississippivalleyphotoarchive.org/)

Interior N. M. Burgland's Meat Market, (ca. 1895). Photograph shows the interior of Burgland's Meat Market. There is a cashier's window and office on the left with butcher blocks and stools beyond. On the right are different types of butchered and cured meats such as hams, sausages and sides of beef hanging on hooks from the ceiling. There are barrels and a crock on the far right. The floor is made of wood and there is a gas lighting fixture in the center of the photograph coming from the ceiling. Location Depicted: 655 East Main Street, Galesburg, Knox County, Illinois

There exists no known photographs of Henry Kohrs first meat market/ butcher shop in Davenport Iowa to inform us as to what the establishment looked like inside. Fortunately, we can view photographs of other meat market/ butcher shops that were in the areas surrounding the quad cities to give us a glimpse of what it may have looked like inside.

Again from Helen Kohrs Gehrmann’s memoirs - "In February, the ice house was filled with ice and packed with sawdust. In late summer the ice would have melted and the sawdust removed, so that the building could be used for other storage. Hogs were slaughtered only from November through March, and the products were sold through a broker in St. , Missouri. The hams and bacon were wrapped in absorbent paper, and then parchment paper, sewed into muslin bags, dipped in "Chromeyellow" (glue) and hung to dry. They were packed and shipped to customers, as ordered. The original brand name was "Kohrs Crown", and the "Arsenal Brand" came into being later." Helen Kohrs, Henry and Johanna's third child, married William Gehrmann, and in 1898, Will Gehrmann became General Manager of the Company. The Henry Kohrs Packing Company has gradually developed and extended until it reached throughout the entire West. 1.

References

1. The ancestors and descendants of the Bettendorf-Kohrs and related families : a memorial to William Edwin Bettendorf, 1902-1979 by Darlene Ward Paxton; L T Sloane. Decorah, Iowa : Anundsen Pub. Co., 1984.

Monday, March 23, 2009

The rise and fall of log rafting on the river




Quoting from Conrad Kohrs autobiography "Then I went to St. Croix, Wisconsin, and got work running logs down the Mississippi to St. Louis. On account of getting on many sand bars the work was heavy. However, the trip was made and after a few days at St. Louis I returned to St. Croix by steam-boat and made another trip with a raft of lumber. I then went to St. Clair, about eighteen miles above Davenport, helped several rafts over the rapids and through the bridge at Davenport. This was the end of my river work and in the Fall I went to work in my brother-in-laws store." (Pages 5-6)

From the Quad Cities Times: By Roald Tweet
FOR ON THE RIVER | Monday, November 24, 2008 9:48 AM CST


When the first few white pine logs began floating down the Mississippi in the 1830s to sawmills at places such as Clinton, Davenport and Rock Island, the supply had seemed inexhaustable. It was the largest region for white pine in the world, covering 38 million acres — an area roughly the size of New England. But the demand for white pine turned out to be equally unlimited. It was easy to cut, and the wood was tall, straight, light and strong. It was considered the perfect wood for the new villages and farms springing up throughout the Midwest. The first logs that came downriver were free floating. Along the way to the mills, many were scattered by storms and floods, and were lost or ended up at the wrong mill. In 1843, a young riverman named Stephen B. Hanks — a cousin of Abraham Lincoln — devised a method of tying logs together into a loose raft 16 feet wide and between 400 and 600 feet long. The practice caught on. Soon, such rafts became a common sight on the river. Each raft was manned by a crew of about 20, who steered the raft with the use of long oars, or sweeps. During the trip downriver, workers lived aboard the raft, eating from a small cook shed at the stern.


On May 6, 1869, a new development changed rafting forever. Samuel R. Van Sant of the Van Sant Boat Yard at LeClaire, Iowa, gave Rock Island lumber baron Fred Weyerhaeuser a ride in his new sternwheel steamboat, which was specially designed with enough power to push large rafts. Weyerhaeuser was impressed. Within a few years, about 70 raftboats were taking ever-larger rafts of white pine down to the mills. Often, at the bow of the raft, a smaller steamboat was tied sideways to steer it. The new rafts, which were about 300 feet wide and up to 1,500 feet long, could carry as much as 10 million board feet of lumber. As a result, the Minnesota and Wisconsin forest began disappearing quickly. By the 1880s, as many as 500 rafts came downriver per month. By 1900, it was clear that the age of white pine was coming to an end. Weyerhaeuser moved from Rock Island to St. Paul, Minn., then out to Washington. On Nov. 18, 1905, the last log came upriver to the Weyerhaeuser Mill in Rock Island, where it closed for good. The white pine that remained grew smaller and smaller, until a single log no longer would support a raftsman’s weight. As the Ottumwa Belle came downriver in 1915 with the last raft, its captain stopped at Albany, Ill., to take aboard an honored guest — Hanks — who at the time was 94 years old. He had begun the raft industry in 1843, and participated in its end. Hanks took the wheel in the pilot house and steered the raft south to Davenport. As the last raft passed various villages and towns along the river, residents came down to the waterfront to witness the end of an era.


