Lyman Family Documentsl
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A. B. Lyman's alfalfa field with
cattle grazing (foreground), looking east
to Joe Kerbe~ fa:ffistead ~~atura~ Green) (~
and School Dlstrlct 13...: /flJ--4"'rJ.%) (fXt;;;::;~1\.
L-__~.
Henry and Martha Lyman
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HENRY MARTYN LYMAN
Henry Lyman was one of the 1st settlers in this part of Chanhassen.
he may have been here as early as 1852. Henry was born in Easthampton
Mass. Sept 1828. He died Jan 1902.
H~nry'i first hcme,a log cabin, was built of Tamarack logs.
He returned to Mass. and married Martha Clarissa Pomeroy in h.~ril ,1856.
He brought Martha back to Chanhassen.
To build the current house, lumber & square nails were hauled from
St. Anthony Falls by oxen cart. It was a 2 day trip. This. house was
built in 1881. There were 4 bedrooms, including one for the hired
men. Also there was a seperate entrance for the hired men.
Henry and Martha had 8 children, 4 of whom died in infantcy.
Over the 80 plus years that Lymans lived on this property, the house
was remodled to fit the times. Bedrooms were added, groves of fruit
trees were removed & indoor bathroom was installed.
At one time when Richard, Henry's grandson, and his wife Mary lived
in the house, and were going to wall paper, they found 7 layers of old
paper. The first layer was dark red paper with big medallions. Under
that the wall was plastered in red terra-cotta. The home is currently
owned by Ted & Marlene Bentz.
1858
1861
1867
Henry Lyman was very active in the Chanhassen Community.1853 was a charter member of 1st I!idependent church of Excel.& Chan.
1854-1859 1st Postmaster. Post Office being run out of his home.
1856 one of 5 representatives from Chanhassen to the RepublicanConventionheldinMpls.
Served on 1st Carver County
member and trustee Cemetery
Planted crab tree seeds and
being the "Lyman Prolific"
Grand Jury
Assoc.
developed the most prominent apple
Henry was very involved with the States Horticulturel Society. In
addition to apples he grBw plums & planted evergreens. He is also
reported tho have raised the best quality hay. Prarie grass on his farm
was said to be 14 ft tall in his fields.
Henry had four sons who lived to adulthood, Albert, Ansel, Frank, &
Arthur. In 1898, son Albert started the Lyman Lumber Co., which still
operated in Chanhassen today. Son Frank moved to Calif. Son Ansel
was killed in 1899 when his buggy was hit by a train while crossing the
2.
railroad tracks south of the Lyman farm. He was 42 years old.
Arthur, the youngest son, bought out his brother, and took over the
farm after Henry's death. Arthur became well known for his contribution
to perfecting "Grimm Alfalfa". They later raised sheep and turkeys.
The 1860 . Agriculture
4 pigs, 6 others. He
and Irish popatoes.
Census listed Henry as having 4 cows, 6 oxen,
also was raising wheat, rye, Indian corn, oats,
Currently the Bentz's
and have two Osttich.
to visit the barn.
are raising 5 head of cattle, peacocks,
The Bentz's are away today, so we are unable
It is also important to note the the exterior of the house looks
exactly as it did when Henry Lyman here.
rsday, February 5, 1947 Price 5c $2.00 per year
Arthur B. Lym~~LivedLong
Productive ,Life at Excelsior
j
Arthur Burt Lyman; lifelong
resident of Excelsior, passed away
at his home here at 3:00 o'clock
last Thursday morning. He had
been ill for more than a year, but
death resulted from cerebral hem-
orrhage.
Funeral services were' con-
ducted at Excelsior Congrega-
tional Church at 2:30 o'clock Sat-
urdayafternoon. The Rev. Wayne
Hoyle, pastor of the church, offi-
ciated. The organ was played by
Mrs. Dudley Kendrick. Interment
was in Chanhassen cemetery.
Pallbearers were Clem Owen,'
Horace Murfin, Edwin Harrison,
Ellis Peck, Hilbert Fredericks and
John H. Rowe, Jr. '"
Mr. Lyman Was born near Ex-
celsior May 29, 1870. He was the
son of Mr. and Mrs.. Henry M. Ly-
man, pioneer hom~steaders. He
was reared on his parents' farm
just across the llneinCarver
county. ,.. ,
In 1903 he was married to Eve-
lyn Brackett of Excelsior, who
survives him. He is also survived
by two. SODS, Richard B. and A.
Burton, both of Excelsior; and one
daughter, Elizabeth, (Mrs. H. D.
Spangenberg) of Columbus, Ohio.'
Mr. Lyman had spent his boy-
hood and adult years in or near
Excelsior, except for temporary
absences in the south and east. He
will be known in Minnesota his-
tory for his work in extending the
culture of alfalfa. He spent the
best years of his life in this pro-.
ject and became wealthy and
famous as a result. In an address
over the radio his friend and
neighbor, the late A. H. Aspden,
described Mr. Lyman's alfalfa
work thus:
To Mr. A. B. Lyman belongs
the credit of introducing Grimm
Alfalfa to the world. As a boy in
the country schools, Arthur Ly-
man took a keen interest in all
about him and excelled'in mathe-
matics. He stayed 'out during
spring and fall months to work on
the farm. After a few terms in the
high school and business college,
he 'taught in the district schools
during the winter months and
helped. manage his father's large
grain, stock and fruit farm during
the rest of the year., By ndting
the success of Laketown farms
with Grimm alfalfa, many of 'the
fields having stood for over 20
years, . Mr. Lyman recognized its
value and 'called the attention of
state experts to the new variety."
Mr. Lyman was a man of ster-
ling character,blghideals, gen-
erous disposition. He was a - thor-
ough patriot; an outstanding
I...
c.itiZen. He will never be forgot-
ten in this section or state so long
as good citizenship is remembered.
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S COHI-fJHITY BOURNS TF.EDEATI-I OF may H. LYHAlI WrIO DIED SATURDAY
MORlIIHG JANUARY 8th
Henr:l Ha-rtin 4VJnan passed fron this lii'e to life .eternal, at his home
three miles south of Excelsior, Sat morning, Jan 4, at 4 O.clock. l-'lr li>'1Ilai1ls
si ckness dated from Oct. 13, a nee 'Hhich time he had been in Excelsior on:y
once, uhen he transacted business at the bank and called on his sister, Mr-s
Fuller.
Doring the last 'Week of his life he suffered little and passed into the
better land peacefuJJ.ybeing conscious up to II 0' clock 'When he sank: into un-
consciousness.
Mr. Lyman at 'the time of his death was aged 73 years, 3 months and 2ldays;
he was born at Easthampton, Mass., Sept 13, 1828. Both parents were natives of
Massachusetts and trace their geneology to the early settlement of Neu England,
their anchestoDs , Richard Lyman and Henry Burt coming from England near. the
year 1630. He was one of five children who reached matur.ity, the eldest,
Theresa., llife of Addison L:t"TIlaIl, died in Geneseo, Ill., in 1837. l~s James
o. Waite resides in Hatfield, l-Jass. Ansel B. Iuman is atill living on the
old homestead in Easthampton, and Nrs William Me Fuller of &celsior.
Hr. 4rman received his education :L'YJ. the public schools and a ferT months
opportunity at Williston seminary in his native town. He was possessed of
much strength and energy and not easily daunted by danger or obstacles. Had an
abbundant opportu..nity as a farmer's son to display his vigor in sports incident
to boys. When Hr. Lyman vlaS fifteen years of age his father died, leaving
the responsibilities of farm and home to him and an elder brother under the
direction of the 'Hidolfed mother. The death of his f ather together ui th the
advic~ received from hil'1 on his death bed had a great influence upon his future
life. He often referred to his father's dying nords, "Be thou faithful unto
death and. thou shalt receive a CrOl-ffi of life". These uorclx Here upon his lips uni
until the close of life.
As the STilE'.ll NeH England farm became too small for one possessed l-rith such
energies, he decided to go uest and first visited llinnesota in 1850, visiting
Taylors Falls and other sections. So 'Hell pleased HaB he l-lith the prospects that
he returned to llinnesota in 1853, Landing at st. Paul he purchased a yoke of
oxen and ui th a conpass for a guide he started on an exploring expedition. After
travelinG tuo days he canpfid at night on the site of the home farm on ..rhich he ha
has lived for nearly f;i.fty years. In 1856 he returned to Hass. and Has united
in marriage to I-n.ss Hartha C. Pomeroy of South Ha.r.lpton, April 13, 1856, brin;:;ing
her to share nith him the little log cabin home. To them were born eif;ht
children, the eldest, Ansel P. being suddenly t~~en by accident a little over
tHO years ago. Four diM in inf~. Mr. IiY'111an united l.lith the Congregational
Church of Excelsior, in 1857 under the pastorate of Rev Sheldon and has ever re-
mained a faithful and consistant mamber. Hr. Iv11lan is survived by his ..rife and
three sons, Albert H., engaged in the lumber busniess;ArthurB, who lives on
the homestead and is in the nurserf business, and Frank J. engaged in business
in Rinnepo; is but living in Excelsior.
Mr Lynan 'Was the first postmaster of Chanhassen, having been appointed
to that office b;r Pres. Pierce in 1853. The office ..ms located in his log house
and he held the office during part of the ~chca:man ad.ministration uheh he ,-TaS
succeeded by a denocrat.
111: L;y-man was an active and valued member of the state Horticultural
society for many years, serving as treasurer of t~e society for tuo years.
The miduinter meeting held the pC'_st December being the first one he he.d T.'.issed
in r:12n:r ;y"e2.rs. Indeed the present development of the ap:)le crop in tIns part
of the state oues a h.stinG debt to Nr Lym~ for his indefatigable energy ,md
experience in aidinG the horticultural interests of the state.
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In 1853 he planted a lae number of' apple-seed ~d slo Mi ~ut six ~ll a":)~ler " trees 1!llich he had bro~ from lass.. The trees _ Here nO~d:y" enough for -thisclim:'1te t:Ll1d killed out In ID55. The seedlings clso failed after a-feu years lortheS<L'11e reason. He propogated a number of valubale varieties for this sectionfrontheseedsuhichheplanJ.:,ed. In 1867 he pllli"1ted seed froLl a Siberian crab 'and from the planting secured a number of seedlings, the most prominent being,l{yna..'1' s Prolific, and a number of other largely crabs and hybrids. He purchasedfromPeterGideon, one of his first trees of the Wealthy variet;}r, from ivhich hetookscionsandtoppedoutthreeSiberiancrabs, i-nlich in 1876 yielded a goodcropoffruit. From a barrel of the apples thus raised he save all the seeds forplanting. These trees when they came into bearing produced fruit of many ~arietieofgoodsizeandhighquality. His time uasgiven largely to originating varietiesthati-TOuld be of benefit to this section, the varieties produced from Wealth:7 beibeinglargelylatekeepers. At this time his commercial orchard of twenty fiveacresisoneofthemostvaluableinthestate.
Mr- IvTtlan always spoke highJy of the work of & Gideon in producing theWealthyappleandwasamongthefirsttosubscribealiberalsumtermrdtheGideonmemorial. A point that will illustrate his care in all matters pertainingtohisbusinessaffairswashisinquiryofhisson, Arthur B. Lyman, only a fewdaysbeforehisdeath, in regard to the above subscription and asking if theyWeresendingtheminandrequestingthatthematterbeattendedtoforhim . Hevisitedtheoldhomesteadin :rass for the last time in 1891, spending severalmonthsofthei-1inter of 1891-92 in the east. Last July, in company in th John R.Cunr.rl...T1gS of Eden Prairi"", he visited Duluth and Port .tLoYa+. Six l-Teeks ago hedrovearoundthefcu1[1 and through the orchard, solicitious to the last for theappletreesTihicllhehadgivensomuchcare. Heinquired ~ly a fel-T days before hihisdeathii' they had been properly mulched. In plitics 1tr. 1.vT.1an i-TaS allTaJ-S astaunchrepublicanandwasclerkofthefirstelectioheldinthatsectionofthecounty.
