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HENRY COUNTY,
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BIOGRAPHIES
Source:
A History of Northwest Ohio
A Narrative Account of Its Historical
Progress and Development
from the First European Exploration of the Maumee and
Sandusky Valleys and the Adjacent Shores of
Lake Erie, down to the Present Time
By Nevin O. Winter, Litt. D.
Assisted by a Board of Advisory and Contributing Editors
ILLUSTRATED
Vol. I & II
The Lewis Publishing Company
Chicago and New York
1917
Transcribed by
Sharon Wick
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RICHARD
NELSON is now serving his first term as a member
of the board of commissioners of Henry County in the
first exclusive republican board of commissioners that
county has ever had. Mr. Nelson's home is
in Harrison Township of Henry County. He laid the
foundation of his success as a farmer in Illinois, but a
few years ago moved to Henry County and has since
acquired some very extensive holdings in the fine
farming section of that locality. He is a
practical business man and is much esteemed for his
excellent judgment on all the issues and problems
connected with farm and community affairs.
About forty-five years ago he came a poor boy from the
old country to America, and has accomplished his
splendid success entirely through his own exertions.
He was born Oct. 22, 1852, in Schleswig-Holstein, then a
province in Denmark but now a part of the German Empire.
He is of Scandinavian ancestry. His father,
Martin Nelson, or Nielsen as the name
was spelled in the old country, married Catherine
Maria Frödden.
She was born in Oevenum Island Föhr,
Schleswig, and grew up there. Martin
Nelson a short time after his marriage, and when his
only son, Richard, was twenty-two weeks of age,
took passage on a sailing vessel bound for Australia,
where he went to seek his fortunes in the gold mines.
While working in the mines he was accidentally killed,
and was then in the prime of life. Mr.
Richard Nelson was four years of age when the
father died and the mother never married again and spent
her life in her native country, where she died when past
threescore.
Reared and educated in Schleswig-Holstein, and living
under the German Government from 1864 to 1870,
Richard Nelson had such training and
educational influences as were bestowed upon most boys
in that vicinity. His birthplace was the Village
of Oevenum Auf Föhr
in Schleswig. At the age of seventeen in 1870,
together with a neighbor boy, Nicholas Petersen,
who was yet younger than himself, he set off from
Hamburg, Germany, on a steamship and landed in New York
City. From there he went out to the State of
Illinois, and found steady employment near Dwight in
Livingston County. That was his home for
thirty-seven years. By hard work he acquired a
modest capital and then used it to the best advantage in
buying land, improving and cultivating, and gradually
extending the scope of his operations until he was owner
of 520 acres of the high class and high priced land of
Livingston and Grundy counties.
A few years ago he sold out his extensive Illinois
holdings and came to Henry County, Ohio, to take
advantage of the equally good but lower priced land in
this section. Here he bought 240 acres with a fine
barn, residence and other equipments in Harrison
Township, and he also owns two other well improved
farms, one of 200 acres and the other 120 acres, both in
Richfield Township of Henry County. Each of these
farms have a complete set of building improvements and
other facilities and all the land is under cultivation
except twenty acres of stump ground. At his home
place Mr. Nelson has a very complete
establishment for farming and for comfortable country
life. His main barn is on a foundation 40 by 80
feet, and there are several smaller buildings in the
farm group. His home is a very attractive country
residence, built of brick and comprising twelve rooms.
The same qualities which made him successful in Illinois
have been exemplified in the management of his Henry
County farms. His fields produce abundant crops
including the great staples of corn, wheat and oats and
he earns his profits through the products of his fine
farms.
During his residence in Livingston County, Illinois,
Mr. Nelson married Miss Anna M. Lauritzen.
She was born in Denmark May 28, 1854. and was still
young when she came to the United States alone, and she
lived in Illinois until her marriage. Mr. and
Mrs. Nelson have some very capable sons and
daughters, most of whom are established in homes of
their own. Martin C., who finished his
education in the schools of Henry County, is now
conducting one of his father's places in Harrison
Township, and is still unmarried. Carl R.
lives on one of his father's farms in Richfield
Township, and by his marriage to Bodel Olsen,
who was born in Illinois of Danish parents, has two
children, Clifford and a daughter.
Albert T., who is a progressive farmer in Livingston
County. Illinois, married Mary Bundessen, who was
born and reared in Illinois, and they have two children,
Irena and a son. C. Mary is the wife
of Karl P. Kline, who was born and reared in
Ohio, and occupies one of Mr. Nelson's
farms in Richfield Township. Emma is the
wife of F. Bert Brilhart, and they occupy
one of the Nelson farms in Harrison
Township. Nora married Vernon
Brilhart, of Napoleon, Mr. Brilhart
for the past nine years having been one of the
successful schoolteachers in Henry County, and they have
a son named Gale Nelson.
Source: History of Northwestern Ohio - Vol. III _ Publ.
1917 - Page 1570 |
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