REFERENCE

1.Conrad Kohrs : an autobiography. by Conrad Kohrs. Publisher C.K. Warren, ©1977.

2. Quad Cities Times: The rise and fall of log rafting on the river: By Roald Tweet
FOR ON THE RIVER | Monday, November 24, 2008. Retrieved March 23, 2009 from http://www.qctimes.com/articles/2006/06/08/on_the_river/river_tales/doc448853d715f43490678993.txt

Sunday, March 22, 2009

The Gold Coast & Hamburg Historic District



The Gold Coast & Hamburg Historic District is situated on and below the limestone bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River, the Hamburg Historic District lies north of Downtown Davenport and encompasses over 25 square blocks. A mixture of elegant mansions and simple homes, Hamburg was home to the middle and upper class German families who had immigrated to Davenport from their native Germany. Many of these immigrants came to this area with little money. They settled in Davenport, realizing the possibilities that were at hand with the ever expanding western frontier, and they made their fortunes here. These prominent residents were bankers, doctors, dry goods & grocery wholesalers, politicians, lumber barons, newspaper publishers, brewery owners, bakers, and retailers of all kinds. These German immigrants were instrumental in transforming Davenport from a 19th century village in the 1850’s into the 21st century city we see today.1

Reference
1. Gold Coast & Hamburg Historic District. Retrieved March 21, 2009 from
www.davenportgoldcoast.com/documents/WalkingTour07.pdf

Links
Take a quick tour of Davenport, Iowa Architecture

Gold Coast & Hamburg Historic District

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Davenport Industry



From the Quad Cities Times: Q-C cigar making, brewing on display. By John Willard | Tuesday, July 11, 2006 6:09 AM CDT

The Quad-Cities’ industrial heritage is not just about farm machinery and other heavy manufacturing. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, brewing and cigar making were major enterprises as the area’s German immigrants capitalized on businesses they had known in their homeland. The Quad-City region once counted a dozen breweries, and more than 30 small companies were producing cigars in Davenport in the late 19th century. 1

The Quad-Cities brewing industry had its beginnings with early German immigrants from the areas of Schleswig-Holstein, Bavaria and Hamburg. Not only did they bring with them their hopes for a better life in the New World but also their acumen in a variety of professions and trades. They took their entrepreneurial spirit to such fields as brick making, (when the family came to Davenport in 1854, Claus Bielenberg found work as a gardener and "layer of brick walks" - quoting The ancestors and descendants of the Bettendorf-Kohrs and related families : a memorial to William Edwin Bettendorf, 1902-1979),. meat packing (i. e. Kohrs Packing Company), lumber (i.e. Mueller Lumber Company) and furniture making as well as brewing and cigar making. Early brewers included Ernst Zoller, Matthias Frahm, John Noth, Henry and Julius Lehrkind, Peter and August Littig and Ignatz Huber. 1

In Rock Island Illinois, Ignatz Huber obtained employment in a brewery, and after his first month's employment he purchased an interest in the concern, of which three years later he became the sole owner. From a small beginning Mr. Huber's business grew and his patronage increased until it became one of the city's principal industries, employing many men. He continued in business alone until the formation of the Rock Island Brewing Company, whereby Rock Island's three brewing plants were consolidated and a stock company organized. Then Mr. Huber turned over active management of the new enterprise to his son, Otto Huber. 1 Conrad Kohrs worked in the brewery for a short time for Ignatz Huber prior to heading for Montana. Quoting from Conrad Kohrs autobiography "I got employment in Huber's Brewery in Rock Island and worked there until the spring of 1855." (Page 5) 3


