Sturm (and Garner) Family Narratives
FAMILY NARRATIVES
by Harlan Sturm


with the help of Linda Bowser, Robin Mosier, Laurence Weaver, Brett Berry and Carolyn Glaspy Landson

Jump to:
Henry Sturm Sr.
Henry Sturm Jr.
George Dalrymple Sturm
Henry E. Sturm
Oather Amos Sturm
Job Garner
Samuel Garner


HENRY (SR.) STURM and ELIZABETH WEAVER STURM

Henry Sturm Sr. was born in Virginia (Colony) in 1757. His people would have been farmers, perhaps having immigrated a few years before Henry was born. In Undaunted Courage Stephen E. Ambrose has a handy paragraph concerning the difference between English and German farmers in eighteenth-century Virginia:

"German immigrants, farming in the Shenandoah Valley, had a much different relationship with the land from that of the planters of English stock. The Germans had not received huge grants of land from the English king or the royal governor; they had bought their land, in relatively small holdings. Coming from a country with a tradition of keeping the farm in the same family for generations, even centuries, they were in it for the long haul, not for quick profit. They cleared their fields of all trees and stumps, plowed deep to arrest erosion, housed their cattle in great barns, used manure as fertilizer, and practiced a precise scheme of crop rotating. They worked with their own hands, and their help came from their sons and relatives. No overseer, indentured servant or slave--men with little interest in the precious undertaking of making a family farm, was allowed near their fields." (Ambrose p. 33, footnote to John Hammond Moore, Albemarle: Jefferson's County, 1727-1926 Univ. Press of Virginia, 1976.)

Although we are not sure about his parents, it is possible he had a sister Sarah Sturm who married Henry Weaver (1750-1802), brother of wife Elizabeth whom he married in 1786 at the age of 29. At the time of her marriage, she was 21, the daughter of Christopher Weaver and Elizabeth Anna Lintzin. She (Elizabeth) was born in Germantown, PA in 1765. They lived initially in West Virginia where their first son was born in 1786 (Matthias), after which they moved to Kentucky where Nicholas Sturm was born (1788) as was Henry Sturm (Jr.), born in Mason, Co, Kentucky (1791). In 1793, still in Kentucky, twins were born (Margaret and Elizabeth) followed by Jacob Sturm in 1799. Henry's brother in law, Henry Weaver reports that he, Henry Sturm (Storm) and William Weaver leased the south end of James Ralph's plantation in 'Canetocky'. They were 'to Cleare and Improve as they see fit for there own profit Said tennents is to heave Six Crops from the date hereof'. But on Jan. 7, 1796 the two Henrys transferred their right and title of the lease to William Weaver and Adam Allan. By 1807, four years after Ohio was admitted to the Union, the family had moved to Clark County, Ohio (with 8 yr. old twins, Henry age 16, Nicholas age 21) where Ephraim (b. 1807), twins George and John (1813) were born. Matthias, Nicholas and Henry all served in the war of 1812. Henry is listed as owning land in Shelby County Ohio before 1822.

Notes in the History of Shelby County, Ohio report that "The first family who attempted to establish a home in the dense forest of Green Township were Henry Sturm and family," (p. 178). At that time, Henry was 57 and Elizabeth would have been 47. Henry soon became central to the early settlement, served as Justice of the Peace in 1820, having been a trustee of the town. There is an anecdote of the travails of one Allen S. Forsyth and his quest to find his real father. Having been living as a runaway child, "He stopped at a house, and asked to stay over night. The man asked him his name, and where he was going. He told him his name, and that he was goijng to find his father in Sidney. The man told him hsi father did not live in Sidney, but had moved on to a farm. this man was Henry Sturm, of Green Township. He took the boy in, kept him all night, and the next day (as it was rainy). The following day Mr. Sturm took his horse, and told the boy he would go with him, as there was no rroad and was woods all the way. Mr. Sturm went with the boy to within sight of home, when he left him." The concentration of Sturms in Ohio has left a mark, aside from the numberous descendants. There is a Sturms Creek, and even a Sturm Cemetery near the land of Henry and his descendants.

There are indications that Ephraim was a troubled child, such that Henry, in his will gives him only a third of that given to other heirs "on account of His Disobedience to me as a Child." Henry's will is 1829, he died on June 14, 1832 (age 75) and Elizabeth eight years later on April 4, 1840 (also 75), both in Green Township, Shelby County, Ohio. By 1835 some of the family had moved to Stark Co. Illinois to take advantage of a federal land grant for veterans of the war of 1812. Many stayed behind in Ohio, others to Illinois and westward. Concentrations of the descendants of Henry and Elizabeth are in Kansas, Iowa, California, Montana, Washington and of course, Illinois.


