Genealogy | Native American | DNA | About Us
Tell A Friend! FTM 2012

Discover your family's story.

Enter a grandparent's name to get started.

Start Now

Genealogy Records

Genealogy
Biographies
Cemetery Records
Census Records
DNA - Genetic Genealogy
Family Tree Search
History Books Online
Military Records
Native American Records
Surnames
Vital Records
World Genealogy

US Genealogy

Alabama Genealogy
Alaska Genealogy
Arizona Genealogy
Arkansas Genealogy
California Genealogy
Colorado Genealogy
Connecticut Genealogy
Delaware Genealogy
Florida Genealogy
Georgia Genealogy
Hawaii Genealogy
Idaho Genealogy
Illinois Genealogy
Indiana Genealogy
Iowa Genealogy
Kansas Genealogy
Kentucky Genealogy
Louisiana Genealogy
Maine Genealogy
Maryland Genealogy
Massachusetts Genealogy
Michigan Genealogy
Minnesota Genealogy
Mississippi Genealogy
Missouri Genealogy
Montana Genealogy
Nebraska Genealogy
Nevada Genealogy
New Hampshire Genealogy
New Jersey Genealogy
New Mexico Genealogy
New York Genealogy
North Carolina Genealogy
North Dakota Genealogy
Ohio Genealogy
Oklahoma Genealogy
Oregon Genealogy
Pennsylvania Genealogy
Rhode Island Genealogy
South Carolina Genealogy
South Dakota Genealogy
Tennessee Genealogy
Texas Genealogy
Utah Genealogy
Vermont Genealogy
Virginia Genealogy
Washington Genealogy
West Virginia Genealogy
Wisconsin Genealogy
Wyoming Genealogy

Free Charts

Correspondence Record
Family Group Chart
Family Tree Chart
Free Census Forms
Research Calendar
Research Extract
Source Summary

 

Eilert, Louis E.

The following data is extracted from Illustrated History of the State of Idaho.

The new west is eminently the home of the self-made man. Indeed, it may be said that in making himself the self-made man of the new west has built the new west up about him. Of course this means the self-made man in a collective sense. Individually self-made men like Louis E. Eilert, of Rathdrum, Kootenai County, Idaho, are units in the scheme of moral and material development and progress. Louis E. Eilert is a native of Hanover, Germany, and was born April 5, 1851, a son of Ernest and Mary Eilert, descendants from a long line of German ancestors. In 1852 Ernest Eilert started for America with his wife and his son (then about a year old), with such plans in his mind as a man will make for those whose lives he wants to make better, without regard to the sacrifices he may be called upon to make in his efforts to the end. But he was doomed to bitter disappointment at the very outset. His wife died on the voyage and was buried in the Atlantic Ocean. But still duty lay plainly enough before him. Emigrants and pioneers may not have time for mourning their dead, for they have a fight to wage for the living. One may scarcely imagine how lonely the journey was of Mr. Eilert to the new land, after that dark day in his history, and across a land to him unknown to Wisconsin, where he settled on Wood river, in Waukesha county. There the boy Louis was reared and taught a good deal about work and not much about books. The schools there were crude and inadequate, but they were schools of a kind, and the boy learned enough to serve as seed in the field of knowledge, seed which he has cultivated since as well as he might, until he is regarded as a well informed man, alive to every important public question and zealous for education and all material progress. He came to the site of Rathdrum, Idaho, in 1880, and was one of the men who erected the first building where the town has since grown up. He is to some extent interested in mining, and is the operator of the Rathdrum brewery and carries on a retail trade in wines and liquors. He has been successful as a businessman and owes his success entirely to his own exertions, for he is in every sense of the word a self-made man.

A steadfast Democrat, he has always taken an active interest in the work of his party, but he has no desire for official position and has discouraged the use of his name whenever his candidacy for office has been suggested. He is a member of the Knights of Pythias, and has made an enviable reputation as a pubic-spirited citizen.

Mr. Eilert married Mrs. Abbie (Bradbury) Tucker, in 1883, and her one son by her former marriage has been given the name of his step-father, Louis Eilert.

Source: Illustrated History of the State of Idaho

  Go Back  

 

Genealogy Websites

Other Websites

Special Offers

Family Tree Maker 2011

Pre-order Family Tree Maker 2011 using our link and support free genealogy online!

Access Genealogy is the largest free genealogy website not owned by Ancestry.com. As such, it relies on the revenue from commercial genealogy companies such as Ancestry and Fold3 to pay for the server and other expenses related to producing and warehousing such a large collection of data. If you're considering joining either of these programs, why not join from our pages, and help support free genealogy online!

Copyright 1999-2013, by Access Genealogy.com
A project by Webified Development