I recently came across two short newspaper articles from the
Aberdeen Daily News in May of 1915 about the death and funeral of my Grandma
Wilkins’ grandfather, whose name was Michael Ryman. He died in Warner
Township, Brown
County, South Dakota, where he
had settled in 1885. He was called one
of the pioneers and early settlers of the county. It is the same county where Grandma Wilkins was born
and not far from where Mom was born.
He’d been born in Switzerland
in August of 1835. His name before
coming to the United States
was Melchior Reimann, but that was anglicized once he got here. In Switzerland
he married Magdalena Bossely in 1861 and then two years later came to the United
States.
The first place he lived was in Sullivan County, New York and then moved
on to South Dakota in 1885.
The newspaper headline was "Apoplexy Cause of Pioneer's Death." He had eleven children
(nine of whom were still alive at his death), thirty-five grandchildren and, at
that point in time, four great grandchildren. His son Will Ryman was Grandma
Wilkins’ father. This was the first information I’ve come
across about Michael Ryman, other than a few dates, so I thought it was
interesting to find out. If anyone
happens to know more about him, please make a comment.
4 comments:
That's really cool. Is he in any of the really old photos we have hanging in the spare room upstairs?
Mike this is very interesting, I had always heard that Grandma's heritage was Swiss and German but with this information it looks like all Swiss. Also interesting to know you were given his first name. Did mom ever mention this? So from what you have found between both sides of the family I would think the strongest lineage we have would be English and Swiss
Ed,
Grandma's line was Swiss (Ryman) and German (Zell). Grandpa's was English (Wilkins) and German (Sitzmann), so the German predominates.
I realize this post is quite old now, but I have a lot of info on the Rymans that descended from Melchior. Someone gave me a family portrait of his family a few years ago, let me know if I can help you out. (I descend from his son John Casper Ryman)
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