Ernst Zoller, who arrived in Davenport from his native Germany in 1848, founded a brewing empire that operated into the early 1950s under the names Davenport Malting Co., Independent Brewing Co., Zoller Brewing Co., Blackhawk Brewing Co and Uchtorff Brewing Co. Cigar making in the Quad-Cities followed a development course similar to that of the breweries as it grew from small, independent businesses to larger, consolidated firms. Most of the cigar factories in Davenport were in the west end, where many Germans lived and found work at the plants. 1

One of the most successful local cigar makers was Nicholas Kuhnen, who hoped his first shop in Davenport in 1854. By the 1880s, he was recognized as owning the largest cigar factory north of St. Louis and west of Chicago. Other successful cigar companies were the Ferd. Haak Cigar Co. and the Peter N. Jacobsen Cigar Co. Jacobsen began making cigars in northwest Davenport in 1880 as part of his hotel business. His son, Peter N. Jacobsen Jr., expanded the business and by 1903 had moved the cigar-manufacturing portion to a building that still stands at the southwest corner of 4th and Harrison streets. 1

By World War I, Jacobsen was producing an average of 250,000 cigars a week, including its “Jacobsen’s Brown Beauty” marketed to the working man. Despite competitive pressure from Florida and Cuba, Jacobsen remained the largest cigar company in the region until it closed in 1946 as cigarettes gained popularity.1

References

1. Quad Cities Times: Q-C cigar making, brewing on display. By John Willard | Tuesday, July 11, 2006 6:09 AM CDT
http://www.qctimes.com/articles/2006/07/11/news/local/doc44b3267904c0b453291413.txt

2. The ancestors and descendants of the Bettendorf-Kohrs and related families : a memorial to William Edwin Bettendorf, 1902-1979 by Darlene Ward Paxton; L T Sloane. Decorah, Iowa : Anundsen Pub. Co., 1984.

3.Conrad Kohrs : an autobiography. by Conrad Kohrs. Publisher C.K. Warren, ©1977.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Emigration from Schleswig-Holstein

Emigration from Schleswig-Holstein

After 1848 (gold rush in California and the uprising of 1848-51 in Schleswig-Holstein) the first significant wave of Schleswig-Holstein emigration to the United States occurred. These emigrants settled in the vicinity of Davenport, Iowa. They were farmers who were eligible to obtain land if they were able to cultivate it. It cost between 400 to 1000 Dollars and hard work to establish oneself and flourish. The emigrants were mostly young men between 17 and 25 years of age. In order to emigrate, they had to get permission and be officially released from military duty. From 1880 to 1893 approximately 88, 000 (recorded) Schleswig-Holsteiner, roughly 10% of the Schleswig-Holstein population moved to North America, first the Holsteiner from Probstei and Segeberg, then the Schleswiger during Prussian times (1867). According to some advertisers the shortest and least dangerous route to take was from Hamburg to Hull, England, then by train to Liverpool and from there to America. Most emigrants arrived in New York through Castle Garden and later (1892) through Ellis Island, New York.1

Davenport, Iowa

The 170 + years of Germanic influence on Davenport, Iowa began shortly after the city’s founding in 1836. Danish political oppression in the Schleswig-Holstein region of Northern Germany fueled the exodus of Germans to America. Schleswig-Holsteiners seeking freedom found safe haven in Davenport beginning in 1848. Known as “48ers”, the well-educated and skilled people were deemed “freethinkers” and quickly settled into life along the Mississippi River’s edge and on farms in rural Scott County. Within twelve years, 20 percent of Davenport’s population of 3, 000 was German.2

Those Davenport German 48s battled oppressive forces in their homeland of Schleswig-Holstein while fighting for their right to live as they saw fit. Many veterans of that fight that began in 1848 left the region and found freedom in the United States, some of them in Davenport. About 200 men settled in Davenport following the fighting that ended with compromise in 1851 and 1852 between German forces and neighbor Denmark. But most members of the Davenport Society of Veterans of the Schleswig-Holstein Wars of Independence left long before Denmark finally conceded its claims on Schleswig in 1864. 3

References
1. Family Search: Research Wiki: Emigration and Immigration in Schleswig- Holstein. Retrieved 13 March 2009 from https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Emigration_and_Immigration_in_Schleswig-Holstein

2. German Life. June/July 2000. Favorite German-American Travel Destinations. Davenport, Iowa. Retrieved 13 March 2009 from http://www.germanl ife.com/Archives/2000/0006_01.html

3. Quad Cities Times German freedom fighters’ memorial etched in stone. By Mary Louise Speer | Friday, March 28, 2008. Retrieved 13 March 2009 from http://www.qctimes.com/articles/2008/03/28/news/local/doc47edcbfea5511732588179.txt




PLAT MAP
SHERIDAN TOWNSHIP 1905

No. 79 N. Range No.3 East of the 5th Meridian
Bordered on the North by Winfield Township, on the South by Davenport, on the East by Lincoln Township, on the West by Hickory Grove.

