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The sweet spring still flows it's crystal waters after all these
years - and what a benediction it must have been that day in 1874!
As he stooped to drink, young Jacob G. Heim must have felt in
his bones that it would be an everlasting source. It was to be a
summer of drought in '74, you know, and in the new raw land water
was everything.
The ninth son Benjamin, they'd left under the sod in Pennsylvania
and two more, Solomon and Mary, were to die that fall of '74 of
diphtheria and be buried in the little cemetery down the road. During
the next dozen years, other individuals and families from Pennsylvania,
all of them related to each other, moved into the vicinity and came
to be known as the Pennsylvania Colony of Nebraska.
And now, one hundred years later, old Jacob himself and Regina,
as well as many of their progeny and others among the Pennsylvanians,
lie buried in what is called the "Heim Cemetery."
Old Jacob died in 1914, Regina six years later, and it was in
that year, 1920, that the "colony" met for a family picnic
and reunion that was to be the first of such events held each year
since that time. The 1974 reunion marked the centennial of the arrival
of Jacob, Regina, et al. The day's registry listed 265 souls from
17 states, plus Manitoba, Canada, including 14 from Pennsylvania,
11 from Montana, others from Michigan, Maryland, Indiana, Iowa,
New Mexico, Oregon, California, New York, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri,
Arizona, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Nebraska.
They came to the very spot where Jacob had cast his family's lot,
hard by the sweet spring, and picnicked under the towering trees
on the slope fronting the house he built there. It was Sunday, bright
and pleasant, save for the aridity, itself a centennial reminder
of the drought young Jacob knew. The summer of 1974 knew drought,
too. The sear native grass crumbled underfoot.
Arthur and Lucile Heim live there now; having added somewhat to
the 10-room frame house Jacob built, and harnessed the spring for
their daily needs. But the place retains much of its original character,
including the stonewalls of the basement where the original family
first lived. Arthur, is the son of Jonathan, who in 1883 married
Louisa Shafer. This couple raised a family of six children. After
Jacob and Regina moved to a house in nearby Dawson in about 1910,
Jonathan's family remained on the home place. Jonathan died in 1934,
Louisa in 1937.
Arthur still farms the original cropland and honoring his forebears,
keeps the house, barns, sheds and grounds clean and spiffy. Inside
a freshly painted red barn are old wooden plows his grandfather
wrestled. Bunches of onions hang in a shed to dry. Racks of sawn
wood are neatly stacked. An old dinner bell has new paint.
The spring's overflow is piped into a ditch at the foot of the
slope. Cups hang there for the thirsty. The water is cold.
The centennial reunion, as all reunions, was mostly for visiting,
reminiscing, identifying individuals as belonging to this or that
family, and heavy eating. This was the largest of all the family
affairs, other reunions at other locations in the vicinity in past
years having averaged about 125 persons.
The kids were fascinated by an old player piano, brought over
by Bob Williamson of nearby Humboldt, and pumped out "It's
Three O'clock in the Morning" and kindred tunes throughout
the afternoon.
With much coaxing, master of ceremonies Ron Heim of Dawson, Arthur's
cousin, finally got the satiated diners lined up in front of the
house for a group photograph.
The business meeting followed. Families were asked to identify
themselves. The secretary read the 'statistics" - the families'
record of births, marriages and deaths during the past year. It
was determined that the oldest person on hand was 89, the youngest
23 days. Frances Heim Whited, a Dawson native, came the longest
distance - 2000 miles from Newport, Oregon, where she is a high
school teacher.
The Pennsylvania group presented a painting of the old meetinghouse
at Blooming, Grove, Pa. It was in Lycoming County, Pa., that Jacob
G Heim, third child of Gottlieb and Margaret Staiger Heim, was born
June 15, 1832. His parents had come from Germany in 1804, Gottleib
to avoid conscription into foreign military service.
Not much is known of young Jacob's childhood, but when he was
8 he helped his father build a log cabin on a new land near Loyalsock
Creek, Pa. They were the first family to move away from the original
settlement of Blooming Grove when land there was all taken. In 1840,
the family moved to a new home seven miles away.
Jacob and Regina Gross were married in 1856 and lived with his
parents a year until he could build a house of their own about 60
rods up stream. Here, their first nine children were born. As the
children grew, Jacob knew there was not enough land in the vicinity
for them to have farms of their own and it worried him. In 1870,
one David Vetter returned home, Jacob came with him to Nebraska
to see for himself and fell in love with the land.
Returning east, he wanted to sell out and move west immediately,
but it was four years before he could do so. Finally, in early 1874,
the family, including Jacob's parents came west by train to Atchison,
Kansas, thence to Rulo, Nebraska where Jacob rented a house. He
bought a team and wagon in Falls City and set out with Vetter to
find land to buy.
A mile north of Dawson, they came on an 80-acre farm for sale
by Thomas Fenton. The house was small and poorly built, but there
was that spring and it caught Jacob's eye. A deal was made. He began
building the 10-room house in August and the family moved into the
basement.
The drought limited the first corn crop to half a wagon box of
nubbins, but the first wheat crop was good. The family grew up with
the years and so
Joseph married Rosa Heim; Sarah married Emanuel Ulmer; Samuel married
Elizabeth Heim; Jonathan married Louisa Shafer; Rebecca married
Jacob S. Heim; Sophia married Martin D. Ulmer; Maggie (born in Nebraska)
married Thomas Wuster
.etc
etc
etc.
Which brings us down to the centennial reunion and 265 persons
posing for a photograph. No. 264. One lad about 7 who said his name
is Kent Knudson - how'd a Knudtson get in there? - was down on his
all fours at the bottom of the slope at the time drinking from old
Jacob's spring.
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