The funeral services Here held from the late residence l-bnday afternoon at2o'clock. }'h:- Traut spoke ferverently and eloquently of the example and lii'e ofNr'. 4rman, taking as his text, Rev. 14;13 "Blessed are the dead who die in the 10lord. 1:."\ren so saith the Spirit for they rest from their labors and their Horksdofollonthem." A quartet, Y.:rs G. A. Traut, Hiss R'l..l11ie Rogers, S. J. :Beardslee,
a...."1d Hill Barducll uith Hiss vlyer as org;:'l1ist, sa.11G "Asleep in Jesus, "A Eveni11;1LetTherebeLight" and Tel1IlYsonfs "Crossin(: the Bar". At the grave Hat sung thetouchil1Glrordsof "Hearer Iv! Gtid to Thee". Tne pall bearers uere Jolm R. eu::ningsJolmVI. Murray, James H. Clark, F. Rosenquist, ELi Stone, H. A Abbott. The house
uas croHded throuGh out the services in th Sjrmpathiaing friends and neighbors uhohadcometopaytheirlast :bribute of respect to one, viho in life had been a deEFfriendandneighbor. Henry H. 4V!:l211 has finished his l.ork in this uorld and laiddOlmtheburdensofeC?..rthl~r cares to enter into hiGher and eternal life. The lossofsuchmen, nhile falljring most keenly upon the fc>Jni:ity am home circle l;here he
Has ever the lovinG husband and father and counselor, is a sad bloH to the
community and especially to the horticultural interests of the state. The casket
in uhich h8 see!7led to rest so peacefully Has covered uith floral offering, a
triiJute fron the ladiesof the Congregational church c:.nd the Horticultural soc.11r It-'Ilal1I s faith uas of the kind that never ua'.rered and his life lms the full and
complete one made possible to such as he, The follol1ing lines from Tennyson's
Crossing the Bar" are fitting tribute to the departed: (article here uas cut
off---lIa.l7 I1=ances Lyman)
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ARTHUR BURT LYMAN and EUNICE (MELLQUIST) LYMAN
Burt was the second son and middle child born to Arthur
Lyman and Evelyn Brackett Lyman July 3, 1908. He grew up on
the Alfalfadale Farm 1 1/2 miles South of Excelsior,
homesteaded by his grandfather. His father, Arthur, was a
very successful horticulturist. Burt was immediately drawn
to the out-of-doors, fishing, hunting and camping. During
his high school stint at Excelsior High School he held the
pole vaulting record for quite some time.
Burt Lyman and Eunice Mellquist met as students at Carlton
College in 1927. Burt majored in Chemistry, graduated from
Carlton and Eunice went on to finish at MacPhail School of
Music, majoring in voice instruction. Burt and Eunice met
again on Nicollet Avenue following graduation from college.
They fell in love and were married.................Because
of the depression Burt could not find work related to his
profession and major in college. He found work in the
Colorado gold and silver mines and once he was able to save
enough money he sent for Eunice, who came to Denver by
train. They were married in Denver. Not knowing a single
person in Denver, the Minister's wife was Eunice's matron of
honor and the Pastor's best friend was Burt's best man. The
Pastor and his wife invited their friends to celebrate their
marriage at a reception for Burt and Eunice and they danced
the night away. Many people throughout their life
encouraged them to become a song and dance team as they were
very talented in music and dance.
Burt worked in the mines ...many died from black lung
disease and others were killed from mine blasts. Many
nights Eunice spent the nights alone in their unheated cabin
waiting for her "love" to return. She told her daughters
that on cold winter nights she would have to wear gloves
while reading. Burt played a saxophone in a dance band to
make extra money for their soon to be born baby, Sally
Lyman. Two-to three years later Burt's mother Evelyn Lyman
wrote asking him to come back and help run the farms. Burt
said he would but would only stay a few years as he had an
opportunity to work for a new company based in the
Philippines, related to his Chemistry background. He ended
up farming until his death.
Burt and his brother Dick recognized the potential profit in
raising turkeys. Lyman Bros. (Burt and his brother, Dick)
purchased a small farm south of Excelsior and the turkeys
stayed in a tin barn close to the house where Burt and
Eunice lived with their two girls Sally and Barbara.
Following the fire that destroyed the barn and all of the
turkeys in it, Lyman Bros. purchased another farm south of
Chanhassen and built an elaborate turkey operation.
Burt ran the turkey part of the business and Dick ran the
dairy and farming part of the partnership at the home farm
The Alfalfadale Farm).
Burt's hobbies were golfing, hunting (preferably duck), and
fishing. He loved the out of doors and had a great respect
for nature.
Eunice was born in Sherburne, Minnesota to victor and Emma
Mellquist. She was the second child follow1ng the birth of
her brother, Jerome. The Mellquist family moved to
Litchfield soon after at which time victor founded one of
Minnesota's finest woman's apparel stores (Mellquist
Department Store). He was the first man in Minnesota to
start style shows and Eunice was on of the first models.
Eunice became very active in Excelsior community affairs.
She was a member of the Cultus Club, Reading Club, Alter
Guild of Trinity Episcopalian Church, and was recognized as
spearheading the drive to get hot lunch programs into the
Excelsior schools. She was a wonderful homemaker and loved
to cook and knit. She was known for her wonderful meals
with a gourmet touch. Burt and Eunice had the reputation as
being a fun, loving couple who continued with their love to
dance. They also made quite a striking couple on the golf
course, having been members of Minnetonka Country Club for
many years prior to Burt's death.
They both worked hard to be able to send their daughter's to
good schools. Their home was open to both daughters
friends. Many wonderful memories are shared by Sally and
Barbara's friends. The boys in the Excelsior area felt it
was an honor to work for Burt on the farm. He taught them
how to work, hunt and fish and to be a gentleman at all
times. He was many a young lad's mentor. He always found
time to watch them play their respective sports for
Minnetonka High School. One father was being congratulated
for the job he did on his son at graduation. The father
commented that Burt deserved the credit.
Vacations were very important to Burt and Eunice. Burt
called them their honeymoons explaining to their daughter's
that it was important to their marriage to have this time
together. The philosophy was always if they were happy the
girls would be happy too.
It was a very sad day when Burt was went home to be with the
Lord, July 21, 1966. A very young and vital man, he and
Eunice had so many dreams. Eunice grieved for quite some
time. Three years later she married Howard McLean from
Scottsbluff, Nebraska. They moved to Scottsbluff and later
escaped the cold to permanently retire in Escondido,
California. Eunice died May 29, 1992 and was laid to rest
with her beloved Burt.
Their daughters, sally and Barbara live in Excelsior and
Minnetonka respectively.
sally is the mother of three children, Judy, Michael and
steven and two grandchildren. Barbara has a son, Arthur
Burt Lyman the Third, and Molly Elizabeth Lyman.
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Mary-Fra,nces Lyman - 196. .
Little did I know when Luvan and some of you asked me to talk of Carver
County just what I was attempting. As you know to do justice to this subject
would take several years of delving and reading in newspapers, files, records
and getting hundreds of interviews with older citizens.
I want to make a quick summary of the NW region of our country. As you know
the earliest people to come west were the fur traders from eastern Canada and
the French priests and missionaries usually coming up the Mississippi River -
This in the 1700's. There is now discussions as you know of the ~unestone
and whether the Vikings were first here - but so far this hasn't been satis-
factorily proved to historians, Most of these fur traders went through
northern Minnesota on the great lakes and west.
There was one English explorer, a Mass. trader Jonathan Carver, who hoped to be
the first to win $10,000 reward for finding the northwest passage to China.
He spend the winter of 1766-1767 at the Falls of st. Anthony trading with the
Indians and claimed to have attended a great council of the Sioux at Carver's
Cave in st. Paul. Carver went up the Minnesota River at that time, his
importance is that he wrote first books of this region 1778 and published in
London. Hennepin was first of Europeans to draw Niagara Falls so Carver
first in history pictured falls of st. Anthony. Later Carver County took his
name for their county.
Then we have 1819's beginning of Camp Coldwater, Fort st. Anthony as it was
first known and then Fort Snelling as a buffer between fur traders, settlers
coming up the Mississippi and the Indians. This history was so interesting
to read could hardly leave it to go on to my main topic. The little indian
village of Kaposia was where S. st. Paul is. There was a small village at
Black Dog (2 or 3 miles from the mouth of Minnesota).
Zebulon Pike sent by Jefferson 1805 to find source of Mississippi peace bet-
ween Sioux and Ojibway and sites for forts - camped at Pike Island and had
council with Sioux from whom bought a nine mile square of land - on this land
Fort sn~lling. The fort4ltldiers asserted U.S. auth~ty and were last out-
post of civilization for pushing on into wilderness.
Beginning with Pike's treaty there were at least 11 treaties by which the
u.s. obtained the lands owned by the Sioux and the Chippewa in Minnesota. In
the famous treaty at Traverse des Sioux with Upper Sioux and another at Men-
dota in 1851 with Lower Sioux, all of Sioux territory in SW half of Minnesota
except a small area set aside for Sioux reservation along the Minnesota) sold
for around $2 million.
A large village at Shah-o-pey (little six), Eagle Creek, Carver, St.
Lawrence, while just about where our farm is was edge of what was called "The
Big Woods" which extended up through central Minnesota - mostly hard woods
of sugar maple, walnut, oak, etc. These indians lived on hunting, fishing
and such vegetables as grew spontaneously. Very little corn planted before
1834 -some at Lake Calhoun and by Renville's relatives at Lac que Parle.
would like to tell more of their corn raising but if you are interested in
wonderful first hand experiences of early Minnesota History I hardily recom-
mend "Early Day in the Old N.W." Maude Lindquist. The indians ate a number of
wild vegetables; "psincha", the "psinchincha", the "mdo", the wild turnip or
pome-de-terre - water lily and wild rice. Psinchincha is a root, in shape
resembling a hen's egg and about half as large. The psincha is spherical
and about an inch in diameter. Both grow at bottom of shallow lakes or
marshy ground where not much water. Dug mostly my women - psinchincha would
float to surface but had to raise the other with their feet. Mdo was
potato. It was root of a slender vine which coiled around weeds growing
near it and resembles our sweet potato. Peck of wild turnips took whole
day to gather. If food scarce, indians ate acorns and vine of bitter
sweet or boiled hickory chips for sap. They killed deer and a few elk.
Mr. Oliver Faribault said he purchased in one year 1500 deer skins from
bands of Shakopee and Carver. Indians also ate geese, ducks, dogs,
2-
muskrats, bear or birds. ~ey were also clever fishe~n. They also
suffered for lack of food. In winter of 1834-1835 the indians at Carver
were in a state of great destitution and provisions were sent to them from
Fort Snelling.
I recommend in the same book I have mentioned a description of the early days
at Fort Snelling, if fact, think the history of the fort would make an
interesting paper for some of you to give. The gentleman, Mr. Eli Pettijohn
arrived and was trying to get transportation up the "St.Peter" or later "Min-
nesota River" from the mission board of Ohio to Lac que Parle. He inter-
viewed Mr. Sibley in his home at Mendota and was told there was a boat up
in two weeks. Read from Lindquist book - about dinner & trip.
Now St.Paul became settled and Minnesota a territory in 1849 with 3,814
people mostly in st. Paul 910 - Stillwater, Little Canada and st. Anthony
248. "The magnet was land, farms, towns, lumbering, industry. After the
purchase from the indians the lands had to be surveyed, land office
established and public sales announced under presidential authority, under
pre-emption act of 1841 - actual settlers who had established claims could
legalize their ownership by appearing at an appropriate office at a fixed
hour and paying $1.25 minimum an acre (but this just surveyed land) Ramsey
and others pleaded that true pioneers were the squatters who were there first
and that they always ahead of surveyors - so they should have the first rights
of purchase. In 1854 Congress extended to Minnesota, the pre-emption privi-
lege to unsurveyed tracts of lands - this undoubed1y gave impetus to rush of
lands in 54-57. 1855 six land offices in Minnesota, Minneapolis, Stillwater,
Winona, Red Wing, Sauk Rapids, Brownsvi11e, 5 million acres from '54-'57.
Claim associations were set up allover the east promoting Minnesota land.
In Mrs. Daisy Dillman's book on our Excelsior Congregational Church and all
Minnesota historic reference they talk of the N.Y. Association to found
Excelsior. Then in this "Hist. Quarterly" written by Charles W. Nichols
3-
and leant to me by Mrs. H~ier - I believe that thi~. Charles Nichols
was the father-in-law of our Reading Club member of a few years ago - so
our club ties in in a lot of ways to our early pioneers. I relate this
episode because the Arba Cleaveland mentioned and Nichols brother-in-law
was with Dick's grandfather (Henry Lyman) and Joshua Moore, three of the
first settlers in Chanhassen Township, the oldest township in Carver
County, then part of Hennepin County. The very first were Joseph Vogel
and Joseph Kessler, two German families who settled in 1852 south and
east of Chanhassen, turn off of #101 near where some of the descendants
live today. The marriage of Vogel to Kessler's sister Veronica was the
first marriage in Carver County.
