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1932 Stories

AN EARLY SETTLER IN BRUCE TOWNSHIP

By Lois Richard, Dist. 42.

 Frederick Richards was born in Prussia, Germany, in September, 1828. He attended school between the ages of six and fourteen years. He was very studious and learned his lessons well.

After completing his schooling he studied to be a cooper. He had to serve an apprenticeship. He served for four years and became an excellent workman, having thoroughly mastered the business in principle and detail.

When eighteen years old he heard glowing stories of the new world. Comparing the conditions of the old world with that of the new he thought he might enjoy better advantages on this side of the water. Competition was greater, but advancement was more quickly secured. He crossed the Atlantic in a sailing vessel. After a voyage of forty-seven days they anchored in the harbor of New York.

He continued his journey, traveling by the way of the Erie canal to Buffalo and thence by the Great Lakes to Chicago. He then proceeded to Ottawa over the Illinois-Michigan canal. His limited resources, combined with natural ability and energy, rendered immediate employment a necessity. He entered the services of a Mr. Hoffman, who was a cooper. Mr. Richards was hired bv Mr. Hoffman to make pork and flour barrels and butter firkins.

He lived for two years in Eagle township, after which he ventured upon an independent business career. He now gave his attention to farm labor, though in the evening he worked at his trade. In this way he secured some ready capital. He had enough money at the age of twenty-three that he was able to purchase a farm of one hundred acres in Bruce township. He began to improve the land. At the same time he continued to work at the coopers' trade.

A life of hard work and steady employment won him success, and soon enabled him to add to his farm until it comprised one hundred and forty acres. At the age of thirty-three he made an additional purchase of two hundred and forty acres. He bought more land until he owned more than half a section.

He began feeding cattle and hogs. The same keen business ability and sound judgment which made him successful in farming the land also brought him prosperity in the new venture. As the Civil war produced good prices, he made considerable money, which he invested wisely.

At the age of thirty-five he purchased one hundred and sixty acres of land in Bruce township, and from time to time has increased his holdings until his possessions were more than twenty-two hundred acres. He had become one of the largest land-owners in La Salle county. His homeplace was a modern farm, supplied with all modern equipment and conveniences that help make farm work easier and to add to comforts and conveniences of life in a rural community.

Excellent crops were annually raised in return for the hard work labored upon the fields. Good barns, sheds and other outbuildings furnished ample shelter for his crops and stock in Bruce township, feeding as high as five hundred head of cattle in a year and about one thousand head of hogs.

A tract of eighty acres which he purchased, has been divided into town lots and is known as the Town of Richards.

In 1851 Mr. Richards married Miss Leah Coty. They had one child, William. He is now a prosperous farmer in Otter Creek township. The mother died in 1856 and Mr. Richards married for his second wife Mary Graham.

In community affairs Mr. Richards was interested to the extent of giving hearty aid to all general welfare. For many years he served as highway commissioner. In 1897 he was appointed postmaster of the town of Richards.

The name of Richards stood for business reliability as well as business. He retired from active service in later years. He moved to Streator, where he lived until his death.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 31.


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