
The story of the settlement of Richmond and it's growth is the story of the German immigrants coming into the whole of the Sauk River Valley in the 1850's. They rushed in to fill the land vaccum created by the opening of the land west of the Mississippi through treaties with the Sioux two years after Minnesota was proclaimed a territory on March 3, 1849, by President Polk. The waterways in those years were the best means of transportation. Prospects were goog, and settling in the Sauk Valley meant being on the main thoronghfare of the Red River trade route between St. Paul on the south and Pembina on the north.
There were early enthusiasts ready to trumpet forth the call for settlers in this section. Two of these were James M. Goodhue, the spirited editor of the Minnesota Pioneer, and the Rev. Francis Pierz, organizer in 1853 of the first Catholic parish in Sauk Rapids. Both published glowing reports of the delights of the Eden which awaited the hearty soul. Goodhue had tremendous faith in the future destiny of Minnesota. The editorial pages of the Pioneer predicted "a rapidity of growth unparalleled even in the annals of Western progress," and promised that "Here they will find an unqualifiedly healthy climate, fertile and well drained lands, and upon the Mississippi the best market for mechanical products im the Union. With such a population will come not only the arts but science and morals. Our Falls of St. Anthony with hundreds of water powers upon other streams will be turned to manufacturing purposes. Thrifty towns will arise upon them. Our undulating prairies will rejoice under the hand of husbandry; these hills and valleys will be jocund with the voices of school children, and churches shall mark the moral progress of our land."
Goodhue's appeal was of a general promotional character, while that of Father Pierz was centered on getting German immigrants into the Sauk Valley. During 1854 and 1855 he published articles which extolled the homestead possibilities in his mission field. He pictured the area as a most favorable place for settlement. Concerning the nature of the soil, the missionary wrote glowingly: "More than half the open meadows in Minnesota have an excellent black loamy soil, with a splendid mixture of sand and clay and a rich top-soil formed by the plant decay of thousands of years, so that it would be hard to find anywhere in the world a soil better suited to yield a rich return for the farmers' toil." A good water supply was also available, Pierz observed. "I can assure my readers that not half the rivers and hardly a third of the lakes of this beautiful region are indicated on the maps. Moreover, in many places one will find springs of ice-cold drinking water, and if here and there a farmer does not happen to have such a supply at his door, he can in a few days and at little cost dig a splendid well at a depth of from eight to twelve feet. Hence immigrants need not fear any lack of water." The missionary wrote enthusiastically of the Minnesota winters, assuring all that they could blot from their minds all notions of their frigid character: "During the three years that I have spent here I have not seen more than a foot of snow, and with the exception of some fifteen or twenty cold days the weather was generally so pleasant that one could work outdoors. During the past winter I have seen German settlers at work in their shirt-sleeves, cutting their wood for building and fencing." Furthermore, the "summer in Minnesota," Pierz declared, "is more favorable for human health and for the growth of farm and garden products than in any other country in the world."
Father Pierz made a special effort to prevent German immigrants temporarily located in Indiana and Ohio from moving into the South. He had nothing but contempt for the climate below the Ohio River. Thus we find him writing: "In the southern states of North Ameriea the climate, the air and the health of the people are quite different. There the winter is much shorter, but it is very changeable and damp and hence injurious to the health .. During the hot summer days a host of noxious miasmas and poisonous gases arise from the marshes and mineral-charged soil and hang like a heavy fog and taint the air and the crops. Thus serious fevers, cholera and other epidemies appear and fill the hospitals with patients and the cemeteries with corpses and especially the German immigrants who are not aceustomed to such air fall victims in great numbers." In contrast, wrote Pierz, central Minnesota offered many special advantages for settlement. Wild fruits grew in abundance, while pheasants, elk and deer abounded. The prairies and meadows offered unlimited space for cattle grazing. There was no Indian threat, as he saw it, for they offered no difficulty unless plied with firewater. With the government making treaties with the tribes, Pierz' aim was to convert the aborigines to Catholicism and make them good neighbors.
The missionary invited all Germans who were living in the unhealthy and disagreeable localities of the United States to settle near his missions and to take up land claims at Sauk Rapids and Belle Prairie. He held out the promise of a church already open at the former place. Furthermore, there was a new church under construetion west of the Mississippi for settlers along the Sauk River. Father Pierz raised the trumpet to his lips: "Hasten then, my dear German people, those of you who have in mind to change your abode and settle in Minnesota. Do not delay to join the stream of immigration, for the sooner you come the better will be your opportunity to choose a good place to settle. Several hundred families can still find good claims along the Sauk River and in the surrounding country no doubt several thousand families can find favorable places for settlement."
