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The Schnell Brick Yard

The Schnell Brick Yard

The brick yard owned and operated by the Schnell brothers was opened ca. 1890 and had three sheds. They first learned the brick business by working in Weimer’s and later Dominick’s brick yard, located only a half a mile away. Eventually the Schnell yard was taken over by John Schnell, Julia’s husband, and his brother Charles. (It was located at the present sit of the trailer park on Highway 33, on the right side going East.)

As a boy, John Mader can remember kids in the neighborhood working at the brick yard for 17 cents a day which was the going rate at that time. John didn’t know then that the Mader family had been in the brick business.

Andy North recalled working for John, Charlie, and old Schnell. He stayed up nights firing the kilns to keep the brick at a certain temperature. “Those old timers were sharp!” Andy said, “If you missed a firing, John knew it in the morning by the feel of the brick. They really knew their business. Boy, you kept up with the machinery or you got so far behind!”

Helen remembered:

“Dad and Grandfather worked till they were real old because they were the only ones who knew the mixture of the clay – no one else could do it. The consistency of the mud had to be just firm enough and the firing of the kilns at just the right temperature or the brick would crack.”

The brothers John and Charlie stopped making brick during World War II. There was no building going on and all the young men were off to war so they could not get help.

Julia (Boma) Schnell 1884 – 1972

Julia (Boma) Schnell
1884 – 1972

In July of 1884, Julia was born at the Boma home. She attended public school in Shelby township and the Catholic school at La Crosse. When she was 21 years of age, Julia married John Schnell November 21, 1905.

The Schnells were neighbors of the Boma’s. John was born in 1883 the son of Phillip and Helena Schnell who founded the Schnell Bros. Brick Co. with his brother.

In the wedding was Julia’s first cousin, Frank Mader Jr., who gave them an ornamental black and gold shelf clock for a wedding present. (This clock is proudly displayed in the home of Bill Schnell.) After the marriage, John and Julia lived with his father and two unmarried brothers on 15th and Market St. in La Crosse.

John was good looking and Julia was very attractive, a jolly, happy-go-lucky person. Frank Jr. always said, “The Boma girls were the prettiest girls he ever saw in his life!”

Later they moved into the Schnell brick house below the road in State Road Coulee. (Site of the trailer park today.) Two houses belonged to the Schnell Brick Yard. When John’s brother Charles married he lived in the lower house and John and Julia moved into the older brick house above the road. When the boys moved to the brick yard their father moved with them renting out his house in town. John and his brothers worked in the brick yard, eventually taking over when their father got too old.

Julia and John Schnell were the parents of four children; Edwin born in 1910, Helen 1911, Florence 1913, and William 1916. Keeping busy with her own family, Julia also had to keep house for the boarded workers in the brick yard, cooking the meals and doing up the bedding.

The children went to school in the red school house on State Road. Then they had two years at Trinity High School for religious training. “We’d run out to the road and catch a ride to school.” Bill recalls, “The janitor would let us in the boiler room until Mass started. After school we walked home.” John Mader can remember going to a school with a boy called “Brick” Schnell. “Brick” was a name for Edwin.

The boys worked in the brick yard. When John bought Jacob Boma’s 380 acre farm, he sent William who was only 15 years old to run it.

The Mader family all came to Julia and John’s Golden Wedding Anniversary in 1955.

Julia was going to be 88 years old when she died in May of 1972. Her husband John lived only six and a half months longer before he passed away at age 89.

John Boma 1882 – 1908

John Boma
1882 – 1908

John was born on June 20, 1882 only five months after Jacob and Caroline lost three of their children to diphtheria.

John lived at home with his parents and older brother Frank until he purchased the brick yard from his uncle Dominick in 1906. That same month on April 23 he was married to Emma Stahl, daughter of Joseph Stahl of La Crosse. They moved into the two story brick house at the end of Boma Road. The following two years they became the parents of John Jr. and Bernetta.