Here permit me to read excerpts from the Nichols diaries which are in the MN
Historical Society's files. They can tell more vividly than I the true
pioneer spirit. Nichols was a Congregational Minister and was getting
glowing letters from this new country from his sister Harriett teaching in
Belle Prairie seminary for Chpppewa children started by Rev. Frederic Ayer he
prepared to organize a company - Read p5 - Henry Mertyn Nichols - to p6. He
with several Dunbar and Nutting advance men explored the territory around
Minnetonka and in one letter is this description of st. Paul - p6 bottom.
In the meantime the 50 to 75 members of the Northampton group are on the way
overland and by boat - a wonderful description of their sugar mapling and
trips out to the lake - April 6th, 1853, p10.
April 19, 1853, 75 of the Northampton colony landed on the "Time and Tide".
A few days later a group of these colonists left for Lake Minnetonka. We
have stories told in our family of Dick's grandfather purchasing a yoke of
oxen, provisions and lumber from the first mill at st. Anthony and driving
out to what ;s our farm today. It took about two days to come out. When
he arrived he built a rude shelter of the lumber from the April cold and
the story goes that the oxen nearly rolled on him that night and nearly
4-
killed h~m.
Since members of another eastern colony, the "Excelsior Pioneer Association
of N.Y." arrived at about they same time - they are sometimes confused. The
Mass. men were not under George M. Bertram's leadership but were; Rev.
Nutting, Gen. Levi Nutting, Rev. H. M. Nichols, Arba Cleaveland, George M.
Powers, H. M. Lyman, Joshua Moore (Mass.), Burrit S. & Wm. S. Judd from
Ohio, Rev. Charles Galpin and Rev. George Galpin of Conn. and Peter Gideon -
just four settled in Chanhassen, Cleaveland, Powers, Lyman and Moore. The
Lakes Lucy and Ann were named for the wives of Burrit Judd and Wm. Judd.
Lake Susan, South of Chanhassen was named for Miss Susan Hazeltine, the
first teacher in Carver County. She taught at the Cleaveland home near #41
and bridge over railroad. Lake Hazeltine also bears her name. Later the
school moved to new school house erected in Section 16 - wher~ we have voted
these last years (now on school grounds in Chaska). The first township hall
was built on the corner of #117 and #17 near Lake Hazeltine in 1881 for
300. When I was first married and came here to live in 1934 we went there
to vote. It was one room, not very large, and had a big drum stove in
the center as I remember it. Several years later is burned and we voted
in the school house.
The first protestant sermon in the township was delivered by Rev. Charles
Galpin at the log house of H. M. Lyman (which was built down the hill from
our house - where we had a garage in 1934 - between later horse barn and the
big house) in June 1854. A Sunday School was organized at same time. After-
wards services were held every two weeks, during warm months in a grove near
Mr. Lyman's house as a branch of the Congregational Church of Excelsior. In
1855 - services in school house near George Powers farm.
The only other church in our township was st. Hubert's Roman Catholic in the
Village of Chanhassen organized in 1863 and building erected in 1873. Of
course now it is a separate village.
5-
Grandfat~er Lyman went bJlltto Mass. in 1856 and marAlld Martha C. Pomeroy of
South Hampton April 13 and brought her to the log cabin. They had 8 children
but 4 died in infancy from diptheria and? and are in the little cemetery
south of the farm as you go on #117 to Chaska. When Richard, our son, mowed
the little cemetery for several years I used to go up with him and see if I
could find the first grave but as you know some stones had fallen and were
moss covered. There are the Cleavelands, Powers, Aspdens, Maxwells, Smiths,
Bennetts, and Harrisons and all the first pioneers there.
Grandfather Lyman was the first Postmaster of Chanhassen having been
appointed by President Pierce in 1853. The office was located in his log
house and he held office during the Buchanan administration when he was suc-
ceeded by a Democrat.
In 1853 he planted a large number of apple seeds and six small apple trees
which he brought from Mass. The trees were not hardy enough for this climate
and killed in 1855. When Mr. Ted Weir so graciously sent our Richard with
the Peace Corp some apples "scions" from the MN Fruit Farm to plant in Gon-
dar, Ethiopia, I wrote Rich he was pioneering like his great grantfather had
done in Minnesota.
Henry Lyman propogated a number of valuable varieties from this section from
seeds which he planted. In 1867 he planted seed from a Siberan Crab and from
that planting secured a number of seedlings. The most prominent being
Lyman's Prolific" Crab and a number of others largely crabs and hybrids. He
purchased from Peter Gideon, one of first trees of the "Wealthy" variety.
His time was largely given to originating varities that would benefit
this section, the varieties produced from Wealthy being late keepers. He
had 25 acres in orchard. We still had, when the children were little, the
apple orchard north of the house 15 acres and the plum orchard across the
road. Mr. Lyman always spoke highly of the work of Peter Gideon in
producing the Wealthy apple and was among the first to subscribe a liberal
sum toward the Gideon memorial.
6-
Reminiscjng more - he p1a4lld the thick evergreen gr~ near our house - and
built the present house in 1881. All the lumber was hauled from st. Anthony
by oxen taking two days each way. Dick used to point out to me the old large
house where his grandfather stopped for the night - It seems to me it was
between Miracle Mile (Excelsior Blvd.) and golf course toward Minneapolis.
Our house has all square nails and I asked why he went that far, to st.
Anthony, when in my readings there was a mill at Minnetonka Mills - Dick
said he wanted the pine and type of lumber from st. Anthony.
The Harrisons lived where Burt Lyman lives (Galpin Blvd.) and he was married
to a Bennett - Willis Wilson, Ruth Hutton were from the Bennett family and
they had a log house where the Brenden farm is (Galpin Blvd.) - South of
Old Slocum place. The Stellers were much where they all live today. There
were many Aspdens and I will try to tell a little of what Helen Aspden
Hillier has given me. Helen's grandfather settled where Berens house (Highway
5 near Arboretum) is in 1867. The Maxwells lived off of #41 near where the
riding stables are - Madeline and Dick Maxwell lived when first married in
the old farm house which had been made over the old log house. The walls and
window sills were a foot wide. They have all intermarried with Aspdens, Kro-
enings, Roers, etc. till I am not going to attempt telling of their families.
The two different A1dritt families were on the old farm home place on Lake
Minnewashta - from here their grandfather went to become famous in the Civil
War. Speaking of the Civil War, the township was sparsely settled and the
people poor while the war in progress. In September 1864 the military
authorities called upon the township for ten more able-bodied men to fight.
If not furnished as volunteers they would be conscripted. The commissioner
issued bonds bearing 10% raised 2833 in cash and gave each of 10 volunteers
250 and agreed to take care of their families while they were absent. The
township furnished 50 union soldiers during war.
Edna Smith Sampson family lived on the farm just south of us, (corner of Hwy
7-
5 ~nd G~lpin Blvd.) know~s the Ke1m farm now and t~Abbott family lived
where Howard Benders live. The Frank Bardwell's had a large house where
the Minnetonka West Junior High just bought land. Ethel Bitting who was
a Nesbitt - lived on the farm where Mr. Bull (High Path) later bought.
could go on and on.
Helen's grandfather came from Lancashire, England to Mass. in 1837. In 1855
his father came to Minn and pre-empted the farm in Sec. 17 (Berens farm
today) 1857 he brought the family out.
There are so many family histories that are equally as interesting but we
have time for just a few.
The naming of Chanhassen makes an interesting story - Mrs. Cleaveland, in a
letter written August 22, 1853, shortly after a visit from her brother-in-law,
Nichols, wrote "Chan has san" before the date in the margin she said "you see
we have named our place. It means 'Map1ewood' do you like it?"
In a column from "Minnesota Republican" of st. Anthony for November 30, 1854,
Chanhassen is the name of a p.o. and settlement midway between Excelsior and
Yorktown on the Minnesota. Like Excelsior and vicinity, the population are
primarily from Mass. and are nearly all Republicans".
The official vote on the name for the whole township did not occur however
until May 11, 1858. According to Edward Neill "History of Minnesota Valley"
at the suggestion of Rev. H. M. Nichols it was voted to call the town
Chanhassen, which is an indian word signifying sugar-maple". Powers was
Clerk Pro-Tem and had a full account of this meeting. It was first spelled
san" which was Dakota or Sioux word meaning "tree of sweet juice:. Since
the spelling has been changed to "sen".
Dick is now Chairman of the same town board with Paul Barnett and Dean Degler
other supervisors - LaVern Stovern is Constable, Arthur Stockwell - Clerk,
Alton Geske - Treasurer and Waldo Bunger - Justice of Peace. We are now third
in population after Waconia and Chaska.
8-
Lu~an gave a very good ta~severa1 years ago on car~ and its place in our
county history. The first white settlement was by Axel Jorgensen, a Scan-
dinavian, Spring of 1852. He was a "sooner".
Carver County came in to being March 3, 1855 and the county seat was at San
Francisco (the best can find is that this was the landing on the river
where the Geh1 farm is today) Officers appointed by Gov. Gorman were John
Koch, William Foster and John Allen. The first election was held in home of
Arba Cleaveland in 1855. In 1856 they voted to have treasurer, register of
deeds hold their offices in Chaska until further others as suitable building
cannot be had at the county seat, then San Francisco. Carver and Chaska and
San Francisco wanted county seat. Election of October 14, 1856 - 525 votes
cast and 303 were for Chaska.
Carver County had a German Agricultural Society 1856 and the large German
library donated to the Historical Museum is from this start. The museum also
has a large Scandinavian library given to them. While I am mentioning the
museum I think some time it is worth a trip to see by our club. Mr. J. J.
Braunworth and his wife so kindly opened it one day just for me to brouse
and then graciously served me coffee and sweet rolls. Mrs. Braunworth was
an Ottinger from near Victoria and is related to the Benders of Chanhassen.
Mr. Braunworth was born on a farm between Mayer and Watertown. He is on the
Historical Society Board and both are greatly interested in our county.
In 1857 there were 5 school districts with 184 scholars. First churches -
first to preach in English language was Rev. Block, a Methodist - was at
Glencoe but came to Chaska and Carver. Later he died in Illinois. Revs.
Galpin and Sheldon of Excelsior, a Mr. Cheeseman, a lay minister who had
a claim in Chanhassen and is buried in our little cemetery. A Rev. Grey,
an Episcopalian frequently preached at Carver. Rev. Edward Eggleston,
famous author and distinguished clergyman of NY City visited the county
in 1857, traveled on foot engaged in sale of religious publications.
9-
Father George, first Germ~catholic - he was locate~ Shakopee but
came into Carver County.
Mrs. Roy O'Reilly of Waconia very graciously leant me 3 phamplets on three
Catholic churches in our county. cannot quote from all but will pass them
around if you wish to read them. notice that each church, Church of
Ascension, Norwood, st. Pat's Young America and church of st. Joseph at
Waconia were all organized in 1859. I understand that the church in Waconia
is lovely with a main altar of hand-carved of Romanesque style.
The wood carved stations were executed in the Village of Artesei in the
Austrian Alps by Ferdinand Stuflesser - from old family of wood carvers.
Are of linden wood a semi hard, light in texture but showing grain. Back as
early as 1863 the church had a bell because the congregation were used to
them in the old country. Three times daily the bells are rung with excep-
tion of short period in Holy Week. There ~re 3 bells now - ordered from
Stuck stade and Bro of st. Louis the 600#, used for Angelus, donated by Mrs.
Schlechter in memory of daughter Anna. It is interesting to know that while
ringing to announce the Armistice of WWI this bell cracked in much the same
manner as our Liberty Bell. This seemed symbolical because there was such
unbounded joy especially for many Waconians whose sons were fighting kins-
folk in Germany. Was remolded. Second bell, 1000# has date 1888. Largest
1902 one has in Latin "In honor of the most Holy Redeemer and Savior of the
Wor 1 d" , I f you are interested when I pass th i s around, there is a paper
where list of things taken from first cornerstone when they built the new
church. think a very interesting list.
Mrs. Bohnsack of East Union leant me this booklet on the East Union
Lutheran Church - 100 years - 1858-1958. This community is 3 1/2 miles
south of Carver in Dahlgren Township. The first Swedes came in 1850 to Min-
nesota and wrote such glowing letters back that it started the migration.
In March 1854 Nels Alexander and Peter Klevin came with first settler
10-
Jo~gensen to look at carv~land. Later a party of ~ seekers came.
