Plymouth County >> 1917 Index

History of Plymouth County, Iowa
Indianapolis, Ind.: B. F. Bowen, 1917

D


William H. Deegan

Many of the farmers of Plymouth county were born in other states or foreign countries and have later come to this state, where they have met with success in farming as well as other lines of industry.  Among them is William H. Deegan, who was born in Jo Daviess county, Illinois, on January 24, 1862, and is the son of Michael and Ellen (Perryman) Deegan.  Michael and Ellen Deegan were born in the county of Kings, Ireland, and came to the United States with their parents, who located in Jo Daviess county, where the children were educated, grew to manhood and womanhood, and were later married.  Michael Deegan engaged in farming as a young man and he and his wife continued to live in Illinois until 1886, when they came to Iowa and established their home on a farm in section I, Elgin township, Plymouth county.  It was on this farm that the parents continued to live engaged in farming until their deaths.  The father died some years ago at the age of sixty-four years.  They were devout members of the Catholic church and were well known throughout the county and were held in high regard by all who knew them.

Michael and Ellen Deegan were the parents of the following children: Kate, Mary, William H., James J., J.F. and Ellen.  Kate died while the family lived in Illinois; Mary is the wife of Ed Fitzpatrick of Le Mars; James J. and J. F. are farmers in Elgin township; Ellen is the wife of Mike King, of Sioux City, Iowa.

William H. Deegan attended school in Illinois and later came to Iowa with his parents.  Soon after his arrival in Plymouth county he engaged in general farming in section I, Elgin township, for himself.  After four years he came to his present farm in section 12, known as the Hingby place.  Here he has done much in the way of development and has erected all the buildings now on the place.

In 1882 William H. Deegan was united in marriage to Kate Quinlan, of Grant county, Wisconsin, and the daughter of Nicholas Quinlan and wife, who were natives of Ireland, and who later came to the United States and located in Wisconsin, where they passed the remaining days of their lives.  To Mr. and Mrs. Deegan the following children have been born: Roy, Minnie, John, Joseph, Nellie, Florence, Margaret, William and Cecelia, all of whom are at home.  They all received their education in the home schools and at Sioux City.

Mr. Deegan is still engaged in general farming and stock raising and has a fine herd of Shorthorn cattle, many Duroc-Jersey hogs and some fine draft horses.   He has always taken much interest in local affairs and is identified with the Democratic party.  For many years he was a member of the local school board, and served his township as clerk and as trustee and was for six years a member of the county board of supervisors, being chairman of the organization.  He and his wife are devout members of the Catholic church and have long been prominent in the social life of the township.

As a farmer and stock man Mr. Deegan is recognized as one of the successful and substantial men of the county.  He now has two hundred and forty acres of land in the home place and one hundred and sixty acres in section I, Elgin township.   He is thoroughly posted on all current events and is well read.  His life has been an active one and because of his ability and excellent judgement, he is often consulted relative to the affairs of the township and county.

Arthur Detloff, a well-known farmer of Elgin township, was born on a farm in section I of that township on July 19, 1894, son of Henry and Pauline (Pech) Detloff, prominent residents of that community, further reference to whom is made elsewhere in this volume. Reared on the home farm in Elgin township, Arthur Detloff received his early schooling in the district school in the neighborhood of his home and supplemented the same by a course in the high school at Le Mars. He began farming with his brother, Henry, and was thus engaged until after his marriage in 1916, when he started farming on his own account and is now farming two hundred and forty acres in Elgin township. In addition to his general farming, Mr. Detloff is feeding about four carloads of cattle annually and one hundred to two hundred hogs and is giving close attention to the live-stock phase of his farming operations.

Mr. and Mrs. Detloff have a very pleasant home and give proper attention to the general social activities of the community in which they live. Mr. Detloff is a Republican and takes a good citizen's interest in the civic affairs of the county.