All was not the unbridled bliss of which Pierz spoke. He failed to tell the German immigrants of some of the hardships he had undergone in this paradise. Elsewhere he had written of a trip he had made between Crow Wing and Mille Lacs in 1853: "Two-thirds of the distance was made on foot over poor roads through brush and timber and one-third was made by water. We crossed six lakes in a birch-bark canoe weighing two hundred pounds, which my catechist had to carry on his shoulders when crossing portages. My cook carried the kitchen utensils and food weighing about one hundred and fifty pounds. My burden was the whole portative chapel with the articles for Mass and the books, as well as blankets weighing seventy pounds.
" . It is impossible to travel on horseback in summer because the road lies through five deep, dirty swamps and over thousands of fallen trees and execrable hunters' trails. For two days we traveled amid indescribable hardships. On such a wretched way I often stumbled over roots and once I had such an unfortunate fall that I was obliged to remain where I fell for some time until I was rested and could rise.
"The worst feature of this trip was that in my hasty departure I forgot my mosquito netting and my gloves and for two days I had to keep waving a leafy branch about my head to keep off the mosquitoes who came in neverceasing swarms. In this process my hands were tortured. Nevertheless I was so badly stung about the face and on the hands by the bold attackers that I suffered as much pain from the bites as if I had a severe case of nettlerash. At the close of the second day we came so close to the Indian village that we could see their wigwams. Our attention being taken away from the canoe for a moment, it struck a tree in the water and we had to land at once and spend the night in a swamp."
Pierz' call was heard, and the families began to arrive at the sites of future settlements along the Sauk River. Some of these came to what was later to be called the village of Richmond in Munson Township.8 The first permanent settlement made in this section of Stearns County was started in 1855. In March of that year a caravan of ox teams and German families left Coal County, Missouri, and by May they had arrived in Stearns County, Minnesota, where they camped at what was later to be called Thyens Lake, about one-half mile east of the present town of Richmond. In the caravan were four families and two brothers-in-law: Andrew Beumel and family, J. H. Wolken and family and brother-in-law, Joseph Junck (Young) and family and his brother-in-law, Heinrich Bock and family, and G. Herman Brunning.
Young stayed at Thyens Lake, while the Beumel family moved on to make their claim at the future northwest corner of Richmond. Adjoining the Sauk River, this land through the years was known as "The Beumel Farm." The Wolkens liked the east side of the Richmond Prairie, but not well enough to stay. They soon hitched up their oxen and were off to the beckoning prairies of the Kansas Territory. Henry Bock moved onto their former claim.
The summer of 1855 saw the arrival of five more claim makers, Peter Seeberger, Frank Schindler, Adam Kolling, the Becker brothers, and Anton Brogelman. In the same year Reuben Richardson, a surveyor, and his family arrived to stake a claim on section twenty-four, which the following year was surveyed and platted. This was the beginning of the village of Richmond, named after Richardson's wife, the former Cynthia Richmond.
After all were settled Father Pierz happened by and stopped to see the pioneers who had come in response to his call. Word passed quickly from cabin to cabin that the following day there would be Holy Mass. It was to be celebrated in the newly erected log house of Joseph Young, who later moved into Swift County. Father Pierz was not one to waste time. With Mass completed, he suggested that the settlers organize a parish and build a log church. All agreed, and the work began.
Two of the future parishoners were appointed to the building committee. It was up to them to collect what money they could from the other members of the incipient community. With the results of their canvass in their pockets, they proceeded to select a site for tile church. After much discussion it was decided to build the church on the claim which Henry Bock had vacated when he took over the section formerly claimed by the Wolkens. In the meantime Mass was offered at the Andrew Beumel cabin whenever Father Pierz was in the settlement.
Meanwhile the small parish was increasing daily. Through the summer and fall of 1856 some sixty-five families moved into the new settlement. Among them were the Kron and Blasius families, Henry Kalkmann, Herman Schleper, John and Henry Koetter, Henry Gertken, Theodore Weeses, and Anton Bruemmer. There were also the Klostermanns and the Willen- brings from New Vien, Iowa.l2 More outstanding among these and others in the early years was G. Henry Rolfes. He made his claim five miles northeast of Richmond near the bank of the Sauk. His place was the regular stopping place for the stagecoach which went by on that route. Teamsters and travel- ing men who did not know his name called him the Yankee Dutchman. Thus his house came to be called the Yankee Dutchman Hotel.