On Sundays Johannes Hatt read from "Luther's Postilla" to those who wished
to come. He wrote to Pastor Cederstrom and asked him to come and finish the
instructions of the confirmation class. In 1855 he baptised son of Johan-
nes Hatt.
At a conference meeting in East Union October 1862 it was decided there was
a great need of teachers and Pastor Norelius was asked to educate such young
men whom the congregation could send to him.
The conference school (the forerunner of Gustavus Adolphus College) was
moved from Red Wing to East Union in 1863 and class.s held in the church
building. Pastor A. Jackson was Superintendent of School. It was know as
Minnesota Elementary School until 1865. The name st. Ansgar's Academy was
then selected. In 1876 the name was changed to Gustavus Adolphus and it was
moved to st. Peter, Minnesota. In 1864 a house was built for school teacher
now the janitor's home. 1866 - new church of brick 70' x 40' x 17' height
with a tower. The West Union congregation also helped on work and money.
Later the Carver congregation separated and built a church of their own. In
1904 it was decided that six services a years were to be held in the English
language. The lovely church and cemetery is still in the beautiful country-
side of East Union. My sister-in-law, Mrs. Burt Lyman's, mother and father
were both born and are buried there.
The Mrs. Bohnsack is a daughter of an early day seamstress who lived in
Excelsior and sewed for many of your early families. Anna Arneson was her
maiden name and she sewed for mother Lyman at the farm she remembered.
Another landmark is the little Swedish Baptist Church on the shores of Lake
Waconia by the golf course - later moved to Highway 5. This early settle-
ment called Scandia was settled in 1854 & 1855 by Swedes. They held first
services in John Anderson's back shanty and Rev. F. O. Nelson was minister.
The little cemetery is across the road and the first burial is 1859. Our
11-
townsman Mr. otto Lunsten~s born on a farm near th~urch and before
his "death gave the new fence and gates for the cemetery. In 1958 when
the 100 anniversary was celebrated at the state Fair, all the families
who had descendants still living on the original homesteads were honored
and their names are on a huge plaque under the ramp going into the stadium.
Well, we all went with mother Lyman (Mrs. A. S.) and there were, other
families from Carver County, the Everett Lundstens was one family, the
Lundsten farm has since been sold to Mr. McKnight and is in the land he
wished to sell to Hennepin County for a park.
The little Moravian church out from Victoria was organized October 31, 1858,
at the house of John Holtmeier near Lake Auburn by Rev. Martin Erdmann the
noted Moravian Missionary. 1860 a log church then brick in 1878. They now
have a lovely retirement home on Lake Auburn across from their church,
another church in Chaska and one in Waconia.
I cannot take every community and township and go into such detail. There
are 12 townships as you see on this map and such towns as Watertown, Young
America, New Germany, Norwood, Songards, Waconia, Victoria, Chaska,
Chanhassen.
Watertown was founded by Swede 1856, Danill Justus. Later there were German
settlers.
A Swiss, John Buhlen laid out the little town of Helvetia (Mayer) named for
ancient name of his land. Watertown was noted for its mills - 1856 first
saw mill and then a grist mill. Farmers came to mill from 50 miles around.
Also had a brewery.
Chaska begins in 1851 - Thomas Holmes had license to trade with indians at
any point he desired to locate on Minnesota River. Then David Fuller, more
or less a speculator - 1852 Holmes sold Fuller the town site for $1,000.
About 20 acres were cleared here not like surrounding country in "big woods"
strawberries grew in great abundance. Holmes said he picked a wash tub full
12-
with heip of squaws broUg~frOm Shakopee and sent t~ller who owned a
hotel in st. Paul.
At a later date houses and implements of iron, old gun locks for flints,
hammers, tongs, etc. were exhumed.It was thought from appearance the relics
were 60 years old showing some settlement at turn of century. Some thought
a Catholic mission - probably a trading post.
Another feature of townsite was existance of a number of symmetrical mounds.
The situation and form of these mounds, as well as relics unearthed indicate
that they were different from mounds of sepulture so commonly found in this
country. They were arranged in a circular form to number of six with rising
ground extending from one to the other as though the whole might at some
former time been a fort enclosed for defense. Excavations have developed
bones in large numbers but in such positions as to indicate that many had
been killed in some great battle and hastily gathered into one common tomb.
Many mounds destroyed but several of these mounds are preserved in the
public park at Chaska, in the square. There now every year the town holds
its Memorial Day service after a parade along the town streets. "Taps" are
blown near the mound where the speakers seats are.
The name Chaska was derived from Sioux language and means "one" and is applied
to the first born. Doubtless, the name chosen for the townsite was through
to be a talisman by which it should acquire prominance amoung the ambituous
young towns. The majority of new settlers were German, many had been in st.
Pau 1.
The first store was opened by Fullers and was on the levee. The Fullers or
Shasta Company also tried to promote a canal to connect st. Valentine at
what is now Smithtown Bay, Lake Minnetonka with Chaska. Not for purposes
of transportation but to make an outlet for the lake to the Minnesota River
to utilize the fall of water for mill purposes. Survey showed minimum 126
feet and length of canal 6 3/4 miles. There was much trouble and contro-
13-
ver..sy ov~r the first coureouse (in "History of MN .ley" p 355) over
bonds issued irregularly and litigation. In meantime Waconia was fighting
for county seat. So 3 Chaska men bought quick deed and gave to Carver
County with stipulations county seat to be in Chaska. Much like the
500,000 willed just recently by Charles Klein to build a new courthouse
but it had to be in Chaska. The new one is started at the present time
and is near the old elementary school. The first white brick house in
county was built in 1857 by L. How - brick made in Chaska and probably
first made in county. For years the town has had prosperous brick yards.
The first post office in Chaska was 1855 with Thomas B. Hunt postmaster and
was held in Fullers store near levee. Mail came three times a week arid
was brought in by foot by G. C. Lee carr i er. In 1880 when "H i story of M i n-
nesota Valley" written getting four mails daily by railroad and stages
supplying connection with neighboring towns not on railroad lines.
San Francisco Township only township in Carver County where there is not
village or town at present. The town was once the Little Rapids of
Minn. first and named after California city - first county meetings
were here. Thought to be Gehl farm location at present. Flood of 1863
wash~d all buildings away. A mill here NW township at one time - run
by Beven's Creek settlers who built st. Ansgar's Academy of East Union.
Then there was a settlement called st. Lawrence (1856) where the ferry
crossed the Minnesota near the Carver and Jordan road of today. Town soon
died out.
Waconia is on lake, the largest lake in the township, 4 miles by 3 miles, 38
acre island - was originally called Clearwater but changed to indian "Meday
Wa-Ko-ni-ya" meaning lake of the fountain or lake of the spring. Ludwig
Gutheimer and Michael Scheidnagel first settlers - 1856 influx of German
settlers. Site of village owned by Russell of Minneapolis who was from Ver-
mont and came to Snelling 1839 - because of his association with U.S. land
14-
district he planned and l~ out town.
Waconia was known for many years as a firewood depot.
covered with sugar maple, beach maple, and hard woods.
The territory was
When county deve-
loped and st. Louis Railroad built through there were long lines of cordwood
sent to Minneapolis and st. Paul, Chaska and Carver also sent 1,000's of
cords by barge and boat. Post office 1857 Ed Hyde - had grist mill and
small brewery. All township 1860 had 261 with 44 serving in union army.
Now is one of three largest communities and a very progressive town. If you
have driven up lately you will see their lovely new hospital, new telephone
building near greenhouse, I call it the "Lloyd Wright" bank creamery, and
many new industries. Lovely new section of homes around Lake Waconia and in
the City. The new historical museum is a wonderful addition and long the
dream of Mr. Sell. When J first came to the county in 1934 he was around
asking items for his collection which he kept in garages and barns and later
in one or two rooms in town hall at Waconia. I will send around these
pamphlets gotten out by the society over the years.
Cologne and Benton are twin neighbors- The Township, Benton, 1855, but both
towns not organized until 1880 - Christian Hebeisen, German first white
settler 1855 - mostly German people - 1860 - 531 people. Adam and Paul
Mohrbacher owned site of Cologne and so named after their home in the old
country. Benton names after American statesman, Thomas H. Benton.
The Cologne Milling Company there is an old firm 1881 and still in Guettler
family - was flour milling but now annual feeds. Is a very well known firm
throughout the state.
Hancock Township - smallest and next to San Francisco. Is settled mostly by
Irish people - 1856 Constantine Dougherty first settler. There were the
Patrick Colberts; John Walls, Patrick Conbay, John Conlin, etc. Assumption
Catholic Church nearby on Sibley County line 1859. West Union Lutheran NE
of township - Gotha church 1876 started by dissenters from West Union church
15-
later '~el igious charact.ecame more Methodist thaeutheran.
Young America Township - a fine rural township with lovely farm land - three
thriving villages in township. James Neal first near Tiger Lake 1855 a
Dr. R. M. Kennedy and James Slocum.
About 1860 a large number of Germans arrived and today the majority of the
people are German. Early official records were burned so there isn't too
much.
The Town of Young America, Dr. K Slocum - then built first house 2 room log
cabin - had storehouse and store and saw mill using Young America lake for
water - later a grist mill when wheat raising was started. Then Ackermann
Bros add saw and grist mill 1866 a brewery, burned and never rebuilt.
The Pioneer Mannenehor est. 1867 and was a society for group singing or a
men's choir - quite active and erected a community hall later known as
Singer's Hall. Part of this still standing and used as a cabinet shop.
When I read this I was more than interested as my oak cabinets at our farm
house were made there by Mr. Lepel, German cabinet maker, in 1955.
A mile from Young America and located on the crossing of Chicago, Milwaukee
st. Paul Railroad and Minneapolis and st. Lou,is Railroad is Village of
Norwood, largest town.
It was laid out in 1872 because of the Chicago railroad (was called Hastings
Dakota). First called Young America station - 1874 village refused to
move so started new town. Site of farm of Julius Feltmann - post office
established 1873 with James Slocum Postmaster.
A village in 1881 with 334 was a wonderful wheat raising district. Acker-
mann's elevator 10,000 bu and Schoser capacity of 50,000 another man Simoni-
teh 35,000. Episcopal church 1858 under Dr. Black. Held in school and
homes until 1879. In 1881 a flourishing temperance organization called Nor-
wood's Red Ribbon Club.
Masons 1877, sons of Hermann - farmers had a 1876 Grange and it is said that
16-
through this lodge that C~d the creation of the In~state Commerce Com-
mission.
Four miles southwest of Norwood is Hamburg. Not organized until after
railroad but early settlers there in 1850's. Mostly German people with a
thriving little town.
Camden Township. Borders on McLeod County. Has two good lakes, Berliner
and Eagle - five farms - Nathaniel Cole from Indiana first 1856. Eagle Lake
had a small town by that name and one called st. Clair but both extinct,
first school 1860 in houses. 1860 - 101 population. During Civil War had
25 capable men and 13 soldiers to army. After war a great influx of German
settlers.
Mayer has grown little in 100 years. New Germany once called Purity.
Hollywood Township - Peter Karels ~ a German. Many Irish but few native
born Americans. After Civil War Germans came. First wanted to call Helve-
tia, Swiss name, but only one Swiss in Township. Matthew Kelly claimed he
saw many holly bushes growing in woods and thought should be Hollywood.
Later discovered Mr. Kelly mistaken and no holly of any kind in surrounding
community. Had 35 men during war and sent 10 to army. The Village of
Helvetia later became part of Mayer laid out 1856 by John Buhlen and Dr.
Lehmann.
Carver County's early transportation. First boat was Anthony Wayne, a
Mississippi river boat and went as far as Traverse des Sioux June 28, 1850.
In 1857 a little boat "Antelope" George Houghtn ran ,regular between Carver,
Chaska and st. Paul. Left Carver early in a.m. and returned at night. All
goods for Glencoe, Hutchinson, and Forest City and northwest parts landed
here.
August 1862 Sioux outbreak closed river for that year because soldiers and
supplies up - steamer "Favorite" Edwin Bell Captain carried General Sibley
and first soldiers of his forces from Fort Snelling to Shakopee and on to
17-
Car~er (Little Rapids) qU~ p 66 phamplet.
First railroad into and through Carver County was Minneapolis and st. Louis
in 1871. To Chaska, Carver and on to Merriam Junction - a distance of 27
mil es .
