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George Adam Benkelman, Benjamin Franklin and Wilhemina (Hesse) Benkelman, Jaqua
January 24, 1908 "John George Benkelman, founder of the town of Benkelman, died in Denver, Thursday night of last week aged 77 years."
George was the first Benkelman born in the United States. He was born only a
few weeks after Adam and Catherine arrived.
In her history of the Colorado and Nebraska Benkelman's, Margaret "Bonnie" Jacob
wrote that George Adam Benkelman was living with his family in Cass City,
Michigan when his Uncle, "Big George" Benkelman, contacted him about going into
the cattle business with him in Colorado. Just 19 years old, and eager to get on
with his life, "Little George" eagerly accepted. It was 1870 when he arrived in
Denver. Big George explained to him the need for a relocation of the cattle
herd. Little George saddled his horse and rode from Denver to the
Kansas-Colorado state line and down the south fork of the Republican River. Just
inside the state line he lay in a draugh and watched an entire hunting party of
Cheyenne Indians cross the river and continue riding south. He knew that if they
saw him that he was dead. Luckily, he continued on his journey, but traveled
cautiously from then on. He returned to Denver drawing to a close his 400 mile
horseback trip.
Little George set out on a second trip east to find line camp headquarters for
the Benkelman Ranch. When George Adam Benkelman viewed the valley of the south
fork of the Republican River, he saw a carpet of buffalo grass about 8 inches
high. It was lush and beautiful with very few trees. The stream trickled across
the prairie aimlessly. One did not have to travel very far in either direction
to find a bleak desolate land with no water and absolutely no trees. The
visibility on a clear day was for miles. There were no buildings except for the
deserted stage station which was made of sod. There was not yet to be a fence on
the prairie. This trip he traveled much the same route as the first trip only he
continued down the south fork of the Republican into Nebraska Territory and back
down through what is now Oberlin and on to what is now Ellis, Kansas just west
of Hays. Indians were encountered several times on this trip and several
skirmishes took place. He returned to Denver with the location selected on the
south fork of the Republican River just inside the state line of Kansas. The
journey encompassed approximately 800 miles on horseback.
In 1874, Big George, Little George, Jake Haigler, Ben and Jim Morning and a
handful of cowboys moved the Benkelman herd to the selected area in 34-4-42
Kansas. Big George returned to Denver. Little George, Jake Haigler and the
Mornings looked after the herd. A sod house was built and the ranch was named
the JC Ranch. The grazing lands included northeastern Colorado, Southwest
Nebraska and Northwest Kansas lands. Large herds of 5,000 to 20,000 head of
cattle were run on this range.
George Adam generally kept 10 cowboys, but during round-up and branding time the
number would increase to 30. The closest place for the cowboys to purchase
supplies was the Roubidoux Store at Fort Wallace, which was 70 miles away. The
trip was made about 3 times a year. A guard was posted at Fort Wallace to
prevent trail herds being driven north from Texas from taking strays belonging
to the Benkelmans.
Jake Haigler was the foreman on the JC. Realizing that other large cattle
companies might move in, George Adam urged Jake to from a cattle company up
north to prevent a squeeze. Jake went to Missouri in 1875 for 1 year and then
returned and formed a cattle company. The Haigler, Aix, Perkins Cattle Company
was made up of family and friends. In 1876, he established on the Arickaree
Forks in Nebraska.
The winters in western Kansas were extremely cold. The location of the line camp
was straight west of the deserted station 20 on the Pikes Peak Leavenworth
Trail. The road to Denver lead home for George Adam. On his trips home, he
always stayed at the Benkelman residence.
One particular trip in 1877 proved to be a turning point in his life. The guest
of honor at the Benkelman house was Mary Barbara Rommel, Christine's sister. She
had been in America only five years.
When John George and George Adam returned to the range in 1878, they moved the
headquarters of the ranch down the Republican River seven miles for better hay
meadows and springs. The Benkelman Ranch was headquartered up the river from
Wano. The exact location was 11-4-41. The new operation was called the T Wrench
Ranch because of the brand. The new headquarters consisted of a row of 3 sod
houses, an underground storage room, a blacksmith shop, sod barn 20x90 for 22
horses, 11 stalls for two horses each. The roof was made of tree limbs and hay.
The corral was 204 square feet.