All the Catholic settlers, in spite of their own problems of getting organized and under roof, helped with the erection of the first log church. Work, however, was moving along slowly when word came that the Rev. Francis X. Weninger, S.J., would be along in a short time to conduct a parish mis- sion.l3 Bishop Joseph Cretin of St. Paul had heard of his success at giving such missions and had asked him to come out and get his new parishes off to a zealous beginning. When Father Weninger arrived for the mission, the chronicler records, "He gave the settlers his best in praise and was well satisfied." Following the mission which ended on August 15, 1856, Father Weninger erected a huge mission cross and turned the new parish over to the newly appointed Benedictine pastors.
The monks who took over the parish were the first Benedictines who had come West at the invitation of Bishop Joseph Cretin, of St. Paul, to take care of the German settlers. They arrived in St. Cloud on May 20, 1856, and set up their first monastery south of that city. Headed by their prior, the Rev. Demetrius di Marogna, they were two priests, Fathers Bruno Riess and Cornelius Witmann, who had been ordained in St. Paul on their way to St. Cloud on May 18 by Bishop Cretin; and two Brothers, Benno Muckenthaler, and Patrick Greil. On their arrival they had found much to be desired on this frontier of the Church. As Father Bruno later reminisced: "At St. Joseph there was already a log church and a pastoral residence under construction. But a few turbulent spirits agitated against the expected monks and went so far as to petition the Bishop of St. Paul begging him not to inflict the monks upon them and not to permit them to come to St. Joseph. In consequence the misguided hotheads had no services till August. At St. James also a log chape1 16 x 20 or 24 stood finished; at Richmond a similar structure not yet under roof; but both congregations had no services through that summer for the same reason." They had the material but not the cooperation.
Father Bruno, however, was looking forward to visiting this turbulent section on July 4, even though he was not assigned as pastor of the St. Joseph-Jacobs Prairie-Richmond territory until August 15. On the previous date he had written: "Three parishes were given to us the day before yesterday, namely, St. Joseph, fifteen miles away; St. Jacob, seventeen miles away; and Richmond, twenty-two miles. I do not know who will take care of these places yet. At any rate as long as we have no horse it is quite inconvenient to go so far per pedes Apostolorum in this great heat and added to this is the hardship to carry on one's back everything necessary for the ceIebration of Mass.''
These days were busy ones for the newly ordained Father Bruno, as can be seen from the same Ietter: "I read the first Mass there (St. Cloud's first church) and conducted the services since then. Every Sunday I have to hear a few hours confessions; then High Mass and sermon. At two o'clock in the afternoon catechetical instructions until three o'clock and then Vespers followed by English instruction in religion. So you see that I am not able to take it easy."
When Father Weninger came to give the mission at Richmond, he was accompanied by Father Bruno. At the end of the mission, which was characterized as "a very solemn and impressive service," Prior Demetrius appointed Father Bruno as pastor of St. Joseph with missions at Jacobs Prairie and Richmond. Father Weninger preached the sermon at Father Bruno's installation on the Feast of the Assumption, a day which brought the first serious test of the settlers' faith and courage:
"The 15th of August was the beginning of a two year after-mission sent by Divine Providence. During the discourse of the missionary a heavy darkness set in, accompanied, as we thought, by a tremendous hail storm, the clatter of which drowned the voice of the preacher. But it was something worse than hailstones, for when we left the church our eyes beheld nothing but greedy grasshoppers, which had darkened the sun and in their descent had struck so heavily upon the roof of our church.
"This small, voracious, yet invincible monster had in a short time devastated all that grows and blooms on the face of the earth. Within about two or three days the fields presented the appearance of having been newly plowed. Then indescribable misery entered the homes of the poor settlers of Stearns County. The entire harvest was a dead loss for those settlers who had taken their abode in this region during the previous year (1855); those, of course, who had settled during the year of the famine, had no crop to lose, as they had not planted any. The first terrible winter was at hand. The few victuals that remained were soon consumed, prices rose enormously, because the nearest market was St. Paul, and it required a full week to make a trip with the ox team. Still hope did not die. What would man be without hope?"