Pacific Division, extended from Hopkins through Victoria, Waconia, Young
America, Norwood and Hamburg.
students of farming history of the state have blocked out three stages from
1860 to 1920's - first wheat as we heard earlier about the storage facili-
ties in Norwood, then small grains, livestock farming, and farming as a
business, not just a "mode of life" - more diversification.
The record of diversified farming is bigger than the efforts of a few indi-
vi~uals but among the pioneers were Oren C. Gregg for dairying, Wendelin
Grimm for alfalfa. The latter was a settler in .Carver County. The old
homestead is marked with a plaque and is off the cut off road between #5 and
41 near Victoria - now belongs to Mr. McKnight and Mr. Maple who bought up
thousands of acres about five years ago. Is in Hennep i n Park now. I will
send around this picture taken during the 100th anniversary of Grimm. Dick
and Rich are in it but Mother Lyman and I were off to the side.
Wendelin Grimm left Kulsheim, an agricultural village in Tauber Valley of
duchy Baden in 1857. He was 40 years of age so brought his old ways of
farming. Among his possessions was 20# of seed. He was destined to be
one of the great contributions to agriculture. He arrived in Carver County
September 1 and bought 137 acres.
He planted his seed but the winters here were colder than the old country
so many alfalfa plants winter killed. But he saved seed from the survivors
and replanted. Years of this made his alfalfa acclimatized.
A neighbor Henry Gerdsen told the story that in the summer of 1863 Grimm
drove a number of fat cattle past Gerdsen's on the way to market. Gerdsen,
surprised to see such fat animals when feed was scarce and his own cattle
18-
lean asked Grimm where he~ained his corn. Grimm, ~g conscious of the
feed value of alfalfa proudly answered "kein kornchen, nur ewiger k1ee:
not one kernel, only everlasting clover".
Grimm himself did nothing to bring his contribution to the attention of the
agricultural world. The farmers near bought his seed - alfalfa spread in
Carver County but in only about a radius of ten miles. In 1889 this county
produced 50% of alfalfa grown in Minnesota. Prior to 1900 it is generally
believed that the farmers of Minnesota could not grow permanent stands of
alfalfa and those few who knew thought it was being grown in Carver County
attributed its success to local soil conditions.
In 1880 Dad Lyman (Arthur B.) while visiting at Tobias Ottinger farm near
Victoria learned of superiority of alfalfa over red clover. His dad bought
some seed in Minneapolis and tried but it winter killed. In 1890 while
teaching in Dahlgren Township he again saw the good hardy alfalfa. After
many tries he bought seed from the Grimm neighborhood.
In 1900 at a picnic excursion on Lake Minnetonka Dad Lyman met Professor
Willet M. Hayes, head of the Agricultural Experiment Station of the Univer-
sity of Minnesota and he told him of the alfalfa. Mr. Hayes decided to
make a personal investigation in Carver County. Accompanied by Andrew
Boss, an assistant, he came out to our farm. Dad Lyman took him to many of
the other farms where the seed had been planted. After three days Hayes
decided to start trials with the plant at the experiment station and made
arrangements with Lyman to procure all the Grimm seed possible.
From then on the agriculture schools of North Dakota, South Dakota, Min-
nesota, Kansas, Montana all were working with the seed. They compared it
with Turkestan and with original old German Franconian seed but Grimm's was
much better. 1904 it was first called Grimm alfalfa in a press bulletin.
Professor Hayes became Assistant Secretary of Agriculture but the experi-
menting went on.
19-
I am taK~ng this from the~th annual meeting of Min~ta Historical
SociOety (1938) paper given by Everett Edwards, U. S. Department of Agri-
culture, and Horace H. Russell, Social Security Board, Washington, D.C.
Also from paper in Dad Lyman's collection.
Large scale production of the seed was slow in developing - in much demand.
In 1914 40,000# distributed among farmers throughout the northwestern coun-
ties of Minnesota. Many seed companies handled what Grimm alfalfa seed
they could get, and probably much was purported to be of this variety, but
it was Lyman who concentrated on the production and distributing the seed
on a large commercial scale. Dick says they had the business in a building
in Excelsior - middle of block from Bacon Drug - and had three or four
secretaries. A. 8. Lyman's early experience in furnishing seed for the
farm school and encouragement and influence of Hayes afforded him
an unusual opportunity. He leased land and bought farms in Montana, Idaho
and the Dakotas where the dry climate seemed to be more favorable to seed
production. Also, some were irrigated, so sure of good crops. Lyman
directed the farmers and all seed delivered to him for inspection and a
pedigree was kept for each field planted. In 1915 $25,000 of seed was sold
and at no time was his production great enough to meet the demand. The
seed always high in price selling as much a $1.00 a pound. Dick says they
had orders from allover the world at that time. Even in 1934 when I came
they were still getting inquiries from many countries.
The focal point up to 1924 was always Carver County - but 702,578 acres in
Minnesota in 1930.
The production of a forage plant so hardy as Grimm alfalfa with its per-
manence, enormous yields, high protein content, economy as a crop and value
as a soil builder and weed throttler, is almost without parallel in plant
history. It is impossible to compute in dollars and cents what it has
meant to the nation. Minnesota owes a great deal to the diligent German
20-
pioneer '~nd to many many ~rs for their interest, ~ tells me they now
have" 100' s of var i ties of a 1 fa 1 fa but two used up here are "Verna 1" and
Ranger" since developed.
The monument which I have mentioned was dedicated June 10, 1924 at Grimm
farm. The inscription reads "Commemorating Wendelin Grimm resident of Min-
nesota 1857-1891 who originated Grimm alfalfa on this farm. Erected June
1924 by Grimm Alfalfa Growers Association - speaker was Dean Coffey.
In 1907 the legislature sanctioned a fruit breeding farm and it was started
west of Excelsior in Carver County. The station got underway in -1908 under
Charles Haralson. No detailed account can be presented of more than 60
varities of trees and small fruits released up to late 1950's but mention
is made of Lathan red raspberry, Haralson apple (1922) a great favorite in
Minnesota, Red Lake Currant 1933 which attained first place in U.S., new
apple, the Beacon (1936). Then the Rose farm was added to the experiment
station located on #41 and #5.
Then in 1956 the Minnesota Garden Society bought from Dr. Herbert Berens,
acres, probably in the original farm land of the Aspden family, for an
arboretum to experiment with trees, shrubs, flowers, in the northwest.
Then it was given to the University to operate. Since the original acres
more have been purchased from the Ray Williams family and George Herman so
the arboretum runs from Highway 5 through to small township road. It is a
beautiful spot to visit and every summer has hundreds picnicing there.
Farm statistics of 1957 show Minnesota fifth in nation in value of its
total production. Dale Smith our County Agent gave me these figures on
Carver County.
The level of living index is reflected in number of home convenience people
have, i.e. freezers, telephones, radio, television, refirgerator, washing
machine, etc. - from 1960 agricultural census - Carver County - 177 and
average of state was 163. There are 229,120 acres with 93.3% of this in
21-
farms. . .
will send this around for you to see but want to quote just a few figures
All farm sales - $13,332,583 - 1960
Farm production expense $5,554,560
Labor force engaged in agriculture - 29.8% (1960) down from 55.2% in
1940
Unemployed - 4.1% - down from 8.2% in 1940
In closing I would like to tell of one of the best agriculture industries
in the county. There used to be many creameries, but Mr. Smith tells me
there are three left in county. One is the Bongards - is midway between
Villages of Cologne and Norwood and is one of largest cheese factories in
the world. It was organized in 1908 and 1909 ready for business. Mr. Fred
Hedtke was first operator and served until June 1938. During these years,
this was one of the few plants that received whole milk. Whole milk
brought in by farmers and milk was separated and each patron received 80%
of his whole milk back in skim milk. Continued until 1940 when milk was
left for processing. Butter was manufactured during these years and stored
i n but t e r tub san d s ton e jar san d sol d 1 0 c all y . . C ream and mil k was coole d
with ice that was cut during the winter months. Wood and coal were fuel
until converted to oil.
In 1908 were 25 patrons delivering milk to plant - 1938 - 72 and now 1,000.
In 1938 Jack Budahn, a native of Arlington, Minnesota came and say great
possibilities and many modern methods installed. In 1938 was processing 7
million pounds of milk and now 20 times that. Net worth in 1938 $50,000
today 40 times that.
The firm generates all its own power and has acquired two adjacent farms
where pipelines from its disposal plant spray waste water from plant.
Employees are 84.
Products manufactures are butter, cheese, condensed products, whey powder,
22-
baKing mixes and calf foo~ In addition to their OW~Oducts, the plant
buys many carloads of buttermilk and non-fat dry milk products annually.
In recent years, many student and goverment officials from foreign lands
have visited the plant and some exchange students have worked at plant,
learning modern methods of manufacturing cheese.
This was 1958 manufacturing report - 12,640,911# of cheese, 624,466# of
butter - 7,937,560# of whey powder. Received 130,347,204# of milk, patrons
received $4,712,393.32.
23-
4
Bibliography
Sources used and people to whom I am indebted to for this paper:
Mr. Dale Smith, Carver County Agricultural Agent, Waconia
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Braunworth, members of Carver County Historical Society
Mrs. Bohnsach, East Union
Mrs. Roy O'Reilly, Waconia
Mrs. A. B. Lyman, clippings and history of her husband A. B. Lyman
Mrs. Stanley Hillier, "History of MN Valley", clippings
1. Minnesota History, a quarterly magazine, MN Historical Society, st.
Paul. Volume 19, March 1938, #1
2. History of the Minnesota Valley, Rev. Edward Neill & Charles S.
Bryant, North Star Publishing Company, Minneapolis, 1882
3. Minnesota, A Teaching Guide - Russell L. Hanson & Gene Hanson, Burgess
Publishing Company, Minneapolis, copy 1962 -
4. The Minnesota Book of Days, Roy Swanson, Perkins-Tracy Publishing Com-
pany, st. Pau 1, 1949
5. The Frontier Holiday - Edited by Glenn Hanson, Published North Central
Publishing Company, st. Paul, .1948
6. Early Days in the Old Northwest - Maude L. Lunquist and James W.
Clark, Charles Scribner's Sons, N.Y., 1937
7. with Various Voices, Theodore C. Blegen, Philip Jordan, Itasca Press,
Division of Webb Publishing Company, st. Paul, 1949
8 Minnesota, A History of the State, Theodore C. Blegen, University of
Minnesota Press, 1963
9. Minnetonka Story - Blanche Nichols Wilson, Colwell Press, Inc.
Minneapol is, 1950
10. A century of God's Grace - East Union Ev. Lutheran Church, Augustana
Synod, Carver, Minnesota, Centennial 1858-1958
11. Church of st. Joseph - Waconia 1859-1959
Church of the Ascension - Norwood, 1859-1959
History of Church of Ascension - Norwood, 1919
12. Newspapers
Young America Eagles - 1906-1907
Atlas of State of Minnesota - 1874
Chaska "Herald"
Minnetonka "REcord"
Farm papers and journals
Agricultural census for 1960 - Government
Phamplet by Nichols
13. Mrs. Dillman's Book
14. Trinity Church Booklet
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Insurance Department
THE UNION BANK
Sidney W. Duke, Agent
Mena, Arkansas
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INCORPORATED 1819 ~
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w. ROSS McCAIN. PRESIDENT . -;. · -,/-
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INCORPORATED 1819
HARTFORD,
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THE UNION BANK
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INCORPORATED 1819 ;~
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INCORPORATED 1819
HART FORD.
CONN.
lnsurance Department
THE UNION BANK
Sidney W. Duke, Agent
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Insurance Department __
THE UNION BANK I I.'v{
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HART FORO,
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Insurance Department Ii
THE UNION BANK I~ .4 "~ 'k-4/.~/.L{.. a-J"'1~.4.L-/..J
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Chaska Herald - Thursday, November 26, 1992
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t~ Square
Chatting with a real pioneer -~-'
It was 51} )'t:ars ago this month
that I hat! an opportunity as a
young Ikralt! reportcr-writt:r-
l~dih lr -jllst a ft:w years out of high
h( ~ II .- 10 sfX'nd part of a Sunday
flrrn(lon with a lerritorial pionl'er.
My rc.:cntly acquired first em. a
u\Cd.-{)f course-Model T Ford,
ofX'ned new hori7.0ns hcyond the
walking limits of Chaska.
With a Novemhcr wind and
snown:'Kes gently mixing, I was
headed for what was then Ch;mhas-
Cn Township, more specifi~lIy to
that i1rea scIlled hy "Yankees" in
the -\ x:;Os.
