CHRISTIAN ANDERSON, light-house keeper, born
Dec. 29, 1825, in Norway; August, 1844, came to Racine, Wis.; in
1845, came to Chicago; July 5, 1846, came to Manitowoc; started a
tailor shop which he continued several years. He afterward bought a
vessel which he sailed several seasons, then sold and bought a farm
where he worked about seven years. He then removed to Manitowoc and
followed teaming about two years; afterward ran a threshing-machine
two seasons. He then opened a boarding-house which he continued till
1876, when he was appointed to his present position. Married, in
1866, to Sarah Torrison, of Norway. They have two children, one son
and one daughter. He has four children by a former marriage, three
sons and on daughter.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524
JAMES S. ANDERSON, attorney and counselor at
law, Manitowoc, first settled in Kossuth Township, Manitowoc Co.,
September, 1852, with his parents. He lived at home until he was
about eighteen years of age. He enlisted in Co. A. 5th Regt. Wis.
V.I., April 22, 1861, and served three years and four months, being
in the battlles of Antietam, Gettysburg, and many of the important
battles participated in by the Army of the Potomac. He received
several slight wounds, but same out sound, and was mustered out at
Madison, Wis., August, 1864. He returned to Appleton and attended
the Lawrence University, and graduated from that institution in the
class of 1870, after which he studied law and was admitted to the
Bar in Manitowoc, December, 1871; then he began the practice of law.
He was born in Kelvin haugh, near Glasgow, Scotland, Dec. 25, 1842.
He married a daughter of the Hon. J. T. Mills, of Grant County, Miss
Eva M. Mills, July 17, 1873. She was born April 15, 1846. They have
two children, Minnie H. and Joseph M.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524
O.R. BACON, M. D., Druggist, Manitowoc, is a
native of Stillwater, Saratoga County, N. Y. When about the age of
fourteen years, his father removed to Otsego County, N. Y. There he
attended school. At the age of 20 he removed to Rensselaer County,
there studied medicine, and graduated at Castleton, Vt. In 1854 he
came to Manitowoc, and was engaged in teaching school several years.
He has also been Superintendent of Schools, Town Clerk, etc. In 1865
he established this business, which he has since continued, being
now the oldest resident druggist in the city.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524
J.W. BARNES, Firm of Barnes & Mendlik,
general merchandise, Manitowoc, is a native of Erie County, Pa. At
the age of seven years he came with his parents to Naperville, Ills.
There he worked at the printer's trade about three years, then
removed to Waukesha, where he attended school. In 1862 came to
Manitowoc; was employed a short time in his brother's bank. After
spending about a year in Cincinnati and St. Louis he returned to
Manitowoc and engaged in the merchandising firm of Goodenow &
Barnes. This partnership continued about three years. He then
carried on the business alone about three years. Then the firm of
Vilas & Barnes was established, which was continued about six years.
Mr. Vilas retired from the business, and soon after Mr. Mendlik was
admitted a member of the firm, which now continues. Mr. Barnes has
been Chairman and Alderman of the Fourth Ward.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524
ALBERT C. BECKER, firm of Becker & Teitgen,
hardware, Manitowoc. Born Oct. 9, 1850, in Prussia. Came to
Milwaukee with his parents in 1855. Two years later they removed to
Manitowoc, where he has since resided. At the age of fourteen he
commenced to learn the tinner's trade, and except four years
railroading he has followed this business since. He established this
business in 1875. Married, in 1877, to Alvina Teitgen of Manitowoc
County. They have two sons.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524
F. BECKER, Saloon and billiards, Manitowoc.
Born March 29, 1823 in Prussia. He emigrated to Milwaukee in 1853,
and the following year came to this city and opened a bakery,
carrying on that business until 1861, when he raised a company,
being himself commissioned captain, the 9th Wis. I. He remained in
the service about two years, then returned to Manitowoc and opened
his present business. He has been Chief of the Fire Department for
two years. Married, in 1847, Miss Mena Boate of Prussia. They have
three children, one son and two daughters.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524
JOHN BIBINGER, Of the firm of Bibinger &
Day, wholesale and retail dealers in all kinds of farm machinery,
Manitowoc, was born in Germany, July 23, 1846. He came with his
parents to America in 1848, and they lived in Pennsylvania about
eight years. Moved to Milwaukee and lived four years. He went into
business in 1873 in Manitowoc. He was married in that city, Sept.