In September, 1856, Father Bruno described the state of the Richmond mission to Abbot Boniface Wimmer of St. Vincent: "Eight miles further (from St. Joseph) is the last station in the Catholic world, namely Richmond. It also has a nice little church and 160 acres of prairie and would give $300 (yearly) for the service of a priest about twice a month. Over a tract measuring thirty miles by six miles everything is claimed, and as far as I know the people are entirely Catholic, amongst whom are two Frenchmen, one Irish family, and four non-Catholics, namely three German Protestants and one American who doesn't believe anything but who has a Catholic wife. One of these three German Protestants as far as I have heard wished to turn Catholic. He was always in church during the time of the mission. The other two have given contributions to the building of the church and are good, solid characters. New settlers arrive here daily and all German Catholics who came from other states where they lived amongst non-Catholics without a church and without a priest. They came here because they heard they will find here what they missed so greatly there. The great majority of these are good, practical Catholics. How happy were they when they heard that I would give them my services regularly. Not only my hands, but even my religious habit they covered with kisses and tears of joy. Old men come to me with their difficulties even on the street and beg me to remain whilst saying, 'Father, stay with us. We poor sinners don't deserve this grace in any way, but have pity on the innocent children. What will happen to them if they are without a priest and grow up without any instruction, etc., etc."
Father Bruno had great hopes for the rich prairie land. "If the prairie land is broken, we can get corn enough and one bushel of seed potatoes yields on the average of seventy bushels. We already sometimes have harvested as much as a hundred to a hundred and twenty bushels. In the second year we can get the finest wheat.''
The cold weather that first winter, however, set in early. On October 1 this same young priest wrote to his abbot: 'The winter has already started; it freezes every night. Yesterday from the beginning of Mass until the Offertory the water was frozen."20 At this time he again described the state of his parishes. "I am not able to give the exact number of families since there are more coming in each week. In St. Joseph there are at present eighty, in St. Jacob over sixty, and Richmond fifty. Sixteen miles in back of Richmond there is another settlement of Catholics of about sixty families who until now belong to Richmond but are not able to come to church since they have no means of conveyance, and who, moreover, are located on the other side of the Sauk River."
Riess was a practical man. Besides writing to the abbot for money and men for the monastery, he showed his great concern for the welfare of his parishioners when he wrote: "Everyone wants to get married . but no girls. Do not forget your promisel But those only that are to your honor and no Englishmen because otherwise the parishes will be disrupted."
After Abbot Boniface's visit in October, 1856, at which time he brought more monks with him, the Rev. Alexius Roetzer, O.S.B., was given charge of the Jacobs Prairie and Richmond missions together with Father Bruno. He was happy at his new task and wrote to the abbot: "I cannot express my satisfaction enough that we are alone now with our present stations Of course there are a number of difficulties involved because I have four stations to take care of, namely, Richmond, St. Jacob, St. Augustine, and Sauk Rapids, which in no way am I willing to neglect."
Having set in early, that winter of 1856 brought snow and Indians in a proportion undescribed by previous glowing accounts spread abroad by Father Pierz. "The worst thing here is the raw north wind because against this there is no block-house too thick nor any clothing too heavy that it doesn't go through. Even in our cellar it has found entrance, so that we had to learn how to eat frozen potatoes as a delicacy. Communication is therefore very bad in the winter since the snow freezes on account of the cold and turns into sand dust. Then Mr. North Wind blows over the road which was made during the daytime. The oldest settlers here (three years) don't know of such deep snow as we have now, since it was only about a foot deep in the past. In spite of this deep snow we were honored on Christmas day by three to four hundred Indians who visited us and who wanted to prove to us that at this time of the year one could camp outside.... Since these people wanted to introduce communism they received a visit from the Germans who, protected with clubs as weapons, indicated to them by a sign that they should look for another place where they might find less opposition to their doctrine . . They dropped their booty and everything when they saw so many palefaces."
With the comming of summer, in spite of the grasshopper threat, Father Bruno went ahead with plans for Richmond. "I don't doubt in the least that we could maintain all the claims if besides the three very good claim sitters of which you wrote in your last letter, you would also send five claim workers. There would still be wanting after the arrival of the three claim sitters three more names, but I have another speculation in my head, namely this: Richmond is going to be a very important place. It has about one and one-half to one and three-quarters claims for church purposes and that closely adjacent to the laid-out town. The church, however, cannot make any claims; consequently the parish would need two names. Now I believe that we could obtain this land as our property which would be given to us almost as a gift in exchange for some church vestments and furniture. The parish there is still poor and young and wants to sell this land for a ridiculously low price. However, who can buy it? Since there is no owner and the other prairie claim may be able to be worth two dollars or more in one year. Wouldn't that be a good speculation for us?25 Young Riess closed this letter with another appeal for girls who could marry the young claim sitters: "Father Abbot, ...come and bring a few dozen girls of good character who are anxious to marry. . . The young men are almost despondent because there are always claim boys and no claim girls coming here."
