Windh/Freise/Maurstad genealogy - Person Sheet
Windh/Freise/Maurstad genealogy - Person Sheet
NameCaroline
Misc. Notes
George Smith and Caroline were married in Illinois had lived in the Galena area, where they had three children named Alf, Leo and Blanche. George died before long, so Caroline married a man named Bachenkeller who already had several children. Together they had one more child, Carrie.

In about 1902 Bachenkeller and Caroline homesteaded in South Dakota, eight miles north and one mile west of Groton. Before long, Bachenkeller and his children left Caroline and her children and disappeared, never to return.

Leo Smith soon took over farming that property, and by the late 1930s, his son Orval was living there. By then, Leo had moved to another farm on the same section of land, on hiway #37 some 8.5 miles north of Groton. As small farms there have been bought up by bigger operators, Leo’s farmstead has now completely disappeared. The trees were cut, the buildings removed and the entire farmstead plowed over, leaving no trace of Leo and Maisie’s many happy years there.
Spouses
Deathca 1902, died in Illinois
Misc. Notes
George Smith and Caroline were married in Illinois had lived in the Galena area, where they had three children named Alf, Leo and Blanche. George died before long, so Caroline married a man named Bachenkeller who already had several children. Together they had one more child, Carrie.

In about 1902 Bachenkeller and Caroline took over a farm in South Dakota which had been homesteaded by a family named Hughes. it may have been homesteaded under the Tree Claim Act, hence someone had planted 40 acres of trees to the north of the buildings. That farm was eight miles north and one mile west of Groton. Bachenkeller and his children eventually left Caroline and her children and disappeared, never to return.

As a young man, Leo Smith took over farming that property, and by the late 1930s, his son Orval was married and living there. Leo had moved to another farm on the same section of land, on hiway #37 some 8.5 miles north of Groton. As small farms there have been bought up by bigger operators, Leo’s farmstead has now completely disappeared. The trees were cut, the buildings burned or razed and the entire farmstead plowed over, leaving no trace of Leo and Maisie’s many happy years there.
ChildrenAlf (1880-)
 Leo John (1892-1980)
Last Modified 11 Mar 2016Created 15 Nov 2024 using Reunion for Macintosh