22, 1873, to Miss Augusta Teitgen. She was born in Newton, Manitowoc
Co., 1855. They have two children, Ellma A., born Oct. 8, 1874, and
Arthur J., born June 9, 1876.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524
SAMUEL
COLEMAN BLAKE, M.D., One of the representative men of Manitowoc
County and one of the best read, and the most eminent physician and
surgeon in Northern Wisconsin, was born in the city of Bath, Me.,
July 25, 1826. He was the oldest child of the Rev. S. P. Blake, of
the Maine Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He
was educated at the Maine Wesleyan Seminary at Kents Hill, from
which he graduated at the age of twenty with honors. During this
time, his father's pecuniary circumstances were such that he could
give his son no aid in paying his way through his educational
course, and he was obliged to earn sufficient money for that purpose
by his own efforts, during the time that he was prosecuting his
studies. In 1850 he entered the Tremont Medical School, Boston,
where he read medicine. In the years 1852-53, he was "house pupil"
in the Massachusetts General Hospital, of Boston, and July 22, 1863,
he graduated in medicine from the medical department of the Harvard
University, having entered that institution three years earlier.
After graduating, Dr. Blake became a member of the Massachusetts
State Medical Society and of the Boston Medical Association, to gain
a membership in which required a most thorough knowledge of medicine
and surgery. He settled in the city of Boston, where he practiced
his profession between three and four years. In 1856 the doctor
removed to Chicago, and immediately became a leader in his
profession in that great metropolis, which position he maintained
through an active and extensive practice until 1877, when, on
account of poor health, he removed to Manitowoc. Since living here,
he has also been actively engaged in the practice of his profession.
In the second year after going to Chicago, he was connected with the
Spring course of lectures in Rush Medical College. Oct. 27, 1857, he
was united in marriage with Miss Adaline Jones, an estimable lady of
fine mental qualities, a daughter of the late Hon. Benjamin Jones,
one of the earliest settlers of Chicago, and the founder of the city
of Manitowoc. She has borne him 3 children, who are all living - the
oldest Charles C., born April 1, 1859; the next Benjamin J., born
Aug. 22, 1864, and the youngest Otis Henry Tiffany, born Nov. 19,
1872. They were all born in Chicago. In 1858, Dr. Blake was
associated with Prof. Daniel Brainard, De Laskie Miller and J. P.
Ross, of the Rush Medical College, in organizing the old City
Hospital of Chicago, and with them composed its medical and surgical
staff until he entered the medical service of the United States, at
the commencement of the late Rebellion. The outbreak of the war
found Dr. Blake in the midst of a large and lucrative practice, and
the occupant of many high and honorable positions in his profession,
but with true patriotism, marked with that large-hearted generosity
and forgetfulness of self-interests which has always characterized
his acts through life, he was appointed by Gov. Richard Yates
surgeon of the 19th Regiment Ill. V. The regiment was immediately
ordered to Missouri, passing via Quincy, Ill. At the latter place,
through appreciation of the eminent ability of the surgeon of the
19th, Gen. Stephen A. Hurlbut detailed him from his regiment to act
as surgeon on his staff. While in Quincy, the doctor organized a
large division hospital, which remained in that city until the close
of the war. In July, 1861, Dr. Blake was transferred to the 39th
Reg. Ill. V., and with his regiment went to St. Louis, and from
there to East Virginia, and was with General N. P. Banks in his
celebrated campaign through the Shenandoah Valley. During the
several bloody battles of this campaign, the doctor was always found
promptly on the ground, ministering to the many and grievous
necessities of the wounded. Later in this campaign, the doctor was
detailed from his regiment by Gen. Banks, and placed in charge of
the general hospital of the division, which responsible position he
occupied during the remainder of that campaign. As a proof of the
estimation in which the doctor was held by his companions in arms,
we take the liberty of inserting the following extracts from among
letters received by him during and immediately after his service.
They will explain themselves.
Headquarters, 1st Div., Dept. of Shenandoah, near Edinburg, Va.,
April 12, 1862.
Dr. Saml. C. Blake, Surgeon, 39th Reg. I. V. - Dr. Sir: I have had
ample opportunity of estimating your services as a hospital surgeon,
and feel much pleasure in being able to testify to the care and
attention bestowed upon the man, and to the professional skill
displayed on many occasions, when the service required it. In field
hospitals, where many things needful for the comfort of the sick
soldier have to be improvised, a faithful devotion of duty and
self-sacrifice are qualities eminently needed; in your display of
these I have also been witness, and put on record here my complete
approval of, and satisfaction with, your conduct at the Brigade
Hospital, Hancock. I am, doctor, Yours Respectfully, Thomas
Antisell,
Brigade Surgeon Vols. and Medical Director 1st Division, Dept. of
the Shenandoah.
