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Chase County Sketches


1863 - 2003



Riedell, Lippert and Fisher Families

An Austrian Group

Thomas Riedel - Katie Lippert - Margaret Fisher

By Clara Brandley Hildebrand from information furnished by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Riedel, January 17, 1938

In April, 1883, a party of four people came from Austria to make new homes in America. All came from Asch, the old home of the Rogler family, and all came to the home of Charles Rogler in Chase County, Kansas. In this group were Margaret Fisher, Emasthina Poul, Katie Lippert and Thomas Riedel.

Katie Lippert made her home with Mrs. Len Harsh of Sycamore Springs, while Margaret Fisher and Thomas Riedel stayed on with Mr. Rogler for a number of years. Margaret soon sent for her sister Bertha and her brother Carl, who also made their home with the Roglers.

Margaret now lives in Kansas City, Missouri with her daughter, Mrs. Opal Hill. Bertha married a Mr. Johnson and moved to Minneapolis, Kansas. Carl Fisher who was about fourteen years of age when he came to America, worked as a farmhand and later learned the butchers trade. He and his good wife, Fro Hawley. Fisher now lives in Cassoday, Butler County, Kansas.

Thomas Riedel and his wife Katie Lippert Riedel

Thomas Riedel was born near Asch, Austria, November 19, 1851. Katie Lippert was born in the same neighborhood March 30, 1864. They were married May 4, 1884, a year after they arrived in America.

For five years Thomas Riedel worked for Charles Rogler as a farm hand and then became a renter, farming part of Mr. Rogler's land and living in the stone house on the east side of Southfork for nine years. Then for a few years Mr. Riedel farmed on Corn Creek and on the Newt Richards farm adjoining the Rogler farm on the northeast.

In 1904 Mr. Riedel bought the Christopher Pracht farm on a branch of Little Cedar Creek about four miles east of Matfield Green, and there the family lives today. The Riedels are hardworking, thrifty people. They now have one of the most comfortable small farm homes in the southern part of the county. Besides this, they have raised a family of fine citizens for the state of Kansas.

The Riedel home in the narrow valley in the Flint Hills reminds one of a home in the foothills of some mountain range or of a home in the Highlands. Not large but so complete, so neat, so well stocked and presenting withal a perfect picture of contentment. Here, (1938), Mr. Riedel and his wife Katie still live, Mr. Riedel taking an active part in the farm management, although he has reached the ripe age of eighty-six years. They have always been farm folks and have carved their comfortable home from the Kansas soil by hard labor.

To Thomas and Katie Riedel six children were born, namely:

Leonard born September 10, 1885. He married Alice Miller and now resides on the former Nichol Gosler farm, adjoining that of his father.

Annie born June 9, 1888, died October 23, 1895.

John born June 7, 1891. He married Sadie, daughter of Fred Hull and now lives near Emporia.

Albert born April 19, 1894, died December 13th, the same year.

Henry born July 8, 1900. He married Evie May Weems and now lives on the home farm with his parents. Evie May Weems was raised in the Peabody neighborhood. She was a school teacher and taught in the Matfield Green school for two years.

Adeline born May 24, 1904. She married Lonnie Williams of the Lone Star neighborhood. Both Adeline and Lonnie were school teachers but now live in Emporia where thay have a thriving restaurant business (1938).

The Reidel name was spelled as Mrs. Hildebrand spelled it ''Riedel'' in the old country, but Charles Rogler thought the Reidel spelling of it sounded more American, so they changed it before they were married.

After 1938

Thomas Reidel helped with the yard, splitting wood and digging cactus out of pastures until his death March 23, 1947, at the farm home, from pneumonia and many ruptures.

Katie Reidel made many lovely quilts, helped with canning, cooking, and cleaning, and both helped to care for their grandson. She died at the farm home November 21, 1951 after her grandson had come home from college for Thanksgiving. She had told him she would see him Thanksgiving when he left for college. She died at 2 a.m. after visiting with him the evening before.

Leonard Reidel lived alone after Alice, his wife, (born in 1909), died January 7, 1958 from burns she received at their home. Leonard mowed lawns, fixed mowers and other motors, sharpened many hedge posts for ranchers, worked for Wayne Rogler on the farm, and feeding cattle. He was a good neighbor and friend. Leonard Reidel died June 24, 1970 from a cerebral hemorrhage at Axtell Hospital in Newton, Kansas.

John Reidel was born to Katie Lippert Reidel and Thomas Reidel June 7, 1891 and died January 20, 1984 at a nursing home in Emporia, Kansas from a stroke. He was married to Sadie Hull Reidel June 12, 1918. Sadie was born January 12, 1898. Four children were born to this union:

LaVera Reidel Reust was born June 22, 1919. LaVera was married to Harry Reust May 31, 1946 and had three children, Robert Reust born July 7, 1947; Carolyn born January 30, 1949, and Donald Reust born April 11, 1963.

Estella Reidel Marcotte was born December 13, 1922. Estella was married to Louis Marcotte on February 19, 1945 and had two children: John Marcotte, born July 19, 1947, and Linda Marcotte Newton, born January 24, 1945.

Dorothy Reidel Marcotte was born September 1, 1925. Dorothy was married to Virgil Marcotte on February 3, 1944 and had one son, Virgil Dean, born October 20, 1962.