On Labor Day of 1908, John and his brother-in-law Emil North left early to go duck hunting on Rice Lake, near French Island. They spent most of the morning hunting when Emil elected to walk along the shore of the lake to scare up ducks and John was going to wait in the hunting skiff. John stepped into the boat, pulling his shot gun with him when the hammer caught on the edge of the boat and the gun went off – hitting him in the chest. Emil heard the shot and could hear him groaning. By the time he reached John, he was in pretty bad shape. John died soon after at age 26. Following service at Holy Trinity Church his funeral cortege was more than six blocks long.

John left a young wife, a son not yet two years old and a six week old baby. Before his death, John had dismantled the brick works and Emma sold the property in 1910 to Louis J. Prucha.

Emma, too, was to live a short life. She died at the age of 30 only ten years after her husband.

Orphaned, the children went to live in Minnesota with the Stahl relation. (Outside of the fact John Jr. is deceased, the family has lost track of this branch of the Boma family.)

JOHN BOMA SHOT WHILE HUNTING
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SHOT GUN DISCHARGE AS HE STEPS INTO BOAT
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CHARGE ENTERED NEAR HEART
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Injured Man Was Dying When Companions Reached Him, and Body is Conveyed to the City

John Boma, aged 28, proprietor of the brick yard on the State Road Coulee, while stepping into a hunting skiff at Rick Lake Sunday morning, was shot and killed by his own gun. The exact details of the accident are lacking but it is thought probable that Boma was entering the skiff and in pulling his gun towards him the hammer caught on the edge of the boat and in this way was discharged. The charge of shot entered just below the heart and when others who had been attracted by the explosion and seeing him fall, had reached the place, they found him dead.

In company with his brother-in-law Emil North, a resident of this city, Mr. Boma had gone to Rice Lake early in the morning for a day of duck shooting and had spend the greater portion of the forenoon hunting. Just before the accident the two separated, Mr. North going up the shore of the lake and Mr. Boma stepping into a hunting skiff. Several hunters were in the vicinity and say Mr. Boma fell following the discharge of the gun. They ran to him only to find him lying in the boat with blood oozing from a fearful would just below the heart. That death was instantaneous was evident. The weapon was a repeating Winchester shotgun.

The body was conveyed to the lower end of the lake and Miler brothers, undertakers were summoned. The body was brought to this city. A widow and two children survive Mr. Boma and they are heartbroken over his untimely and horrible death.
Funeral arrangements will be announced later.

Frank J. Boma 1873 – 1952

Frank J. Boma
1873 – 1952

In June of 1873, Frank was the first born of the Boma children. He was a bachelor and lived on the Boma farm until he was 56.

After his parents died of old age in 1930 and 1931, Frank stayed on to run the farm. “He wasn’t much of a farmer.” Andy North recalled, “After dinner he would sit and smoke his pipe for a couple of hours and the hired man was only too happy to sit with him.”

Soon he let it go into disrepair. Times were tough right after the Depression and the Boma farm went up for the Sheriff’s sale. Julia Schnell’s husband John put in a bid and got the farm.

There were hard feelings on Frank’s part. He had worked on his father’s farm all his life without wages. He wouldn’t stay on and moved to town where he lived with Alfred Oestreicher in his basement until his death at age 80.

Mader Clothing

Mader Clothing

The Mader Clothing Co. was first established in 1893 by the clothing merchants Volz and Reuter at 125-127 South Fourth St.. They operated the store eleven years before Frank Jr. bought Volz’s share and the firm became Reuter and Mader.