On January 6, 1880, George Adam Benkelman was united in marriage to Mary Barbara
Rommel at the Benkelman residence in Denver. The ranching business had been
quite prosperous. George Adam longed for Mary Barbara to be by his side. Their
first child, Lottie, was born October 24, 1880 in Denver, as was their son
Frank. George and Barbara were living with George and Christina at the time of
the 1880 census.
George was 33, a cattle dealer, born in New York Mary 32, also in New York,
Lottie 4, Franklin B. 2. both Colorado.
George Adam loaded his family into a wagon and moved from Denver to the JC Ranch
in September 1886. Mary Barbara had to be surprised when she saw her new home.
It was a small sod hut absolutely colorless with no trees or landscaping. Water
had to be hauled from the river, which was only a few steps away. The outdoor
privy was not constructed until shortly before she arrived. The inside of the
soddie allowed no frills. The walls were plastered with a limestone mixture. She
had brought her cookstove from Denver. Wood and cow chips had to be gathered
from the offerings of the prairie. One always felt better when there was a stash
of chips piled not to far from the house, because of the severe winters. It is
amazing what she did with the one room soddie with a few curtains and well
spaced colored articles. Life was hard for the pioneers, but Mary Barbara never
complained. She tended her family with all the grace and charm with which she
had been endowed. Two more children were born, Charles in 1888 and George Albert
in 1890. They were the first children born on the ranch.
The ranch cook was Billy Walsh of Irish descent. He had hunted buffalo on the
prairies since 1872. A.W. Tip Spencer worked for the Benkelman's since 1877.
Other ranch hands were John Burgwald, Ben Benkelman, Lee Bright, Mart Tscheudy,
Walter Tovey, Harry Strangeways, John Chandler, George Fahrion, Wallace Clow,
Emmet Vandergrift and Elmer Tabor. During the roundup season, the cowboys slept
on the ground.
In 1894, the George Adam Benkelmans moved to St. Francis, Kansas after he was
elected County Clerk. He served in that capacity until 1904, when he resigned to
enter other business opportunities. In 1905, he was appointed postmaster in St.
Francis. He served until 1915. He was enroute to California when he suffered a
stroke. He died in Alhambra, California, February 10, 1929 at age 77. His wife
had died earlier, on May 18, 1928, at age 75, in St. Francis. She was stricken
with apoplexy and never regained consciousness before she passed away.
The following biography was transcribed from "A Standard History of Kansas and
Kansans," written and compiled by William E. Connelley, Secretary of the Kansas
State Historical Society, Topeka. [Revised ed.] Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co.,
1919, c1918. 5 v. (xlviii, 2530 p., [155] leaves of plates): ill., maps (some
fold.), ports.; 27 cm.
GEORGE ADAM BENKELMAN. One historical account states that the first cattle ranch
in Cheyenne County was established in the year 1876, but there were no really
permanent settlements made for several years after that. These facts give
interesting prominence to the career of George A. Benkelman, a well known
business man and citizen of St. Francis, who by every right and propriety may be
regarded as the real pioneer and first permanent settler of the county, since he
was herding cattle on the range in this northwestern corner of Kansas in the
year 1876. At that time the frontier was exposed to danger from Indians, who
were still numerous and many of them hostile, and there were many more buffaloes
to be seen on the prairies than native cattle.
Few men still living have had more intimate contact with the life and times of
the old West than George Adam Benkelman. He was born at Lancaster in Erie
County, New York, September 7, 1851. His father, Adam Benkelman, was born in
Wuertemberg, Germany, in 1830, grew up and married in that kingdom, learned the
trade of cooper, and in 1851 brought his family to the United States and settled
at Bowmansville, New York. He was a cooper there and in 1865 went to Michigan,
where he was both a cooper and farmer. He died at Cass City, Michigan, in 1901.
On getting his first papers as an American citizen he affiliated with the
democratic party but became a republican later through his admiration of
President Lincoln. He was a member of the German Lutheran Church. Adam Benkelman
married Christina Schifely, who was born in Wuertemberg in 1826 and died at Cass
City, Michigan, in 1910. George Adam was the oldest of their children; Louise is
still living in Cass City, Michigan, widow of Andrew Schwegler, who was a farmer
there; John also lives on a farm in Cass City; S. G. is a carpenter and farmer
at Cass City; W. F. is bookkeeper for a lumber firm in Detroit; and B. F. is a
general merchant at Cass City.