At the llerh A<;pden home I was
going to hecome acqu;sinted with
his mother. Mary Wooo A<;[xkn, a
delightful lady gracefully enjoying
her upper Ms.
She and her family had the
experiencc of coming from
Massachusells to the fronticr lwit:c.
Abel WlXxJ had worked in the
cotton mills of that state sint:e
lXlming from England as a hay.
Learning of new opportunities in
the new Midwest. he hrought his
family. including two-year-old
Mary, to the Waukesha arc;, of
WisConsin. However, it proved to
he a malaria area. The family went
hack east.
Some German fClmilies had come
up the Minnesotil River in IX52
and pre-cmpted homesteads on the
prairie and along the bluffs of what
would hcc:ome Carver County, cast
of what would hecome Chaska.
The steamboats leI them off at a
landing cllled Yorkville. During
the following year, 10 fClmilies
from MassachuSCllS got off at the
same plat:e and headed north to
claim land. In the group were Arhil
Cleveland, George Powers, H.M.
Lymiln, Joshua Moore, J. C.Hheart,
George Galpin, Lemuel Griffin,
James Ryan, William Tilton and
James Hillery.
A minister t:.lme to visit the
C1evdands and was so favorahly
impres.sed with the new arc,s that
he wrote lellefS to the Pillmer
Journal. a Mas.sachuSClls public,t-
lion.
Ont: of the readers who was
convincet! and hecame excited was
Ahcl W(xx.l. He started west amI
left enough money for his family 10
follow Ialer. He IandeLl at Yorkville
in 1854 and estahlished a home-
sle<.td. After a year's preparation of
lhe site, he sent for hiS familv.
A contingent of ] () set oul from
Mas.<;Rchusells, making the first
legs of the trip by railroad. In the
group the Wcxxls' cousins, Caspar
KnOll, John A'ipden, and the
Hobson, Lynn ant! M()()re families.
On one leg of the journey lhey nxJe
in :J C.l11Jc em, just vat:Olted hy
animals. Planks were pul in as seats
for women.
After six t!ays they arrived in
Chi~go on a Sunday. Trains did
nOI olXrate on thaI dOlY. The next
dilY lhey were back on the rails
headed for Ga!enil, III. There they
got on the steamboat, Franklin,
hound for 5t. Paul. There they
hoarded the Antelope and reached
the Minnesota River Valley ilt
Shakopce by night filiI. KnOll, a
tinsmith, was impres.c;cd wilh the
sellJcment at ShakofX'e and decided
to sct up busines.s there. TIle
Antelope stopped al Yorkville, a
scallering of log homes east of
what was to become Chaska. They
were greeted there by JOI1O Mann, a
sclller. He had been requested 10
take cme of the newcomers until
their friends arrived.
Mr. Wood arrived with a lumhcr
wilgon drawn hy a yoke of oxen he
had purchased. Reunited, the WlXxJ
family drove into the nearby
Chaska selllcmcnt, SlOpped at
David Fulkr's slore on lhe levee at
the soulh cnd of Walnut Street.
They purt:hascd a h:mel of salt
pork, a dollar's worth of sugar, a
h:lrrel of nour and II gallon of
mola~c;cs. With those purchascs,
the wagon and oxen ant! a $60 cow,
the Wcxx1s had $42.50 left as their
wealth. That would he contrihuletl
10 the cost of a log schex)! neigh-
nors had decided 10 build. They
could then get education funds
from the territorial government.
As the filrmsleild came into view,
there was the 16 by 24 foot log
house with two windows. Inside
were ;1 ht:d m;lde with lamar;lck
poles, a cros.s-Ieg pine hoard tahle,
some sltlols and an iron stove. The
family unpacked the IwO chests of
c10lhing they hrought from the
F.-1st.
Now 1I11:re were eight hanus
insteau of fwo for further clearing
the entanglement of hrush, fern
growth and rexlts under which there
was ridl soil for cultivating. While
the son helped his father, nine-
year-old Mary aided her mother,
churning hUller and shooting
blackbirds to protecl the acre of
wheat ht:r father hat! planted for
next winter's nour.
A young girl, Susan Hazeltine,
sl:lrted leaching school in lhe
Cleveland home, hul, when the log
school was finished, that hcc:mle
Ihe eJu':<ltionaI, cultural and social
ccnter. The ncwcomers from
Mas.<;;l(:husells were 4u ite cu lturet!.
In the Sdllxlltl1ey had such
activities as spelling bees and
lyceums, inc.:luding dehates,
recital ions, singing, and reading of
prepared pafX'rs.
The Rev. Edward Eggleston,
author famous for "TIle Hoosier
Schoolmaster" and "The Cirt.u it
RiJer," preached at the schlxl!
while lraveling as a txxlk salesman.
Mrs. ASlx.lcn rememhcred lht.:
occasion. She cou ltln 't allend,
hecause she didn't have she)(:s.
There were no churches, hut in
the summer neigl1hors would
galher in the sugar maple grove
near the Lyman home for servkcs.
It was there lhat the first Protestant
sermon was preached hy the Rev.
Charles Galpin of Minnearxllis in
June IX54.
The A<;pLIens and WooJs being
neightxlrs Icdto a rather n,llural
romant:e, and Henry A<;pLIen :Jnd
Mary Ann Wo<xJ married. By that
time Minnesota had become a
state.
There was so much more
Grandma A<;pLIcn told me in that
1933 visit. In a future column I
shall relate some of her experiences
with Indians al home in Chanhas-
scn and while tt:aching at
Shakopce.
Occupationl
Education I
Miscellaneous
Activitiesl
RI CHARD o. LYMAN
Personal Resume)
Turkey farmer, Chanhassen, Minnesotao
County Commissioner, Carver County.
Graduate, Minnetonka High School (1957).
Student at Carleton College (1957-1959).
Graduate, Bachelor of Science degree, University
of Minnesota (1961); major, Agricultural
Economics; minor, Economics.
Member, Alpha Zeta and Gamma Sigma Delta,
honorary societies.
President, Board of Governors, Student
Center, St. Paul Campus (1960-1961)0
Member of the Student Senate (1960-1961).
Recipient of the North Star Award for Student
Leadership (1961).
Recipient of the Ralston Purina Scholarship (1960).
Recipient of the Dean Freeman Award for Out-
standing Leadership, in the College of
Agriculture, Forestry, and Home Economics (1961).
Graduate study in Economic Development at Vanderbilt
University (1961-1962).
Graduate studies in Agricultural Economics and
Public Administration, at the University of
Minnesota (1964-1965).
Graduate Fellow in the office of Dean Keith McFa~laq?
1965-1966)0
t...
Ten-year member of 4-H (1950-1959); State Award
Winne~ in Health and Citizenship.
Peace Corps teacher in Ethiopia (1962-1964)0
t'
66 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
proached his brother-in-law. He said "Henry, I have a deal for
you." The plot of land in the cemetery that is right next to mine is
not purchased. You buy it. We will then jointly buy a tombstone
and set it on the border. You will put your name up on your side
and my name up on my side. How much would it cost? Henry
asked. Fred quoted double the salesman's price. But we'll split it.
Henry went to his grave not knowing that he paid the entire cost
of the tombstone.
He began using the gravestone in 1935.
Prolific Lyman
Henry Lyman typified the mentality of many of the Northamptoncolonists. Their religious beliefs sought moral perfection. It carried
over to his attitudes toward the land. Agriculture was more than a way
to make a living. It demanded improvement. Lyman became friends
with Peter Gideon of Excelsior, creator of the Wealthy apple, and
Arthur Latham, president of the new Minnesota Horticultural Soci-
ety. Mr. Lyman became a member of the society in 1891. He estab-
lished an official "Trial Station" on his farm where he maintained
copious notes on his experiments.
After he returned from a visit to Massachusetts following the Civil
War, he planted seeds from apples of hardier varieties such as the Sibe-
rian crabapple. He grew a crabapple tree in his orchard that was
named "Lyman's Prolific." It spread more than forty feet and became
famous for its yield. He experimented with other fruit trees and grew
one of the finest evergreen windbreaks in the state next to his home.
Fred Geiser ran a butter and
egg business. His accident on
the road to Excelsior gave the
Butter Hills)) their name. In
this photograph) taken in
1908) Clarence and Florence
Geiser sit on the wagon.
Below:
The two-sided tombstone of
Fred Geiser and Henry
Schroeder stands in St.
Hubert)s Cemetery,
still the biggest.
Henry and Martha
Pomeroy) Lyman built their
home (below) in 1882. It still
stands along Galpin
Boulevard.
CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY 67
On one excursion with his son, Arthur, he noticed some fine alfalfa in
a neighboring township and brought home some seed.
The period after the Civil War saw the application of science to
horticulture and agriculture. The University of Minnesota Agricul-
tural School promoted new ways to grow crops. Companies began
promoting their new farm machinery, fertilizers and seeds in an in-
creasingly wide array of magazines and newspapers.
In a typical report, Arthur wrote,
I shall call attention to the marked difference in the behavior
of two plantings of apple seeds by my father. In the year 1868 he
planted a lot of seed from the Haas apples which grew Siberian
crab trees and from his planting he got varieties of very small crabs
up to hybrids as large as the Whitney No. 20, but not any large
apples. By this planting was originated our Prolific, which is now a
tree measuring forty feet spread and has become quite noted in
the northwest.
The year 1876 he planted a lot of Wealthy seed that were
saved from a barrel of Wealthy apples that grew on three top-
worked Siberian crab trees that were somewhat removed from
other trees, the adjacent trees having killed down in the early sev-
enties. By this planting, he originated an exceptionally fine lot of
seedlings, which are nearly all of the large type of apples. In the
years 1896, '97, '98, '99, 1900 and 1901 these seedlings have
taken first premium as "best fall apple" [at the state fair].
68 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
Henry Lyman built a new home in 1882-a substantial two story
wood house with fashionable Italianate features. It is still standing.
Lyman visited Massachusetts for the last time during the winter of
1891-92. He died in 1902, leaving the farm to his son, Arthur. His
obituary said, "Mr. Lyman left a most honorable record, and the good
he did in the direction of creating a pomology adapted to this com-
paratively new country will undoubtably perpetuate his name long af-
ter those who knew him personally have passed away." On his
deathbed, he asked if the trees had been mulched.
Lyman farm circa 1900.
Henry Lyman (with beard)
holds the white horse on the
right. His son, Arthur, lived
on the farm and worked with
his father.
Henry Lyman stands next to
the original tree of LymanYs
prolific crab. The tree was
forty feet in diameter.
Mary Taylor Aspden)
wife ofJohn
Mary Wood Aspden and her
brother, John Wood
Right: Henry Aspden
with his cattle
CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY 27
I live in a little log house with four windows in it; two bed-
rooms on the west end and a parlor, sitting room, kitching, and
pantry all in one. At the east window have a beautiful view of the
lake. I have made a walk down to the brook, and my flowers on
either side, they are all up, and my dahlias all alive. It will look
some like home to see old Mass[ achusetts] plants in Minn[ esota].
We have an Indian canoe on our lake. Mr. Powers goes out and
gets us pond lilies: it is a pretty little sheet of water about a mile or
more long.
Aspden
John Aspden was one of the oldest pioneers. He was born in Eng-
land in 1808 and came to America in 1849. He brought two sons with
him, Henry and James. Henry Aspden was born in England in 1837.
They lived for seven years in Massachusetts where he attended college
and worked at a weaving establishment. He settled in Chanhassen in
1856 when his father purchased 160 acres. He would serve as assessor
and treasurer, as well as town clerk and treasurer of Chanhassen. His
brother, James, was born in 1840, and served in the Civil War.
Lyman
Henry Martyn Lyman was born in Easthampton, Massachusetts,
September 13, 1828. He was educated in the public schools and
Williston Seminary. Henry took over the family farm after his father's
death. In 1850 Mr. Lyman landed at Taylor's Falls, remaining a year
after which he returned to Massachusetts. In the spring of 1853 he
headed west again, landing at Saint Anthony Falls. He purchased
some oxen and drove west. He built a log house of tamarack. He, too,
came to stake his claim and then return to take a wife. He returned to
28 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
Massachusetts in the fall of 1855 to marry Martha Pomeroy of
Southampton in the spring of 1856.
Lyman was the first postmaster and clerk for the first election.
Lyman was widely respected for his ability with agriculture and horti-
culture. He probably planted the first apple tree in Carver County in
1853, bringing with him six small apple trees and seeds. They all died
in the winter of 1856. The Northampton Courier, Nov. 22, 1853 re-
ported, "At Minnetonka, on the claim of Henry Lyman, is a meadow
of fifteen acres or more of the best quality of native hay, which yields
from three to five tons to the acre." Another person noted that prairie
grass stood fourteen feet tall in Lyman's fields.