“…It is the busy store of the town. All that is new and substantial in the line of clothing is kept in full stock, nothing is carried over from old seasons. Their goods sells on merit and their success is due to sound business principles and fair dealing. They are experienced and efficient salesmen and good judge of the goods at hand. A choice line of shoes from the standard factories are carried and a substantial patronage is theirs. They are also agents for the New Home Sewing Machine. Their store is an attraction in all its departments and clerks pleasant and quick. They are rated high in business circles.” (1)

Reuter and Frank Mader Jr. were partners for 10 years when Reuter was bought out by Frank Mader Sr. “to set his sons up” and the store became the Mader Clothing Co., Frank Jr. having 1/2 interest and Joseph and Henry 1/4 interests each.

Frank Jr., the principal owner and manager, was in charge of clothes, Joseph was in charge of the shoe department, and Henry was bookkeeper.

At one time the clothing store was a thriving and prosperous store. During World War I, it was going quite well. The store was primarily a men’s store. At first, they carried only men’s shoes and when they expanded into ladies’ shoes, the style changed and they were stuck with a whole bunch of women’s shoes.

The venture that started so promising led to disagreements between the brothers. Although they were in business together, their families didn’t socialize on holidays.

Frank Jr. purchased Joseph’s share upon his death and in 1940, also bought the building. The two brothers remained in business until 1951 when The Mader Clothing Co. was sold to Frank Wanner. It then became known as Mader’s Store for Men.

Wanner eventually sold the men’s store to Herchan who still called the store Mader’s. Because of bad management and other reasons, Herchan went bankrupt and sold to Dad and Lads, a men’s store chain. The building still remained in the Mader family and was sold in 1977 by Frank Jr’s. daughter Florence to Dad and Lads.

Joseph Mader Jr. had been an employee of the store for 50 years until Dad and Lads closed its doors forever. (2)

Frank Mader Jr. 1882 – 1971

Frank Mader Jr.
1882 – 1971

Frank was the youngest of Frank and Rosa’s children born on the Mormon Coulee farm March 16, 1882. He received his education at Elm Grove School about two miles from home. (Located where Mormon Coulee Road meets Losey Blvd.) Frank reminisced about his school days in an article in the La Crosse Tribune, July 1, 1951.

“…the snow was so deep that it was necessary for the children to wait for some farmer enroute to La Crosse from some place farther out to break trail with team and bobsled before they could proceed to school.

“Air conditioning of the school was primitive but effective–the loose windows and door did the job. Heat was supplied by a stove.

“First boys to arrive in the morning were required to build the fire, knock the ice from the water bucket and fill it from the pump in the yard.

“Sometimes the teacher was late. This was a serious situation for the shivering youngsters and usually solved by boosting “the smallest kid” (usually Mader) to an opening near the roof. The youngster would crawl in, drop through a trap door to the floor below and release the door latch.”

After the family moved to La Crosse, Frank Jr. only 14 years old, went to work for the Hackner Altar Works on 13th and Ferry for $1.50 a week. The workday was from 7 a.m. until 6 p.m. six days a week. Later his wages were increased to $2.00 a week.

He left Hackner’s to work for Ed Riley, a contractor. The hours were the same as before, but the pay was $9.00 a week. “For heaven’s sake, don’t let the rest of the crew know I’m paying you wages like that, ” Riley had told him. “They’d all want it.” One of the buildings he worked on was the Holy Trinity Convent.

Frank almost became a building tradesman but was determined to be a merchant. He left the good job with Riley to become a clerk for the Gaspard Shoe Co. on So. Fourth St. for a salary of $4.00 per week. (Site occupied by Popcorn Tavern.) His chief duties as “clerk” were sweeping the sidewalk, washing windows, stoking the stove, emptying ashes, running errands, and replacing the stock that customers took down from shelves. The work day was still nearly 12 hours long, six days a week.

Later he went to work for Volz and Reuter, clothing merchants located at 125 So. Fourth St. In 1904, at the age of 24, he bought the interest of Volz and the firm became Reuter and Mader. Ten years later with his brothers, Joseph and Henry, they bought out the remaining half and the firm became The Mader Clothing Co.