The next, which will suffice, is from Gen. Osborne, the first
colonel of the 39th Ill. V., afterward promoted to major general,
and now Minister Plenipotentiary from the United States to the
Argentine Republic.
Headquarters 39th Reg. I. V., Harrison's Landing, James River, Va.
Army of the Potomac, Aug. 5, 1863.
Dr. S. C. Blake - My dear old surgeon: * * * * * If at any time you
should need my good offices, they shall be freely given you for the
good name and reputation which you won for yourself and my regiment
in the medical department of the army in the field, as I cannot
forget that high and never to be forgotten compliment paid me as
your commanding officer by Maj. Gen. Williams, in your behalf, for
your distinguished services when in charge of the general hospital.
Please accept the kindest wishes of, Yours truly,
Thomas O. Osborne, Major General
In 1862 Dr. Blake was compelled to resign his position in the army
on account of chronic diarrhea, which he had contracted in the
service during the severe and fatal winter and spring campaign
preceding. After returning home to Chicago, the doctor was
incapacitated from any active labor in his profession for more than
a year. In 1863, having sufficiently recovered from his illness to
go into active practice, he was honored with the appointment of
County Physician of Cook County, Ill. In 1865, he was appointed City
Physician of the City of Chicago, which responsible position he held
two years, discharging the duties thereof with credit to himself and
to the city. He was one of a number of prominent gentlemen and
ladies in Chicago who founded the present flourishing Women and
Children's Hospital of Chicago, and was one of the consulting
physicians and surgeons until he moved to Manitowoc in 1877. In
1869, he, in association with Dr. W. H. H. Byford, and other
prominent physicians of Chicago, organized the Women's Hospital
Medical College of Chicago, and became one of its faculty, occupying
the chair of professor of diseases of the mind and nervous system, a
position of eminent honor and usefulness, for about seven years. In
1868, Dr. Blake, while a member of the Board of Supervisors of the
County of Cook, in connection with the late Hon. James H. Reese,
after long and faithful urging, prevailed upon the Board to occupy
the old City Hospital as a county hospital, and this was the
beginning of the present magnificent Cook County Hospital, which is
the pride of Chicago, and an honor to the State. After the doctor
left Chicago to live in Manitowoc, recognizing his eminent ability
in his profession and worth as a gentleman, the physicians and
surgeons of his old home, Chicago, at a meeting of their society,
elected him an honorary member thereof, and the following extract
from a letter from his old and time-tried friend, Dr. Byford, will
attest:
Chicago, Ill., Jan. 15, 1878.
Dear Dr. Blake - * * * The Society of Physicians and Surgeons took
great pleasure in electing you an honorary member of that body.
Several of the gentlemen spoke in terms of warm friendship, and with
great good will wished you prosperity and happiness in your new
home.
I am, as ever, your very true friend, W. H. H. Byford
Dr. Blake has been a member of the Massachusetts State Medical
Society, Boston Medical Association, Illinois State Medical Society,
Chicago Society of Physicians and Surgeons and the American Medical
Association. He has many times been elected to represent his
profession in both the State and national associations of
physicians, and has always been an active and loyal member of his
profession. In religion he is a Methodist, having been an active and
conscientious member of that organization since he was a young man.
He has ever sustained an enviable reputation as a man of honor and
integrity, as well as for rare skill and success as a medical
practitioner. No considerations of policy, professional or
mercenary, affright him from the exercise of righteous judgment, or
deter him from the expression of a conscientious opinion. He
sturdily adheres to the path of rectitude in his profession, and
looks upon quackery as an impious tampering with human life, and
puts it aside with scornful detestation. Such a course has its
reward, and gains the applause of all who behold it. It shames the
mountebank, strengthens the young physician and crowns the
profession with an honorable reputation. But the doctor is as highly
esteemed for his qualities of heart as he is admired for his
qualities of mind, talents, and attainments. He is a gentlemen of a
kind and generous nature, with warm impulses, and generous to a
fault. His charities are open-handed as well as open-hearted, and he
is held in equal estimation by dwellers in cots and in palaces. He
mingles with the latter with ease and grace, and associates with the
former without endangering his dignity. He has no affectation or
egotism to alienate the one, or haughtiness of behavior to repel the
other. He has served his generation so well that its prayers would
continue his term of service for many years to come.
~ Source: History of Northern Wisconsin, 1881, pp524-525
|