John Hieb

Male 1935 - 1955  (20 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John Hieb was born on 8 Jan 1935 (son of John J. Hieb and Eva Bauer); died on 5 Aug 1955; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John J. Hieb was born on 25 Mar 1886 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA (son of Georg Johann Hieb and Katherina Permann); died on 11 May 1965 in Lodi, San Joaquin County, California, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY:
    http://www.genealogy.com/users/c/h/r/David-Alan-Christianson/FILE/0004text.txt
    JOHN J. AND EVA HIEB John J. Hieb was born March 25, 1886, at Eureka, South Dakota to George and Katherine (Perman) Hieb. John received his education through the fifth grade in Eureka. His father, George Hieb, was born February 12, 1860, in Neudorf, South Russia. His mother, Katherine, was born December 4, 1863, in Kassel, South Russia. George passed away in Eureka on March 10, 1941, and Katherine passed away in Eureka on August 14, 1955. They had arrived in Eureka May 19, 1884. On January 28, 1908, John J. Hieb and Eva Bauer were united in marriage. Eva was born in Eureka to John and Katherine Bauer, who were born in South Russia and came to Eureka about 1886. Both are deceased. Eva received her education through the third grade at Eureka. Besides being a homemaker, she liked to sew, garden, and entertain friends. John was the John Deere Implement dealer in Eureka for many years. He served on the church board of the German Reformed Church in Eureka. He also served on the city council. Other interests were entertaining, playing cards, reading and gardening. John passed away May 11, 1965, at Lodi, California and Eva passed away February 23, 1951, in Eureka. John and Eva Hieb had eleven children: Ella is married to Matthew Mutschler and their children are Barbara, Rochelle, Mathew, and Blake; Ann married Vern Jorgenson and has a daughter, Gloria; Harley, married Elaine Marr and their children are Cindy and Candy; Frances married Gottlieb Cirks and has three children: Carrol, William, and Dennis; Harry married Ellen Rengo, their children are Gloria and Gregory; Max was born in Eureka; Verna married Robert Le Seur and has four children: Vicki, David, Robert, and Thomas; Agnes married Robert Prout and has a son, Jeffrey; Florence married Russel Lee; Colleen is married to Donald McCains and their children are John, Susan, and Marv: John was born in Eureka.

    John married Eva Bauer on 21 Jun 1908 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA. Eva (daughter of Johannes Bauer and Katherina Wohlgemuth) was born on 7 Apr 1891 in Campbell County, South Dakota, USA; died on 23 Feb 1951 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Eva Bauer was born on 7 Apr 1891 in Campbell County, South Dakota, USA (daughter of Johannes Bauer and Katherina Wohlgemuth); died on 23 Feb 1951 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    Children:
    1. Ella Hieb
    2. Ann Hieb
    3. Lt. Col. Harley Froy Hieb was born on 15 Jan 1914 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 29 Mar 1994 in Lodi, San Joaquin County, California, USA; was buried in Lodi Memorial Cemetery, Lodi, San Joaquin County, California, USA.
    4. Frances Maude Hieb
    5. Harry Hieb
    6. Max R. Hieb was born on 5 Apr 1920 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 21 Jan 2007 in Maricopa County, Arizona, USA.
    7. Verna Hieb was born on 29 Dec 1921 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died in 0Jul 1982 in Albuquerque, Bernalillo County, New Mexico, USA.
    8. Agnes Hieb
    9. Florence Hieb
    10. Colleen Hieb
    11. 1. John Hieb was born on 8 Jan 1935; died on 5 Aug 1955; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Georg Johann Hieb was born on 12 Feb 1860 in Neudorf, Odessa, Ukrayina (son of Johannes Jakob Hieb and Klara Schnabel); died on 10 Mar 1941 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.

    Notes:


    GEORGE J. HIEB

    One of the Eureka community pioneers, who has seen this section grow from a
    prairie wilderness to a region of fine farms and enterprising towns, is George
    J. Hieb. In coming here with the great majority of Eureka folk, he is a native
    of South Russia, having been born near Odessa on February 12, 1860. His parents
    were Jacob and Clara Hieb. The family ancestors came from Wuertemburg, Germany,
    in 1812, when Adam Hieb and his parents joined the tide of immigration to the
    region around the Black Sea in Russia. Adam Hieb was the grandfather of the
    subject of this sketch.

