Sawtell, William Amos Jr.

Male 1916 - 2006  (90 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Sawtell, William Amos Jr. was born 5 Feb 1916, Powell, Park County, Wyoming, USA (son of Sawtell, William Amos and Fiegenbaum, Helen Mary); died 10 May 2006, Santa Fe, Santa Fe County, New Mexico, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Census: 1930, South St. Paul, Dakota County, Minnesota, USA

    Notes:

    Census:
    According to the 1930 enumeration, William, Jr., age 14, was attending school and lived at 220 Fifth Avenue North with his parents, William A. Sawtell (age 41) vice-president in a bank, and Helen Sawtell (age 40).

    Died:

         The following obituary was published on 12 May 2006 in the Albuquerque Journal, Albuquerque, New Mexico:

    SAWTELL -- William Amos Sawtell died May 10, 2006 in Santa Fe, NM where he resided since 1972. He is survived by his wife of 58 years, Gloria Sawtell of Santa Fe. He is also survived by his sons: W. Anthony Sawtell and wife, Sarah of Santa Fe, Peter Sawtell and wife, Allyson of Denver, CO; granddaughter, Katherine Sawtell Mirecki and husband, Edmund of Athens, GA; and grandsons: Andrew Sawtell of Lincoln, NE, Geoffrey Sawtell of Denver, CO; and brother, Stephen Sawtell and wife, Helen of Omaha, NE. Mr. Sawtell received a B.A. Degree in 1938 and a J.D. Degree in 1940 from the University of Nebraska. He served in the United States Army (artillery) from 1941 to 1945, with combat service in France and Germany, retiring with rank of Major. In Omaha, He [sic] was partner in the law firm of Morsman, Fike, Sawtell and Davis until his move to Santa Fe in 1972. In Santa Fe, Mr. Sawtell served as board member and treasurer of the Historic Santa Fe Foundation, President of El Zaguan, Inc., until the donation of this historic home to the Historic Foundation, member of the honorary board of the Historic Foundation, board member of the Old Pecos Trail Association, member of the New Mexico Advisory Board of the Trust for Public Land, and frequent volunteer with the Santa Fe Community Foundation. In Santa Fe, Mr. Sawtell was a partner in the law firm Catron, Catron and Sawtell and more recently, of counsel to the law firm of Sawtell, Wirth and Biedschied. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be directed to the Trust for Public Land at 418 Montezuma, Santa Fe, NM 87501 or the Santa Fe Community Foundation at P.O. Box 1827, Santa Fe, NM 87504 or to the charity of your choice. Cremation has taken place and a private family Service will be held at a later date. McGee Memorial Chapel 1320 Luisa St. Santa Fe, NM 983-9151.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Sawtell, William Amos was born 19 Dec 1888, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA (son of Sawtell, Henry Francis and Michel, Sophia Frances); died Apr 1963.

    Other Events:

    • Census: 1900, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Graduation: 1910, Champaign, Champaign County, Illinois, USA; Address:
      University of Illinois
    • Census: 1910, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Residence: 1910–1916, Powell, Park County, Wyoming, USA
    • Military Service: 1913–1918
    • Residence: 1917–1918, Miles City, Custer County, Montana, USA

    Notes:

    Census:
    According to the 1900 enumeration, William A., age 11, born in December 1888 in Illinois and attending school, lived at 6653 Wentworth Avenue with his father, Henry F. Sawtell (age 56); his aunt, Katharine E. Kienie (age 47); Susie McCabe (age 23), a household servant; and his five brothers and sisters: Florence (age 16); Henry J. (age 14); Alice (age 13); and the twins, Warren M. and Frances (both age 7).

    Graduation:
    According to published alumni information, William graduated with a B.S. in Agriculture, was a member of Phi Kappa Sigma and Alpha Gamma Rho and served as the editor of The Illinois Agriculturist.

    Census:
    According to the 1910 enumeration, William (age 21), in school, lived at 7117 Yale Avenue with his father, Henry F. Sawtell (age 66), the proprietor of a stationery store; his aunt, Katherine E. Michel (age 57); Lumine Francour (age 22), a household servant; and four of his brothers and sisters: Florence (age 25), a kindergarten teacher; Alice (age 22); and his twin sister and brother Francis and Warren M. (both age 16), attending school.

    Residence:
    William was a rancher.

    Military Service:
    From 1913-1917, William served in Company C of the Wyoming Militia, reaching the rank of Captain. In 1918 he served in Battery F, 148th Field Artillery, American Expeditionary Forces, rising to the rank of major; and was a major in the same unit in the Army of Occupation, in Germany. On his draft registration card filed in June, 1917, he is described as being of medium height and build, with grey eyes and brown hair.

    Died:
    According to the Social Security Death Index, William's last known residence was in Nebraska.

    William married Fiegenbaum, Helen Mary 27 Jun 1914, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA. Helen (daughter of Fiegenbaum, George Adolph and Bradrick, Anna Birdsall) was born 30 Jul 1889, Nebraska, USA; died May 1984. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Fiegenbaum, Helen Mary was born 30 Jul 1889, Nebraska, USA (daughter of Fiegenbaum, George Adolph and Bradrick, Anna Birdsall); died May 1984.

    Other Events:

    • Residence: Abt 1890, Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska, USA
    • Census: Jun 1900, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: Apr 1910, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA

    Notes:

    Residence:

         On 31 July 1890, the World-Herald, of Omaha, Nebraska, reported that the first anniversary of the birth of Helen Fiegenbaum, the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Fiegenbaum, had been celebrated the day before at the family home at 1438 North Sixteenth street.

    Census:

         According to the 1900 enumeration, the head of household was Anna Feigenbaum [sic], age 42, born August 1857 in Ohio, a widowed and the mother of three children, all of whom were still alive. Two of these children were Mary Feigenbaum [sic], a 10 year old daughter (born July 1889 in Nebraska); and Clara M. Feigenbaum [sic], a 7 year old daughter (born June 1892 in Oklahoma Territory.
         Also in the household was Mary Broderrick [sic], a 71 year old widow (born May 1829 in Ohio). Mary's identity as a "daughter" of the head of household was crossed out at some point.
         The final resident of the home was May [sic] B. Broderrick [sic], age 39 (born June 1860 in Iowa). She was identified as Anna Feigenbaum's niece.
         There are some problems with this enumeration apart from the misspelling of the surnames of all concerned. The head of the household, Anna B. (Bradrick) Fiegenbaum was born in Ohio, but the date of August 1857 may not be correct. She was indeed the mother of three children, but her eldest appears to have died at an early age (before the death of Anna's husband in 1896). Two daughters survived: Helen Mary had been born in 1889 in Nebraska, and Clara Marguerite was born in 1893 in Oklahoma Territory.
         The 71 year old widow, who had first been mistakenly identified as Anna Fiegenbaum's "daughter," was no doubt the mother, Mary (Rankin) Bradrick, born in 1829 in Ohio.
         The woman identified as May [sic] B. Broderrick [sic], age 39, was in all probability Anna Fiegenbaum's younger sister, the second child born to Isaiah Allen and Mary (Rankin) Bradrick. Mary B. Bradrick appeared in subsequent enumerations of Anna's households in Chicago.

    Census:

         According to the 1910 enumeration, the household consisted of Anna B. Fiegenbaum, age 53, head of household, widowed, mother of 3 children (2 children still alive); Mary B. Bradrick, age 49, sister, single, manufacturer of "Delicacies;" Helen Fiegenbaum, age 19, daughter, single; and Clara M. Fiegenbaum, age 15, daughter, single, in school.

    Died:
    According to the Social Security Death Index, Helen's last known residence was Omaha, Nebraska.

    Notes:

    Married:

         According to the marriage license, William A. Sawtell, of Powell, Park County, Wyoming, age 25, and Miss Helen M. Fiegenbaum, of Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, age 24 were married at 372 [S?] Normal Parkway, Chicago. James A. Beebe, a Methodist Episcopal pastor officiated.

    Census (family):

         According to the 1930 enumeration, the household at 220 Fifth Avenue North consisted of William A. Sawtell, age 41, vice-president in a bank, Helen Sawtell, wife, age 40, and their son, William, Jr., age 14, attending school.

    Children:
    1. 1. Sawtell, William Amos Jr. was born 5 Feb 1916, Powell, Park County, Wyoming, USA; died 10 May 2006, Santa Fe, Santa Fe County, New Mexico, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Sawtell, Henry Francis was born 2 May 1843, Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, USA; died Yes, date unknown.

    Other Events:

    • Census: 1900, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: 1910, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: 1920, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA

    Notes:

    Census:
    According to the 1900 enumeration, the household at 6653 Wentworth Avenue consisted of Henry F. Sawtell, head of household, age 56, widowed, a "Stationery Maker"; Katharine E. Kienie, identified as a 47 year old widowed daughter-in-law but almost certainly a sister-in-law; Susie McCabe, a 23 year old house servant born in Ireland; and Henry's six children, all attending school: Florence (age 16); Henry J. (age 14); Alice (age 13); William A. (age 11); Warren M. (age 7); and Warren's twin sister, Frances (age 7).

    Census:
    According to the 1910 enumeration, the household at 7117 Yale Avenue consisted of Henry F. Sawtell, head of household, age 66, the proprietor of a stationery store; Henry's sister-in-law, Katherine E. Michel, age 57, widowed; Lumine Francour, age 22, a household servant; and five of Henry's children: Florence (age 25), a kindergarten teacher; Alice (age 22); William A. (age 21), attending school; Francis (age 16), attending school; and her twin brother, Warren M. (age 16), also in school.

