Bio: Schaeffner, Carl
"Charley" Friedrich & Blanche (Eysnogle)
Contact: Stan
----Source: Contributed by Carl
Hollister (grandson)
Surnames:
Carl
"Charley" Friedrich & Blanche (Eysnogle) Schaeffner
"Charley & Blanche Schaeffner"
(Marriage Photo--Click on the photo for a larger view) Carl Friedrich Schaeffner was born October 20, 1886 in Loyal, Clark Co.,
Wisconsin. He was the second son and fourth child out of the eight children born
to Eduard and Pauline. "Charley" married Blanche
Eynogle when he was twenty-four and she was twenty-two. The wedding took
place at her family home in Bloom, Richland Center, Wisconsin, April 7, 1910.
She was born November 11, 1888 in Bloom, Richland Center, Wisconsin
to Joseph & "Nettie" (Deets) Eysnogle. Schaeffner
Family Album The Schaeffner Family
Farm Loyal, Clark Co., WI
1893 Loyal Plat Map (see Sec. 15) Schaeffner Home Loyal, Clark Co., WI Eduard Schaeffner
Family
The barn and home above
belonged to Carl Freidrich(Charlie) Schaeffner and are located on land
purchased
from Joe and Nettie Eysnogle.
Carl and his team of horses is pictured to the right.
1. Blanche (Eysnogle) Schaeffner is pictured
below.
2.
3. Research Notes
parcels of land there. That is where my grandma and
grandpa first met. Grandma said she remembered seeing the farm with the old man
and all the young kids running around and they would laugh, little realizing
that some day she would be marrying one of them. The Eysnogles then moved back
to Richland Co. when grandma was in her teens. I know they were there in 1900.
Grandpa sometime around then decided to "go a-courtin" and told the folks around
that he was going to Chicago to learn the butcher trade. Instead he went to
Richland Co. and married grandma. They came back to Clark Co., Wisconsin and
sometime around that time the Eysnogles came back too. When grandma and grandpa
came to the loyal farm they had a log shanty. Mom has a photo of that and
perhaps Gwen Piggott has one too. The house shown was moved from up the road a
ways, I don't know exactly where. One of the places the Eysnogles owned was a
brick building originally built as a small hotel or inn. It is now demolished
but mom has the stained glass side panels at the front door. My cousin, Gwen
Piggott, was a small girl and lived there. I am attaching the wedding photo of
Charlie and Blanche Schaeffner.
* * * * * * *
Conversation of 3-13-07 with
Irma Schaeffner Hollister. Grandpa Charlie sold his milk to the cheese factory
in Spokeville run by Geo. Fischer or Fisher. Mr. Fisher got the factory
from a Mr. Rhode. The house in the photo was moved from north of Spokeville by
moving tractors to its present location. The part moved was the long part in the
photo and the front was added on. Grandpa was a practical joker also. One
evening with a full moon out, he and the hired man saw the plow of the neighbor
across the road, a Mr. Getchell, sitting in the field and he and the hired man
connived to put it up in an elm tree in the field. They managed to do it and the
next morning Mr. Getchell couldn't find his plow until he looked up and saw it
in the tree. Grandpa and the hired man went over and discussed how it had gotten
there. Mr. Getchell opined that it had to have been a crew because no two men
could have done it. Grandpa finally confessed and they got it down for him and
had a good laugh all around. In some respects it beat watching television if
they would have had it then. © Every submission is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
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