When the eggs the grasshoppers had laid in the previous year started to hatch the minds of the settlers were soon taken from the lack of claim girlx. If the 'hoppers' would not leave before the harvest of 1857 could be assured, the outlook for the young community would be hopeless. Contrary to their hopes the plaguing horde was as hungry the second year as the first. Cattle died from scarcity of food and blood poisoning caused by the bites of the grasshoppers. They were so numerous that one worker hung his coat on a fence post while plowing a field; when he returned to pick it up nothing was left but the buttons. In May, 1857, a decisive step was taken to get rid of the pests. The four pastors of the county, Fathers Bruno, Cornelius, Clement, and Alexius, proposed to their congregations that they vow an annual procession on the feast of St. Ulric, July 4, and on that of St. Magnus, September 6, since these two saints were venerated in southern Germany as the special patrons of those afflicted as the settlers were.
The people were desperate. Seed wheat stood at $2.00 a bushel, cash was being loaned at 36,% interest and at some places as high as 50%. Corn in the husks was $2.00 a bushel, as were frozen potatoes. The corn was ground in coffee mills to prevent waste and then mixed in a stew with the frozen potatoes. There was an abundance of game but no money with which to buy shot. As Father Bruno wrote: "Even the priest at the altar was not secure from their attacks; before Mass the hoppers had to be swept off the altar. The priest had to dress hastily, place the altar cloths upon the altar and be careful to keep the Sacred Host covered with tile paten, and at the elevation had to leave the pall upon tile chalice. During the Mass the altar-boys were kept busy driving away the insolent insects with whips from the vestments of the priest."
God heeded their vow and in the early days of June the 'hoppers' were blown by a brisk northwest wind to other sections of the country. They were not to return again until 1875-76. During the years 1874 to 1877 the whole of southern Minnesota was plagued with these Rocky Mountain locusts. Although this second visitation was far worse than the first, it did not affect the settlers so much since they had supplies and savings to fall back on at this later date.
During the time of the first plague the Rev. Clement Staub, O.S.B., had begun to minister to the Catholics of Richmond. On July 2, 1857, he showed his will to master the situation in writing to Abbot Boniface: "I am perfectly satisfied. I have enough work and am able to sacrifice my efforts which was of course my wish. I am also convinced, even though it doesn't go just so well now, that everything will be all right later.... I have now nothing more to do than to take care of Richmond and St. Jacob. There is plenty of work and everything is wonderful confusion. I have, however, started and accomplished quite a deal in both places and with the help of the grasshoppers it will go better as time goes on I have almost the intention to take over the church claim in Richmond. There seemed to be many people there who have the urge to jump claims. There are adjoining the place where the town is laid out eighty acres. The other eighty claims are above the town and comprise fine land but have no wood. In Richmond most of the settlers have settled down this spring."
With the coming of Fathers Clement and Alexius to help Father Bruno in his expanding parish and missions, there was still no easy life for the pastor. In giving an account of the Christmas season to the abbot, Fr. Bruno wrote: "I had during four holidays the whole parish receiving the Sacraments. Every day there was a High Mass and sermon. Vespers and instruction. I am half dead."
Through all the grasshoppers and poverty the settlers on the Sauk River kept increasing. In 1856 Richardson had surveyed and platted the land for his proposed village of Richmond. The following year Herman Brunning platted his addition on which the greater portion of the village rests today. At the same time Henry Broker opened the first store; and Andrew Goehring, the first blacksmith shop. G. N. Middendorf and his wife came from Iowa to start a hotel near the Sauk River crossing. They later sold the hotel to O. S. Freeman and started a merchandise store. Another store along the Paynesville road was started by Jacob Simonitch and his partner M. Stockard.
With such rapid growth in but two years, Richmond was ready to assert itself. In 1858 the village was organized, and a year later Munson Township came into being. The first officers of the township were supervisor, Reuben Richardson; chairmen, Andrew Buemel and William Bock; clerk, Henry Broker; Justice of the Peace, Herman Brunning; assessor, B. Pirz; and constable, Samuel Wakefield.
By this time the log church which had been hurriedly readied for Father Weninger's first mission in 1856 had become too small. Besides the increasing number of immigrants who were moving in, there was the usual increase through marriages and births. Starting with the first recorded Baptism by Father Bruno on August 14, 1856, that of Anna Catherine Seeberger, daughter of Peter Seeberger and Anna nee Schummer, there had been five Baptisms in 1856. There were eight in 1857, and thirty-one in 18S8. September 1, 1857, saw the first marriage between Bernard F. Zumwalde, son of Andrew and Anna Zumwalde, and Anna Marie Weber, daughter of Andrew and Anna Weber. Father Clement officiated at this function; while at the end of the month, September 29, 1857, Father Bruno conducted the funeral of Mrs. Anton Brummer, who at the age of thirty-nine was the first member of the parish to die.