    Census:
    According to the 1920 enumeration, the household at 7117 Yale consisted of Henry F. Sawtell, age 76, partner in a stationery company; his daughter, Frances, age 26; and his son, Warren M., age 26, a commercial salesman.

    Henry married Michel, Sophia Frances. Sophia was born Abt 1853–1854, Dubuque, Dubuque County, Iowa, USA; died 16 May 1893, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Michel, Sophia Frances was born Abt 1853–1854, Dubuque, Dubuque County, Iowa, USA; died 16 May 1893, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    The approximate date of birth is calculated from the date of her death and her age reported at that time.

    Notes:

    Married:
    Details of the marriage are not known at this time.

    Children:
    1. Sawtell, Florence was born 25 May 1884, Hughes County, South Dakota, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    2. Sawtell, Henry Jacob was born 2 Aug 1885, Hughes County, South Dakota, USA; died Nov 1979, Miles City, Custer County, Montana, USA.
    3. Sawtell, Alice was born Apr 1887, Illinois, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. 2. Sawtell, William Amos was born 19 Dec 1888, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA; died Apr 1963.
    5. Sawtell, Frances was born 3 May 1893, Illinois, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    6. Sawtell, Warren Michel was born 3 May 1893, Illinois, USA; died Aug 1974, Cook County, Illinois, USA.

  3. 6.  Fiegenbaum, George Adolph was born 1 Jan 1855, Galena, Jo Daviess County, Illinois, USA (son of Fiegenbaum, Heinrich Hermann and Kastenbudt, Clara Catherine); died 27 Apr 1896, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 29 Apr 1896, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Census: May 1870, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: Jul 1870, Quincy, Adams County, Illinois, USA
    • Education: Between 1873 and 1878, Mt. Pleasant, Henry County, Iowa, USA; at Iowa Wesleyan University
    • Occupation: Between 1880 and 1896, Missouri, USA; a physician
    • Census: Jun 1880, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Census:

         According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of Henry, age 50, a minister; Clara, age 47, at home; Mary, age 19, at home; Carri, age 17, at home; George, age 16, a clerk; Anna, age 13, at home; Minnie, age 11, at home; Legette, age 9, at home; Louis Deitch, age 26, a dry goods merchant; and Mike Connelly, age 22, a clerk.

    Census:

         According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of Henry, age 50, clergyman of the Methodist church, and a citizen of the USA; Clara, age 46, keeping house; Mary, age 20, blind; Carrie, age 17; George, age 15, in school; Anna, age 13, in school; Minnie, age 11, in school; and Lizzetta, age 8, in school.

    Education:

         George entered Iowa Wesleyan University (known as Iowa Wesleyan College since 1912) in 1873 and graduated with an A.B. degree in 1878. He was a member of the Philomathean Literary Society and the Iowa Alpha Chapter of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. George was also a graduate of the nearby Mt. Pleasant German College, affiliated with the German branch of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
         In 1880, after receiving his M.D degree from the St. Joseph Hospital Medical College, at St. Joseph, Missouri, George also received an A.M. degree from Iowa Wesleyan University.

    Occupation:

         The following biographical sketch was published in History of Holt and Atchison Counties, Missouri, containing a History of These Counties, Their Cities, Towns, etc., etc., Biographical Sketches of Their Citizens.... (St. Joseph, Missouri: National Historical Company, 1882):

         "Dr. Geo. A. Fiegenbaum, A. M. of the firm of Goslin & Fiegenbaum, physicians and surgeons, was born in Galena, Illinois, January 1, 1855. His father, Henry H. Fiegenbaum, was a native of Prussia, Germany, and his mother, whose maiden name was Clara C. Kastenbutt, was from Hanover, Germany. The former was an itinerant minister in the German M. E. Church, and consequently made various moves. He went with his family to Wapello, Iowa, in 1860, then to Pekin, Illinois, in 1864, thence to Quincy, Illinois, in 1867, and in 1870 to St. Joseph, Missouri. George now started out on his own account by first engaging himself as clerk in a mercantile establishment. In the fall of 1873 he moved to Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, and took a classical course at the Iowa Wesleyan University and a theological course at the German Wesleyan College, attending the two colleges together. After five years study he was graduated in June, 1878, with the degree of A. B. In 1877 he commenced the study of medicine under Dr. Ray Beattie, and in the fall of 1878 he attended his first course of lectures at the St. Joseph Hospital Medical College. By the removal of Dr. Beattie to South America Mr. F. was obliged to choose another preceptor, which he found in the person of Dr. T. H. Doyle, of St. Joseph. He graduated in the spring of 1880, and that same year the Wesleyan University conferred upon him the degree of A. M. In July, 1880, he came to Oregon and formed a partnership with Dr. Goslin, In the spring of 1882 he received the appointment of physician of Holt County. Dr. F. is a member of the Medical Society of Northwest Missouri. He was married in October, 1880, to Miss Anna B. Brodick, daughter of the Rev. I. A. Brodick, of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. She was born in Burlington, Iowa, on the 16th of August, 1856. She is an active member of the Woman's Union of Oregon."

         From at least 1889 to 1894, George practiced medicine at 702 North 16th Street, Omaha, Nebraska.

    Census:

         According to the 1880 enumeration, the household, living on 4th Street, in St. Joseph, consisted of Henry Fiegenbaum, age 60, married, minister; Clara, age 56, wife, married, keeping house; Mary, age 29, daughter, single,at home; George, age 25, son, single, doctor; Annie, age 23, daughter, single, at home; Minnie, age 20, daughter, single, at home; and Lizzette, age 18, daughter, single, at home.
         According to records of his marriage in October 1880, George A. Fiegenbaum was identified as a resident of Oregon, Missouri.

    Buried:
    Funeral services were held at 2:00 p.m. Wednesday afternoon at the home of his parents, 1123 North Fifth Street, St. Joseph, Missouri. He was buried in Ashland Cemetery.

    Died:

         Frances Gretchen (Klein) Leenerts provided the following transcription of an obituary for George Adolph Fiegenbaum.

    St. Joseph Daily News, Tuesday, 28 April 1896: Dr. George Fiegenbaum died last night at St. Joseph's Hospital. He had not tasted food or drink for ten days and would have starved to death had it not been for an air operation performed on him last Sunday. The unfortunate man was afflicted with a throat trouble, a stricture of the esophagus, that had been growing for a year. Dr. Fiegenbaum was educated in St. Joseph and graduated from a medical college here. He has been practicing during the last fifteen years, lately at Oklahoma City, where he located several years ago. He is a son of the Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum of 1123 North Fifth Street and will be buried from the home of his parents at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. The cause of his death was a most peculiar one and baffled the skill of some of the greatest physicians in the United States. When he was first afflicted, Dr. Fiegenbaum sought relief by going to some of the best physicians in Chicago. Attempts were made there and by physicians in this city to dilate the esophagus with a tube, but it was found to be an impossibility. Ten days ago it became so bad that he could not swallow food and since then he had eaten nothing. He was slowly starving to death and as he lay in the hospital he begged the physicians to go on with the contemplated operation. There was no hope of saving his life, but he would be saved from death from starvation, and the operation was performed. "Do anything to save me from starvation and this burning thirst," said Dr. Fiegenbaum to the physicians attending him. He knew there was no hope of saving his life. The stomach was opened and food and water were placed in it. The operation was successful and if it had been performed months ago, the man's life might have been saved. He died peacefully and without suffering, and a post mortem examination of his body was made today. It was found that the esophagus and windpipe had a common opening and that the patient had strangled to death. The lungs were filled with saliva and everything that had been swallowed by him for several days -- in fact everything that went down his throat went into the lungs instead of the stomach. Before he died Dr. Fiegenbaum asked one of his friends to do him a favor, "After I am dead," he said, "and a post mortem examination has been had, I want you to take radishes and lettuce and things that look cooling and good and after mixing them with cracked ice, fill the abdominal cavity. I know it will do me no good, for I will be dead, but there is a satisfaction in knowing that it can be done and that the burning thirst will be allayed." For days before he died the sufferer was in untold agony on account of his thirst that almost drove him wild. His throat was closed and he could take no nourishment of any kind. When water could be taken a drop at a time it went into his lungs only increasing his suffering. Through it all he was patient and while he knew the end was near, he had a horror of starving to death. The unfortunate man who died was born at Galena, Illinois in 1835 and came with his parents to this state when a child. The Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum was Presiding Elder of the German Methodist Episcopal Church here for many years and has been a minister of the gospel for more than forty years. Dr. Fiegenbaum was educated at a college in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, where he was graduated with high honors. He afterwards attended the St. Joseph Hospital and Medical College, where he was graduated. He began the practice of medicine at Oregon, Holt, Missouri about fifteen years ago, and afterwards removed to Omaha where he practiced for five years. Since then he has been practicing medicine in Oklahoma. A wife and two children are left by Dr. Fiegenbaum. His wife was a Miss Bradrick of Mount Pleasant, Iowa and they became acquainted while he was attending college there. His parents are both living and he has four sisters all of whom are living. The sisters are Mrs. J. C. Steinmetz of this city, wife of a bookkeeper for the Turner-Frazer Mercantile Company; Miss Anna Fiegenbaum with the Townsend and Wyatt Dry Goods Company; Miss Mary Fiegenbaum who lives at home, and Mrs. Thomas Curry, wife of the editor of the Oregon Sentinel. The deceased was a member of the Woodman and other lodges at Oklahoma City. All the immediate relatives are in the city and were with Dr. Fiegenbaum when he died. The deceased was a large man and was in good health before he became afflicted with throat trouble. He was well known all over this part of the state and had many friends in St. Joseph and the surrounding country. He will be buried at Ashland Cemetery in St. Joseph.

         The following obituary was published in The Holt County Sentinel (Oregon, Missouri) on Friday, 1 May 1896.