Coon hunting was Frank’s favorite sport, bagging a total of 866 raccoons, a record he was to regret in later years. He kept the coon dogs in the barn by the alley. One day a coon dog got loose and it went to Strassers who lived a block away. The coon dog took the beef roast right off their table. As a rifle shot he had several championships to his credit and once put a shooting gallery out of business by winning six rifles.

Before his marriage, Frank attended 53 weddings in Wisconsin and Minnesota and acted as best man in 13. Some being overnight affairs. After he married, his wife exclaimed, “This has got to stop!”

In 1906, he married Magdaline Weigel. She was the daughter of Joseph A. Weigel of La Crosse. Frank’s father converted the upstairs of his home into an apartment for them. They had two daughters, Viola born in 1909 and Florence in 1911. Around 1919 the family bought a house at 1227 So. 14th St. Magdaline passed away after a short illness in 1929 at the age of 47.

Frank was unhappy about his daughter Florence’s marriage to Olaf Hoff, a Norwegian, but later Olaf worked in the Mader Clothing Store. Never wanting his oldest girl, Viola, to marry at all, he busted up every relationship that she had with a boy by being rude to him or by talking to the boy’s father – and that was the end of that! Viola kept house for him and worked in the store without pay. One time his brother Henry who kept the books gave Viola a check but Frank found out and tore it up. Finally Viola couldn’t take being dictated to any longer. She went to beauty school in Milwaukee where she met her future husband, Ray Winkel. She came home and told her father, “Dad, I decided I’m not going to be single all my life. I have a boyfriend and I’m going to get married whether you like it or not!” And he had a fit! She was 36 years old.

Frank was the manager of the Mader Clothing Co. and an aggressive salesman. A firm believer on advertising, he never missed a stunt that would publicize the clothing store. The first game of the season, a La Crosse baseball player caught a bouquet of roses from a passing airplane. The attached card, read, “Compliments of Frank Mader.”

Another time a raccoon was discovered atop a downtown building north of the Mader store and a call went out to “Get Frank Mader.” Climbing to the top of the building, he caught the coon in a chicken mesh net but it wriggled out then plunged to the sidewalk. He took it to the Bodega to recover and the raccoon did an advertising stunt caged in the clothing store window.

In 1951, the Mader Clothing Co. was sold and Frank retired after being associated with the store for around fifty years. ” I have enjoyed every minute of my business life in La Crosse,” he said, “and the friendships I have made through the years are my most cherished possessions.”

Learned from his first job at age 14 at Hackner’s Altar Works, Frank enjoyed a lifetime hobby of woodworking. His home at 330 No. Losey Blvd. was filled with cleverly designed and executed items he made. The bowling alley in Leo Hall at Holy Trinity was built by him.

He lived to an old age of 89 years.

Growing Up at 1402 South 13th Street

Growing Up at 1402 South 13th Street

Being first cousins and the same age, Florence and Ben played together and were good friends. Too young to say Bernard, Florence called him Bama, a nickname some people call him to this day. When they were about 5 years old they like to go over to the fire station and watch the horses. Their parents bawled them out for this because they were afraid they might get hurt. Ben’s mother Angeline would bring them bread with butter and white sugar on it which Ben liked. The children played on the beautiful open stairway.

Living so close to church, the Mader boys would get a kick out of crawling underneath the wagon hearse and teasing the horses.

During World War I, there was a lot of hatred towards the Germans. Posters against the Kaiser were all over town. Their mother’s maiden name was Kaiser and the children couldn’t understand it. John felt he didn’t do anything! Everybody’s activities were for the war. The children played war and the Mader kids always had to be the bad side and the neighbor kids who weren’t German were the good side.

Angie and Edith, Dominick Mader Jr.’s wife were very close friends and they visited back and forth. Their son Bill remembers when they would play ball on the double lot on 13th St. with Father Plecity. One time the kids broke a window and Father Plecity took the blame for it.

