SUBMITTED BY: Carl W Matthews
THE
ROLOFF FAMILY
Dawson,
Texas
William
Ludwic “Uncle Billy”
Roloff and his wife lived on
the Dawson street that dead ended into the school yard in 1931.
Children, on their way to school, would often receive his greeting as
they passed while he tended the well kept yard. Uncle Billy was seventy, but,
… he seemed much older.
A
large and well maintained “Hupmobile” sat in the detached garage and was
used in good weather to carry Uncle Billy to The Blackland….to his farms
carved from the 14,000 acre Williams Eldorado Ranch when the land was
subdivided. His children… .now with families of their own…tended to the rich
black soil that he had claimed from the raw prairie.
NOTE:
The Hupmobile was a key player in the Detroit automobile scene from 1909
until 1940. The Hupmobile was
built for dependability more than speed and
owners were extremely loyal.
The Hupmobile that sat in Uncle Billy Roloff’s garage was, probably, a
1925-1928 Model E four door.
Uncle
Billy died in 1932. His
wife continued to live at the home until her death in 1951.
After Uncle Billy died, Miss Lulu Hucklebee, who taught English at Dawson
High School for decades….became a long term boarder.
Uncle
Billy Roloff had migrated from German Prussia to the United States in 1878
The
political climate in 1870s Germany was
tense. Kaiser Wilhelm II had
become “King of the Mountain” and the 2nd Reich had been
established as Bismark, “The Iron Chancelor,”
gathered the fragmented German states into a formidable social and
military force. All young men
were expected… ,,,.demanded…to serve in the military for a prescribed time.
More than one family, ready to sail to America, witnessed a young man
from their family removed from the ship by military officials and forced to
serve the required time in the German army.
Ludwig
and Johanna Roloff, an uncle and aunt, paid for passage to Wisconsin, but
William’s father could not or would not provide funds for William.
Undaunted, William slipped aboard the ship….secreted himself until the
ship was far at sea. He was a
stowaway. He was
seventeen.
Frederich
and Christina Friedel were aboard that same ship, possibly close friends of
Ludwig and Johanna Roloff.
Their daughter, Louise Monita. Whose name was “Americanized” as
“Mary Louise,” …..was fifteen.
Romance
may have blossomed between William Roloff and Louise Friedel as they whiled away
the time sailing from Germany to the United States…or ….since both families
settled in Jefferson Co Wisconsin….it could have happened there.
Regardless….the two were married at Whitewater, Jefferson Co.
Wisconsin….December 26 1885.
It
is not known when William Ludwic Roloff first arrived at Navarro Co. Texas, but
he may have been an early employee of The Williams Eldorado Ranch…. 14,000
acres purchased during 1881 and 1882 by B
J Williams of Whitewater, WI and John Patterson of Geneva NY.
J
F Williams, also from Whitewater WI, and, probably a relative of B J William,
came to Texas in 1882 to be Ranch Forman.
He may have known William Roloff in Whitewater WI….as a hard working
young man….and…recruited him in 1882 to work with him at the new ranch in
Texas.
Three
years elapsed between 1882 and December 1885 when William Roloff, perhaps,
returned to Whitewater WI for the first time.
William Rudolph is twenty-four…he has a job….he has saved money for
three years…he comes home for a long visit in the late fall.
Louise Friedell is now twenty-two and, in the eyes of William Roloff….absolutely
beautiful. The two attend the
many parties and festivals of the late fall….attend the Lutheran Church
together…the families celebrate Christmas.
The
time is approaching when William Roloff must return to his responsibilities in
Texas. He cannot bear
the thought of leaving Mary Louise Friedel…she cannot bear the thought of his
leaving. They
announce on Christmas Eve that they will be married the day following Christmas.
They
will go to Texas to begin a life together.
They will live in one of the little houses clustered together on The
Williams Eldorado Ranch, a community… called “Patterson”….after John
Patterson, one of the owners of the ranch.
Thousands
of sheep were moved to the ranch from California, but the ranch had a $50,000.
loss in 1864. B J Williams
and some investors from Vermont purchased another large property west of San
Angelo TX…hoping that the sheep would fare better there than on The Blackland.
When the sheep were moved to the new ranch….the owners replaced them
with draft horses that could be sold to area farmers to plow the rich black
soil. When that venture
failed, the owners decided to break the ranch into farms and dispose of the
property.
William
and Mary Louise Roloff were, probably, among the first to become owners of one
or more of those farms. It
was here that their children were born….
Rudolph John Roloff
b. 1887 d. 1958
Dawson Cemetery
Harry Augustus Roloff
b. 1889 d. 1967
Dawson Cemetery
William J Roloff
b. 1892 d. 1910
Boardtree Cemetery
Allie Monita Roloff
b. 1896
Edwin Roloff
b. 1909
d.1966
Dawson Cemetery
***************************
RUDOLPH
JOHN ROLOFF….1887-1958…
m.