Powers
George Powers was born on a farm near Belchertown, Massachu-
setts. Like many of the Northampton Colony, he was an educated
man, graduating from college with honors. His wife, Thelena White,
graduated from Mount Holyoke. Powers traveled to Minnesota with
the goal of claiming land, building a home, and then returning to
marry. He followed his plan.
A neighbor wrote that Powers was "an excellent, handsome young
man. Always happy, good Christians, very nice and pleasant." He was
active in local politics, holding offices at the township and local level.
Trumble
Joel Trumble was born in 1831 in Concord, New York. While liv-
ing in Illinois, he met Jemima Aldritt, followed her to Chanhassen and
married her in 1857. They had ten children.
Wood
Abel Wood came to America from England as a young boy and
found work in New England cotton mills. He brought his family to
the Waukesha area of Wisconsin. There was malaria so they returned
to Massachusetts. He began to read the series of letters that Henry
Martyn Nichols sent to the Northampton Courier and decided to try
the west again. In 1854, he and his family landed in Yorkville with a
contingent that included Caspar Knott, John Aspden, and the
Hobson, Lynn, and Moore families. The farmstead was a 16 x 24 foot
log house with two windows, a bed made of tamarack poles, a cross
leg pine board table, some stools, an iron stove and two chests of
clothing from the east.
Harrison
Edward B. Harrison, a native of England, was born July 21, 183l.
Mter duty in the English navy, Harrison settled in Chanhassen in
1855, shortly after his marriage to Hannah Richardson of England.
Harrison became a prominent community leader, serving as Chair-
Abel Wood
Margaret Jackson Wood
Jemima Aldritt Trumble
40 CHANHASSEN: A CENTENNIAL HISTORY
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than proper... that it be read by the light of burning churches."
Nancy Nichols wrote in her diary that friends "would not let him
walk the streets alone. There is a watch set over the house last night to
prevent its being fired, as there is such a feeling against Mr. N by the
saloon keepers." He began carrying a revolver.
But the congregation chose to rebuild. In late June, Nichols
wrote in his diary, "prospect brightens for a new church." It was his
last entry. On July 5th, he joined Arba Cleaveland for a picnic at Lake
Calhoun. The two oldest Cleaveland girls and young Henry Jr. went
swimming and stepped over a steep slope into deep water. The two
fathers dashed into the water and sank beneath its surface. At the last
minute, Nancy reached out her hand to her husband, the hand that
had held her on the S.B. Dr. Franklin seven years earlier. She called
back to her sister to head for shore then sank clutching her husband.
The next afternoon, six coffins were placed on the lawn of the Nichols
home. Thousands attended his funeral. It was the great tragedy of the
era before the Civil War, the moment when a city stops and searches
its soul.
Theodore Bost, who thought so highly of the Cleavelands, wrote,
So there was Mrs. Cleaveland in a strange town, alone in a hotel with
the dead bodies of her husband, her oldest girls, her sister, her
brother-in-law, and her nephew, with nobody to console her except
for two little girls of seven and four years of age."
Life went on, even after a tragedy. Sophie and Theodore tried to
watch over the widow and offered to take her in for the winter. They
wrote to his parents on September 22, 1860,
Mrs. Cleaveland is not going to spend the winter with
us. ..She has decided to go back East to her family. So now the
most delightful family around here has been lost and destroyed.
Mrs. Cleaveland has been selling her furniture and so on, we have
seized the opportunity to buy for not much money a lot of things
we should otherwise have had to buy a few at a time-a lovely,
solid dresser, a good sofa, a kitchen stove, a small worktable, and a
number of other things.
A year later, several of the neighbors met at the schoolhouse to
organize the Chanhassen Cemetery Association. The initial members
were Hiram Eldridge, John Murray, Theodore Bost, Henry Lyman,
William Sarver, George Powers, and Harlow Langdon. They selected
a piece of land owned by John Murray, probably selected because it
held the grave of Nirum Abbott. After they divided the lots, they re-
served one for Clarissa Cleaveland. Her husband and daughters are
buried there. It was the final step for the Northampton colonists.
Chanhassen was now their final resting place.
Nancy Sikes Nichols was the
sister of Clarissa Cleaveland
and the wife of Reverend
Henry Nichols. She died
alongside her husband in a
drowning at Lake Calhoun.
HORTICULTURlS'l's
make a strong investigator and teaCher. In a real
estate venture in Florida, before his entering the Agri-
cultural College, he became interested in agricultural
problems and resolved to devote his life to them. In
1890 he undertook work as private assistant to the
writer; and from this he became 88Ilistant and instructor
in Cornell University. In the extension work amongst
N ew York farmers he had charge of the investigations on
grapes and strawberries. He was an originator of the
spray-ca.1endar idea. In 1896 he published "The Spray-
ing of Plants." which is yet the fullest presentation of
the subject. This was prepared after a most thorough
traversing of the sub~ect, both as author and experi-
menter, including a VlSit to Europe for the p~ of
tracing the French history of the subject. He was an
accomplished scholar, speaking German and French
with fluency and possessing a working knowledge of
other languages. His early death deprived American
horticulture of a promising leader. L. H. B.
Longworth, Nicholas (Fig. 1887), (1783-1863~ has
been ca.lled the "father of American graoo-culture.' He
was born in Newark,
NewJeraey. Hees.rlr
went to CincinnatI,
then in the young
and gro~ Weet,
and engaged m bank-
ing and other busi-
ness. He early be--
came interested in
agricultural affairs,
and particularly in
the grape. From John
Adlum he received
the Catawba, and
became the means of
making grape-grow-
ing a commercial suc-
cess in the Ohio val-
ley. He was a leader
in the company of
horticultural experts
and writers which
I~ made Cincinnati
188'1. lfIcho1u LoDporth. fa.mous in the mid-
dle of the century.
Longworth was one of the first to perceive that many
strawberries are infertile with themselves, and to
2est
the planting of pollinizers, although tbe im-
ect nature of the strawberry blOl!8Om had been
own long before his time. He also introduced the
Ohio Everbearing raspberry, the first improved variety
of Rubm OtXicknlalis. Longworth was a pioneer of
horticulture in the expanding West, and more than that
he was a guiding spirit in horticultural affairs of
national importance. In 1846 he published a pamphlet
on "The Cultivation of the Grape, and Manufacture of
Wine. Also, Character and Habits of the Strawberry
Plant." He also contributed a chapter on the straw-
berry to Buchanan's "Culture of the Grape." For
further notices, see Hovey's "Magazine of Horticul-
ture" 29:160, and Bailer's "Evolution of Our Native
Fruits." The portrait In Fig. 1887 shows Mr. Long-
worth at seventy-four years of age. L. H. B.
Lord, Orville Morell, horticulturist and plum special-
ist, was born in the town of China Wyoming County,
New York, April 20, 1R26, and di;{ at Minnesota City,
Minnesota, July 21( 1906. The Lord family moved to
La~ County! Michigan in 1842. After two years'
training at a pnvate school in Pontiac, Mr. Lord taught
public school for four years in the country near his home.
In 1852 he moved west with his family to Minnesota
and was one of the first settlers in the Rollingstone Val-
ley near Winona where he lived till his death with the
101
HORTICULTURISTS 1585
exception of the vears from 1861 to 1864 when he
returned to a farm" near K~~
Ill.Michigan. He was
a member of the Territorial . ture of Minnesota
in 1853-4 and served in the State Leitislature in 1873-4.
He was active in many lines of public service through-
out his life. In 1884 he became a member of the State
Horticultural Society of Minnesota and was elected
an honorary life member in 1800. He conducted a sub-
experiment station for the eociety at his home for many
He was considered one of the leading authorities
m the Northwest on all lines of horticulture and
enjoyed a national reputation as a plum specialist.
He cultivated the well-known "Rollingstone" plum from
a wild variety growing in the Rollingstone Valley. He
also established several varieties of Very JtOOd hardy
apples. Mr. Lord was a lecturer on hort~culture in the
Mmnesota Farmers' Institute for a number of years
and also horticultural editor of "Farm, Stock and
Home." He always ...arried on an extensive corree-
pondence with other horticulturists all over the
country. E. G. CHEYNu.
LYJIl&D:L Henry :Martyn. pioneer horticulturist, was
born at Easthampton, -Massachusetts, September 13,
1828, and died at Excelsior, Minnesota, January 4,
1902. He was a descendant of Richard Lyman, who
came to America in 1630 from EnJda,nd. Mr. Lyman
received his education in the pu6lic schools and at
Williston Seminary in Easthampton. His father died
when he was fourteen years old and with the assist-
ance of his mother and older brother he carried on the
New England farm. Mr. Lyman came to Taylors
Falls, Minnesota, in 1850. After remAining 8 year and
a half, he returned to Massachusetts. In 1853 he came
west again and landed at St. Anthony. He purchased
an ox.,.team, a wagon and a little lumber and drove west
to the site of the Lyman Homestead at Chanhassen,
Carver County. He made this his bome until his
death in 1902.
Mr. Lyman was for years postmaster of one of the
first poet-offices in the county. He was interested in
fruit-growing and planted the first apple trees in Carver
County in 1853. These trees were not adapted to
Minnesota and were winterkilled in 1856. In 1867 he
p,lanted more apple seed and from this lot came the
Lyman's Prolific" crab. From apple seed planted in
1876 and later came the Evelyn and other seedlings
that are promising well for Minnesota conditions and
are good keepers. Mr. Lyman was much interested
in evergreens and early planted many varieties. He W88
one of the first settlers to realize their value as wind-
breaks and eome excellent specimens are still to be
found on the homestead.
In 1891 a trial station was located on his farm and is
still in operation. He was treasurer of the State Horti-
cultural Society in 1900. As a pioneer horticulturist,
Mr. Lyman did very much to establish horticulture
on a sound basis in Minnesota. LE Roy CADY.
Lyon, Theodatus Timothy (Fig. 1888)"pomologist,
was born in Lima, New York, January 13, 1813, and
died in South Haven, Micru.ta.n, February 6, 1900. He
was the son of a farmer. lIiS school-going was very
limited. In 1828, his parents went to the territory of
Michigan, where he was employed in many pioneer
pursuits, as farming, lumber-making, post-boy, tanner,
merchant. He became more and more interested in
farming, and in 1844 started a nursery on the farm
at Plymouth; Michigan. He collected varieties from
the local orchards, and found their names much con-
fused. His interest was challenged, and gradually he
became absorbed in a study of pomol~, which in that
day meant mostly knowledge of varieties. Articles on
the varieties of Michigan apples in the "Michi~an
Farmer" attracted the attention of Charles Downmg,
and a correspondwce and exchange of varieties resulted.
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H. M. LYMAN, DEAD/,
He Was ^ Pioneer Settler
Chanhassen.
Henry Martyn Lyman, .was born in'
Ealthnmpton. Mess" Sept. 13th, 1828.'
Btin,lt 01 English 'nncclltl}'. II dCM:cndnnt
of Richard Lyman, who came to Ameri.
ca in 1630. Mt. Lyman rect:ived bis
education in the public ecboolllaDd Wil-
Illton Seminary of Ealltbo.mpton. At
the 8Kt of 14 llis father dicd. He with
the lllllistance of his motber nnd older
brothcr carried 011 the New England
fant!,
In 1850 Mr. Lymnn InDded lit Tltylor'll .
Fallo, Minn" nmninins:- a year and a
half, after "Whicb he n:turned to his old,
home in Masll. In the Ilprin~ ot '53 be
ajtainlCt hill fnce toward the lletting
lun, landinK at St. Antoon), ~'::::::
Bere be purchalled an ox team, a wn~on
lom~ lumber, nnel drove wellt, landing
on the aflernoon of May 18tb, at the
prnC:1t Ilite of the' Lyman homelltead in
Char:nallllen. He let up the few boards
he hul brougbt with him agalnllt hill
w8lo.. and callcd that bome. Sbortly
after be built a 101 house of tamarack.
brok~ Ian II and raised vegetablell, grain
etc:. Returned to MassDchuletts in tbe
fall of 1855, ant.! was married to Mar.
tba C. Pomeroy of Sonthampton, April
18tb, 1856.
Mr. and Mrl. Lyman now came wcst
to try their fortunes in the new territory;
taking np house keeping in the little 10J:'
hOUlC, previously built hy Mr. Lyman.