F. Joseph Mader 1880 – 1931

F. Joseph Mader
1880 – 1931

On March 18, 1880, Frank Joseph was born on the small white farm house in Mormon Coulee to Frank and Rosa Mader. At age 20 he worked as a coachman living with the family on 13th Street in La Crosse.

Joseph married Angeline Kaiser in 1906. Their first home was on 14th and Adams. Angeline was one of seven children born in 1878 to Joseph and Catherine Kaiser in Leer, Germany. Angeline came to America at age 11 and lived her family in St. Paul, Minnesota. Later the family moved to La Crosse.

After his mother Rosa died in 1908, Joseph returned home with Angeline and baby Joseph, moving into the lower apartment to care for his father. During this period, they became the parents of four more sons; John born in 1908, Marcus 1910, Bernard 1911, and Lambert in 1914.

For eleven years from 1908 to 1919, the two brothers Frank Jr. and F. Joseph and their families shared the house at 1402 South 13th Street. It was never meant to be two apartments. Until ca. 1935 it had a big open stairway and only one bathroom which was upstairs. Downstairs there was a half bath. “Oh, there was friction,” Viola said. “I did not like living there. My mother and Aunt Angie did not get along. My mother was easy going and Aunt Angie was strict.”

At age 34, Joseph joined the Mader Clothing Co. when his father bought out Reuter’s half of the firm for his sons in 1914. In the beginning, everyone was happy and they had a lot of friends. Remembering those times John recalls,

“On Sundays after church, Dad would march us five kids downtown to roll the awning down. We had a special zig-zag way that cut through a playground and some empty lots – two miles down and two miles back. Our dad got quite a kick out of this and would give us a treat on the way back. In the late afternoon we marched back down again in order to roll the awning up. This was when we were about 5 to 10 years old and we thought we were pretty important.”

Joseph kept a horse and buggy in the barn. (1) He thought quite a bit of that horse and buggy. Not everyone had one in those days. He rode a bike to work and later on when his son John got a car he gave him a ride.

In 1914, Frank gave Joseph and Angeline the house for taking care of him. The house had a $2,500.00 mortgage on it which Frank had borrowed against to buy into the clothing store. He later paid $700.00 back. On taking the house, Joseph agreed to pay the loan.

Later, after his father’s death, Joseph felt the clothing store should repay the loan since it was used to buy out Reuter’s share of the firm. His brothers, Frank Jr. and Henry thought Joseph should pay back the loan because he inherited the house.

In those days, $1,800.00 was a lot of money. Also Joseph had five children to support and he needed a larger salary from the store than the other two. This did not make for good feelings between the brothers. John felt those two things affected his father physically and may have been the cause of his father suffering a nervous breakdown. Joseph became ill ca. 1920 and went to Holy Hill Hospital near Madison.

This left Angeline to care for the new baby, a girl named Helen born in February of 1920 and their five growing sons between the ages of 13 and 6. Only one year before they had a lost a little two year old girl, Mary Angela, who died after a short illness. Mary was their first daughter and they took her death very hard.

Joseph never fully recovered from his breakdown, going in and out of the hospital. When he was home he went back to work at the store. John said of his father,

“I always think of the cartoon, ‘Mr. Milktoast’ when I think of my dad. Dad didn’t have very much courage, he wasn’t an aggressive person. My dad wasn’t that way. He wouldn’t argue, he’d rather let the other guy have his way.”

On February 16, 1931, F. Joseph died of pneumonia at age 50, in a rest home by Madison, WI. He had been seriously ill. His niece Florence remembers being at practice for the Holy Trinity Grade School orchestra when Mark came over to tell her his father had died that night. “Joe and his sons all had the strong Mader look after the Mader side of the family.” Florence said. “German looking, he was well dressed and always stood tall and straight.”