HENRY (JR.) STURM and CATHERINE DALRYMPLE STURM

Henry Sturm Jr. was born in Mason Co., Kentucky in 1791, while his father and Henry Weaver were working land there. Kentucky became the fifteenth state in the Union June 1, 1792. They moved shortly after 1796, back to Shelby County, Ohio. Henry married Catherine Dalrymple in 1814 when he was twenty three and she was twenty. She was born in South Carolina Feb. 5, 1795, daughter of George Dalrymple and Ann Miller. Henry Jr. was appointed Constable of Perry Township in Shelby County, Ohio on April 6, 1818 by the trustees of the town, a group which included his father, Henry Sr. The pair had eleven children: George Dalrymple Sturm (1816); Peter Sturm (1817); Rebecca Sturm (1818); William Henry Sturm (who died, killed in battle in 1862) soon after moving to Shelby, Co. Ohio in 1822 where father Henry and mother had lived since 1807); Isaac Sturm (1824); Elizabeth Sturm (1827); Abner J. Sturm (1830); Catherine Sturm (1832) the same year grandfather Henry Sturm died; Nancy Sturm (1834); Margaret J. Sturm (1838, Ohio); and finally Rachel Sturm born (1841) in Stark Co. Illinois where the family had moved around 1836, Henry at the age of 45, Catherine 41. The move of the Sturms to Illinois went in phases, and since Matthias Nicholas and Henry all fought in the war of 1812, they were eligible for federal land in Stark County, Ill. The federal land records show several purchases of land by Henry (2); his son Isaac, John T (Ephraim's son); Joseph (Nicholas' son); Lervis (Lewis?, Nicholas' son); Mathias and Matthias (5) and Nicholas (6) as well as Nicholas II (1) who bought a school in 1836. The election there in August of 1834 saw the name of one Lewis Sturm(s) added to this lists, since he seems to be the first of the Sturm men to settle in Stark County, Illinois. He was about twenty two years old, and he is probably responsible for bringning the rest of the family. By by the county election in August of 1836, of the fifty four votes polled, thirty one were new, including the names of Henry Sturm(s), Mathias Sturm(s) and Henry Seeley among others. Lewis Sturm is assumed to be Henry's nephew, son of Nicholas. The Stark County Illinois census for 1850 lists Henry Sturm, age 58, a farmer, his wife Catharine, age 55, daughter Nancy, 16, Margaret age 12, Rachel age 9 and Lydia P. Phenix age six. His son George D. Sturm is also listed with his family, as well as brother Matthias Sturm Sr. (age 65), Henry Seeley Sturm, age 41, Samuel Sturm (37) Peter, Simon, Abner, and Matthias Sturm Jr. are also listed as heads of families. In Stark County and its Pioneers the Sturms are remembered, many had for a time recorded their last name with an 's':

"The Sturms family had some of them reached Seele's Point in 1834 and detachments continued to arrive from time to time, making claims near the south part of Osceola Grove, till they had a settlement of their own. They were regular frontier's men, every one "mighty hunters:" of tall stature, combining strength and activity in an unusual degree. Wearing an Indian garb of fringed bucksins, their feet encased in mocasins, with bowie knife at the belt and rifle on the shoulder; no wonder many a new comer started from them in affright, supposing they had encountered genuine "scalpers." But these men were by no means as savage as they seemed, but had hearts to which friend or stranger never appealed in vain. Very many old settlers yet remember they got their first slice of meat from a Sturm's pork barrel, their first meal of corn or potatoes from their fields. An as early as 1836 they had horses, cows, and hogs to sell, and in this way aided others not so well provided." (p. 32-33).

The family of Matthias and his son Henry Seeley Sturm is remembered prominently in the history of Stark Co. Illinois. Of Henry Jr. there is only "Besides the large family of Matthias, senior, there was another Henry Sturms, brother of the former, whose children for the most part are residents of Stark County. Of this family, we have even less knowledge." (p. 255 see
complete text). Henry Jr. died at age 77 six years after the death of Catherine who died in 1862 at age 67, both in Elmira, Stark County Illinois.

