MARTIN
MATHIAS AND EMMA KATHRYN KLEIN SCHMITT
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Martin and Emma Schmitt were tenant farmers, and very good
ones.
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Martin was born in Hunolstein,
Rheinland, Germany (now West Germany, WG), September 7, 1887.
Martin's
parents were John Schmitt and Barbara Flach. Barbara died in
Germany when
Martin was 8 months 11 days old. Martin came to the United States
with his
father and stepmother, (who was also his aunt), Magdalena Flach
Banner
Schmitt. They came on the sailing vessel RHYNLAND embarking from
Antwerp, Belgium and arrived in New York May 18, 1889. Anton
Flach,
Magdalena's father came with them on the ocean journey. The family
arrived
in Mendon about a month later, having gone to Chicago where John
Schmitt
was said to have had a brother. John was a carpenter and farmer in
Germany,
but was a farmer in his new country, living on several different
farms
near Mendon before
buying a
farm south of Mendon which extended to the St Joseph River where he and
Magdalena lived the rest of their days. John died Aug 19, 1916 at
age 64
Magdalena died Feb 10, 1930 at age 74. Both are buried in St
Edwards
Cemetery, Mendon.
Martin attended school through the fourth grade and later worked
for his Uncle William and Aunt Maryann Flach who farmed near
Scotts. One
of his jobs was "Breaking New Ground.". Martin used to have
several rattles from rattlesnakes that he had killed. (Have any of
these
rattles survived?) He depended on the horses to warn him. The
horses would
simply refuse to move forward if a snake was ahead. Then Martin
would
proceed very cautiously until he could locate and kill the
reptile. Martin
was never bitten by a rattler. Martin earned fifteen dollars a
month and
his board and room at this time.
Emma was born May 22, 1889 on her parents farm 1 mile or so
north of
Mendon at the top of the hill. Her parents were Mathias Klein
and Catherine Stermer. Her father died March 3, 1900 at age 55
years.
He used to sleep in their Morris Chair (similar to a Barcalounger)
because
he had difficulty breathing, and so that he could elevate his
swollen feet
and legs. (These are symptoms of congestive heart failure.) His
death certificate lists heart failure as the cause of death. Her
mother
died Feb 27, 1902 at home at age 51 years. It was said that she
had fallen
on icy steps or from the porch and was said to have had internal
injuries.
Her death certificate lists fractured hip as the cause of death.
Emma was
13 at this time. Her sister Mary was 22 and was the legal guardian
for all
the children. Martin was 19 and Rose was 16.
Mary Klein and Mathias Banner were married at St Edwards,
Mendon August
8, 1906. Emma continued to make her home with them.
Emma graduated from Mendon High School in 1908 and
attended Western
State Normal School in Kalamazoo where she received a
Teaching Certificate. She taught in the Cupp School District south
of
Mendon on the Prairie for fifteen dollars a month and room and
board with
the Norman Cupp family. The school year was 6 or 7 months long.
Martin and Emma were married in St Edwards Roman Catholic
Church in
Mendon February 13,1912 by Father Henry Kaufmann who had helped
plan and
build the beautiful field stone church . Both had an active part in
the construction of the church. It was said to have been 13
degrees
below zero at wedding time. Emma lost her citizenship at this time
for
marrying an alien. Emma's citizenship was restored September 18,
1941
in Kalamazoo County and Martin became a naturalized citizen on
June 8,
1943 in Kalamazoo County.
Their first home was the 40 acre Luther Langdon farm 3 miles
north west
of Mendon. Their possessions at the time included a team of
horses, called
Chub and Oliver, a wagon and a buggy. Oliver, the peppier
and probably
younger of the team usually doubled as the buggy horse also
called a
driving horse. Their first child, Francis
Mathias, was born on this farm in 1912. [Editors note: exact
dates of
birth are available upon request from email addresses at the end of
this
document.] Aunt Mary Banner, Emma's older sister, was there at the
time
and it was said that Dr. Barnager, the local M.D. was asleep on
the couch
at the time. They would have called him if they had needed him.