    When political and social conditions in Russia made it an unpleasant place to
    live for the freedom-loving Germans, they decided to seek new homes in America.
    Among them were the Hiebs. On May 2, 1874, George Hieb, then a lad of 12,
    accompanied his parents on the long journey to America. After an ocean journey
    of two weeks and eleven days of travel by rail, the family arrived in Yankton,
    Dakota Territory, on May 27 of that year.

    A few weeks later the Hiebs settled in Hutchinson County where they made their
    home for several years. Meanwhile, young George grew up, and on December 17,
    1883, took unto himself a wife. She was Katharina Perman, born on December 4,
    1863, the daughter of Christoph Perman, a resident of that community. To this
    union was born a family of children that would have delighted President
    Theodore Roosevelt, as there were no less than 16 boys and girls.

    However, soon after their marriage the Hiebs decided to join the tide of
    immigration to McPherson County where there was still land open to homestead,
    pre-emption and tree claim entry. Accordingly, George and his young wife loaded
    their movable property on a freight car on May 2, 1884, and left Menno,
    traveling by rail to Frederick, via Aberdeen. Frederick was then the nearest or
    most convenient railroad town to the far-flung stretches of McPherson County.
    Here they loaded their wagon and started the slow trek toward their future
    home.

    It was an interesting train. They had two mares, two years old, a pair of oxen,
    two cows, six chickens, a wagon, and a breaking plow. Most important, they had
    $40.00 in cash. They drove westward as far as Spring Creek in Campbell County.
    But the young couple didn't like the land so well there and retraced their
    tracks back to McPherson County where they selected their claims in Section 11,
    Township 127, Range 71.

    The land had been surveyed only into townships, so each family picked their
    locations by guess. There were, namely ten families who came with the Hiebs and
    were a part of the exploratory trip. On May 19, 1884, the Hiebs pitched camp on
    the site of their new home. Their first concern was of course to provide some
    sort of shelter, but it must not require too much time. Accordingly, they built
    a wall of sod and leaned a few scrap boards against it at an angle. This was
    their first home in McPherson County.

    But an even more important worry met them the day after they arrived on the
    claim. Mrs. Hieb discovered they were out of bread and the water jug was empty.
    They had no stove nor oven. Necessity, the mother of invention, stood by. Young
    Hieb scooped a hollow in the earth in an adjacent bank and drove a pole from
    the top, which, when removed, provided an opening for a chimney. Then came the
    question of fuel. The young couple hitched up trusty oxen and drove over to a
    valley, which to this day known as Hieb's hay lake. There they cut the long dry
    grass with a bread knife, tied it into wisps of suitable size for the
    fireplace. The balance was used for a bed in the improvised house. The oven
    worked admirably and Hieb recalls the bread was extra good. The slough water
    was, of course, not good for drinking purposes, so they called the cow over for
    a cup of milk whenever they felt in of liquid refreshment.

    It was not long, however, until a well was dug and a good supply of drinking
    water obtained. Day by day they worked and provided one after another the
    little comforts that make life more pleasant. All of it made them very happy.

    The coming of the winter made a more substantial house imperative and this was
    one of the principal occupations for some time. They built not only a house but
    a barn of sod, both of which had roofs of rafters and boards, covered with sod
    smeared over with mud in order to make them as waterproof as possible. In order
    to complete the houses a trip to Frederick was necessary, since that was the
    nearest source of supply for lumber. The horses were too young to drive, so the
    trip was made with the ox team and required four days -- a decided contrast to
    the rapid means of travel of the present time.

    Making hay was quite as imperative as providing shelter. But cutting the hay
    with the bread knife might have been all right to provide fuel for baking
    bread, but the oxen, the young mares and the cow would need a good supply of
    fodder for the winter -- and the Hiebs had no mower -- and the precious forty
    dollars must be conserved.

    George Hieb had a good neighbor, however, in the person of Valentine Mettler,
    and best of all, Mettler had a mower and a rake and was willing to loan them.
    So the hay was made.

    All work and no play is not so good, the saying goes. The Hiebs therefore took
    the opportunity to make a visit to the old home at Menno while their neighbor,
    Mr. Stein, took care of the cows and chickens in return for the use of the oxen
    in breaking some sod on his claim. The Hiebs together with Mr. and Mrs. George
    Neuharth, made the trip which required four days. While in Menno, the Hiebs
    helped their parents harvest the crop and stayed for the threshing, earning a
    bit of money.

