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| Adam Pfaffenberger Family 1870's |
Adam Pfaffenberger
was born on March 15, 1832 in or near Petzmannsberg, Bavaria.16 He was the
fourth son of Andrew J. and Catharine Pfaffenberger. In the summer of
1837, at the age of five, he migrated with his parents, four brothers and a
sister to the United States. He and his family arrived at Philadelphia
on September 16th that year.4, 146 He spent the next three to five years in
Pennsylvania, where his brother Joseph and sister Margaret were born.
He reached his final boyhood home on Chestnut Ridge Road in Washington
Township of Jackson County, Indiana in 1842. His eleventh birthday was
likely spent helping his father prepare the soil for their first crop in the
state of Indiana. As he reached his teenage years his services on the
family farm were growing increasingly important as his older brothers were
beginning to leave home.
By the time he was 18, his brothers John, George, and John
Andrew and sister Elizabeth had left home to begin their own families and
careers. The 1850 U.S. Census which reached the Andrew Pfaffenberger
residence on September 17, 1850 bears this out.2 The excitement at home
during these early years had to include the construction of the
Jeffersonville and Indianapolis Railroad about one quarter mile east of the
farm. Completed in 1852, the J&I provided a means to explore wider
areas that had been reasonably possible before.
Adam remained on the family farm at least through the
1856-growing season. However, by September 16, 1856, Adam had saved
enough money to purchase his first farm. He purchased 160 acres in
Scott County from Louis Schneck for $550.111 (See the map below.)
This farm, lying north and west of what is now County Roads 200 West and 100
North, was flat exhibiting only five or ten feet of drop from south to
north. The land, drained by the Big Ox Creek and small tributaries, is
very flat and was likely prone to flooding. Thus, there was not a good
site for a home. Based on the tree growth in the area, it was likely
completely wooded at the time of acquisition.
| The writer had assumed that the Louis Schneck was same Louis Schneck who was the Seymour business man. However at the time Louis Schneck lived in Jeffersonville. Here is what Ed Schneck had to say on November 24, 2008. "Louis Schneck was not in Seymour at the time. He was baking bread and making cookies in a bakery in Jeffersonville, Indiana in 1856. He did not move to Seymour until 1864 and did not begin to amass real estate or to build his fortune there until 1872 when he became President of the Seymour Woolen Mills." |
Two years later, September 9, 1858,
Adam purchased approximately 25 acres from C. A. Bennett for $170.112 This property, located on the south side of C. R.
100 North, was higher ground and either contained an existing house or had a good location
for one. (Only the indexes of the Scott
County deed books were available to the author, therefore, a precise location of the
property is not given.)
Over the next twenty years Adam's
children bought, sold and traded property. It
appears that Frank and George W. purchased a considerable amount of farm property, while
Joseph, Horace and John M. liquidated their share of the estate.
Over the years many of Adam's children
migrated north from Scott County. Frank, who
never married, lived in Indianapolis. He died on September 21, 1937 and was buried in
Riverview Cemetery, in Seymour.
Emma, referred to as Etta or Ettie in
later accounts, married William F. Adams on March 1, 1896, in Jackson County, and
subsequently lived in Columbus.126 She
was the mother of Edith, Glenn, Lucille and Paul.149
George W., who was a life-long Scott
County farmer. He married Janie Wardell and
was the father of Walter. George died in
1931. (He was the grandfather of Walter
Pfaffenberger who has substantially contributed to this chapter.)149
Joseph was married in 1897 to Eva J.
Crabb, who died on December 4, 1905. He lived
in both Lawrence and Jackson Counties after leaving home.
He died on April 20, 1940, and was buried in Riverview Cemetery.
Oliver P. M. moved to Indianapolis, where he became an Indianapolis
policeman. He married Anna B.
Crabb on March 6, 1888 and was the father of three children, Minnie, Walter
H. and Herbie. Oliver died on
May 6, 1938, and was buried in Seymour’s Riverview Cemetery.
Oliver’s family is chronicled in Minnie May Hough’s book, A Backward
Glance At 80. 149, 168
Luella married John Cooley and was the
mother of Roscoe, Lester and Cecil. 149
Horace, a vetran of the Phillipians
theater in the Spanish-American war, married Phema Morris and was the father of Ernest,
Mary, Irene, Margaret, Evelyn, Horace, Jewel and Alta. 149
John M., the youngest son, migrated to Jennings County,
where he had a North Vernon address. Later he migrated to Seymour.
He married Clara P. Adams, the daughter of John and Mary Spray Adams on
February 26, 1905. John M. and Clara
had the unusual experience of have two sets of twins in their family.
On January 21, 1906, twin sons, Roy E. and Robert E., were born.
Later came twin daughters Marie and Marian.
In addition to twin sons and twin daughters, they were blessed with sons
Lennie and Lynn.167
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