| The Gollon Family
I am Alvine Christensen, grand-daughter of Frank Gollon and Rose Bujarski
who were married Nov. 11, 1890, at St. Casmir's Church, town of Hull.
They spent their life here, at 101 DuBay Ave. Both are buried at St.
Casmir's cemetery.
Their daughter, my mom, is 90 years old and lives at River Pines Living
Center.
My grandfather was a carpenter. He built the house I’m living in and
also some around the neighborhood. He also trapped a lot in the winter.
My grandmother was busy with 11 children. Four died in their early years
from fever.
I have a copy of their marriage from the church. Only Evelyn Buckel,
age 90, and Lucy Moore, 81, California, are alive. All the children were
born in this house, even me in 1918, although I lived in Chicago for 27
years, back here for 47 years.
Rose came from Dunkirk, N.Y. I don’t know about Frank or how they met.
They were very poor and had little to eat and not much education for
the children, but they all learned to read and write.
Submitted by
Alvine Christensen
101 DuBay Ave.
The Grant Family
William Grant is one of the honored pioneers of Portage County, and
the history of life on the frontier is very familiar to him, for he has
experienced its hardships and trials, and has borne all the difficulties
that come to those who found homes in new and undeveloped regions.
Mr. Grant was born in the parish of Comb St. Nicholas, Somersetshire,
England, in 1823, and is the son of William and Margaret (Hayo) Grant,
who spent their entire lives in that country, the father following carpentering
and also operating his little farm. The subject of this sketch was educated
in the schools of his native land. His mother died when he was only 2 years
of age, and his father never recovered from her loss. With him William
learned the carpenter’s trade, and remained at home until he had attained
his majority.
On March 23, 1851, in Somersetshire, at the Comb St. Nicholas Church,
Mr. Grant was married to Jane Vickery, who was born Feb. 7,1833, in Bickland,
St. Mary’s Parish, Somersetshire.
In April, 1851, Mr. Grant with his bride sailed from Liverpool on the
ship “New Brunswick,” which after six weeks and two days reached New York
harbor, Rochester, N.Y., being their destination. Through the summer after
their arrival, Mr. Grant lay sick with chills and fever, and not until
September was he able to do work. His money was almost exhausted and their
hardships were many.
At length he engaged in carpentering and painting, and later bought
a small tract of land near Rochester, upon which he built a small house.
Throughout the week he was obliged to be away from home, and one evening
upon his return he said: “I dislike to remain away all week. We will go
West where we can get a cheaper home, and I will remain in it.”
Therefore, in the spring of 1854, he left his wife and daughter Emma,
now Mrs. C. S. DeVoin of Waupaca, and made his way to Gill’s Landing, Wis.,
thence to Stevens Point. He afterward went to Portage County and secured
work on Fletcher’s tavern, which afterward became Gray’s tavern, and was
known far and wide.
Through the summer of 1854, he was there employed, and then worked on
Spurr’s Mill in Lanark township of the same county. In October 1854, he
was joined by his wife and daughter, and they began housekeeping in a little
cabin 12x16 feet, situated on 180 acres of land in Lanark
Township, which he had previously pre-empted. He raised a crop of potatoes
upon seven acres of ground which he had broken, and in the fall of 1855,
he sold this property to Charles Pierce for $1,100, thus laying the foundation
for his handsome competence.
In Belmont Township, he secured
160 acres of land, but much of the land had not then come into market,
and wild game of all kinds was abundant.
In the early days, Mr. Grant started to the home of his neighbor, who
lived two miles away, but lost his way in the forest, and while wandering
around almost stepped on a fawn, which shows how plentiful were the deer.
He wandered for hours before he found his way out of the woods, and consumed
the entire day before reaching his neighbor’s.
On another occasion while they were living in Lanark
Township, in a severe rainstorm the roof was blown off their cabin,
and Mrs. Grant had to lie in bed, with her child, under an umbrella. Such
were the hardships which the pioneers endured.
In August 1870, on a hot sultry day, when Mr. Grant and his son James
were in the harvest field, Mrs. Grant started after blueberries, leaving
the little ones in the charge of the eldest daughter. While absent, their
little son, less than 2 years old, strayed from the house. A search was
instituted in which nearly 100 neighbors joined, and after hours of anxious
waiting and almost unbearable suspense, the little fellow was found. He
had started for the harvest field, but had become lost, and for over a
mile he traveled through the thick woods and bushes, but was unhurt, save
for a few scratches, and was found on a dry spot just at the edge of a
deep creek. The joy of the parents on his recovery can better be imagined
than described.
Prompted by patriotic impulses, Mr. Grant responded to the country’s
call for troops in February 1864, enlisting at Waupaca in Company D, 42nd
Wisconsin Infantry. He went to Madison, thence to Tennessee, where his
regiment did guard duty, principally against bushwhackers. He served until
September 1865, when he was honorably discharged at Nashville, and then
returned to his home in this state. His wife during his absence carried
on the farm and provided for her little children.
In his farming operations, Mr. Grant had been quite successful, and
had owned much land; also had located several hundred acres for others.