    This done, both the Hiebs and the Neuharths gathered up seed wheat, feed and
    other necessities and loaded all of it, including their teams, in a freight
    car, shipping it to Frederick. Reaching that point they unloaded and proceeded
    with the teams and wagons loaded to capacity to their claims. Part of the
    supplies had to be left behind and another trip was necessary to haul them to
    the new homes.

    On the return trip to Frederick, the pioneers gathered buffalo bones along the
    trail, loading their wagons with about a ton or so. These bones were in demand
    and brought them about $8.00 per ton. In November came another long trip, this
    one to Aberdeen where the new settlers filed their final papers on the claims
    they had taken, at the U. S. Land Office at that place.

    The first crop was seeded in the spring of 1885. The yield was small and the
    prices of grain low. Mr. Hieb now recalls his wheat yielded only 10 bushels per
    acre and brought from 35 to 40 cents per bushel. Flax sold for 90 cents to a
    dollar a bushel and yielded 8 bushels per acre, and oats only 15 bushels per
    acre. The latter grain was saved for seed and feed.

    The crop was harvested with a combination mower and harvester purchased in
    Ipswich at a cost of about $100. This trip to Ipswich remains vivid in Mr.
    Hieb's memory as it took four and a half days, the traveling being mainly at
    night in order to escape the heat of the day. Oxen were unable to stand
    traveling in hot weather, Mr. Hieb says. While the oxen were resting he was
    busy picking buffalo bones and had accumulated about a ton when he reached the
    town. These he sold for $13.00.

    The new town, Eureka, did not come into being until three years after the Hiebs
    settled on their claims. Soon after the first trains arrived George Hieb,
    together with Jacob Hoffman, drove to the new town to get a load of lumber
    each. But they were disappointed as no lumber had as yet arrived. The town was
    composed of a mere half dozen buildings or so, he recalls, all situated east of
    the railroad tracks on what was known as the school section. The present site
    of the town had not yet been surveyed, he says.

    Mr. Hieb continued his farming operations until 1927, when he retired to a
    comfortable home in Eureka. At the time of his retirement he had added to his
    original land holdings, owning over fourteen quarter sections, passing the task
    of cultivating the tract to younger shoulders after forty-three years of active
    work.

    Talking over old days with Jubilee book writers, he recalls that of the ten
    families who came with himself and his wife to McPherson County, only six
    persons survive, namely, Mr. and Mrs. George Neuharth, Henry Schnabel, Nick
    Lechner and himself. Mrs. Hieb died in 1933. He still makes his home in Eureka,
    but has spent the winter months in the milder climate of California with his
    son, George, who resides at Lodi, in the Golden Gate state.

    There, as snow covers the wide fields of his old farm, he perhaps dreams of the
    old days, the cold, stormy winters of Dakota and the memorable blizzard of
    January 12, 1888. He perhaps remembers drouths of other years and compares them
    in retrospect with the most severe of all, those of 1936-36. In spite of all
    hardships and privations, it may safely be guessed that his farm and the men
    and women who passed through the pioneer period with him still hold an
    important place in his affections.

    A list of the names and residences of surviving members of the Hieb family
    follows: John J. Hieb, implement business, Eureka, South Dakota; Henry G. Hieb,
    farming, Eureka; Christina Werner, farming, Eureka; Adam Hieb, merchant,
    Marion, South Dakota; Jacob Hieb, farming. McIntosh, South Dakota; George Hieb,
    factory superintendent, Stockton Box Company, Lodi, California; Magdalena
    Neuharth, farming, Eureka; Katharina Mehlhaff, farming, Eureka; Emma Mehlhaff,
    housewife, Eureka; Willhelm Hieb, farming, Lodi, California; Emil Hieb, civil
    engineer, United Air Lines, Cheyenne, Wyoming; Gustave Hieb, machine operator,
    box factory, Lodi, California; Helen Holman, housewife, Denver, Colorado.

