resulting from his efforts. The
eighty acres which comprise the farm of our subject
have been brought to the very perfection of husbandry,
and are well provided with all necessary stock and
farming implements. Whatever Mr. Burck has acquired
has been solely the reward of his indefatigable
perseverance, and the ambition resulting from the
exuberance of pleasure and delight in the prospect of
being the sole possessor of a home wherein he may
bring happiness to those who form an integral part of
his life.
Mr. Burck is a member of the
Congregational Church, where also his wife finds that
which is congenial to her religious sentiment. Our
subject has been too busily occupied with home matters
to give much attention to political matters, but has
sought to understand the institutions of his adopted
country, and usually votes with the Republican party.
ON.
THOMAS R. BURLING is one of the leading citizens of
Nebraska, of which he was an early pioneer, and with
whose interests he has long been identified as an
agriculturist, as a statesman, and as a merchant, and
in all that relates to her commercial, social and
political life, he is pre-eminent. He is now carrying
on an extensive business in the town of Firth, as a
dealer in dry-goods, hardware, clothing, hoots, shoes,
groceries, and other merchandise. He is a native of
England, but coming to this country when a child, he
has become thoroughly Americanized, reared, as he was,
under our institutions and educated in our
schools.
Our subject is a son of John and
Mary (Harry) Burling, natives respectively of
Cambridgeshire, England, and Wales. Mr. Burling was a
farmer, and prior to coming to this country with his
family he was actively engaged in agricultural
pursuits about five miles south of Cambridge, in his
native shire. The mother of our subject was a woman of
superior refinement and education, and for twenty-one
years taught a school in England. In 1854 Mr. and Mrs.
Burling decided to leave the old home on English soil,
and with the other members of their family, begin life
anew in the United States of America, whither their
two eldest children, Sarah and John, had preceded
them. Our subject was then but eight years old, but he
remembers well how they sang as they stepped on board
the sailing-vessel "Emerald," bound for this
country:
Good-by,
church,
Good-by,
steeple,
Good-by, Englishmen,
And all good Irish
people.
Singing with a mingled feeling of
mirth and sorrow, as they left their native isle
forever, with all its tender and hallowed
associations, to seek a new home among strangers in a
far-away country. Mr. Burling and his family finally
arrived safely in port at New York City, after a
voyage of twenty-eight days, about the middle of
December, 1854. They remained in that city about
eighteen months, Mr. Burling readily finding
employment in the building of the Singer Sewing
Machine Company. After that he removed with his wife
and children to Bureau County, Ill., and took up his
residence in Wyanet, where he remained for three
years, engaging in various occupations. He then
purchased a farm near Buda, Ill., and from its 160
acres derived a comfortable income. In 1862 his
household was deeply bereft by the death of the noble
woman who had so patiently aided and encouraged him in
his work since the early days of their wedded life,
and who had tenderly and wisely reared their children
to become good and useful members of society.
Thomas R. Burling, of this sketch.
was born March 15, 1846, in Cambridgeshire, England,
and there spent the first eight years of his life,
gaining in the school of which his mother was teacher
his first knowledge of letters. He received his first
instructions in America in the excellent public
schools of New York City, where, by reason of his
quickness and fine scholarship, he became the. banner
scholar of his classes, as is proved by the records
that he has preserved of his rank. When his parents
removed to Illinois he attended the public, district
and village schools very regularly for some years, and
maintained the same high standing that had
characterized his scholarship in the schools of New
York. After he was fifteen years old his education was
conducted more irregularly than before,
|