Donald Munger is another of the native sons of
Clayton county who is contributing effectively to upholding the
high standard of agricultural industry within its borders, and
his farm, which comprises forty acres, is situated in Boardman
township. He is one of the energetic exponents of agriculture in
this section of the Hawkeye state, is a scion of an honored
pioneer family of Clayton county.
Mr. Munger was born in Reed township, this county, on the 7th of
March, 1886, and is a son of George W. and Augusta Sophia (Bandow)
Munger, both folk of fine mentality and much practical ability,
though both were deaf and dumb from birth. George W. Munger was
born in the state of New York and his wife was born in Germany.
He passed the closing period of his life at Elkader, this county,
where he died November 18, 1914, and where his widow still
maintains her home. He became one of the prosperous farmers of
the county, to which he came with his parents in the early
pioneer days. He was a son of Milo E. and Jane M. (Glaiser)
Munger, who settled in Reed township in the pioneer period of
Clayton county history and who here passed the residue of their
lives. George W. was the eldest of their nine children; Frederick
is a resident of Rolla, Missouri; Ebenezer, of Delaware county,
Iowa ; is deceased; Aurelia is the wife of Jeremiah Cassidy, of
Elkader; Mary is the widow of Edward Gifford and she likewise
maintains her home at Elkader, this county; Carrie is the wife of
George F. White, of Volga, this county; Simeon is a resident of
Oelwein, Fayette county; and Milo resides at the county seat of
Clayton county.
Donald Munger,
immediate subject of this review, was the second in a family of
three children. His older brother, Charles H., is now a resident
of Cresco, Howard county, and the younger brother, Dale W.,
resides at Manchester, Delaware county. Donald Munger was reared
to the sturdy discipline of the farm and continued to attend the
public schools of the locality until he had attained to the age
of sixteen years. Both of his brothers had in the meanwhile left
the parental home and it thus devolved upon him to assume
eventually the practical control and supervision of the old
homestead farm, to the management of which he has since given his
attention, with marked success. He is a loyal supporter of the
cause of the Democratic party and is affiliated with the Modern
Woodmen of America as a member of the camp at Elkader. His name
is still enrolled on the list of eligible young bachelors in his
native county.
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