Gilbert John was born on the 35 acre David Riley farm 2 '/2
miles north
of Mendon in1914. This was about one mile north of the Klein
Homestead.
The sisters Emma and Mary and brothers Martin and Mathias
exchanged
services and worked closely between the two families.
Stanley Joseph was born near Elmira,
Michigan
on an 80 acre farm Martin and Emma had bought when they went
"North" with Francis and Agnes Flach. Francis was interested in
timber and they purchased farms near by but not adjacent to each
other.
Stanley was born there in 1916, the same day, almost to the hour
that his
grandfather, John Schmitt, died at his Mendon farm home.
Mary Kathryn was born on one of the Herbert E. Custard Farms
1/2 mile
west of Mendon, in 1918. The buildings no longer stand.
Lucille Eleanor was born in 1920 on the second Herbert
E. Custard Farm
40 rods east of the one where Mary was born. The farm extended
east to the
Mendon Village limits and was 125 acres. The St Joseph River was
the
southern boundary. We had swimming holes in the river. One of the
horses
broke through the Ice in the river one winter. The buildings are
in very
good repair today. Lucille Dillon and Francis visited this farm a
few
years ago. One of Herbert Custard's granddaughters,
Dagmar Horning, now
lives there. She and Lucille were both impressed by the visit.
Martin
bought his first Model T Ford on this farm. It came without
a starter, but
he soon added one so that Emma could also drive it. In one
of Emma's photo
albums is a picture taken in a school yard. This was on a trip to Williamston,
Michigan to
visit Emma's Aunt Mary Van Buren. Aunt Mary Banner and one or two
of her
boys are also in the picture.
Donald Eugene was born on the 140 acre John Haas farm 3 1/2
miles northeast of Mendon in1922. This was a good farm and
they lived
there 9 years. Martin bought a Fordson tractor. Francis and
Gilbert used
to drive this tractor when they were too small to crank it when
cold. Martin would crank it the first time in the morning and
afternoon
and the boys did their best to keep it from stalling. In 1924
Martin
bought his 2nd Model T. One good year peppermint oil brought 25
dollars a
pound, the usual price was 3 to 5 dollars a pound, and as a reward
to his
children who worked hard that year, Martin and Emma bought a Robin
Egg
Blue 1926 Pontiac 4 Door Sedan. This was a classy car and it would
go more
than 70 miles per hour. This was also a fun place to live. Often
on a
Sunday one or more families of cousins would come for dinner and
church:
the Martin Klein's from Kalamazoo, Leon and Gladys Happel, Mathias
and
Mary Klein, Mathias and Mary Banner and Peter and Clara Schmitt.
There is
one picture that includes all the above families on the same day.
What fun
that was! These families also reciprocated and more often it was
only two
families at one time. The Happel's were especially good at making
home
made ice cream.
One hot summer afternoon when Donald was about 2 1/2 years old
he began
gagging and coughing. No one knew what he had in his throat.
This was
before the days of the modern emergency rooms. Martin and Emma
in desperation took him to Kalamazoo
where they were able to find a nose and throat specialist who
removed a 2
1/2 inch bearded barley head. (It could have been Dr. Fast.) When
Don was
about 5, the children were playing with an old buggy used to coast
down
the small grade toward the water tank and cow barn. Don was riding
on the
back and fell off and fractured his left femur. He spent a long
time in
bed that summer with leg traction supplied by a pulley system with
a #10
can in which the load was adjusted by placing stones to get the
desired
amount of traction. He became a great contortionist before the
healing was
completed.
The school for the Haas Farm was south at the end of the road,
less than a mile. The School Board met annually and would vote to
close
the school another year and send the only kids in the district,
the Martin
and Emma Schmitt children, to the Mendon Schools. Martin and Emma
also seemed to be the only people interested in the contract to
haul the
kids. The Model T and later the Pontiac was the usual mode of
transportation. If the snow was too deep for the car, sometimes used
the
bobsled or even a cutter if some of the kids were ill and the
number of
riders was down.