GEORGE DALRYMPLE STURM and Francis Marion Jordon

George was born in Shelby Co, Ohio Sept. 11, 1816 and married Francis Marion Jordan (b. New York or Vermont, Feb. 9, 1828) in 1844 in Stark County, Illinois. (There is a record of a land purchase on April 8, 1850 in Stark, Co. Illinois.) Their first child Henry E. Sturm was born in Black Hawk Co., Iowa in 1845. They then moved to Missouri where their second child was born, Eldridge George Sturm in 1848. The family returned to Stark Co, Illinois where he was listed as a resident in October 1850, while his sister Catherine lived with them. Born that year was Alonza S. (1850). In the 1850 Stark County census the household listing for George D. Sturm, age 28, a farmer, includes Marion age 21, Henry E age 5, Elbridge G age 2 and Catharine Sturm age 18.George and his son Isaac both record federal land purchases on April 8, 1850. They then moved back to Iowa (Ringgold Co.) where son Abner DeForest Sturm was born (Jan. 22, 1853); Elemial Harvey "Lem" Sturm was born in 1857; Octava Minerva Sturm (Mar., 5, 1861 Vandalia, IA). William Rufus Sturm was born in Maines Grove, Iowa (May 26, 1864). George and Francis moved after that to Osage Co., Kansas where they were recorded in the 1870 census, then to Republic Co., KS for the 1875 census and finally to Long Island, Phillips Co., Kansas in 1893 where George dies.



HENRY E. STURM and Winnie E. Garner Sturm.

Henry E. Sturm (born in Iowa in 1845, died there in 1903) was married to Winnie E. Garner (1846-1910) on May 28th, 1863. Winnie Garner was born April 23, 1846 in Taylor Township, Howard Co. Indiana, daughter of Samuel Garner and Charity (or Chariety as she signed her name) Moon. They were married in Waverly, Iowa, where their first son, Charlton was born. By 1866 they were in Humboldt (Richardson County) Nebraska where their second child Samuel Luther ("Lute") was born (he died Nov. 27, 1924 in Finchford, IA). In August of 1870, the census for Humboldt Neb. lists Henry (age 25), Winnie, (Age 24), Charlotte (Age 11, born Iowa) and Samuel (age 2, at home). [Charlotte's sex was "m," changed to "f" on the form, could this have been Charlton, age 4? Lemuel Ichabod (spelled 'Ichobud') "Bud" (see photo and Bonnie (from Boniface) Sturm, born in Washington, DC)...Need info: where were they born, where did Henry die, etc. Lemuel (Bud) Sturm was crippled by polio as a young boy, and was Deputy Collector of Customs in Los Angeles. By 1871 the family was in Concordia (Cloud Cty.) Kansas where Oather was born. AAB reports that Winnie had told him that Henry "moved a couple of times to avoid supporting some relatives." A Henry Sturm is credited with donating some stones from his dismantled ice house in Dodge City, Kansas to a church which was built in 1890 or so. In the 1900 census for Union Township in Black Hawk CO, IA, Henry lists himself, age 55, Winnie age 54, and son "Ichobud" (hence "Bud") age 25 as well as a Francis Devol, no relation, age 25, the latter said to be a preacher. Also in the 1900 census in Union Township Samuel L. Sturm lists himself, age 32, wife Emma, age 30, son Henry age 8 and son Dalas (sic), age 4. Winnie Garner died in Finchford in 1911. According to AAB, Henry died in Finchford and Oather came back from North Dakota for the funeral, that would have been 1903. Anna Garner wonders if Henry was related to a George Sturm, born in 1853, perhaps the first white child recorded in Maynes Grove, IA. Records say it was either Isaac Garner or one George Sturm (Franklin Co. IA records.)



OATHER STURM and Lizzie Turner

Oather Amos Sturm was born in Concordia, Kansas in 1871. He married Sarah Elizabeth "Lizzie" Turner on Jan. 15, 1891. Oather was 21 years old, Lizzie was 32. Witnesses to the wedding ceremony were Luther Sturm and Emma Sturm, both were residents of Finchford, IA. Sarah Elizabeth (1857-1940) was a school teacher originally from Wisconsin, Oather was her student. She is listed in the 1880 census as a teacher and boarder, 18 yrs. old in Union Township, Black Hawk County, Iowa. She was eleven years older than Oather was (Lloyd Sturm). Their first child, Max was born in 1891 while they lived in Finchford, IA followed by Porter Leroy, Irvin Noble, and Kenneth who was born in nearby Shell Rock, IA (Woodbury County). Oather owned and operated a butchershop in Shellrock IA, near Finchford with Ed Ralya (AAB). Shortly after 1900, the family moved to Hillsboro, N.D. where the twins (Cle and Lee) were born. Hillsboro was settled after 1869 by German settlers who found it after its discovery by a survey team, then by Norwegians who came at the recommendation of a native American guide. In Hillsboro, Oather farmed, and at one point owned a pool hall (FDS says combination fruit stand and pool hall, LS says beer and pool hall). AAB reports that Max helped farm the Sturm land as a young boy and has a story about a ruined crop due to a hailstorm. The Sturms could not have stayed in Hillsboro long, since Duane reports that Oather and Max fought the big fire near Libby, MT in 1910. The twins' school record shows them to have moved during the summer of 1909 from Hillsboro to Kalispell, MT. After North Dakota, they moved to Valley View Montana (near Polson) where they homesteaded. CCL reports Oather, Lizzie and three sons (Cleon, Leland [both 18], and Ken age 23) in the 1920 census in Tacoma WA. Both Ken and Oather worked for public transportation in Tacoma.