MaDY will remember Mr. Lyman as
being polt-malter lor a number ofyeu.n.
ha"ing one of the lint pollt.officell in
Carver county. Wall clerk of tbe firllt
election held in thil Ketion of tbe coun-
try. Ha' lince made two trips to the
old bome in Mau" one in 1866 to join
Idre.Lyman, who had returned esat the
previoul year. Durin,lt hi'ltay of a year
and a half hi. fann interntl were ;oui..~':
altaby Mr. lohn Wood.
of
Henry M. Lyman, my
Great-great-grand
father was born
September 13, 1828.
He died January 4
1902. '
jng 'terI muc:h IllterNUd III Indt
rOWid~, Mr. Lyman w.. el~l, ideati.
fied with the MlaaC8ota' State HortJctiJ.
tural Socirt,. Be proba~1y pJaetcd, the
firet a.pple tree la 'Caner' ~T, brill~'
lag WIth him 6, .......pple tfttI .ad
teedl, wbic:1i wtre plallb!dUs the 1prIit~or '68. Thcee tfteI IlOt .beIo. ac!aptccl to
MlnnetlOta ellmate:w.-e ~ hi.'tlle
wlllterol'S8. '. '.. . -' ""\,,.
Ia tht Ieat 188r ~ ~~tect eeed~ .~~
appa of hardier TarictJtS. otfcluti.
laa'f' Taluble.. ~Ha. ; tfttI - f
hi b he .' .._...
0
W c. t "Lylltad'. Prolific": "a~a
rtad 01 crter ~ ~t, bd bae bor1.e1a.
mac:h al SO balhde Q{hlt at'oDe - ti.eF~m "Wealthy" ~I that lie pIalltedia. 78, tbere .1. DOW.lttOwfal' maD '. rfetlCl ()f larre tIpe 0' apple. OrKOO~
T&
JIt" whlc:b ha.n ,c'ptare4 the ..31'S
priRI at the State -'Pair d
I.,
Meetingl 01 the State :fl~t1i::a::
clct7, . for a .Dllmber of JUrt.' KaArletlCllaregoodktepcrl.' ; I,':: ~T.
J,lr. [~.,,' w.. aJao 'ftr7 .ticir m..a--CIted la tlae .rowiag of ev~1 hAT
1I1 oae oftb~ b;cetntljn~u wiad break;
In the c:o,!ntry. MaayeyttgTteul olbla
rl'y Ie~t~ng. tower OTCr 50 (t. hi&h.
D
In PObl.1ltlCl, be wa, alwa'l a Itron"
Aepu Ican. ,..
Mr. Lymaa Ie enmnd by hll wire andthreeSOliS, Albert H., and Frank J., ofExcelstor. and :'rtbur B., at the OldHomeat~ad. H" eldeat loa, Aa~1
P.. al
manv: wtll remember, waa killed ia 1899bybeiag .track by a train. ,
Mr. Lyman wal taken ill about twelTe
wc:e~. ago! althongb treated b, tbe beat'lnedlcRlllkdl. be Rfadnally rrcw wo i
and departed from tbis Iile at ~:20 a. ~
January 4th. of Jaundice. a&'ed 78 1'eal'l8mOll ~~I !,nd 11. day.. He WAl a dCTo-ted ChnlltJan. beln~ llIl actin member oftheCOIIgre2ationalchulchofBzc:elsior
01 wb!cb ~e haa been a m~mber lince it~
Or~aDIz:a taon.
a
t
Excelsior community affairs. She was amemberofthe Cultus Club, ReadingClub, Alter Guild of the Trinity
Episcopal Church and was recognized as spearheading the drive to get hot lunches into the Excelsior schools.
She was a homemaker and loved to cook and knit. She was a member of the Minnetonka Country Club.
Three years after Arthur Burton's death she married Howard McLean from Scott's Bluff, Nebraska. They
resided in Scott's Bluff until theirretirementwhen they moved to Escondido, California.
GRA VE45.1
LYMAN HENRY MARTYN - PIONEER
Marker)
Born: 13 September 1828,Easthampton, Massachusetts (CCDR)
Died: 4 January 1902, Chanhassen (CR)
Cause ofDeath: Jaundice Age: 73 years
Spouse: Martha Clarissa Pomeroy Children: Albert, Arthur Burt, Frank, Ansel,
Father: Jeremiah Lyman (CCDR) George, Grace, Ada, and Willie
Mother: Orpha Bust
Henry Lyman was a charter member of the FirstIndependentChurch Excelsiorand Chanhassen in April 1853.
He is named in the 1850 territorial census. It is believed he first arri ved at Chaska and then settled in
Chanhassen on present day Highway 5 and County Road 117. Here he built a cabin of tamarack logs and set
about farming in 1852. A deed for 160 acres ofland in Section 10, Township 116, Range 23, was recorded
29 June 1858.
In 1854 a post office was established in Chanhassen. Henry was the first postmaster; he held the office for 2
years. The post office was abolished in 1859.
In 1858 Henry served on CarverCounty's first Grand Jury.
Henry was a founding member of the Chanhassen Cemetery Association in 1861. He was also involved in the
State Horticultural Society. He grew orchards of apples, plums, and developed the
Lyman "Prolific Crab Apple."
Henry was active in Republican politics and served as one of fi ve representati ves from the Chanhassen Precincts
attheRepublican Convention in Minneapolis 1856.
Henry and Martha Cl ari s sa Pomeroy were marri ed the 13th of A pri 1185 6 in East Hampton Massach usetts.
Son Albert stattedthe Lyman LumberCompany, which still exists in Chanhassen today. Son, ArthurBurt
introduced "Grimms Alfalfa" to United States. Son, Frank moved to California and son Ansel was killed in a
train accident on the railroad south ofL yman Farm. Four children diedin infancy between 1863-1874 from
scarlet fever, typhoid fever and Cholera, they were: George, Grace, Ada, and Willie.
GRA VE45.2
L YMAN, MARTHA CLARISSA (POMEROY)
Marker)
Born: 3 November 1833, Southampton, Massachusetts
Died: 17 August 1911in Chanhassen
Cause of Death: Unknown
Age: 73 years Baptized: 7 September 1856
43
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i
i
HENRY MARTYN LYMAN
Henry Lyman was one of the 1st sl:ttlers in this part of Chanhassen.
he may have been here as early as 1852. Henry was born in Easthampton
Mass. Sept 1828. He died Jan 1902.
Henry's first home,a log cabin, was built of Tamarack logs.
Re returned to Mass. and married Martha Clarissa Pomeroy in h~ril 1856.
He brought Martha back to Chanhassen.
To build the current house, lumber & square nails were hauled from
St. Anthony Falls by oxen cart. It was a 2 day trip. This house was
built in 1881. There were 4 bedrooms, including one for the hired
men. Also there was a seperate entrance for the hired men.
Henry and Martha had 8 children, 4 of whom died in infantcy.
Over the 80 plus years that Lymans lived on this property, the house
was remodled to fit the times. Bedrooms were added, groves of fruit
trees were removed & indoor bathroom was installed.
At one time when Richard, Henryrs grandson, and his wife Mary lived
in the house, and were going to wall paper, they found 7 layers of old
paper. The first layer was dark red paper with big medallions. Under
that the wall was plastered in red terra-cotta. The home is currently
owned by Ted & Marlene Bentz.
1858
1861
1867
Henry Lyman was very active in the Chanhassen Community.1853 was a charter member of 1st I!idependent church of Excel.& Chan.
1854-1859 1st Postmaster. Post Office being run out of his home.
1856 one of 5 representatives from Chanhassen to the RepublicanConventionheldinMpls.
Served on 1st Carver County
member and trustee Cemetery
Planted crab tree seeds and
being the IILyman Prolific"
Grand Jury
Assoc.
developed the most prominent apple
Henry was very involved with the States Horticulturel Socie In
addition to apples he grBw plums & planted evergreens. He is also
reported tho have raised the best quality hay. Prarie grass on his farm
was said to be 14 ft tall in his fields.
Henry had four sons who lived to adulthood, Albert, Ansel, Frank, &
Arthur.In 1898, son Albert started the Lyman Lumber Co., which still
operated in Chanhassen today. Son Frank moved to Calif.Son Ansel
was killed in 1899 when his buggy was hit by a train while crossing the
2.
railroad tracks south of the Lyman farm. He was 42 years old.
Arthur, the youngest son, bought out his brother, and took over the
farm after Henry's death. Arthur became well known for his contribution
to perfecting "Grimm Alfalfa'!. They later raised sheep and turkeys.
The 1860 Agriculture Census listed Henry as having 4 cows, 6 oxen,
4 pigs, 6 others. He also was raising wheat, rye, Indian corn, oats,
and Irish popatoes.
Currently the Bentz's
and have two Osttich.
to visit the barn.
are raising 5 head of cattle, peacocks,
The Bentz's are away today, so we are unable
It is also important to note the the exterior of the house looks
exactly as it did when Henry Lyman here.
14~VV'.
I.ATR OP
EXCEI.SJOIl. MINN.
f
THE MINNESOTA
HORTICUL TURIST.
VOL. 30.MARC", 1902.NO.3.
I 11 lV(;IIlOrillIIl.
HENRY M. LYMAN.
DIED JAN. 4. 1902. AGED 73 YEARS.
Henry :\lart)'n Lyman was born in Easthampton, Mass., Sept.
13, 1828, ~eing of English ancestry, a descendant of Richard Ly~
man, who came to America in 1630. ~Ir. Lyman received his edu-
cation in the public schools and at \Villiston Seminary, in East-.
hampton. At the age of fourteen his father died, and he, with th('
assistance of his mother and older brother, carried on the New
England farm.
In 1850 Mr. Lyman landed at Taylor's Falls. Minn., re111ainin~
a year and a half, after which he returned to his old home in Massa-
chusetts. In the spring of 1853 he again set his face toward the
west, landing at St. Anthony, Minn. Here he purchased -an ox
team, a wagon and some lumber, and drove west, landing on the
afternoon of May 18th at the present site of the Lyman home-
stead, in Chanhassen, Carver Co., Minn. He set up the few boards
he had brought with him against his wagon and called that home.
Shortly after he built a log house of tamarack. broke land and
raised vegetables,' grain, etc. He returned to ~Iassachusetts in the
fall of 1855, and was married to Martha C. Pomeroy, of Southamp-
ton, April 13, 1856.
M'r. and Mrs. Lyman now came west to try their fortunes in the
new territory, taking up housekeep~ng in the little log house, pre-
viously built by Mr. Lyman.
Many wilt remember ~-Ir. .Lyman as.bein~ postmaster for a num-
I
82 MINNESOTA STATE HORTlCrLTCRAL SO<'IETY.
ber of years, having one of the first postoffices in Carver county.
He was clerk of the first election held in this section of the coun-
try.
Mr. Lyman was very much interested in fruit growing. He
probably planted the first apple tree in Carver county, bringing
with him six small apple trees and seeds, which were planted in
the spring of' 1853. These trees not being adapted to Minnesota
climate were killed in the winter of 1856.
In the year r867 he planted seeds from apples of hardier varie-
ties, originating many valuable seedling trees, one of which, the
Lyman's Prolific" has a spread of over forty feet, and has borne
as much as thirty bushels of fruit at one time. From U\Vealthy"
seeds that he planted in 1876 there are now g-rowing many
varieties of large type of apples of good quality, which have cap~
tured leading prizes at the state fair and winter m _'etings of the
State Horticultural Society for a number of ycars. :\Iany varietie:;
are good keepers.
He was also very much interested in the growing of evergrecns,
having one of the best evergreen windbreaks in the country. !\iany
evergreens of his early setting tower over fifty feet high.
l\lr. Lyman is survived by his wife and three sons, Albert H.,
and Frank J., of Excelsior, and Arthur fl., at the old homestead.
He was a devoted Christian, being an active member of the Con-
gregational church of Excelsior, of which he had been a member
since its organization.
Mr. Lyman became a member of this society in 1891. and the
same year a society trial station was located on his grounds, whkh
he continued to operate as superintendent, making annual report
thereof till his death. In 1900 he was appointed treasurer of the
society for that year, but declining re-election, his son, Arthur B.,
w~s elected his successor and still continues to hold the office.
As a horticulturist, Mr. Lyman has left a most honorable record,
and the good he did in the direction of creating a pomology adapt-
ed to this comparatively new country will undoubtedly perpetuate
his name long after those who knew him personally have 'passed
away. We honor and love him, and his memory is that of one who
fought well the battle of life and achieved success in its highe3t
sense.
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