Having raised her family, Angeline in her late sixties took on the care of her sons Joe’s five children after their mother died until she was unable to do so any longer. When the children left, her daughter and son-in-law, Helen and Lester Beeler lived with her. Angeline suffered a stroke in 1955 and was hospitalized almost a year before she died of cancer.

Angeline directed in her will in 1946 that her home be sold (not to any member of the family) and the proceeds be given to her son John. (2) Four months after Angeline’s death, John sold the home to his sister Helen’s husband, Lester Beeler, who in turn gave Helen 1/2 interest and the house remained in the family. (3)
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(1) Eventually the barn was sold to Barney Borseth for a barber shop and moved to 8th and Adams. (It is still in use as a barber shop today.)
(2) John had supported his mother financially after Joseph’s death.
(3) The house is presently owned by Bill Beeler, Helen’s son.
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JOSEPH MADER, 50, WELL-KNOWN HERE, PASSES EARLY TODAY
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Joseph Mader, 50, 1402 South Thirteenth Street, for more than a quarter century connected with the Frank Mader Clothing company of this city, passed away at 5:30 Monday Morning.
Mr. Mader was born in the town of Shelby on March 18, 1880.
He is survived by his wife; five sons Joseph, Marcus, Bernard, John and Lambert; one daughter Helen; two brothers Frank and Henry. Funeral arrangements had not yet been made at noon.

F. Henry Mader 1878 – 1954

F. Henry Mader
1878 – 1954

Frank Henry was the oldest living child of Frank and Rosa, born in the State Road Coulee home on May 28, 1878. After high school, he worked at the Hackner Co. making church furniture. He studied for the Priesthood at St. Francis Seminary in Milwaukee but a nervous condition forced him to drop out after one year. In La Crosse at the Wisconsin Business University, located on the second floor of a building on Main Street, Henry received a degree in business administration.

With his degree, Henry was a bookkeeper for a laundry where he met Anna Puent who also worked there. They were joined in marriage on May 28, 1900. Anna was born in 1876 near Oldenburg, Indiana to Herman and Susanna Puent. The family later moved to La Crosse.

In the spring of 1900, Henry became bookkeeper for the J.J. Hogan Wholesale Grocery Co.. Henry and Anna first lived on 17th and Badger. Here they became the parents of three children. The first child, Cecilia, died at birth. The second child, Stephen, born December 24, 1903 died of an illness at age 13 on February 1, 1916. He was remembered as being quite a bike rider. The third child was Isabelle born in 1905.

The family moved when Isabelle was four to a house on the SE corner of 13th and Vine St. which was kitty corner from Henry’s uncle Theodore. Isabelle said that her dad rode a bicycle for many years and they didn’t get around very much because he didn’t have a car until 1924.

After the death of his father Frank in 1916, Henry joined his brothers Frank Jr. and Joe in operating The Mader Clothing Store. He had an office upstairs where he was bookkeeper. Because of a hearing problem, he did not wait on customers. “He was so friendly,” his daughter said. “When someone came in that he knew, my dad would go down and put his arm on their shoulder.”

Henry stayed with the firm until it was sold in 1951, retiring at age 73. Henry had kept a diary every day of his adult life. The saddest entry he made was in the morning April 29, 1954 when he wrote that he wasn’t feeling well and would finish it later. Henry never wrote in the diary again, for he died that afternoon. Anna Mary lived to age 91 passing away on Mother’s Day of 1966.

Willard Mader – d1941

Willard Mader
– 1941

Willard D. was the son of Martin and Louisa Mader born ca. 1891. He was the husband of Emma M. and they had no (known) children. (1)

During World War I, Willard served in the armed forces. Later in Spokane he was the golf pro at the Downriver Golf Course. His home was at 3312 Columbus Cr..

Willard passed away on September 18, 1941. A rosary was recited at the funeral home and services were held from the Elks Temple. He was survived by his wife Emma.

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(1)Willard’s obituary stated he was a resident of Spokane all of his life and it did not list any children.