Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
John
Abegglen page 621
The
little republic of Switzerland has sent to America comparatively few of her
adopted sons, but those who have come are a valued portion of our
citizenship. One of these worthy
immigrants is John Abegglen, who was born to Peter and Maggie Abegglen. His father followed farming in one of the beautiful
valleys of Switzerland until 1855, when he brought his family across the
Atlantic to America. Proceeding into
the interior of the country, he took up his abode in Ripley county, Indiana,
where he remained until 1869, and then came to Monroe county, Iowa. For the next twenty-four years he was one of
the respected residents of this vicinity, and in 1893 his life came to a
peaceful end, when he was eight-two years of age; his wife is also deceased.
Both were devout and consistent members of the Lutheran church and
impressed upon the minds of their children lessons which have borne fruit in
upright lives. The worthy couple were
the parents of the following children:
This worthy couple were the parents of the following children: Crist, Margaret and Gottlieb, deceased; John;
Elizabeth, also deceased; and
Fred and Anna, both residents of Monroe county.
John
Abegglen was born in Switzerland November 27, 1840, and was a youth of fifteen
when he came with his parents to the new world. All the educational advantages he was privileged to enjoy were
obtained before he left his native land.
He accompanied his parents to Iowa and has since been one of the
prominent agriculturists of this great state.
Shortly after his second marriage he took up his residence on his
present farm just east of Lovilia, and in the course of the nearly ten years
spent on the place has made his property both valuable and attractive. Excellent improvements are found on the
farm, and everything is kept in the best of order and system.
In
1865 Mr. Abegglen returned to Switzerland on a visit, which ended in a
practical romance for him, inasmuch as he met Miss Margaret Michalo, with the
result that she accompanied him to the United States, where they were married
in 1866. Their domestic life was begun
on a farm in Cedar township, Monroe county, where they remained during the
lifetime of Mrs. Abegglen. They enjoyed
eighteen years of wedded life, but in 1884 Mrs. Abegglen was called to her
final rest. The children born of this
marriage were John, Charles, Anna, George, Walter and Sherman, who are all
living; and those deceased are Willie,
George and Jennie. Ten years after the
death of his first wife Mr. Abegglen married Miss Jennie Rose, a daughter of
Edward and Phrela Rose. For a quarter
of a century Mr. Abegglen has been an exemplary member of the Masonic
fraternity, and his political support is given to the Republican party. Both he and his wife are members of the
Lutheran church, but as there is no congregation of that denomination in the
vicinity, they attend the services of the Methodist Episcopal church.
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