Obit: Sternitzky, William August (1839 - 1922)
Transcriber: Crystal Wendt
Surnames: Sternitzky, Halleck, Hasz, Helm, Pusheck, Steinbach
----Source: Neillsville Press (Neillsville, Clark County, Wis.) Thursday, 12/28/1922
Sternitzky, William August (16 Dec. 1839 - 22 Dec. 1922)
William August Sternitzky who for the past 21 years had made his home with his brother Henry, in the town of Lynn, passed quietly away on Friday, December 22nd, following injuries received in an accident two weeks earlier. He reached the ripe old age of 83 years and 6 days.
Born in Germany December 16, 1839, Mr. Sternitzky came to the United States with his parents the following year. The first winter was spent at Buffalo, N. Y., and the following spring the family moved to Milwaukee, Wis., where they remained until 1856, when they came to Clark County. He May be thus considered on of the fist settlers in the town of Lynn. He was then but a boy of 17, but did his share in the early pioneer work in helping to convert the them primitive wilderness to the present well developed farms and fields. Mrs. Sternitzky was one of the few remaining veterans of Civil War. Answering the call of President Lincoln, he enlisted at Black River Falls, October 19, 1861, was mustered into service at Fond du Lac January 30, 1862, and served as Corporal in Co. I, 14th Reg. Wis. Inf. Volunteers. On April 7, 1862, he was severely wounded in the left arm in the battle of Shiloh, and after a few months in the hospital, was discharged for disability at Hamburg, Tenn., by order of General Halleck. Following his discharge, he went to St. Louis for a few years, returning to Clark County in 1864. In 1866 he went to Chicago and from there followed the call to the West, residing for various periods of time in California, Arizona, ad Washington. In 1901, he returned to Clark County, since which time he has made his home in the town of Lynn on the farm of his brother Henry.
Five brothers and two sisters have preceded him in death. Two brothers, Ernest and Henry, both of the town of Lynn, together with a large circle of nephews and nieces here, in Ashland county, Wis., and in St. Louis, Mo., survive.
Uncle William, as he was familiarly known by most everyone, will be much missed. His kindly disposition, genial smile and jovial manner won ready friends wherever he went. Up to the time of his accident he was very spry for his age and took part in many of the activities about the farm and in social life.
Funeral services were held at the Mapleworks German Luth. Church Tuesday December 26th, Rec. M. Hasz officiating, with interment with military honors in charge of Granton Post of the American Legion, in the church cemetery. Six of his nephews carried him to his last resting place Willie, Ed. And Fred Sternitzky, Fred Helm, Adolph Pusheck and Phillip Steinbach.
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He came to the U.S. in 1840 with his parents (Frederick and Helena Sternitzky), two brothers (Charles and James) and one sister (Susan). The Frederick Sternitzky family left Hamburg, Germany on June 24, 1840, on the sailing ship Washington. They arrived at the Port of New York on September 16, 1840. Traveled to Buffalo, New York. In the spring of 1841 the Sternitzky family moved to Milwaukee. In 1856, the Frederick Sternitzky, Frederick Yankee, and George Kleinschmidt families left Washington County and traveled to Clark County via Sparta. The Sternitzky family brought with them a four- oxen team, two cows and a few household goods. They arrived at the site of what became Lynn Village after three weeks, on June 1, 1856. The party had to cut their way through woods for the last three miles of the journey. The Sternitzkys and the Yankees settled on adjoining sections, and the Kleinschmidts settled five miles away. The Sternitzky's nearest neighbors lived two miles away by trail.
a. Enlisted on October 19, 1861 at Black River Falls, Fourteenth Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Company I.
b. The 14th regiment was mustered into the U.S. service at Fond du Lac on January 30, 1862, and left Fond du Lac on March 8, 1862.
c. The 14th regiment, under the command of Colonel David E. Wood, marched to St. Louis and then to Savannah, Tennessee. The regiment was still camped at Savannah on April 6, 1862, when the battle of Shiloh began.
d. William was wounded at the Battle of Shilo (Pittsburg Landing); shot through the left forearm on April 7, 1862. William was discharged, with a disability, as a Corporal on July 24, 1862, from Hamburg, Tennessee.
e. References:
1. Roster of Wisconsin Volunteers, War of
Rebellion, 1861-1865. Volume 1 Printed by the State of Wisconsin in 1886. Brown County Library,
R973.7475/W753r v.1
Page 799: William Sternitzky residence- Neillsville date of enlistment- October 19, 1861 Corporal,
wounded at Shiloh discharged- July 24, 1862, with disability
2. Wisconsin Volunteers, War of Rebellion,
1861-1865. Madison, Wisc.: State of Wisconsin. Brown County Library R973.7475/W753ra.
Page 966: William Sternitzky Private, Company I, Regiment 14, Infantry
3. Army of the United States Certificate
of Disability for Discharge.
Signed June 24, 1862. Corporal William Sternitzky of Captain C.R. Johnsons Company I of the 14th
Regiment of Wisconsin Infantry.
William was married in St. Louis, Missouri on March 16, 1863. William's Army Pension Certificate (signed June 9, 1989) lists him as married in 1862 at St. Louis to Teresa Brenner, and divorced in San Francisco around 1882.
William stayed in St. Louis for a few years (July 30, 1862 to 1864,SFH) and returned to Clark County in 1864. He lived in Chicago from 1866 to 1868, and then resided in California (1868-1879), Arizona and Kent County, Washington Territory (1879-1895). He lived in Oregon from 1895 to 1900. He returned to Granton to live with his brother Henry in 1901 until his death on December 22, 1922.
William died in 1922 (TS), 22 Dec. 1922 (OB,CS), buried at Mapleworks Zion Lutheran Church Cemetery (Granton, Wisconsin). Tombstone information: William A. Sternitzky 1839-1922 Co. I, 14 th Reg't Wisc. Vol. Inf.
This Biography was supplied by James W. Sternitzky,. William Sternitzky was the brother of James' GGGF, Charles Sternitzky.
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