Climbing the family tree

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NEPONSET — “The past is not dead. It isn’t even past,” so said the author William Faulkner.

Bob Weber, 82, of Neponset found that phrase to be true 40 years ago when he first began to research his family history. His research began with the son of his great, great, great, great grandfather, Henry Weber. Bob Weber learned his ancestor had joined in the 14th Illinois Cavalry and fought in the Civil War.

“He rode a horse from Geneseo to Macon, Ga., and was captured and put in Andersonville Prison for six months with a bad knee. He was later exchanged for southern soldiers and was sent home,” Weber said.

After sending in a request for any information of Henry from the Congressional Records, Weber’s interest in genealogy was born. Years later he went to visit Andersonville Prison and was able to see the conditions his ancestor survived in for so long.

Since then he’s learned a great deal about his family — he’s traced the Weber family tree back to 1776 in Germany.

“It’s kind of like a jigsaw puzzle. I get a piece here; I get a piece there, and I put it all together. I’ve collected them all and kept my own book. I’ve got a closet full of stuff that I’ve collected through the years,” Weber said.

One of Henry’s sons, Freeman Weber married and had a son, Dr. A.D. Weber, the eventual Dean of Agriculture at Kansas State College. A.D. Weber was the first American to judge the steer class at the International Livestock Show in Chicago; there were 800 steers in this class. He judged the show for 11 years, Weber said.

Another interesting relative, was James Russell, a grandfather four times removed, who fought with the Duke of Wellington at the Battle of Waterloo, Weber said.

Russell’s son, Thomas, eventually married and moved to America. He and his wife, Rebecca, landed in Quebec, Canada, and took a train to Chicago. From there they walked to Valpraiso, Ind., before settling down.

“Thomas got a job in a brick factory as a laborer because he couldn’t read or write. When the Civil War was going on he left his wife and family and joined the 138th Indiana Infantry,” Weber said.

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