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1907 Past and Present Biographies

John A. Burman

John A. Burman was for many years one of the leading farmers of Paton township, where he settled at an early date. He is now living retired at Lanyon, Webster county, Iowa, for his labors in former years brought to him the success which enables him to live without further recourse to labor. He was born in Sweden, July 28, 1849, and spent the first twenty years of his life in that country, acquiring his education in the common schools.

The favorable reports which Mr. Burman heard concerning America led him to seek his fortune in the new world and in 1869 he crossed the Atlantic to America, making his way to Altoona, Knox county, Illinois, where lived his sister and some friends whom he had known in the old country. He had only a dollar and eighty cents when he arrived in the new world, but he possessed what is better than money - a strong purpose, laudable ambition and determination to succeed. He worked one year for the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company at construction work between Galva and New Boston and was afterward employed for nine months on a farm by a Mr. Koehler, a Pennsylvania Dutch man, who paid him nineteen dollars per month for his services. He afterward engaged in farming, renting land until 1876, when he removed to Webster county, Iowa, where for one year he cultivated a rented farm.

Mr. Burman next bought eighty acres of section 1, Paton tqwnship, Greene county. Not a furrow had been turned nor an improvement made upon the place, but with characteristic energy he began its development. He built a little house and prairie stable and he experienced the usual hardships and trials incident to pioneer life. One winter the snow was so deep that he could not get in the stable in the regular way and carried water and grain to his horses through a hole in the front of the barn. After the third day he dug a tunnel from the house to the barn, which served until the thaw in the spring. He made a trip to Crooked creek for coal on one occasion and was gone from two o’clock in the morning of one day until three o’clock the following day, such were the conditions of the road. He now owns two hundred and eighty acres of valuable land and his farm is the visible evidence of his life of thrift and energy. He has worked earnestly year after year and as time has passed his fields have brought forth rich harvests and his energies have gained him prosperity. Retiring from his farm about four years ago he removed to Lanyon, where he is now residing in well earned ease. Aside from his property he is a stockholder and one of the directors in the Farmers Elevator Company.

Mr. Burman was married in Webster county, March 26, 1876, to Miss Tilda L. Johnson, who was born in Sweden, March 13, 1852, and came to America from her native land in 1870, at which time she located in Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Burman have become the parents of eight children, Hannah, the wife of A. T. Eklund, of Paton township; Sophia, the wife of David Carlson, living in Webster county; Alice, Edith, Esther, Paul and Ruth, all at home, and Martin, who died at the age of eight months.

Mr. and Mrs. Burman are members of the Mission church, which they joined soon after its organization, and in its work they have taken an active and helpful part. Mr. Burman has served as one of the trustees and deacons for twenty-five years and has done everything in his power to promote the growth of the church. He formerly gave his political support to the republican party but is now a prohibitionist. believing that the cause of temperance is one of the most important issues before the people today. His life has ever been honorable and upright, his actions manly and sincere, and wherever he is known he is held in high esteem.


Transcribed from "Past and Present of Greene County, Iowa Together With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Prominent and Leading Citizens and Illustrious Dead,"
by E. B. Stillman assisted by an Advisory Board consisting of Paul E. Stillman, Gillum S. Toliver,
Benjamin F. Osborn, Mahlon Head, P. A. Smith and Lee B. Kinsey, Chicago: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1907.


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