Brauns Create Braun Settlement (1879)
Transcriber:
stan@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Braun, Noah, Torsh, Warnke, Schmalz, Clement, Kapellen, Korman, Wolff,
Rabenstein
----Source: Scrapbook of Mrs. Emil (Marianna Braun) Noah
A write-up taken from a German newspaper published in Neillsville, Wisconsin and
translated by Mrs. Emil Noah, a granddaughter of the happy couple.
Seventeen years ago (1879) when Clark County had trails but no roads, a family from
Sheboygan County arrived here to face the work and hardships that combine trying
to make a home in the wilderness. This family consisted of parents, Wilhelm and
Anna Thorotea (Torsh) Braun and four sons, Gottfried, Wilhelm, Christian and
Friedrich, and three daughters, Louisa, Christina, and Eva.
They settled in the northwestern part of the county, where the townships of
Warner, Hixon, and Reseburg meet, about 24 miles from Neillsville, where they
bought land, Grandfather Braun and two sons, Gottfried and Wilhelm in the town
of Hixon (became town of Longwood in 1893), Christian in the Town of Warner, and Friedrich in the Town of
Reseburg. Though the farms were in three townships, it was only a (cat’s leap)
minor distance from one to the other.
Through hard work and hardships they finally got the land cleared, which became
their home, while roads and streets were still but a dream.
No one at this time can imagine how things look 17 years ago that had not lived
and slaved through the work. A present, leaving Greenwood, a person would expect
the same impassable trails of yester years, but no trace of them remains. The
streets are nice and wide, and as a person turns north toward Hemlock, roads
have been built. At Hemlock a high steel bridge, somewhat like the one on 5th
Street in Neillsville, spans the Black River. After crossing this bride, a few
arms are seen, but also beautiful hardwood forests. The roadsides are lined with
raspberry bushes loaded with luscious fruit. The wonder of this beauty is
finally changed when our eyes behold in the distance some clearings.
To the left of the road lies the farm of Frank Horn, son-in-law of the
Grandparents Braun, to the right the farms of Gottfried and Wilhelm Braun with
their large barns, house and gardens. It is a picture a person will never
forget. A short distance to the west and south from here lie the farms of
Friedrich and Christian Braun and Robert Horn, the latter is also a son-in-law
of the Grandparents. John Warnke, related to the Brauns, also has a nice farm.
As most of the land in the community was in the hands of the Brauns or relatives
of the Brauns, it got the name of “Braun Settlement.”
The elderly couple lived in the house of
the oldest son, Gottfried.
The paternal love often written about by writers is here portrayed in its
fullest extent. Seldom does a person find families that live together as
peacefully as the ones in “Braun Settlement.” Year in and year out they have
been helping each other and the main factors are the aged parents.
It is, therefore, no wonder when it was decided that the Golden wedding of the
parents was to be celebrated in due honor, as this also was the first Golden
Wedding amongst the German Settlers in Clark County. (See BioA for Braun, Mr.
and Mrs. Wilhelm from 1896)
Grandfather Braun died September 18, 1915 – age 94 years.
Grandmother Braun died December 30, 1897 – age 77 years.
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