              Death of Dr. Geo. A. Fiegenbaum

         The dark lines of great grief rest upon all this community this week, and The Sentinel will, with painful reluctance carry it to the heart of many in the announcement that Dr. George A. Fiegenbaum, passed over the river into the great unknown beyond on Monday evening last, April 27, 1896, at the age of 41 years, his death occuring [sic] at St. Joseph's Hospital, St. Joseph, Mo., from stricture of the esophagus. For fifteen months the deceased had been an invalid from stricture of the esophagus, and his affliction came to him while a resident of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and so great was his suffering that he was compelled to abandon his practice and seek treatment in St. Joseph and Chicago. His physicians as well as kind and attentive friends did all in their power to bring about his recovery. As a last resort, after an exhaustive consultation with leading specialists and his physician, it was decided the only chance was to submit to an operation, and as a consequence the patient was removed from the home of his father, Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum, of St. Joseph, to St. Joseph's hospital where the patient was prepared and on Sunday, April 26th, his physicians, took charge of the patient and the operation was skilfully [sic] performed and was a success in every particular. The patient had been unable to take the proper nurishment [sic] for so long that he was greatly weakened, from the time of the operation, he was doing well until attacked by a spasm of coughing, which produced strangulations and from that time he continued growing weaker and weaker, until Monday evening he sank into that "sleep that knows no waking."
         He was born in Galena, Illinois, January 1, 1855. His father, Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum, now of St. Joseph, was a native of Prussia, Germany, and his mother, was a Miss Clara C. Kastenbudt, from Hanover. George went with his parents to Wapello, Iowa, in 1860, then to Pekin, Illinois, in 1864, thence to Quincy, Illinois, in 1867, and 1870 to St. Joseph. From St. Joseph Rev. Fiegenbaum was removed to Oregon, where he was stationed for three years, during which time the subject of this sketch was taking his collegiate course. The deceased began life at this time for himself by clerking in a mercantile establishment. In the fall of 1873 he went to Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, where he took a classical course at the Iowa Wesleyan University. In June 1878, he graduated with high honors, the degree of A. B. being conferred. In 1877 he commenced the study of medicine under Dr. Ray Beattie, and in the fall of 1878 he attended his first course of lectures at the St. Joseph Hospital Medical College. By the removal of Dr. Beattie to South America, the deceased was obliged to choose another preceptor, which he found in the person of Dr. T. H. Doyle, of St. Joseph. He graduated in the spring of 1880, and that same year the Wesleyan University conferred upon him the degree of A. M. In July 1880, he came to Oregon and formed a partnership with Dr. Goslin, and during this partnership he was appointed county physician, this was in 1882. He was married in October 1880, to Miss Anna B. Bradrick, a daughter of Rev. I. A. Bradrick, of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, and by this union three children were born, two now living, aged seven and three years respectively, who with their mother survive. In our half century journey on this earth, never have we seen a husband and wife live so devotedly for each other as the deceased and his now broken hearted wife. Love was supreme with them, hence their home was what "two souls with but a single thought, two hearts that beat as one," could possibly make it here on this earth. His venerable parents and four sisters are also left to mourn his loss. -- The sisters are Mrs. J. C. Steinmetz, of St. Joe, wife of a bookkeeper for the Nave & McCord Mercantile Company, Miss Anna Fiegenbaum, with the Townsend & Wyatt Dry Goods Company, Miss Mary Fiegenbaum, who lives at home, and Mrs. Tom Curry, of Oregon. The deceased was a member of the Woodmen and Redmen lodges at Oklahoma City. All the immediate relatives were in the city and were with Dr. Fiegenbaum when he died.
         In the solemn presence of death love should be modest in its praise, and silence lay its finger upon the lips of flattery. Our friend was not faultless. He had weakenesses [sic] and imperfections; who of us have none? But under the blessed common law of love, death always pushes faults and frailties out of sight and memory touches with brighter color every virtue and living trait of character. We might speak of his loyal, passionate love of home, of the dear ones there; we might speak of his loyal constancy in friendship, but you who knew him have felt the warm grasp of that dead hand. We might dwell on his open-handed generosity, but we believe that is known to us all. We could talk of his long and heavy suffering, but we, who have been close to him know of all this, and so our thoughts and feelings and memories are more eloquent than any words we may write.
         Now let us speak of the solemn significance of life which the presence of death always suggests, even to the least thoughtful. Especially do we remember, now, these words of scripture, "in the midst of life we are death."
         But dear reader of The Sentinel remember this. No man holds a moment's lease of life. And yet life is full of jealousies, resentments, envyings and bitterness. Little words and acts have caused estrangement among those who ought to love each other. Some day you mean to be generous and forgiving. Some day you mean to take the hand you have not clasped for years. But that day may never come to you. "Now is the accepted time." Now is the time for reconciliation, for the offices of love, for the blessed ministry of forgiveness, for sweet charity, the hour of true penitence. You are waiting for tomorrow. But the curtain may be rung down upon the last act of your life today.
         Dr. Fiegenbaum had many admirable traits of character; no higher tribute could be paid to any man than to say he was incorruptible; his views may not have been right; they may not have been popular; they might even have given pain to those whom his every wish was to have saved this pain, but he was honest in his views and this honesty was steadfast to the truth as he saw it; he hated shams, despised hypocrisy, and had no patience with affectation or shallow pretense; always sincere, always thoughtful, he fully realized the imperfections of life and the short-comings of humanity; he pitied and was silent; he had faith, but that faith was not in forms or set theories, but that highest and abiding faith in the love of the Creator of Love; he was heroic in facing the end; patient and kind to all during his affliction, so that in his presence no one was aware of the mental and physical struggle he waged against pain; of fine intellect, finely developed, he was yet so retiring in disposition that only those who were closet to him insensibly were made aware of the man's remarkable ability; his mind was a great storehouse of knowledge and facts which never escaped him.
         All who became well acquainted with George Fiegenbaum liked him, for he was generous, kind hearted, true to his home and loved ones and friends; sympathetic in his nature, and was always ready to do a favor or a kindness to others if in his power. There was so much of these in his nature that endeared him to a great number, and his memory will be cherished by the many who have been made sad by his death.
         Short funeral services were conducted from the family residence at 2 p.m. last Wednesday afternoon, by Rev. C. H. Harmes, pastor of the German M. E. church, St. Joseph, and by Elder J. Tanner, of Lincoln, Nebraska, a former pastor of the deceased, after which the remains were laid to rest in the family lot in Ashland cemetery, St. Joseph, to await the final resurrection.
         Friends and relatives from a distance were in attendance to pay their last sad tribute of respect and love, and telegrames [sic] of condolence were also received from dear ones in far away countries. Rev. I. A. Bradrick and wife, of Chicago, the venerable father and mother of the bereaved wife were present.

         The following notice was published in World-Herald (Omaha, Nebraska) on Friday, 1 May 1896.

    Dr. Fiegenbaum Dies

         Dr. George Fiegenbaum, who died Monday in a hospital in St. Joseph of stricture of the aesophagus, after submitting to an operation intended to enable him to avoid a death by starvation, lived in Omaha between Chicago and Davenport, also in the Brown Block, and was for a while connected with the Whitehouse pharmacy. He was of a retiring disposition and, while a man of ability, did not do well here, and left Omaha for Oklahoma, where he resided until illness overtook him and he went to Chicago for the operation, then to St. Joseph.

         This notice appeared in the American Medico-Surgical Bulletin; Volume 9, Number 20 (May 16, 1896), page 681.

         Dr. Geo. A. Fiegenbaum at the St. Joseph Hospital in St. Joseph, Mo., on April 29. He had been troubled for 18 months with stricture of the esophagus, and had gone to the hospital to undergo an operation. The post-mortem examination disclosed the fact that the esophagus and the trachea had a common opening. He was 41 years old.

    George married Bradrick, Anna Birdsall 20 Oct 1880, Mt. Pleasant, Henry County, Iowa, USA. Anna (daughter of Bradrick, Isaiah Allen and Rankin, Mary) was born 18 Aug 1856, Lima, Allen County, Ohio, USA; died 6 Feb 1941, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Bradrick, Anna Birdsall was born 18 Aug 1856, Lima, Allen County, Ohio, USA (daughter of Bradrick, Isaiah Allen and Rankin, Mary); died 6 Feb 1941, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Census: Jun 1860, Ottumwa, Wapello County, Iowa, USA
    • Census: Jun 1870, Center Township, Henry County, Iowa, USA
    • Education: Between 1873 and 1877, Mt. Pleasant, Henry County, Iowa, USA; at Iowa Wesleyan University
    • Census: Jun 1880, Mt. Pleasant, Henry County, Iowa, USA
    • Census: Jun 1900, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: Apr 1910, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Residence: 1917, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: Jan 1920, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: Apr 1930, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:
    The year of birth has also been reported as 1857.

    Census:

         According to the 1860 enumeration, the household consisted of "J. A. Braderick," age 32, head of household, M. E. Minister, born in Ohio; "Mary R. Braderick," age 30, born in Ohio, insane; and "Anna Braderick," age 3, born in Ohio.

    Census:

         According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of I. A. Bradrick, age 43, head of household, a preacher, born in Ohio; Mary R. Bradrick, age 41, keeping house, born in Ohio; Annie B. Bradrick, age 13, attending school, born in Ohio; Mary B. Bradrick, age 10, attending school, born in Iowa; Charles H. Bradrick, age 9, attending school, born in Iowa; Willie P. Bradrick, age 7, attending school, born in Iowa; and Mattie Orrison, age 26, a seamstress, born in Virginia.