Winnifred Sawyer
daughter
of Ed & Molly Ward Sawyer
“Rudy”
was born two years after William and Mary Louise married and established
residence on The Blackland. “Rudy”
married Winnifred whose last name is unknown.
She died 1964. Both
are buried at the Dawson Cemetery. Their
infant child was buried at The Board Tree Cemetery located on the Tehaucanna
road. Surviving children
were:
Irvin
Roloff
b. 1909
d. 1966
m.
Rosie Slater
Clyde Roloff
b. 1911
m.
Callie Jordan d.
Mary
Roloff
b. 1913
d.
m.
J F McLain
d.
Margie
Rolof
b. 1915
d.
Opal
Roloff
b. 1917
m.
Hugh Lynn Hillis
Vernon Roloff
b. 1920
m.
Valarie Lewis d. 1947
m.
Lucy McCulloch
d. 2000
*****************************
HARRY
AUGUSTUS ROLOFF…..1889-1967…….
married
Sarah Isabella McKinzie
daughter
of W J and M A McKenzie.
Her
brother, James McKinzie 1887-1907, was buried at Boardtree Cemetery.
“ Sadie” died in 1962. She
and Harry are buried at The Dawson Cemetery.
Their infant child was buried at The Boardtree Cemetery.
Surviving children were:
Melfin Roloff
b.
m.
Edell Roloff
b.
m.
Lester Leo Roloff
b. 1914
SEE BELOW
m.
Thelma Roloff
b. 1917 d.
1927
Dawson Cemetery
************************
ALLIE
MONITA ROLOFF…..1896-????…
.married
William Sammons Walker 1893-????
son
of Edward & Mary Roby Walker.
The
name “Sammons” may have come from Professor John Hansel Sammons b.1858 SC
who attended Trininty College at Tehuacana and, later, taught school at Bowman
Grove, a community west of The Blackland.
Margarette Sammons 1858-1881 is buried at the Dover Cemetery.
His son, Howard Payne
Sammons MD, practiced in Hubbard for many years.
Their
children were:
Charles Walker
b.1917
m.
m.
Lived
Odessa TX 2005
Virgil Walker
b. 1919
Felix Ray Walker
b. 1924
d. 1953
**************************
CLYDE
ROLOFF……..????
m.
Daughter
of
Their children were:
Beverly Roloff
b.
m.
Kenneth Thompson
Lived Waxahachie TX 2005
VERNON
ROLLOFF……????-????
m.
1st
Daughter
of
Their
children were:
Brenda Roloff
b.
m.
Holland
Lived
Dawson TX 2005
m.
2nd Lucy McCulloch
OPAL
ROLOFF
1917-
m.
Hugh Lynn Hillis
Their
Children were:
Hugh Lynn Hillis Jr
b.
m.
*************************
Lester
Leo Roloff, son of Harry Augustus & Sarah Isabella McKinzie Roloff, became a
Baptist minister, a pioneer in multiple social endeavors, and created a radio
ministry that continues to be heard across the nation.
He died in a private plane crash at Normangee Texas in 1982.
He
was viewed by more than a few to be a controversial figure on the American
religious scene, but there was never any doubt as to his sincerity or
enthusiasm.
He
picked cotton and baled hay during the early 1930s to earn tuition for courses
at Baylor University in Waco, Texas.
His board and room at an off campus boarding house was in exchange for
“sweet milk” coaxed from his cow…Mame…which he had taken from the family
farm.
Saturday
afternoons in Dawson drew great crowds to the center of Main Street for the
weekly drawing. Merchants
distributed dual tickets for each one dollar purchased in their stores.
One ticket was place in a large metal drum…one kept by the purchaser.
Billy Lawrence would climb upon a wooded stand located in the middle of
Main Street…shake the metal drum…and have some pretty little girl to draw a
ticket for….$2.50….$5.00….$10.00…..”BIG MONEY” during the
depression.
When
the drawing was completed and Billy Lawrence climbed down…..Lester Leo Roloff
would climb up and begin singing and preaching.
Many people would leave, but there would always be some who remained.
Lester never knew “he couldn’t sing,” and he made a “Joyful
Noise” wherever he went. Often…in
the middle of a sermon…he would break out in song.
Congregations….loved it.
A
graduate student at William & Mary University in Virginia is presently
compiling information on the life of Lester Leo Roloff for a thesis for a Doctor
of Philosophy Degree…and…perhaps…a published book.
Uncle
Billy Roloff, who, more than once, embarrassed his children by standing
regularly in church services to give his “Testimony”…..would have been
proud of Lester.
Last Update Monday, 07-May-2018 17:25:03 CDT
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