Thus of all the family George Adam Benkelman has shown the most enterprise in
breaking away from home ties and discovering new fields of conquest in remote
districts. He got his education in the public schools of Cass City but at the
age of nineteen started out to make his own way in the world. His journeyings
soon brought him into the far West and he had an extensive experience as a
cowboy in Colorado and along the Western Kansas line. When he was in Cheyenne
County in 1876 he had no neighbor nearer than Fort Wallace, seventy-five miles
away. He ran his herd of cattle over a domain of country unvexed by wire fence
or any other civilized obstruction and made no attempt to secure a more
permanent location until the spring of 1888, when he took advantage of the
homestead laws and filed upon a quarter section and also a timber claim. The
homestead was his place of residence and center of operations until the spring
of 1894. Some years later he sold that quarter section.
In the fall of 1893 Mr. Benkelman was elected county clerk of Cheyenne County,
and his official duties brought him to St. Francis. He was county clerk for
eleven consecutive years. In 1905 President Roosevelt appointed him postmaster
of St. Francis, and that office kept him as its incumbent by successive
appointments until July, 1915. In the meantime he was identified with all the
progressive movements for the upbuilding of his home town. For several years he
clerked in a general merchandise store in St. Francis and also owns a farm of
160 acres near St. Francis and thirty-three acres adjoining the town. He is
president of the Herald Publishing Company. Mr. Benkelman's home is a modern
residence remodeled in 1905, and it stands upon a considerable plat of ground.
Politically he is a republican and is a steward in the Methodist Episcopal
Church. He has also served as noble grand of Rising Star Lodge of Odd Fellows,
and is a past master workman of the Ancient Order of United Workmen at St.
Francis.
In January, 1880, at Denver, Colorado, Mr. Benkelman married Miss Mary B.
Rommel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Rommel, both now deceased. To their
marriage were born four children: Lottie C., a graduate of the Cheyenne County
High School and of the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, and is at home with
her parents; Frank B. is a graduate of the County High School and of the School
of Pharmacy of Kansas City, Missouri, and is a registered pharmacist at Kansas
City; Charles A. graduated in pharmacy in the Kansas University and is connected
with a general store at McDonald, Kansas; George A., Jr., is a dentist, a
graduate of the Western Dental College of Kansas City, Missouri, and while his
home and professional office are at St. Francis, he was with the United States
Army on professional duty at Camp Beauregard, Louisiana. "
Cass City Chronicle
July 15, 1927
In 1880 Erie County, New York, Andrew Bengalmin is a blacksmith, 47, born in Germany, Sally 46, Jacob 21, FRANK 17, William 14,
In 1895 Jaqua, Cheyenne County, Kansas, B.F. "Beukelman" is 31, Minnie 29, Ruth eight months.
Adam timber-claimed a quarter in 33, 4S 42W in 1895, and Benjamin one in section 34 in 1896.
Benjamin and Adam both had cash-claimed quarters in 4S 41W - Kansas- in 1890. Others in Cheyenne County were George W. 1890, George A. 1894, Harry J. 1891, John 1890 and 1890 and 1900.
George Adam Benkelman 1851-1929 is buried in Saint Francis # 125305095, with Maria Barbra (Rommel) Benkelman 1852-1928.
BENJAMIN
Benjamin F. Benkelman, 24, married Minnie Jesse 26, in Saint Francis December 26, 1893.
In 1900 Jaqua, Cheyenne County, Kansas, Ben Benkelman born Sept 1863 in New York, married seven years to Minnie Sept 1875 Michigan. Routh July 1894, Mary May 1896, Harold Nov 1897, and Bengman Nov 1899 were all born in Kansas.
In 1910 Tuscola County, Michigan, Benjamin is 46, Minnie 44, Ruth 15, Mary 13, Harald L. 12, Benjamin F. 10, Looris J. 5, and niece Birtha 22, a bookkeeper.
After retiring from ranching, Ben Benkelman Sr. owned and operated a dry goods store in his hometown of Cass City for approximately twenty years. Ben Sr. is standing in the background of one photo. In the foreground is Mr. Philo S. Rice, who clerked at the Benkelman store for 19 years, and was proprietor of his own grocery store for nearly six years thereafter. He was born on Stuben, NY on 5 Dec 1863, and died in Cass City on 8 Oct 1928, leaving behind his widow, Carrie Fancher Rice and two children, Mrs. A. C. Atwell of Cass City and Roy F. Rice of Los Angeles. (Cass City Chronicle, 12 Oct 1928, page 1).
In 1920 Tuscola County, Michigan, Benjamin H. is 56, Minnie 54, Ruth 25, Florence S. 23, Benjamin 26, and Lois J. 14.
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