SECTION 9
Henry Meier
Ernst LeMarinell Est
Chas Meier
Bielenberg & Kohrs

SECTION 16
A.H. Lamp
Bielenberg & Kohrs
Joachim Muks
Chas Ehrsam


PLAT MAP
SHERIDAN TOWNSHIP 1882

No. 79 N. Range No.3 East of the 5th Meridian
Bordered on the North by Winfield Township, on the South by Davenport, on the East by Lincoln Township, on the West by Hickory Grove.


SECTION 9
Henry Meier
Ernst LeMarinell Est
Chas Meier
Bielenberg & Kohrs

SECTION 16
A.H. Lamp
Bielenberg & Kohrs
Joachim Muks
Chas Ehrsam

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Another stay at the Hog Hotel’


Photo of Kohrs Packing Plant (Davenport, Iowa) 1910

Another stay at the Hog Hotel’

Quad Cities Times

By John Willard | Monday, June 19, 2006

Hog slaughtering is long gone from Davenport, but a vestige of the once booming industry still survives at the Kraft Foods/Oscar Mayer plant, 1337 W. 2nd St.

Some Oscar Mayer employees who read a column in the Quad Cities Times by John Willard on Monday, June 19, 2006 about the city’s packing house heritage note that a portion of the five-story hog containment building at the plant, known to generations as the “Hog Hotel,” is still standing and stores spare parts for maintenance. Employees still refer to it by that name.

Jeff Merrill, a maintenance employee, said the structure is recognizable from the street by the wind-sock flying over it.

Another employee writes: “The Hog Hotel really was a hotel. At the end of each day, some animals were kept overnight to allow for a prompt start-up the next morning if there was a delay in new deliveries such as bad weather.”

As hog slaughtering moved to more efficient, single-story buildings designed for rapid mechanized movement of animals, such as the one that Triumph Foods wants to build in East Moline, the Oscar Mayer plant became obsolete. It nearly closed in the early 1980s.

The jobs were saved when the company shifted to food processing and transformed the turn-of-the-century plant to virtually an all-new facility.

The $10 million project included demolishing 86.000 square feet of space in the center of the plant relating to slaughtering and knocking down half of the 120,000-square-foot hog containment building, or “hog hotel.”

The remainder of the space was rebuilt as a maintenance center. Still in place is a spiral staircase leading to the fourth and fifth floors, with two-inch high risers that made it easier for the porkers to climb.

The “Hog Hotel” was among the improvements completed in the early 20th century by Kohrs Packing Co., which was acquired by Oscar Mayer in 1946. More than 3,500 hogs could be accommodated in rooms equipped with running water.

Kohrs, founded in 1872 by German immigrant Henry Kohrs, was among a half-dozen packing plants that thrived in west Davenport to satisfy the tastes of the city’s many Germans.

Today, Kraft Foods/Oscar Mayer employs 1,600 people in Davenport, making it among the Quad-Cities’ five largest employers. Products include bologna and other cold cuts sold retail and to food services; wieners and Lunchables packaged cheese, meat and crackers packs.


References
Another Stay at the grand Hog Hotel. Quad Cities Times by John Willard
Monday, June 19, 2006

Retrieved on 22 February 2008 from
http://www.qctimes.com/articles/2006/06/06/opinion/columnists/john_willard/doc4485075a86528694724421.txt

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

HENRY KOHRS (1830-1917)


HENRY KOHRS
1830-1917

In the spring of 1854 a young man, industrious in spirit and indomitable in determination, selected young and already thriving Davenport, Iowa as the place where he would earn his living. Up from grocer’s helper and clothing store clerk to builder of one of Iowa’s most exclusive meat packing houses—that, in brief, is the story of this intrepid man of progress. To the memory of Henry Kohrs, pioneer Davenport businessman and founder of Kohrs Packing Company, this site is respectfully dedicated.