    Education:

         Anna entered Iowa Wesleyan University (known as Iowa Wesleyan College since 1912) in 1873 after finishing at Mt. Pleasant High School. She graduated with a B.S. degree in 1877. She was member of the Ruthean Literary Society and the Iowa Alpha Chapter of the Pi Beta Phi sorority.

    Census:

         According to the 1880 enumeration, the household consisted of Issah [sic] A. Braderick, age 43, married, a minister; Mary R. Braderick, age 51, wife, married, keeping house; Anna B. Braderick, age 28, daughter, single, at home; Mary B. Braderick, age 20, daughter, single, at school; Charles H. Braderick, age 19, son, single, at school; William Braderick, age 17, son, single, at school; and Elijah R. Braderick, age 9, single, at school.

    Census:

         According to the 1900 enumeration, the head of household was Anna Feigenbaum [sic], age 42, born August 1857 in Ohio, a widowed and the mother of three children, all of whom were still alive. Two of these children were Mary Feigenbaum [sic], a 10 year old daughter (born July 1889 in Nebraska); and Clara M. Feigenbaum [sic], a 7 year old daughter (born June 1892 in Oklahoma Territory.
         Also in the household was Mary Broderrick [sic], a 71 year old widow (born May 1829 in Ohio). Mary's identity as a "daughter" of the head of household was crossed out at some point.
         The final resident of the home was May [sic] B. Broderrick [sic], age 39 (born June 1860 in Iowa). She was identified as Anna Feigenbaum's niece.
         There are some problems with this enumeration apart from the misspelling of the surnames of all concerned. The head of the household, Anna B. (Bradrick) Fiegenbaum was born in Ohio, but the date of August 1857 may not be correct. She was indeed the mother of three children, but her eldest appears to have died at an early age (before the death of Anna's husband in 1896). Two daughters survived: Helen Mary had been born in 1889 in Nebraska, and Clara Marguerite was born in 1893 in Oklahoma Territory.
         The 71 year old widow, who had first been mistakenly identified as Anna Fiegenbaum's "daughter," was no doubt the mother, Mary (Rankin) Bradrick, born in 1829 in Ohio.
         The woman identified as May [sic] B. Broderrick [sic], age 39, was in all probability Anna Fiegenbaum's younger sister, the second child born to Isaiah Allen and Mary (Rankin) Bradrick. Mary B. Bradrick appeared in subsequent enumerations of Anna's households in Chicago.

    Census:

         According to the 1910 enumeration, the household consisted of Anna B. Fiegenbaum, age 53, head of household, widowed, mother of 3 children (2 children still alive); Mary B. Bradrick, age 49, sister, single, manufacturer of "Delicacies;" Helen Fiegenbaum, age 19, daughter, single; and Clara M. Fiegenbaum, age 15, daughter, single, in school.

    Residence:

         According to information published in 1917 by the Alumnal Association of Iowa Wesleyan College, Anna was living at 472 North Normal Parkway, in Chicago.

    Census:

         According to the 1920 enumeration, the household consisted of Anna R. [or B?] Fiegenbaum, age 59, head of household, widowed; Mary Bradrick, age 38 [sic], sister, single; and Marion [Bubeberrzen?], age 21, single, a boarder, attending school.

    Census:

    According to the 1930 enumeration, the household consisted of Anna B. Fiegenbaum, age 73, head of household, widowed; Mary B. Broderick [sic], age 69, sister, single.

    Notes:

    Married:

         According to marriage records in Henry County, Iowa, George A. Fiegenbaum, of Oregon, Missouri, a physician and surgeon who would be age 26 at his next birthday, and Anna B. Bradrick, of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, who would be age 25 at her next birthday, were married on 20 October 1880 at the home the bride's parents by her father, I. A. Bradrick, a minister of the Gospel. This was the first marriage for both bride and groom. Rev. Bradrick and Mary B. Bradrick, Anna's sister, were witnesses at the ceremony.

         The following notice of the marriage was published in the Western Christian Advocate (Cincinnati, Ohio):

    FIEGENBAUM-BRADRICK - On Wednesday, October 20, 1880, in Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, by the bride's father, Rev. I. A. Bradrick, of the Iowa Conference, Dr. George A. Fiegenbaum, son of Rev. --- Fiegenbaum, presiding elder of St. Joseph District (German), Methodist Ep'scopal Church, to Miss Anna B. Bradrick.

    Residence (family):

         On 31 July 1890, the World-Herald, of Omaha, Nebraska, reported that the first anniversary of the birth of Helen Fiegenbaum, the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Fiegenbaum, had been celebrated the day before at the family home at 1438 North Sixteenth street.
         On 1 May 1896, the World-Herald published a brief notice of the death of Dr. George Fiegenbaum and noted that he had "lived in Omaha between Chicago and Davenport.... He was of a retiring disposition and, while a man of ability, did not do well here, and left Omaha for Oklahoma, where he resided until illness overtook him...."
         Exactly how long the family resided in Omaha is not fully known at this time.

    Residence (family):

         In December 1895, George's illness was serious enough to cause his sister, Mrs. Minna Curry, to travel from Oregon, Missouri to his home to help with his care.

    Children:
    1. Fiegenbaum, Henry Allen Ernest was born 19 Jan 1882; died Bef 1895.
    2. 3. Fiegenbaum, Helen Mary was born 30 Jul 1889, Nebraska, USA; died May 1984.
    3. Fiegenbaum, Clara Marguerite was born 1 Jun 1893, Oklahoma Territory, USA; died Jan 1973.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Fiegenbaum, Heinrich Hermann was born 15 Oct 1821, Lengerich, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia (son of Fiegenbaum, Adolph Heinrich and Peterjohann, Christine Elisabeth); died 13 Jan 1905, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 16 Jan 1905, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Immigration: 1834, Missouri, USA
    • Census: 1840, Charrette Township, Warren County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: 1840, Femme Osage Township, St. Charles County, Missouri, USA
    • Occupation: Between 1848 and 1889; Minister in the German Methodist church
    • Census: Aug 1850, Mascoutah, St. Clair County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: May 1870, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: Jul 1870, Quincy, Adams County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: Jun 1880, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA
    • Residence: Sep 1899, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: Jun 1900, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA
    • Residence: 1902–1903, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:
    He was born in Bauerschaft Hohne, a "township" of Lengerich.

    Immigration:

         Heinrich was about 13 years old when he emigrated from the Hohne section of Lengerich, in the Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia with his father, Adolph (age about 40), his mother, Christine (age about 37), and four brothers and sisters (ages 10 to less than 1 year). The family is reported to have disembarked at New Orleans, Louisiana in late June 1834 and to have traveled up the Mississippi, arriving at St. Louis, Missouri about 3 or 4 July. They appear to have settled initially in Femme Osage Township, St. Charles County, Missouri and later moved to nearby Hopewell, in Warren County, Missouri. Around 1850, Heinrich's parents and two of his brothers still living at home settled near Wapello, Louisa County, Iowa. By then, however, Heinrich was married and already engaged in his career with the German Methodist Episcopal Church.

    Census:
    The 1840 U.S. census enumerated eight people living in the "Rudolph Feigenbaum" household in Charrette Township, Warren County, Missouri.

    Census:
    The 1840 U.S. census enumerated eight people living in the "A. Frigenbottom" household in Femme Osage Township, St. Charles County, Missouri.

    Occupation:

         The following autobiographical sketch was published in 1856 in the Experience of German Methodist Preachers, compiled by Adam Miller.

         Experience of H. Fiegenbaum

         I was born on the 18th of October, in the year 1820, in Westphalia, kingdom of Prussia, Germany. In the year 1833 our family migrated to America, and about midsummer my parents with five children landed in New Orleans. This was the year when the cholera raged with such violence, and scores fell victims to it every day. A gracious Providence preserved our lives, and we took steamboat for St. Louis, which we reached in nine days. We did not remain long in the city, but moved to the country, and settled seventy-five miles west of St. Louis, in St. Charles county, Missouri. Here we were in an entire wilderness, on which account no one grieved more than my mother, as she had been converted in Germany, and was now deprived of Church privileges and Christian associations.
         Here we lived five years without a church or preacher. "Alas, children," said mother frequently, "we will all be heathens yet." We children found a manner of life according to our wishes. Hunting, fishing, and roaming through the forests, was our employment whenever we found a leisure hour from our labors; but with all this our heavenly Father watched over us. We had a pious mother. The Sabbath day was not forgotten; for every Sunday we had to read our Bibles, and she made explanations to us of difficult passages.
         I was sorry that we were deprived of schooling, but finally the time came when we were supplied with a preacher. He came from Germany as a missionary to North America. This man was an evangelical Lutheran, and in accordance with the wishes of my parents, I went to him for instruction in the doctrines of the Church, and was confirmed. During the time I was receiving instruction I was awakened, and a few weeks afterward was converted, and felt myself one of the happiest beings on earth. But being left to myself, and not properly understanding the nature of the blessing that I had experienced, nor knowing how to retain it, I fell into a state of indifference and hardness of heart, which continued for five years. Yet God restrained me from outbreaking sins; and as I had, in my confirmation, renewed my baptismal vows and was now recognized as a communicant, I was appointed to an office in the Church; and thus I lived and labored within her pale, a backslider and a benighted sinner, till I was finally waked up through the preaching of Father Swahlen, who was the first German Methodist preacher we had ever seen. He made application to preach in our church, and received permission to do so; but when we found that he was a Methodist the door of the church was closed against him by my colleagues, the trustees. But as he made an appointment and could not get into the church, he took his stand by an old tree in front of it, and preached to the people. His word was not lost upon us: he visited us in our houses, and had he not been a Methodist he would have been received as an angel of God.
         I left this neighborhood and went to St. Louis, where I fell into bad company, and made rapid progress in a course of sin. Yet I still went to Church, sometimes to one and then another, till finally I was told that my sister, who also was now living in the city, had joined the Methodists. Through her I became acquainted with brother L. S. Jacoby, and brother Casper Jost, under whose preaching I was again awakened and converted.
         It was a hard matter to get my consent to be a Methodist, and still harder for me to go the altar of prayer. I was afraid that if I were converted among the Methodists at the altar of prayer I should have to shout; however, when the Lord granted me peace I forgot all this, and my Savior was my all, and in all.
         In my early youth I frequently had strong desires to do something for the cause of God; especially at times when my mother talked to me about Jesus and heaven. But this missionary spirit died in me when I came to America. However, at my confirmation, this feeling - a desire to do something for the cause of God - was waked up anew in my heart, but I could see no way open for me to do any thing.
         When I was converted in St. Louis, the impression again was strong on my mind that I ought to preach; and as I thought over this matter I became very much alarmed, for I now saw the responsibilities resting upon a minister of the Gospel, and the infinite value of an immortal soul. Although the impression was strong on my mind, I felt disposed to shrink from the task. After hesitating some time, and seriously reflecting on this subject, when the providence of God opened the way for me, I started in this great work.
         In the fall of 1847 I was received into the Illinois conference, and from that day to this I have endeavored to publish the word of the Lord. I thank God that I ever found the Methodist Church, and that she received me. In this Church I hope to remain till the Lord shall call me home.