In the muddy roads of Spring, sometimes it was the surrey.
Norberta Jean was born in 1931
on the
200 acre Albert J. Sprinkle Farm 3 miles southeast of Kalamazoo on
what is
now Sprinkle Road. The buildings were south of the present Knights
Inn and
some of the maple trees from the yard still stand. The move was
completed
in March 1930 and Stanley, Gilbert and Francis were able to
complete their
school year in Mendon. This was a dairy farm which the folks
rented for
cash rent. This was the nicest house in which they had ever lived.
It was
a full two stories with full attic and basement. It had a Delco
Electric
plant, indoor plumbing, a big room with pool table, dumbwaiter,
central
heat and other fine features. this was an ideal place for a large
family
to live and it was a real fun place, especially when our cousins
or
friends would visit us.
The big kids went to St Augustine's High School in Kalamazoo,
the
smaller kids went to the one room country school 1/2 mile south.
The Frank
Reddy family lived a mile away and they matched our family just
about
child for child. Vincent Reddy was the best friend Francis ever
had. He
still fives a mile away but in the opposite direction since he
married
Margaret Beckwith and their home has been a Centennial Farm for
many
years. A John Deere Put Put tractor was added to the equipment of
this
farm but later was returned to the seller. Things were going well
until
the Depression Years came along and the bottom dropped out of the
milk market. The $200 per month rent payment could no longer be
met and
the opportunity came to move a mile away to Cork Street.
The
Cork Street Farm
The Gilbert Farm on Cork Street was the most fertile land Martin
and Emma worked. Vern Gilbert, the owner, was also a horse trader,
a
very ambitious man used to turning a profit on every move he made.
He
liked Martin and Emma with all their strong, wiry, easy to
manipulate sons
and beautiful daughters. This farm was 200 very fertile acres.
Vern
rented every vacant piece of land as far as Martin would agree to
travel
to make the spread in acres very much greater than the 200. They
combined
Martin's beautiful Guernsey herd with Vern's ugly, giant, heavy
producing
Holsteins. The combined herd reached as many as 60 milkers. The
Oliver
tractors came in these years. Vern furnished many horses and
mules. There
was a runaway team on occasion. The association was good for Mr.
Gilbert
and for Emma and Martin and their family and it continued for over
20
years. All their children were married while they lived there and
many of
their grandchildren enjoyed visiting The Farm.. At about age 45
Martin developed a heart condition which was diagnosed by their
nephew of
whom they were very proud, Lawrence R. Banner, M.D. Larry treated
Martin
so successfully that Martin outlived Larry by many years. Meanwhile
Mr. Gilbert had died and the farm was inherited by Mel Stevens,
and when
he died, by one of Mel's relatives who lived in Detroit who never
came to
see the folks about continuing the operation of the farm. Martin
was 66 at
this time so they decided they should retire. In 1953 they had a
sale to
dispose of the possessions they would no longer need and moved
near Otsego
in 1954 on a neat 3 acre parcel with lots of planted evergreen
trees and
a very generous garden space on M 89, half way between Otsego
and Plainwell.
Their retirement home was the only property they really owned.
They enjoyed 17 peaceful years and their children and
grandchildren
visited them often. Martin died August 26, 1971 in his own bed at
age 84.
Emma continued to live at 1316 West M-89 and later lived with Mary
for a
short time. She died at Ridgeview Manor Nursing Home in Kalamazoo
February
9, 1976 at age 87. Martin and Emma had 59 1/2 years of marriage.
They
had 62 grandchildren and at the time of Emma's death 61 were
living. They
are buried in St Margaret's Cemetery, Otsego, on M-89 a half mile
from
their home.
All names mentioned are those of real people.
A sincere effort has been made for accuracy. If you discover any
errors,
wish any deletions, or have further information to contribute, please
communicate them to the writer.
First draft, June 15, 1987 by Francis
M.
Schmitt, DDS
2nd draft, July 9, 1987 includes suggestions
offered by: Norberta Schmitt Renauld
and Father LaVern
Flach
3rd Draft, August 17,1987
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