He had found in his estimable wife a most faithful companion and helpmate,
and to her is due much of their success. While in New York, after working
all day at domestic duties, she would sew in the evenings, and frequently
made three fine shirts a week, doing all of the sewing by hand.
In 1863, Mr. and Mrs. Grant, with their two children, Emma and James,
visited their old home in New York, then sailed on the “Great Eastern”
for Liverpool, where they arrived after 12 days spent on the water. They
renewed the acquaintances of their childhood, and revisited the scenes
in which their youthful days were passed, but were glad to return to their
American home. Again they crossed on the “Great Eastern” and this time
13 days were consumed in making the trip. On the 19th of August, 1863,
they encountered a terrific gale, a severe and destructive storm which
is still mentioned in history.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant were consistent and faithful Christian people, and
the Methodist Church in the town of
Belmont, near their home, which was built largely through their generosity
and instrumentality, is known as Grant’s Church.
Submitted by
Joan Grant Dobbe
Rosholt
The Green Family
Darius E. Green was born Nov. 13, 1835,
in Houlton, Maine, according to his family Bible given to him in 1861.
Other records show that he was born in New Brunswick. He was the son of
James and Mary (Plummer) Green, and was the third child of a family of
ten.
At the age of 20 he came to Wisconsin. His first residence was in Dayton
Township of Waupaca County where he worked as a farm hand. He later worked
as a lumberjack on the river and in the woods. He also worked as an occasional
carpenter.
He was married to Effie Garter in 1879. She was the daughter of James
Garter and a resident of Portage County. They moved to Belmont
Township, Portage County. Seven children were born but only three survived
the hardships and diseases of that time. My father, James, his twin sister,
Jessie, and one older sister, Ethel, lived and raised families.
Darius died Nov. 8, 1905, when my father was 13 years old. His wife,
Effie, continued to farm with hired help. She sold some of the 2,200 acres
and purchased a house in Waupaca. Thus my father and his sisters were able
to attend Waupaca High School. She later sold and divided the acres between
her children. James continued to farm the 200 acres where the original
house was built.
My father met my mother when she visited the farm with his sister Jessie.
Jessie and my mother, Bertha Darrow, were classmates at Waupaca County
Training School for teachers in New London, Wisconsin. To visit her in
New London was an extensive trip by horse and buggy.
My parents were married May 25, 1915. My five brothers and one sister
and myself were born and raised on the farm in the town of Belmont.
My parents moved off the farm in 1951 and a brother, Laurence, lived
on the farm and raised his family. Later he and his family moved to Tucson,
Arizona. My mother died in 1960 and my father in 1974.
One brother lives in Waupaca after retiring from farming in Waushara
County, one brother lives in Tucson, Ariz., one brother lives in Colorado
Springs, Col., one brother is deceased and some of his family live in the
Milwaukee area, one brother lives in St. Paul, Minn., my sister lives in
Denver, Col., and I live in Stevens Point, Wis.
Submitted by
Ellen (Green) Andrew.
409 Weir Blvd.
Stevens Point
The Groshek Family
John Groshek was born in Prussian Poland on June 24, 1856. At the age
of 9, he came to America with his family. They lived in Buffalo, N.Y.,
for a year and eventually settled near Princeton, Wisconsin. Here, his
parents, Peter Groszczyk (the original Polish spelling of the surname)
and Marianna Konek, purchased a 160-acre farm for $600. They both died
here in early 1877 from diphtheria.
At 15, John moved to Portage County where he lived the remainder of
his life as a farmer.
On Feb. 7,1882, John married Anna Shulfer at Sacred Heart Catholic Church
in Polonia. She was the oldest of 11 children born to John Shulfer and
Marianna Lorbiecki. Anna was born in the town of Hull on July 10, 1865.
Anna’s father arrived in Baltimore, Md., after leaving his home in Stezyca,
Poland, in 1860. Her mother’s family was from Lipusz, Poland, and landed
in New York in August 1859. Undoubtedly, they chose to make their home
in Portage County because of the availability of land and the hope of a
better life. They were among the first of many Polish Immigrants to settle
in Portage County due to the similarity in climate to their native land.
After their marriage, John and Anna farmed in the town of Stockton and
raised 15 children - 9 sons and 6 daughters. The youngest and only surviving
child, Bridget Cieslewicz, 82, now lives in Stevens Point.
On Feb. 9, 1912, Anna died in Stockton. A few years later, John fell
from a hay wagon and suffered a head injury. Thereafter, he lived with
his daughter in Stockton until his death on August 19, 1942. He was 86.
Both he and his wife are buried at St. Mary of Mount Carmel Catholic Church
cemetery in Stockton.
John and Anna’s daily life was much the same as most pioneer families
whose days were consumed by hard work and the rearing of children. Religion
and education were definitely high priori-ties.
Neither John nor Anna lived to see one of the fruition's of “the American
dream.” In 1967, their grandson, Leonard A. Groshek, was elected state
representative for Portage County. He served in this position for 12 years.
Submitted by
Raymond L. Groshek and June Groshek Czarnezki
South Milwaukee
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