Henry Detloff

The late Henry Detloff, for years one of the best-known pioneer farmers and stockmen of Plymouth county and one of the most extensive landowners in Elgin township, was a native of Germany, but had been a resident of this country since 1869 and of Plymouth county since 1876. He came to this country, a poor German boy, practically empty-handed, but by careful management succeeded far beyond the measure of most men and at the time of his death in the fall of 1915 was the owner of eleven hundred acres of excellent land and had long been regarded as one of Plymouth county's most substantial citizens. His widow, who still survives him, is now living at Le Mars, where she is very comfortably situated at her pleasant home at 1401 Eagle street.

Henry Detloff was a Pomeranian, born in the province of Pommern, Prussia, May 12, 1846, son of John and Ricka Detloff, the latter of whom died when he was a small boy. John Detloff was a shepherd in his native Pommern and followed that gentle calling until some time after the death of his wife, when he came to America and settled near Bloomington, Illinois, where he spent the rest of his life farming. To him and his wife five children had been born, of whom but two are now living, Mrs. Ricka Bealah and Mrs. Minnie Ward. Henry Detloff received his schooling in his native land and there early learned the wagon-making trade, which he followed until he entered the army at the age of nineteen. At the end of six months of service he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant and served in that capacity until the completion of the required three years of service. In 1869, shortly after the completion of his military service, Henry Detloff came to the United States and joined his father at Bloomington, Illinois, in the neighborhood of which city he worked as a farm hand until the next spring, when he rented a farm in that vicinity and there remained until 1876, in which year he came to Iowa and settled in Plymouth county, where he spent the remainder of his life. In the meantime, in the summer of 1872, Mr. Detloff had married and upon coming to this county established his home on the quarter section of land he had bought in Elgin township, four and one-half miles north of Le Mars. For that quarter section he paid eight dollars an acre, the same being raw prairie, and he lost little time in breaking the sod and bringing the land under cultivation. Upon taking possession of his new place he built a small two-room house and during his second year there planted a grove. During the dread visitations of the grasshoppers throughout this section he suffered almost total losses, in common with all the other early settlers hereabout, but he had courage and pluck and "stuck to the job", presently beginning to see his way clear, and from that time on prospered in his undertakings. As he prospered he built a new house and substantial farm buildings, brought his farm up to a high standard of cultivation and gradually enlarged his land holdings until he became the owner of eleven hundred acres of excellent land, of which he farmed five hundred and twenty acres, leaving the remainder for a range for his cattle, in which latter line he also became quite successful, long having been regarded as one of the most thrifty stockmen in that part of the county. Mr. Detloff was a Republican and from the time of taking up his residence in this county ever gave his thoughtful attention to local civic affairs, serving for some time as township trustee and for years as director of his local school district. He was one of the active supporters of the German Methodist Episcopal church and for years was a member of the board of trustees of that body. Mr. Detloff died on October 31, 1915, and his passing was widely mourned among his large circle of friends and acquaintances, for he was a good citizen and one of the county's most influential pioneers.

It was on August 24, 1872, at Bloomington, Illinois, that Henry Detloff was united in marriage to Pauline Pech, who was born in Germany, a daughter of Ferdinand and Dora Pech, also natives of that country, who were the parents of five children, Robert, Gus, Ferdinand, Pauline and Augusta. The elder Ferdinand Pech was a millwright in his native land and died there when his daughter, Pauline, was two years of age. In 1871 his widow and the other members of the family came to the United States to join the son, Gus, who had come here some little time before and had settled at Bloomington, Illinois, and it was there that Pauline Pech met and married Henry Detloff. To that union ten children were born, namely: Martha, who married Henry Reints, of Elgin township, this county, and has five children, Henry, William, Carrie, Lena and Minnie; Bertha, who married William Heinrich, of Seney, this county; Matilda, who married Samuel Uthe, of Le Mars; Anna, who married Matt Myers, of Sioux City; Marie, who married Hugh Dailey, of Paullina, in the neighboring county of O'Brien, and has four children, Marion, Robert, James and Kenneth; Dorothea, who married Edward Roecter and has five children, Alton, Dwight, Fred, Pauline and Marjorie; Henry, who married Carrie Durban and has one child, a son Charles; Edward, who married Della Webber and has one child, a son Robert; Arthur, who married Hettie Reints, and Minnie, deceased. Mrs. Detloff, as was her husband, is a member of the German Methodist Episcopal church, and the children were reared in that faith.