         As a circuit preacher (Reiseprediger), resident pastor and presiding elder in the German Methodist church, Heinrich served during his long and active career in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska and Wisconsin.
         The following biographical sketch appeared in Souvenir der West Deutschen Konferenz der Bischöflichen Methodistenkirche in 1906.

         "Heinrich Fiegenbaum, many years the Nestor of the West German Conference, was born on 16 October 1821 in Ladbergen, Westphalia.  He came to America with his parents in 1834.  He worked on the land and then as a carter in St. Louis.  Here he became acquainted with Methodism and in 1845, after a vigorous struggle for repentance, he achieved sanctifying faith.  He immediately joined the church.  In 1847, he entered into holy matrimony with Katharina Kastenbudt, who over 50 years shared joy and sorrow with him.  He joined the Rock River Conference as a probationary member in 1848; the Southwest German Conference in 1864; and the West German Conference in 1879.  He stood for 41 uninterrupted years in the active ranks and served the following congregations:  Mascoutah, Ill., 1848 to 1850; Muscatine, Iowa, 1850-52; Galena, Ill.,1852-54; Iowa District 1854-1860; Burlington District 1860-64; Pekin, Ill. 1864-1867; Quincy, Ill., 1867-70; St. Joseph District 1870 to 1872; Oregon, Mo., 1872-1875; St. Joseph District 1875-79; Missouri District 1879-83; St. Joseph, Mo., 1883-86; Sedalia, Mo., 1886-89.  In 1889 he entered into retirement, but in the following 15 years he preached well over 500 times.  For 20 of his 41 years of active service he was a presiding elder and was in this office, as in his pastorates, very successful.  He was a born leader, a popular and forceful preacher.  Without the privilege of a higher education, but through diligent study, robust common sense, and a rare power of observation, he cultivated an extraordinary oratorical gift.  In a joyous assembly, he was in his element.  His later years brought various infirmities, but he never lost his confidence.  'With Jesus alone' was his motto in the last days.  And thus on 13 January 1905 he entered into his well earned rest.  His wife had preceded him by a few years.  He was survived by four daughters who follow in his faith."

    Census:
    According to the 1850 enumeration, the household consisted of "H. H. Fiegenbaum," a 29 year old Methodist minister and "Catharine Fiegenbaum," age 26.

    Census:
    According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of Henry, age 50, a minister; Clara, age 47, at home; Mary, age 19, at home; Carri, age 17, at home; George, age 16, a clerk; Anna, age 13, at home; Minnie, age 11, at home; Legette, age 9, at home; Louis Deitch, age 26, a dry goods merchant; and Mike Connelly, age 22, a clerk.

    Census:
    According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of Henry, age 50, clergyman of the Methodist church, and a citizen of the USA; Clara, age 46, keeping house; Mary, age 20, blind; Carrie, age 17; George, age 15, in school; Anna, age 13, in school; Minnie, age 11, in school; and Lizzetta, age 8, in school.

    Census:
    According to the 1880 enumeration, the household, living on 4th Street, in St. Joseph, consisted of Henry Fiegenbaum, age 60, married, minister; Clara, age 56, wife, married, keeping house; Mary, age 29, daughter, single,at home; George, age 25, son, single, doctor; Annie, age 23, daughter, single, at home; Minnie, age 20, daughter, single, at home; and Lizzette, age 18, daughter, single, at home.

    Residence:
    An account of the 50th wedding anniversary of "Rev. and Mrs. William Fiegenbaum," celebrated on 27 September 1899 at Edwardsville, Illinois, noted that one of William's three brothers was "...Henry of St. Joseph, Missouri...."

    Census:
    According to the 1900 enumeration, the household consisted of Henry Fiegenbaum, age 78, head of household, widower, a minister; Anna Fiegenbaum, age 49, daughter, single; Julia Fiegenbaum, age 43, daughter, single, a clerk; and Henry Fiegenbaum, age 32, nephew, single, a salesman; and Mary Fiegenbaum, age 48, daughter, single.
         This enumeration appears to have listed Anna Maria Fiegenbaum, born 3 September 1850, as two separate people: Anna, age 49, and Mary, age 48.
         The Henry Fiegenbaum identified in the census as a nephew is probably Heinrich Fiegenbaum (1868-1954), son of Heinrich Wilhelm and Louisa (Otto) Fiegenbaum.


    Residence:
    In the Social Register of Saint Joseph, Missouri, published in 1903, "Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum" was listed as residing at 1123 N. Fifth. The family of one of his daughters, "Mr. and Mrs. John C. Steinmetz" and "Adolph H. Steinmetz" resided nearby at 1121 N. Fifth.

    Buried:
    The funeral was held at the German Methodist Episcopal Church in St. Joseph, Missouri on Monday afternoon. The services were conducted by the pastor, Rev. G. Becker. Heinrich was buried at Ashland Cemetery.

    Died:

         The following is a transcription supplied by Frances Gretchen (Klein) Leenerts of an obituary for Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum which she reported had appeared on 14 January 1905 in the St. Joseph Gazette, of St. Joseph, Missouri.

    "Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum, a pioneer German Methodist Minister circuit rider of the central west, died at 2:30 yesterday afternoon at the age of 83 years at his home Fifth and Auguate Streets. He was born in Ladbergen, Prussia, 16 October 1821. He came with his parents to America in 1832, landing at New Orleans. Coming up the Mississippi River from New Orleans, the family stopped in St. Charles County, Missouri, where he spent his early life in clearing ground and farming. He lived in St. Charles County for several years but finally went to St. Louis to seek employment. While in St. Louis he was invited to attend a German Methodist revival. He was converted at the meeting and soon entered the ministry, spending the next twenty years of his life as a circuit rider, commencing in the late 40's. His first circuit went out from St. Louis and through central Illinois, returning back to St. Louis. After about eleven years spent preaching as a circuit rider in Illinois, he turned his attention to the west. He was married to Miss Clara Kastenbudt 11 April 1847. She died 2 September 1897. He moved his family to St. Joseph in 1870 at the close of his ministry east of St. Louis. His family has lived in and near St. Joseph since that time. For about eleven years after coming to this part of the state he traveled all through Kansas, Nebraska, western Missouri and Iowa, and as far west as Denver, in the interest of the German Methodist Church. As a result of his work in the west, after coming to St. Joseph, both as a circuit rider and as an organizer, the German Methodist Church became a conference in itself, he being its father. Many times his trips would keep him away from his family for two or three months at a time. He traveled from place to place while preaching a circuit either on horseback or using a canoe and snow shoes. Frequently in the winter time he was taken from one place to the next German settlement in a sleigh. Although he answered requests for English services, he devoted his entire ministerial life to the German Church and in his organizing the conference in this part of the central west he had to find the German settlements during the early days when this part of the country was thinly inhabited. He retired from active service in 1889. After the German Methodist Church became a conference and St. Joseph a district, the Rev. Mr. Fiegenbaum was presiding elder, which position he served for about twenty years. Up to the last ten years of his life he was sturdy, active and always working. Even during his retired years he was always ready to serve his church and was frequently called upon to assist in revivals. He was the first of four brothers, who came to America, to die. The others are ministers. He has two sisters, who married ministers, who are living. They are: Rev. F. Fiegenbaum of Wathena, Kansas, Rev. William Fiegenbaum of Edwardsville, Illinois, Rev. Rudolph Fiegenbaum of Connell, Washington, Mrs. K. Wellemeyer of Warrenton, Missouri and Mrs. William Winter of Kansas City. His brother, Rev. F. Fiegenbaum and sisters were at his bedside when he died. The funeral will be held from the German Methodist Episcopal Church at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon. Rev. G. Becker will have charge of the services. Burial will be at Ashland Cemetery. The Rev. Mr. Fiegenbaum's wife, Clara (Kastenbudt) died shortly after they celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary. Surviving children are Mrs. C. J. Steinmetz, Miss Mary and Miss Anna Fiegenbaum of St. Joseph and Mrs. Thomas Curry of Oregon, Missouri."

         The following is a transcription of what appears to be a reprint of an obituary for Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum that had been published on 20 January 1905 in the Holt County Sentinel, of Oregon, Missouri. The Holt County Sentinel was published by Henry Fiegenbaum's son-in-law, Thomas Curry.