At one point they moved to Nisqually WA where Oather once again owned a butcher shop (and kept cattle on an island in the river--FDS), later to return to Montana--Kalispell (where he built a house) then to Polson. Oather was the Sheriff (or night watchman) at the Polson Dam while it was under construction, later moving in with Cle in Polson. LS reports that Lizzie had a stroke in her 60's which left her without the use of one leg an arm, but she managed by using a high stool around. FDS lived with Oather and Lizzie in Polson MT for a year. LS reports Oather to be a "very big" man, about 6-3 or 4 and about 300 lbs. AAB calls him "little guy" in gest. LS reports that Oather sang some German songs, but would only smile when asked what they meant. Lizzie's brother Henry who also homesteaded in Valley View. (Uncle Henry Turner to both FDS and LS). Henry's son Alvin (never married) had several original paintings of Bill Russell. Alvin, Henry, and Henry's wife were buried on their ranch. HS remembers Oather in Libby in the 40's. Oather died in 1946 visiting son Cle in Spokane, WA. Lizzie died in Polson, MT in 1941.

Note: F. Duane Sturm lived with Oather and Lizzie for a year or year and a half (1932-3), in Polson. (A junior in high school. (He graduated in 1934). He describes her as "small, very English. "Could never understand a joke. Easy going, grandpa could do no wrong. She was a teacher, born in Wisconsin."



JOB(E) GARNER and REBECCA JONES GARNER

Job Garner was born in Tennessee on April 8, 1795. His father Henry Garner and wife Nancy lived in North Carolina until just before Job was born, when they moved to Tennessee with at least three children (Enoch, Vincent and Elizabeth). Born after Job in Tennessee was Nancy and James.) Some of the Garner clan moved to Wayne Co. Indiana where all of Nancy Garner and Issac Adamson's children were born. Job had moved to Clinton County, Ohio, about 1811, where he fought in the war of 1812 (until March 4, 1814) and where he eventually married Rebecca Jones (Sept. 26, 1815). Five of their children were born in Clinton Co, Ohio: John (1816); Henry (1818); Eleanore "Linny" (1821); Samuel (1823). Jobe's father died probably in 1819. The family moved to Wayne Co. Indiana in 1825, where Nancy was born (1826)and on Feb. 8,1828 son Mathias was born, followed by Sarah (1830); James (1835), Allen (1837) and finally Margaret "Mag" (1839), although James, Allen and Margaret were born in Delaware Co rather than Wayne, Co. In 1834 Jobe bought land in Delaware Co. Indiana, near his brother Enoch, both known to be the earliest settlers there.

Son Sam was married in 1845, while the group was still in Indiana, and four of their children were born there. Job, Samuel and others brought their families from Indiana to Iowa in 1853--AAB reports that it was common knowledge that this trip was by covered wagon. Job bought land in Iowa, and at one point sold 40 acres to Hampton, IA so a town could be built ["This beautiful and enterprising city (Hampton) was laid out in 1856, by James B. Reeve, George Ryan and wife, and Job Garner." (History, p. 384). His photo is on display in the Court House and Town Hall.
Jobe Garner and his family figure prominently in The History of Franklin County and it is reported that "The first religious services were held at the house of Mr. Fairchild by Job. B. Garner, who had just come to the township [Reeve] and was anxious to get a claim but was short of means to purchase. Mr. Reeve had an interest in a claim and arranged it so that Job had the claim with the understanding that he was to pay for it in preaching. A meeting was held in the summer of 1853, which nearly everyone in the township attended." (History p. 534.