    Georg married Katherina Permann on 17 Dec 1883 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA. Katherina was born on 4 Dec 1863 in Kassel, Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 14 Aug 1933 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Katherina Permann was born on 4 Dec 1863 in Kassel, Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 14 Aug 1933 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    Children:
    1. Lydia Hieb was born on 23 Dec 1884 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 28 Mar 1952 in South Dakota, USA.
    2. 2. John J. Hieb was born on 25 Mar 1886 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 11 May 1965 in Lodi, San Joaquin County, California, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    3. Heinrich G. Hieb was born on 12 Jul 1887 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 2 Sep 1982 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    4. Christina Hieb was born on 14 Oct 1888 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 19 Jan 1983 in Aberdeen, Brown County, South Dakota, USA; was buried on 23 Jan 1983 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    5. Adam Hieb was born on 13 Feb 1890 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 12 Feb 1979 in Lodi, San Joaquin County, California, USA.
    6. Jacob Hieb was born on 24 May 1891 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 15 Mar 1980 in North Dakota, USA.
    7. George Hieb was born on 15 May 1893 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died in 0Nov 1977 in California, USA.
    8. Magdalena Hieb was born on 14 Mar 1897 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 15 Jan 1991 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    9. Katherine Hieb was born on 5 Aug 1899 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    10. Emma Hieb was born on 7 Apr 1901 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    11. William Hieb was born on 28 Oct 1902 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 12 Mar 1967 in California, USA.
    12. Emil Hieb was born on 11 Sep 1904 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 27 Oct 1993 in California, USA.
    13. Gustav Hieb was born on 4 Jul 1906 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 13 Apr 2000 in Lodi, San Joaquin County, California, USA.
    14. Helen Hieb was born on 10 Nov 1908 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.

  3. 6.  Johannes Bauer was born in 1864 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died in 1896 in Campbell County, South Dakota, USA.

    Johannes married Katherina Wohlgemuth. Katherina was born on 4 Aug 1866 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 18 Nov 1918 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Katherina Wohlgemuth was born on 4 Aug 1866 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 18 Nov 1918 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    Children:
    1. Adam Bauer was born in 1884 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died in in at sea.
    2. Christian Bauer was born in 1886 in Odessa, Ukrayina.
    3. Rosa Bauer was born in 1888 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    4. 3. Eva Bauer was born on 7 Apr 1891 in Campbell County, South Dakota, USA; died on 23 Feb 1951 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    5. Mathilda Bauer was born in 1892.
    6. Anna Maria Bauer was born on 20 Mar 1894 in Campbell County, South Dakota, USA; died on 12 May 1984 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Johannes Jakob Hieb was born on 6 Apr 1833 in Neudorf, Odessa, Ukrayina (son of Johannes Adam Hieb and Magdalena Kirschenmann); died on 25 May 1927 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Glueckstahl Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.

    Johannes married Klara Schnabel on 4 Feb 1858 in Kassel, Odessa, Ukrayina. Klara (daughter of Johannes Georg Schnabel and Barbara Großhans) was born in 1836 in Kassel, Odessa, Ukrayina; died in in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Klara Schnabel was born in 1836 in Kassel, Odessa, Ukrayina (daughter of Johannes Georg Schnabel and Barbara Großhans); died in in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    Children:
    1. Barbara Hieb was born on 27 Oct 1858 in Neudorf, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    2. 4. Georg Johann Hieb was born on 12 Feb 1860 in Neudorf, Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 10 Mar 1941 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Eureka Cemetery, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA.
    3. Elisabeth Hieb
    4. Magdalena Hieb was born on 13 Feb 1862 in Neudorf, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    5. Klara Hieb was born on 14 Apr 1863 in Neudorf, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    6. Katharina Hieb was born on 14 Apr 1864 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 15 Apr 1864 in Odessa, Ukrayina.
    7. Jakob Hieb was born on 18 Mar 1866 in Odessa, Ukrayina.
    8. Peter Hieb was born in 1871 in Odessa, Ukrayina.
    9. Christina Hieb was born in 1873 in Odessa, Ukrayina.
    10. Elisabetha Hieb
    11. Adam Hieb was born on 15 Sep 1875 in Eureka, McPherson County, South Dakota, USA; died on 7 Jan 1936 in Gregory County, South Dakota, USA; was buried in Herrick Cemetery, Herrick, Gregory County, South Dakota, USA.
    12. Caroline Hieb was born in 1877 in South Dakota, USA.
    13. Mary Hieb was born in 0May 1880.
    14. John Hieb