              His Life's Work

         "Death," wrote Faber, "is an unsurveyed land, an unarrayed science. Poetry draws near death to hover over it for a moment and withdraw in terror. History knows it only as a universal fact, philosophy finds it only among the mystery of being, the one great mystery of being not. But we all rejoice in the fact that the light of our Christ hath penetrated this dark shadow, by his promise of 'whoso findeth me findeth life.'"
         Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum, a pioneer German Methodist circuit rider of the central west and founder of the Western German M. E. conference, died at his home in St. Joseph, Mo., Friday morning, January 13, 1905, in the 84th year of his age. He was born in Ladbergen, Prussia, October 16, 1821, and came to America with his parents by the way of New Orleans, in 1832. The family came immediately to St. Charles county, Mo., where he spent his early life upon the farm. From here he went to St. Louis to seek employment, and while there he attended a German Methodist revival and was converted. At the same revival a Miss Clara Kastenbudt was converted and on April 11, 1847, she became the wife of Rev. Fiegenbaum.
         Shortly after his conversion he felt that he should enter the ministry, and at once began preparations to dedicate his life to the Master's cause, and in 1847 he was granted exhortor's license and the following year he was given the Okoe, Illinois, charge, until the annual meeting of conference, and his circuit afterward was extended and for several years he preached as a circuit rider in Illinois, Southern Wisconsin, Northern Iowa and Southern Minnesota, being in the Rock River conference and doing the pioneer work among the Germans in these various states. His home was in Galena, Ill., having charge of the Galena charge and for six years was presiding elder. During these eight years he traveled mostly by buggy and horseback, and was often in danger of his life from wild animals and Indians, which were plentiful in this sparsely settled country, but his zeal knew no limit, fearing neither weather, beasts or Indians, on he went, carrying the tidings of Salvation to his fellow-countrymen, who had come to America to build themselves homes in our land of liberty. From Galena he went to Wapello, Iowa, where he served as presiding elder for four years; then taking a three years' charge at Pekin, another three at Quincy brought him into the folds of the German conference, then known as the Southwest German conference. By this conference he was sent as presiding elder to the Missouri district, which extended over the western half of Missouri, all of Nebraska, all of Kansas and the west half of Iowa. After serving in this capacity two years, he took the charge at Oregon, Mo., where he worked successfully for three years, after which he again became presiding elder of the Missouri district, whose growth was so rapid as to form two large districts in themselves, and by the year 1878 he brought it before the Southwest conference at Warsaw, Illinois, Bishop Merrill, presiding. At that time there were but 37 ministers enrolled. Of these but ten are now in actual service, 12 are superannuated, and including Rev. Fiegenbaum, 11 have died. The conference included three presiding elders and 3,014 members. He lived to see the fruits of his early work extend until the conference to-day includes over 100 ministers, four presiding elders and 8,000 members. The original conference included the state of Iowa, but since has been transferred to St. Louis. The first session of the West conference was held in the old rock and brick church in St. Joseph, on the same site now occupied by the present German M. E. church. We here give Father Fiegenbaum's early fields of labor in his Savior's cause:
               1848-50, Mascoutah, Ill.
               1850-52, Muscatine, Iowa.
               1852-60, Galena, Ill., P. E.
               1860-64, Wapello, Iowa; P. E.
               1894-67, Pekin, Ill.
               1876-70, Quincy, Ill.
               1870-72, St. Joseph, Mo.,; P. E.
               1872-75, Oregon, Mo.
               1875-83, Presiding Elder, St. Joseph.
               1883-86, St. Joseph.
               1886-89, Sedalia.
         While in Sedalia his health failed him and he retired from active ministerial work and returned to St. Joseph, where he had made his home since 1870, and where he lived up to the time of his death - thus giving 42 consecutive years of labor in the ministry. In his early day labors for the church, his circuits covered large territory, which would keep him away from his family for two and three months at a time, and would travel from place to place on horseback or using canoe or show shoes, and frequently in the winter season would be taken from one German settlement to another in a sleigh.
         He began his ministry when but 27 years of age, and during all these years he gave his life in extending the cause of Christ and building up the church; and though enfeebled from age and physical infirmities, he was ever ready to do what he could for his people. His ambition through life was service for the Master, and np [sic] to the last several years he was sturdy, active, earnest - always working - always busy. Even during his retired years he was frequently called upon to assist in revivals.
         It is a remarkable co-incident in the history of this family - there were four brothers and two sisters - the brothers were all ministers and the sisters married ministers. Father Fiegenbaum is the first of the list to be called home by Him who gave him being.
         The brothers and sisters are Rev. William Fiegenbaum, Edwardsville, Illinois, aged 80 years; Mrs. Katharine Wellemeyer, Warrenton, Missouri, aged 77 years; Rev. F. W. Fiegenbaum, Wathena, Kansas, aged 74 years; Mrs. Mina Winter, Kansas City, Missouri, aged 71 years; Rev. Rudolph Fiegenbaum, Connell, Washington, aged 68 years. The combined ages of the family that are left, aggregate 370 years, something very remarkabse [sic], surely, in one family. His brother, Frederick W., and the two sisters and his surviving children were at his bedside when he died.
         On April 11th, 1847, Rev. Fiegenbaum and Miss Clara Kastenbudt were united in marriage in the city of St. Louis, and on Sunday, April 11th, 1897, in their home in St. Joseph, they celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. The wedding was solemnized in the German M. E. church in that city, immediately following the regular service. Their golden wedding anniversary came on Palm Sunday, and although having reached the golden stepping stone, and true to their early faith, wended their way to the house of God, they found the church a bower of palms. At the close of the regular service, Rev. Harmes, pastor in charge, called the bridal party forward and seating them before the altar, delivered a touching and fitting address to them. Mrs. Dorothea Lahrman and Dr. Heinz, of St. Joseph, the only living witnesses of the marriage in 1847, were present on the occasion of the golden anniversary. Mother Feigenbaum [sic] died September 2, 1897, only a few months following their golden wedding anniversary.
         The surviving children are Mrs. J. C. Steinmetz, Misses Mary and Anna Fiegenbaum, of St. Joseph, and Mrs. Tom Curry, of Oregon. There are also 12 grand-children and three great-grand-children.
         The funeral was held from the German M. E. church in St. Joseph, on Monday afternoon, January 16, 1905, the services being conducted by the pastor, Rev. G. Becker, the interment being at Ashland cemetery.
         "Well done, good and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of the lord." -- Sentinel, Oregon, Mo., Jan. 20.

    Heinrich married Kastenbudt, Clara Catherine 11 Apr 1847, St. Louis, St. Louis County, Missouri, USA. Clara was born 9 Dec 1823, Osnabrück, Kingdom of Hannover; died 2 Sep 1897, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 4 Sep 1897, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA. [Group Sheet]


  2. 13.  Kastenbudt, Clara Catherine was born 9 Dec 1823, Osnabrück, Kingdom of Hannover; died 2 Sep 1897, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 4 Sep 1897, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Immigration: 1844, USA
    • Census: Aug 1850, Mascoutah, St. Clair County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: May 1870, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: Jul 1870, Quincy, Adams County, Illinois, USA
    • Census: Jun 1880, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Immigration:
    According to accounts published later in her life, Clara Kastenbudt emigrated to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1844. She moved on to St. Louis, Missouri in 1846, where she joined the German Methodist Episcopal Church and met her future husband, Heinrich Hermann Fiegenbaum.

    Census:
    According to the 1850 enumeration, the household consisted of "H. H. Fiegenbaum," a 29 year old Methodist minister and "Catharine Fiegenbaum," age 26.

    Census:
    According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of Henry, age 50, a minister; Clara, age 47, at home; Mary, age 19, at home; Carri, age 17, at home; George, age 16, a clerk; Anna, age 13, at home; Minnie, age 11, at home; Legette, age 9, at home; Louis Deitch, age 26, a dry goods merchant; and Mike Connelly, age 22, a clerk.

    Census:
    According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of Henry, age 50, clergyman of the Methodist church, and a citizen of the USA; Clara, age 46, keeping house; Mary, age 20, blind; Carrie, age 17; George, age 15, in school; Anna, age 13, in school; Minnie, age 11, in school; and Lizzetta, age 8, in school.

    Census:
    According to the 1880 enumeration, the household, living on 4th Street, in St. Joseph, consisted of Henry Fiegenbaum, age 60, married, minister; Clara, age 56, wife, married, keeping house; Mary, age 29, daughter, single,at home; George, age 25, son, single, doctor; Annie, age 23, daughter, single, at home; Minnie, age 20, daughter, single, at home; and Lizzette, age 18, daughter, single, at home.

    Buried:
    Clara was buried in Ashland Cemetery.

    Died:

         The following is a transcription supplied by Frances Gretchen (Klein) Leenerts of an obituary for Mrs. Clara Fiegenbaum which she reported had appeared on 3 September 1897 in the St. Joseph Daily News, St. Joseph, Missouri.

    "Mrs. Clara Fiegenbaum, wife of Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum, a retired minister of the German Methodist Episcopal Church, died at eight o'clock last night at the family residence, 1123 North Fifth Street, of paralysis. The deceased was seventy-four years old and had been a resident of St. Joseph for thirty years. She was one of the most earnest workers in the church and was beloved by all who knew her. Misses Anna and Mary Fiegenbaum and Mrs. J. C. Steinmetz of this city, and Mrs. Thomas Curry of Oregon, Missouri are daughters of the deceased. The funeral services will be held at three o'clock tomorrow afternoon from the German M. E. Church, Third and Robidoux Streets."

         The following obituary was published in the The Holt County Sentinel (Oregon, Missouri) on Friday, 10 September 1897:

              A Well Rounded Life.