An anecdote is reported in the History where the families had to move for a few weeks in 1854 due to an "Indian scare." "Van Horn came to Garner's before bedtime and the families immediately set about making preparations for departure. Garner's people had quite a number of chickens and the thrifty housewife concluded that the best method of taking them along was kill, pick, and cook them, which job took nearly all night. The Garner family remained away about three weeks" (pp. 222-3).

Around 1860, Jobe Garner moved to Liberty Township, Grundy County Missouri, but were recorded back in Iowa, Bremer County, in 1870, joining his son Matthias who had a farm north of Finchford. Rebecca dies in 1872, in April. Jobe marries Mary J. Moore a year and a week later. She dies before 1877 when Jobe marries a Martha Taylor, also in Bremer County Iowa. Job dies on October 9, 1879 and is buried in the town cemetery in Finchford, Iowa, near many of his sons and daughters.
Quotes from History thanks to Bob Woods. See also the Chronology of Jobe's life by Darell Garner.



SAMUEL GARNER and CHARITY MOON GARNER

Samuel Garner (1823-1903) married Charity Moon (d. 1911), daughter of Richard Moon and Sarah Hockett in Howard County, Indiana on June 28, 1845. Moon is probably one of the variant spellings of the German Mohen or Moen. At the time of his marriage he was 21. The family moved, with Jobe Garner, to a farm near Waverly Junction, Iowa then in about 1871 moved to just west of Finchford, Iowa. Apparently, a large group moved to that section of Iowa and spent the first winter in what is now known as Maynes Grove. AAB reports that the group came with teams of horses and covered wagons, with his father, the patriarch of the family, Job Garner and his wife Rebecca Jones. Samuel and Charity's first four children (Winnie, Amos, Thomas and James Mathias were all born in Howard Co. Indiana. After the birth of James Mathias Garner (March, 1853) they moved to Iowa. Isaac was born in January of 1855 in Hampton, Franklin Co. Iowa as were Mary Ellen and Justice ("Jet" b. 1859). Isaac is reported by some to be the first "white" child born in this county. Their last child, Lucinda Jane was born in December of 1864, during the Civil War, in Stringtown, IA. LB reports that Sam Garner was a shoemaker and that he owned 80 acres in IA. Sam Garner was 80 when he died, and he is buried in Finchford, Iowa. Here is an account from 1886 (thanks to Linda Bowser):

"Samuel Garner was born in Clinton County, Ohio, July 27, 1823 and when a child his parents moved to Indiana where he was reared to manhood in Delaware County. When he was nineteen years old his parents removed to Howard County, Indiana and in 1853 he came with them to Franklin County, Iowa. The parents a few years later removed to Missouri, but subsequently returned to Iowa, where the father died in Bremer County, the mother dying at Shell Rock, Butler County, this state. Samuel commenced life for himself in Howard County, working at the shoemakers trade which he had previously learned. He has made farming his principal avocation through life, his first purchase of land being eighty acres which he obtained from the government. He worked at his trade day and night till he had his land paid for, when he commenced to improve his land on which he built a log house.

He was married in Howard County in June 1845, to Charity Moon, her parents Richard and Sarah (Hockett) Moon dying when she was very young. Her father was a native of Tennessee, but was reared and married in Clinton County, Ohio, where Mrs. Garner was born December 22, 1829, her mother being a native of South Carolina. Her parents finally settled in Howard County, Indiana, where they lived till their death. To Mr and Mrs. Garner have been born eight children- Winnie married Henry Sturm of Finchford, Black Hawk County. Amos married Esther Sevell and is living in Waverly, Bremer County: Thomas married Mary A. Gonis and is living in Mills County, Iowa: James M. married Phila Foster, living in Finchford: Isaac F., at home: Mary E. wife of Enoch Boyd, of Finchford: Justus M. married Rachel Sharp and is living in Finchford and Lucy J., wife of William J. Ballentine, of Union township.

Samuel Garner was born in the same house as his father and is of English descent. His grandfather, John Jones, immigrated to New York from England in an early day and was a Quartermaster in the Revolutionary War. Samuel Garner was a son of Job Garner and a grandson of Henry Garner. In politics he affiliates with the Republican party. He is a member of the Christian church. He is now engaged in farming in Union township, Black Hawk County, where he is the owner of 130 acres of land on sections 8 and 9."

The previous is from the History of Black Hawk County written in 1886.



Key:

AAB: Amos A. Ballentine (see
correspondence)
FDS: Frances Duane Sturm
HS: Harlan Sturm
LS: Lloyd Sturm
LB: Linda Bowser
AG: Anna Garner
CCL: Carolyn Glaspy Lansdon