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Adam Kuentz

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Adam Kuentz

Birth
Zwingenberg, Kreis Bergstraße, Hessen, Germany
Death
14 Nov 1942 (aged 98)
Colby, Clark County, Wisconsin, USA
Burial
Colby, Clark County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Source: Colby Phonograph (Colby, Clark County, Wis.) Thursday, 19 Nov. 1942
Adam Kuentz, the oldest resident of the city of Colby and a resident of Clark county for 72 years, died Saturday night at 8:45 o'clock at the home of his son in law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schwierske, in Colby, at the age of 98 years, bronchial pneumonia being the cause of his departure to the distant shore.
Funeral services were held at the Lulloff Funeral Home in Colby on Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 18, at 1:30 o'clock and at the Zion Ev. Lutheran church at 2:00 o'clock, Rev. O. Hoffmann officiating, and internment was made in the Colby cemetery. Pall bearers were H. W. Reeves, Walter Wiersig, C. W. Whitney, E. A. Fleischauer, Oscar Dix and Carl Sabler. Those in charge of the flowers were Mrs. Albert Dins, Mrs. Fred Kobs, Miss Martha Kloehn and Miss Edna Kobs.
Out of town people here for the funeral were Ed Eckoff of Rib Lake and Mrs. Wm. Turner of Phillips.
The deceased was born in Swingenberg, Darmstadt, Germany, on April 2, 1844, and came to the United States with his parents when two years old. He attended the country schools and assisted on his father's farm which, at that time was surrounded with wilderness. Later, he worked in lumber camps. He operated a cheese factory for a number of years before moving to Colby in 1870, when he bought 120 acres of land in Clark county. In 1880 he built a hardware store in Colby which he conducted for 19 years and then sold it to Zillmann Brothers, who, in turn, sold it to Stroota and Stieber, the present owners.
Mr. Kuentz belonged to the Wisconsin Schuetzen Verein and took an active part in its meetings. He won many medals and prizes in sharp-shooting contests, winning the grand prize in the Chicago contest of 1879. He also won many prizes since then at contests in Milwaukee, Chilton, Davenport, Iowa, St. Louis, Mo., and other cities. In 1931, at the age of 87, he participated in the shooting contest at Davenport. He was one of family of 10 children, five of whom reached the age of 90 or more.
He was married in Ashland to Miss Amelia Hildebrandt. The deceased was a member of Zion Ev. Lutheran church of Colby and was well known for his honest dealings and congenial disposition.
Surviving besides his widow are two children, Herbert Kuentz of Madison and Mrs. Schwierske of Colby; a brother, George Kuentz, 96 years old, of Sheboygan Falls, and a grandson, Fredrick Schwierske, who is in the U.S. navy at San Francisco, Calif.
Source: Colby Phonograph (Colby, Clark County, Wis.) Thursday, 19 Nov. 1942
Adam Kuentz, the oldest resident of the city of Colby and a resident of Clark county for 72 years, died Saturday night at 8:45 o'clock at the home of his son in law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schwierske, in Colby, at the age of 98 years, bronchial pneumonia being the cause of his departure to the distant shore.
Funeral services were held at the Lulloff Funeral Home in Colby on Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 18, at 1:30 o'clock and at the Zion Ev. Lutheran church at 2:00 o'clock, Rev. O. Hoffmann officiating, and internment was made in the Colby cemetery. Pall bearers were H. W. Reeves, Walter Wiersig, C. W. Whitney, E. A. Fleischauer, Oscar Dix and Carl Sabler. Those in charge of the flowers were Mrs. Albert Dins, Mrs. Fred Kobs, Miss Martha Kloehn and Miss Edna Kobs.
Out of town people here for the funeral were Ed Eckoff of Rib Lake and Mrs. Wm. Turner of Phillips.
The deceased was born in Swingenberg, Darmstadt, Germany, on April 2, 1844, and came to the United States with his parents when two years old. He attended the country schools and assisted on his father's farm which, at that time was surrounded with wilderness. Later, he worked in lumber camps. He operated a cheese factory for a number of years before moving to Colby in 1870, when he bought 120 acres of land in Clark county. In 1880 he built a hardware store in Colby which he conducted for 19 years and then sold it to Zillmann Brothers, who, in turn, sold it to Stroota and Stieber, the present owners.
Mr. Kuentz belonged to the Wisconsin Schuetzen Verein and took an active part in its meetings. He won many medals and prizes in sharp-shooting contests, winning the grand prize in the Chicago contest of 1879. He also won many prizes since then at contests in Milwaukee, Chilton, Davenport, Iowa, St. Louis, Mo., and other cities. In 1931, at the age of 87, he participated in the shooting contest at Davenport. He was one of family of 10 children, five of whom reached the age of 90 or more.
He was married in Ashland to Miss Amelia Hildebrandt. The deceased was a member of Zion Ev. Lutheran church of Colby and was well known for his honest dealings and congenial disposition.
Surviving besides his widow are two children, Herbert Kuentz of Madison and Mrs. Schwierske of Colby; a brother, George Kuentz, 96 years old, of Sheboygan Falls, and a grandson, Fredrick Schwierske, who is in the U.S. navy at San Francisco, Calif.


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