         One by one the pioneer mothers of Methodism are dropping out, and passing over the great river, to take their places in the ranks of those of an immortality, and we are called upon this week, to record the death of one of the grand old Methodist mothers: The spirit of "Mother Fiegenbaum, wife of Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum, of the German M. E. church, burst its mortal fetters and went out to meet the Master, whom she loved so much to serve while on earth, and whom she had devotedly served for over half a century, at her home in St. Joseph on Thursday evening last, September 2, 1897, from paralysis, at the age of 74 years.
         She was a devoted Christian woman. She believed that Christianity presented the true philosophy of life - giving contentment of mind and peace within that this world cannot give nor take away. She was always to be found where duty called, whether it was by her husband's side in his great religious work or at some lonely hut in sweet charity's name. If she quitted her God at the altar, it was to find Him in her domestic duties. She did service as if it was a pleasure or privilege, accepting the thorns with the roses without a murmur. Indeed her life was a candle that wasted and burns itself up shining, so patient was she, so thoughtful, so forgiving, so charitable.
         Clara Kastenbudt was born in Osnabrueck, Hanover, Germany, December 9, 1823. In 1844 she came to America, first locating at Cincinnati. She then came to St. Louis in 1846, and that year she united with the German M. E. church, and it was here that she first met her now bereaved husband, and in this church, where these two were converted, the marriage ceremony was said, Sunday, April 11, 1847. With him, hand in hand, heart to heart, she shared the toils and privations, the joys and the sorrows, in the itinerant ministry, until a few years ago failing health made it necessary for her husband to retire from active ministerial work.
         Her religion was fundamental, and all her life grew out of it. She was probably a greater instrumentality in leading lost souls to Christ than we may be able to comprehend, and how much of her husband's great success during his effective service in the ministry was due to her strengthening and encouraging influence, only eternity will reveal.
         As a true wife and self-sacrificing Christian mother, "Mother" Fiegenbaum might be said to have been a model of perfection. It was the dearest wish of her heart to make her home what it should be, and in this she succeeded in a most admirable manner. Her hospitality was proverbial, and those who partook of it will remember her with the kindest of feelings. She was a true helpmeet to her now bereaved husband, who, in her death, he and surviving children loses one who was tenderness and love.
         She was a most obliging neighbor, and generous toward the needy - never did any one [sic] go away from her door hungry, any [sic] truly it may be said that she was a friend to all, and all were her friends.
         April 11th, of this year, 1897, their golden wedding was celebrated. Some anxiety had been expressed to see the aged pilgrims reach this milestone in their earthly career, which through the mercy of Him, who doeth all things well, was granted them.
         She leaves a husband and four daughters, Mrs. Carrie Steinmetz, Misses Mary and Anna, of St. Joseph, and Mrs. Mina Curry, of this city, to cherish the fond memory of one of the truest and noblest of wives and mothers.
         Funeral services were held from the German M. E. church in St. Joseph on Saturday, September 4, conducted by her pastor, Rev. Charles Harmes, assisted by Presiding Elder Tanner and Bishop Fitzgerald.
         The remains were laid to rest in the family lot in the Ashland cemetery.

    Notes:

    Married:

         The following is a transcription of an article published in The Holt County Sentinel (Oregon, Missouri) on Friday, 16 April 1897.

              Half A Century.
              Rev. Henry Fiegenbaum and
              Wife Celebrate Their Golden
              Wedding in St. Joseph,
              Monday, April
              12, 1897.

              Were United in Marriage, April 11,
              1847 - Recipients of Many Hand-
              some Presents - Telegrams and
              Letters of Congratulations
              Received by the Score.

         This mile stone was reached by Rev. Henry and Mrs. Clara Fiegenbaum of St. Joseph, Mo., on last Sunday April 11th, 1897.
         Cards had been sent out, announcing the coming event with a reception on Monday, April 12, 1897, at their home, 1123 North 5th Street, St. Joseph, Mo.
         Sunday, April 11, 1847, found the bridal party in the house of God in St. Louis, Mo., and at the close of the sermon the minister, Rev. Casper Yost, called forward the young couple who wished to be joined in holy matrimony and then and there pronounced them husband and wife.

         [anniversary photo here]

         Last Sunday, April, 11, 1897, they had reached the Golden stepping stone, and true to their early faith, wended their way to the house of God. It being Palm Sunday, they found the church a bower of palms. At the close of the sermon, Rev. Charles Harmes, pastor in charge, called forward the bridal party, and seating them before the altar delivered a fitting address to them, and in connection read a poem written for the occasion [sic] by Rev. J. A. Reitz, of Junction City, Kansas, Mrs. Dorethia [sic] Lahrman, of St. Joseph, Mo., the only living guest and witness of the marriage in 1847, acting as one bride's maid and Mrs. Dorathea Balcke as the other bride's maid.
         After the wedding ceremony, the bridal party went to their home where a 5 o'clock dinner was served.
         Those present were Rev. F. Fiegenbaum and wife, of Oregon, Mo.; Dr. J. F. Heinz and wife, Dr. H. R. Riemer and wife, Rev. J. A. Mueller and wife, Rev. Chas. Harmes, Mrs. Rev. J. G. K[o?]st, Mrs. Rev. Geo. Schatz, Mrs. Rev. H. Lahrman and Mrs. Rev. F. Balcke, and Miss Eda Heinz, all of St. Joseph, Mo.; Tom Curry, wife, children, of Oregon, Mo.; J. C. Steinmetz and wife, Adolph, Clara, Nettie, Emma, Addie and George Steinmetz, Julia and May Neudorff, Misses Mary and Anna Fiegenbaum and Miss Lydia Gutknecht, of St. Joseph, Mo.
         As early as Thursday the letters of congratulations came rolling in, and by Wednesday, 100 letters and fifteen telegrams had been received. Donations from friends were numerous and expensive, and true to the Golden Standard of our country, the bridal couple received one dollar each for every year of connubial bliss. Rare coins, such as a $2½ gold piece, coined in 1847, and $1.00 gold pieces were found among the presents.
         It would be well to give a short sketch of the lives of this worthy couple.
         Henry Fiegenbaum was born in Ladbergen, Prussia, Oct. 16, 1820; came to America with his parents in 1832, by the way of New Orleans; thence up the Mississippi river to St. Charles county, Mo., and in 1845 to St. Louis, Mo.
         Mrs. Clara Fiegenbaum (nee) Kastenbudt, was born in Osnabruck, Hanover, Dec. 9, 1823, and came to America in 1844, first going to Cincinnatti [sic] and thence to St. Louis, where in 1846 she united with the German M. E. church, and it was then and there that these two hearts met and in the same church where each were converted and joined that the marriage ceremoney [sic] was performed, Sunday, April 11, 1847, that made them one for life - for better or for worse, and in looking back over the years, they cannot but say: Truly, the Lord has been good unto us.
         In 1847 Mr. Fiegenbaum received exhorter's license, and in 1848 was sent out to fill a charge at Okoe, Ill., until conference. He joined the Illinois conference and was sent on the Belleville circuit.
         1848 to 1850 they were stationed at Mascoutah, Ill.; 1850 to 1852, Muscatine, Iowa; 1852 to 1860 in Galena, Ill.; 1860 to 1864 in Wapello, Iowa, Presiding Elder; 1864-1867 in Pekin, Ill.; 1867 to 1870 in Quincy, Ill.; 1870 to 1872 in St. Joseph, Mo., Presiding Elder; 1872 to 1875 in Oregon, Mo.; 1875 to 1883 in St. Joseph, Mo., Presiding Elder; 1883 to 1886 in St. Joseph, Mo., as station minister; 1886 to 1889 in Sedalia, Mo., and finding his health failing him retired from active charge in the ministry and found a home in St. Joseph, Mo., from whence they celebrated their Golden wedding on last Sunday.
         "But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles, they shall run and not be weary; and they shall walk and not faint," - has been verified in the lives of these servants of God, and that they may spend the remainder of their lives in sweet communion with that Master and friend in whom they have trusted all these years, and that they may have a glorious golden sunset with a golden sunrise in the better world, is the wish of their many friends, both far and near.


    Residence (family):
    From 1850-1852 (in Muscatine) and again from 1854-1864, Heinrich served Methodist congregations in Iowa.

    Children:
    1. Fiegenbaum, Edward Heinrich was born 22 Aug 1848, Mascoutah, St. Clair County, Illinois, USA; died Bef 1850.
    2. Fiegenbaum, Anna Maria was born 3 Sep 1850, Mascoutah, St. Clair County, Illinois, USA; died 26 Jun 1937, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 28 Jun 1937, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.
    3. Fiegenbaum, Caroline Katherine was born 31 Oct 1852, Galena, Jo Daviess County, Illinois, USA; died 11 Sep 1932, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 13 Sep 1932, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.
    4. 6. Fiegenbaum, George Adolph was born 1 Jan 1855, Galena, Jo Daviess County, Illinois, USA; died 27 Apr 1896, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 29 Apr 1896, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.
    5. Fiegenbaum, Anna Julia was born 28 May 1857, Galena, Jo Daviess County, Illinois, USA; died 26 Sep 1942, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 28 Sep 1942, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.
    6. Fiegenbaum, Christina Wilhelmina was born 30 Aug 1859, Galena, Jo Daviess County, Illinois, USA; died 22 Nov 1929, Oregon, Holt County, Missouri, USA; was buried 24 Nov 1929, Oregon, Holt County, Missouri, USA.
    7. Fiegenbaum, Lizette Clara was born 24 Mar 1862, Wapello, Louisa County, Iowa, USA; died 6 Feb 1892, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA; was buried 13 Feb 1892, St. Joseph, Buchanan County, Missouri, USA.
    8. Fiegenbaum, Franz N. was born 8 Nov 1865, Pekin, Tazewell County, Illinois, USA; died 22 Feb 1866, Pekin, Tazewell County, Illinois, USA; was buried , Pekin, Tazewell County, Illinois, USA.