Reference
Kohrs Packing Company, 75 Years, Davenport Iowa, Bawden Brothers, 1947 Published by Bawden Bros., Inc. Davenport, Iowa.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Kohrs Hams



Kohrs Packing Plant 1910


Photo of Kohrs Packing Plant (Davenport, Iowa) 1910

Vacancies at the Grand Hog Hotel

Quad Cities Times

By John Willard | Tuesday, June 06, 2006

For generations, the five-story, 120,000-square foot structure that loomed over west Davenport was the final destination for hogs in a meat processing operation that made the city one of the largest hog slaughtering centers in the nation.

Until it was phased out in the 1980s, the hog kill operation — under Oscar Mayer and its predecessor, Kohrs Packing Co. — had been a vital part of the city’s economy. Other packing plants such as Armour Packing Co. brought an overpowering odor to the west end, but residents didn’t seem to mind.

“We never complained about the smell. It was our daily bread,” a worker once recalled.

Now that Triumph Foods has the financial incentives to proceed with its $130 million pork processing plant in East Moline, let’s look back at the meat packing industry that once thrived in Davenport.

In 1895, the city counted more than a half-dozen packing firms producing bacon, pork, ham and sausage. Most packers were clustered along West Second Street near Fillmore Street, where the present Kraft Foods/Oscar Mayer plant is today.

Davenport’s largest and most successful packer was Kohrs Packing Co. Founded in 1872 by Henry Kohrs, a German immigrant, the company grew from a corner butcher shop into an international supplier of pork products.

At the time Kohrs was acquired by Oscar Mayer in 1946, it was paying pork producers in excess of $5 million a year. During the 1920s and 1930s, the plant was a busy place as farmers and their Ford Model A trucks loaded with hogs rolled in from eastern Iowa.

Strategically located near the Mississippi River, a source of ice in the days before mechanical refrigeration, the plant was considered modern for its day. In an age before mechanization, its vertical design enabled animals to be lowered by gravity to the various slaughtering stages. The animals were bled, scalded in boiling vats to remove hair and butchered.

By the early 1980s, the plant had become obsolete for hog slaughtering operations, which had moved to efficient, single-story structures designed for rapid mechanized movement of animals.

Oscar Mayer’s Davenport plant shifted its focus to meat processing. The old “Hog Hotel” was razed in the early 1990s, along with other outdated spaces.

Today, Kraft Foods/Oscar Mayer employs 1,600 persons in Davenport, making it among the Quad-Cities’ five largest employers.


Vacancies at the grand Hog Hotel. Quad Cities Times by John Willard Tuesday, June 6th, 2006. Retrieved on 22 February 2008 from http://www.qctimes.com/articles/2006/06/06/opinion/columnists/john_willard/doc4485075a86528694724421.txt

Kohrs Jar


PATENTED JULY 14, 1908

Business Card

Kohrs Jar "Diamond Shape"


VINTAGE FRUIT JAR MARKED
KOHRS, DAVENPORT IA.
BOTTLE IS 8 & 1/4" TALL
THE SHAPE IS A VERY ODD DIAMOND SHAPE.
NO DAMAGE, OLD ZINC LID

Kohrs Pure Lard



Worker remembers Hog Hotel’ smell
Quad Cities Times

By Mardel Peters, Davenport | Tuesday, June 20, 2006 

John Willard’s June 6 article on the “Hog Hotel” brought back memories of Oscar Mayer (Kohrs Packing Co.). We at Brammers Manufacturing (cabinets) were the building directly west of that plant. Wow! Talk about the odor! The east winds brought it all. I retired in 1989.

We all were so happy when the hog slaughtering ceased. There is no smell as bad as that was. Having lived on a farm as a child, I’d forgotten the pig smell, which was in a smaller dose.

I don’t envy the people in East Moline.

Mardel Peters

Davenport

References

Retrieved on 24 February 2008 from
http://www.qctimes.com/articles/2006/06/20/opinion/letters/doc44971920838bf670033097.txt?showComments=true

Kohrs Packing Company Postcard


Kohrs Packing Company Postcard

50 lb Kohrs Crown Lard




Kohrs Crown Lard: 50 lb net. U.S. Inspected and Passed by Department of Agriculture Establishment No. 114, Davenport, IA.