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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Wanderlust









Wanderlust

                                                               
                                                                 
   AWOL! Adventurer. Good Character. Handsome. Naturalized Citizen. Homesteader. Industrious. Motorman. These attributes describe my great-great-uncle Reinhart Fermazin.
   Reinhart was born on January 28, 1875 in Godziwy, Schubin, Posen, Prussia. He immigrated to America as an infant with his mother Carolina Hartwig and his sister Bertha. 
   Reinhart’s life was adventuresome as an adult. In 1898, Reinhart enlisted in the Spanish American War in Evanston, Wyoming. His military service occurred in Fort San Felipe, Manila, Philippine Islands.  During his time in Manila, he served three times in the brig with ten days of hard labor and court martialed. He was discharged on July 28, 1899. After his court martials and infractions, he mustered out at the Presidio in San Francisco with “service honorable and faithful, character good.”
   In 1903, he married his first wife, Sharlot Wittelsbach, who died of consumption a year later. Two years after her death, Reinhart married Lillian Ryland. In 1908, Reinhart obtained a one hundred sixty-acre homestead in Lemmon, Perkin, South Dakota where he built a twelve by sixteen foot sod house with a lumber floor and roof, three windows, one door and a five foot by six foot cellar under the house. He drilled a twenty-seven foot deep well on the property and built a chicken coop and a sod barn with a pole roof. He planted seventy box elders around the perimeter. During the first year, he planted corn and potatoes, harvesting fifteen bushels of corn and twenty-five bushels of potatoes. 
  
  By 1920, he moved back to Chicago where he obtained work as a motorman for the Chicago Surface Railway Company. In 1931at the age of fifty-six, after Lillian’s death and twenty-four years of marriage, Reinhart married a young, Slavic, woman, twenty-one years old, named Anna. They lived in Chicago for the remainder of his life.
He did indeed live an adventuresome life, AWOL in the armed services, suspected AWOL on his homestead and skirting the law on a few occasions. He was a fascinating guy! You can only help but love him. 
Link: http://creativegene.blogspot.com/2012/03/carnival-of-genealogy-115th-edition.html
Link: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nancysheritage/index.htm