  3. 14.  Bradrick, Isaiah Allen was born 22 Jun 1827, Belmont County, Ohio, USA; died 10 Apr 1899, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church
    • Census: Jun 1860, Ottumwa, Wapello County, Iowa, USA
    • Census: Jun 1870, Center Township, Henry County, Iowa, USA
    • Census: Jun 1880, Mt. Pleasant, Henry County, Iowa, USA

    Notes:

    Occupation:
    According to a 1904 newspaper article commemorating the 75th birthday of Mary Rankin Bradrick, shortly after Isaiah and Mary were married in Ohio, "they moved to Burlington, Iowa, afterward moving to Mt. Pleasant, Henry county, Iowa, where the Rev. Bradrick took up the work of raising the money to pay off the indebtedness of the Iowa Wesleyan University, which is today one of the oldest and best known Methodist colleges in Iowa. To this work he gave the best years of his life. After completing this great undertaking, Brother Bradrick entered the M. E. Iowa Conference. He was presiding elder on the Burlington and Muscatine districts for many years, and filled nearly all the important pulpits in the Iowa Conference. He was considered one of the ablest preachers in the West. The town of Bradrick, Ohio, was named for Rev. I. A. Bradrick and his name is well remembered by many of the [older?] people of that [now?] thriving Buckeye town."


    Census:
    According to the 1860 enumeration, the household consisted of "J. A. Braderick," age 32, head of household, M. E. Minister, born in Ohio; "Mary R. Braderick," age 30, born in Ohio, insane; and "Anna Braderick," age 3, born in Ohio.

    Census:
    According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of I. A. Bradrick, age 43, head of household, a preacher, born in Ohio; Mary R. Bradrick, age 41, keeping house, born in Ohio; Annie B. Bradrick, age 13, attending school, born in Ohio; Mary B. Bradrick, age 10, attending school, born in Iowa; Charles H. Bradrick, age 9, attending school, born in Iowa; Willie P. Bradrick, age 7, attending school, born in Iowa; and Mattie Orrison, age 26, a seamstress, born in Virginia.

    Census:

         According to the 1880 enumeration, the household consisted of Issah [sic] A. Braderick, age 43, married, a minister; Mary R. Braderick, age 51, wife, married, keeping house; Anna B. Braderick, age 28, daughter, single, at home; Mary B. Braderick, age 20, daughter, single, at school; Charles H. Braderick, age 19, son, single, at school; William Braderick, age 17, son, single, at school; and Elijah R. Braderick, age 9, single, at school.

    Died:
    He died in the Englewood section of the city.

    Isaiah married Rankin, Mary 22 Feb 1854, Newark, Licking County, Ohio, USA. Mary was born 11 Mar 1829, Ohio, USA; died 12 Aug 1908, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA. [Group Sheet]


  4. 15.  Rankin, Mary was born 11 Mar 1829, Ohio, USA; died 12 Aug 1908, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Census: Jun 1860, Ottumwa, Wapello County, Iowa, USA
    • Census: Jun 1870, Center Township, Henry County, Iowa, USA
    • Census: Jun 1880, Mt. Pleasant, Henry County, Iowa, USA
    • Census: Jun 1900, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA
    • Residence: 1904, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:
    In a newspaper article, Mary is reported to have celebrated her 75th birthday on 11 March 1904. In the 1900 U.S. census, the date of birth was recorded as May 1829.

    Census:
    According to the 1860 enumeration, the household consisted of "J. A. Braderick," age 32, head of household, M. E. Minister, born in Ohio; "Mary R. Braderick," age 30, born in Ohio, insane; and "Anna Braderick," age 3, born in Ohio.

    Census:
    According to the 1870 enumeration, the household consisted of I. A. Bradrick, age 43, head of household, a preacher, born in Ohio; Mary R. Bradrick, age 41, keeping house, born in Ohio; Annie B. Bradrick, age 13, attending school, born in Ohio; Mary B. Bradrick, age 10, attending school, born in Iowa; Charles H. Bradrick, age 9, attending school, born in Iowa; Willie P. Bradrick, age 7, attending school, born in Iowa; and Mattie Orrison, age 26, a seamstress, born in Virginia.

    Census:
    According to the 1880 enumeration, the household consisted of Issah [sic] A. Braderick, age 43, married, a minister; Mary R. Braderick, age 51, wife, married, keeping house; Anna B. Braderick, age 28, daughter, single, at home; Mary B. Braderick, age 20, daughter, single, at school; Charles H. Braderick, age 19, son, single, at school; William Braderick, age 17, son, single, at school; and Elijah R. Braderick, age 9, single, at school.

    Census:

         According to the 1900 enumeration, the head of household was Anna Feigenbaum [sic], age 42, born August 1857 in Ohio, a widowed and the mother of three children, all of whom were still alive. Two of these children were Mary Feigenbaum [sic], a 10 year old daughter (born July 1889 in Nebraska); and Clara M. Feigenbaum [sic], a 7 year old daughter (born June 1892 in Oklahoma Territory.
         Also in the household was Mary Broderrick [sic], a 71 year old widow (born May 1829 in Ohio). Mary's identity as a "daughter" of the head of household was crossed out at some point.
         The final resident of the home was May [sic] B. Broderrick [sic], age 39 (born June 1860 in Iowa). She was identified as Anna Feigenbaum's niece.
         There are some problems with this enumeration apart from the misspelling of the surnames of all concerned. The head of the household, Anna B. (Bradrick) Fiegenbaum was born in Ohio, but the date of August 1857 may not be correct. She was indeed the mother of three children, but her eldest appears to have died at an early age (before the death of Anna's husband in 1896). Two daughters survived: Helen Mary had been born in 1889 in Nebraska, and Clara Marguerite was born in 1893 in Oklahoma Territory.
         The 71 year old widow, who had first been mistakenly identified as Anna Fiegenbaum's "daughter," was no doubt the mother, Mary (Rankin) Bradrick, born in 1829 in Ohio.
         The woman identified as May [sic] B. Broderrick [sic], age 39, was in all probability Anna Fiegenbaum's younger sister, the second child born to Isaiah Allen and Mary (Rankin) Bradrick. Mary B. Bradrick appeared in subsequent enumerations of Anna's households in Chicago.

    Residence:

         The following is a transcription from an unidentified and undated newspaper clipping sent as a digital image from Mary Margaret McCaslin-Blanchard.

              Mrs. Mary R. Bradrick
              Celebrated Her 75th Birthday March 11, 1904

         Mrs. Mary R. Bradrick, who has resided at the corner of N. Normal Parkway and Stewart avenue, Englewood, for the past eight years, celebrated her 75th birthday on March 11, 1904. She is no doubt the youngest looking lady for her age in the city. She is the widow of the Rev. I. A. Bradrick, a noted Methodist clergyman, who passed away at the same place April 10, 1899. Mrs Bradrick was married on Washington's birthday 50 years ago the 22d of last February, at Newark, Ohio. Shortly after their union they moved to Burlington, Iowa, afterward moving to Mt. Pleasant, Henry county, Iowa, where the Rev. Bradrick took up the work of raising the money to pay off the indebtedness of the Iowa Wesleyan University, which is today one of the oldest and best known Methodist colleges in Iowa. To this work he gave the best years of his life. After completing this great undertaking, Brother Bradrick entered the M. E. Iowa Conference. He was presiding elder on the Burlington and Muscatine districts for many years, and filled nearly all the important pulpits in the Iowa Conference. He was considered one of the ablest preachers in the West. The town of Bradrick, Ohio, was named for Rev. I. A. Bradrick and his name is well remembered by many of the [older?] people of that [now?] thriving Buckeye town.
         Mrs Bradrick is the mother of five children, for of whom are living. Charles H. Bradrick holds a responsible position with the Texas & Pacific Railway company in Dallas, Texas.
         Wm. H. Bradrick is one of Chicago's best business men; he is at present treasurer of the Braganza Gold Mining Company of Arizona, whose headquarters are in this city. This is one of Arizona's best and largest gold mines. He is also interested in several other mining and live stock enterprises.
         Anna Birdsall married Dr. George A. Fiegenbaum, a very eminent physician of St. Joseph, Mo., in 1880.
         Mary Bell Bradrick owns the controlling interest in the noted Shafer & Bradrick Rheumatic Cure, which medicine is manufactured by the Englewood Patent Medicine Co., at 430 W. [63d?] street.
         To this medicine Mrs. Bradrick attributes her wonderful health, as she suffered for years with rheumatic paralysis, which her daughter's medicine has completely cured, and she now walks, talks, eats and sleeps as in her childhood days. She is really a marvel to all who know her for her wonderful health, and would not be taken for more than 50 years of age. She is very fond of reading and keeps well posted on all the news, besides reading many chapters of her Bible every day.
         Mrs. Bradrick was the recipient of many [humorous?] remembrances from relatives and dear friends and all join in wishing her many more pleasant birthdays.

    Children:
    1. 7. Bradrick, Anna Birdsall was born 18 Aug 1856, Lima, Allen County, Ohio, USA; died 6 Feb 1941, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA.
    2. Bradrick, Mary Bell was born Abt 1859/60, Iowa, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    3. Bradrick, Charles H. was born Abt 1860/1, Iowa, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. Bradrick, William H. was born Abt 1862/3, Iowa, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    5. Bradrick, Elijah R. was born Abt 1870/1, Iowa, USA; died Bef 1904.