Una Mae Reidel Kuhn was born January 26, 1931. Una Mae married Elden Kuhn on December 23, 1951 and had two sons: Michael Kuhn, born December 30, 1952, and Ronald Kuhn, born April 11, 1955.

The Henry Reidel, Evie May Weems Family By Euie May Weems Reidel

The Weems family (originally spelled "Wemyss") were of Scotch, English descent, who were owners of 60,000 acres of estates and castles, with Earls and Lords titles in the family. They came to America in 1706 and settled on estates in Maryland and Virginia. In 1825 they migrated to Tennessee near Nashville and Clarksville. My grandfather, Joe Weems, was born in 1843 and died in 1896. There were seven children in his family.

My father, Nute Weems, the oldest, was born on May 16, 1874 and died March 22, 1952. He married my mother Mollie Davis Weems on December 7, 1902, who was Scotch Irish. (I don't know when her ancestors came to Tennessee.) Her parents and grandparents were farmers.

My mother was born October 15, 1882 in Tennessee and died June 17, 1972. There were nine children in her family.

My grandfather Weems had a family of seven children. Philip Van Horn Weems, one of the sons, was Commander in World War I. He invented a navigation system for ships and planes which was patented and sold to the government as the ''Weems System of Navigation' which is still used today. He flew with Lindberg and taught the system to him. He was a Commodore in World War II to get the ships safely across the ocean.

Brigadier General Hatton Weems of the Army, another son, is buried in Arlington Cemetery. He remained a bachelor. He started ''Weemsana" which is a family newspaper, and also set up a scholarship fund for deserving college students, which remains in use today. My father and the rest of the family were farmers and judges.

Evie May Weems Reidel, the daughter of Nute Weems and Mollie Davis Weems, was born September 26, 1910 on a farm near Clarksville, Tennessee. She was the fifth child of a family of seven children.

In 1919 the family moved from Tennessee to the Wilcox farm in Butler County, Kansas. It was a large stone house built in 1885 and later remodeled. It was burned by vandals in the fall of 1983.

It was during the oil boom of Oil Valley that I attended the Wilcox school. After graduation Lonnie and Adaline Reidel Williams taught there for four years and I met Henry Reidel when he came to visit them. After doing college work at Emporia State College, I taught one year at the Wilcox school.

Henry Reidel, born July 8, 1900, and I were married May 29, 1929. I attended summer college and taught another year at the Wilcox school before coming to the Matfield Green school to teach for two years with Mrs. Ida Vinson, a very dear friend. I lived with my parents while teaching in Butler County and commuted.

During the depression, I stayed at home to help on the farm. We lived with Henry's parents. I was called back to teach during World War II and taught three more years while staying with my parents and commuting again.

Henry Reidel had remained at the home of his parents to take care of the farm. Henry Reidel remained on the family farm until his health failed and we moved to Matfield Green where he died at his home March 31, 1974. My mother, Mollie Weems, lived with Henry and me for fifteen years before her death.

Our son, Robert Lee Reidel, was born March 18, 1934. He finished high school at Matfield Green. He went two years to Wichita University and stayed at the Sunset Motel with Lonnie and Adaline Williams. He finished his Electrical Engineer degree at Kansas State University. Robert worked at Boeing in Wichita, Kansas after graduation in 1954. Robert was married to Jeanette Huff on February 6, 1954.

Jeanette was born in Strong City February 12, 1935. They moved to Peabody before she started to kindergarten. Her father, Howard O. Huff, was killed December l, 1947, in a car accident. Her mother Alma, married Felix Jackson, and in 1949 moved back to Matfield Green. She finished high school at Matfield Green, attended Emporia State one semester, and the University of Utah.

Nancy Reidel was born September 29, 1954 in Wichita, to the Robert Reidels, and at seven months of age the family moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota where Robert worked for Honeywell.

Juanita Reidel was born December 6, 1957 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to the Robert Reidels.

After three years the family moved to Salt Lake City, Utah, where he worked for Sperry for seven years. He attended the University of Utah at night while there. They moved to Huntsville, Alabama where he worked for Sperry for fifteen years and on projects at Cape Kennedy, Florida, Seattle, Washington, and White Sands. Robert also attended the University of Alabama at Huntsville.

Nancy Reidel was married to Brian Steven on December 22, 1973. Nancy worked with computers and is now in the Netherlands as a Systems Engineer for Intergraph. She graduated from Calhoun Junior College by going to night school.

Juanita Reidel was married to Nicholas Neville on January 3, 1977, and they live in Birmingham, Alabama. She works as a key punch operator for the University Hospital at Birmingham and is attending the University of Alabama at night on a computer science degree. Nicholas is a supervisor of heating and cooling of the University of Alabama and is a disc jockey of a radio station on weekends.

Robert and Jeanette now live in Las Cruces, New Mexico where he works for the government at White Sands. He also owns land in Chase County, Kansas.



Chase County Submitted Historical Sketches
compiled and abstracted from the Chase County Courant, Chase County Leader, other sources and newspapers
by your Chase County Host, Lorna Marvin.
Please submit your historical sketches.




Chase County Host
Lorna Marvin



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Last updated 11/10/2003
   
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