|
THE
HISTORY OF ST. JAMES AS PUBLISH IN THE PARISH CENTENNIAL BOOK IN 1954.
|
||||||||||||
|
"One Hundred Years
Jacobs Prairie"
|
||||||||||||
|
The history of
Jacobs Prairie is closely bound up with the immigration of the German
settlers to Stearns county. Of the claims these first pioneers
made, those around St. James Parish are of the earliest. The
easiest course to follow being that of the waterways, they came in 1854
to the prairie of open land and good Soil along the Sank river via the
Mississippi. Most of them came at the urging of the Rev. Francis
Pierz, who having come to do missionary work among the Indians, first
made known the possibilities of Central Minnesota to the people of
Austria and Germany. His notices went not only to the motherland,
but were also read by German immigrants in other parts of the United
States. Those first to arrive were for the most part from German
settlements in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa.
Lured by Father
Pierz' description in the German Catholic newspaper, Der Wahrheitsfreund, of this "land
flowing with milk and honey," fifty families came to locate in what the
missioner considered the best portions of his mission field, the
prairie along the Sauk river.[1] What is today Jacobs Prairie
must have first been seen by these German settlers.
The first existing
record of Father Pierz' visiting these settlers is the first Holy Mass
offered at St. Joseph, called Clinton in the early days, on October 22,
1854.[2] It seems reasonable to assume that he would have also
visited and said Mass for the people of Jacobs Prairie on this same
occasion since it was only a few miles distant. The tradition at
Jacobs Prairie seems to bear this out, since it is believed that he
said Mass there on three different dates beginning with the fall of
1854. The first was held at the home of Michael Fuchs, the second
at that of the Jacobs Brothers, Nicholas and Theodore, and the third at
Chris Koeh's place. The fourth Mass was offered at the farm of
Michael Brixius.[3]
Judging from the
letters which Father Pierz wrote to the Ludwig-Missionsverein [4]
during this period, there seems to be very good evidence that he
offered Mass at Jacobs Prairie in 1854. In his letter to the
secretary of the Missionsverein on November 14, 1854, he mentions that
the previous summer he had been ministering to the German immigrants at
Sank Rapids.[5] By the next fall he tells that the Bishop of St.
Paul had "strongly recommended that I care for the immigrant Germans
along the Sank river who have come in such great number that they
already fill four flourishing missions with four newly-built
churches."[6]
It is strange that
after these rather vague references in the first two years he should
suddenly in a letter of June 25, 1856, speak of Jacobs Prairie as one
of his old missions, while referring to Sauk Rapids and St. Cloud as
his latest triumphs:
|
||||||||||||
|
I have accumulated
many fine and valuable tracts of land in my new mission fields of Sank
Rapids and St. Cloud, where I have received, respectively, six
and sixteen building lots in my name, which have a total value of more
than $8,000. The day after I received the deeds for them I
transferred my title of ownership to the Bishop's name as mission
property of the Church. Then, in order to remove any suspicion of
a tendency toward speculation on my part, I immediately sent the
document to St. Paul. In my other two missions I received gifts
of property from the parishioners; at St. Augusta one hundred joch,[7]
and in St. Jacob ten acres of good land.[8]
|
||||||||||||
|
In this passage we
first meet Jacobs Prairie explicitly mentioned by the pioneer
priest. Sank Rapids is known to have preceded the prairie
settlement, but this young stalk of the Church soon died out to return
only in later years. St. Augusta was quite certainly the last of
the four to be cared for by Pierz. Whether the pairing of St.
Jacob with the newborn would jeopardize its right of being among the
firstborn is doubtful, for it is difficult to argue from the
acquisition of land for a church back to the place and time of the
first Mass. In spite of the lack of documentary evidence, there
has long existed a living tradition that the oldest parish of the St.
Cloud diocese east of the Mississippi is at Belle Prairie, while Jacobs
Prairie holds that honor, at least in respect to having the first Mass,
for that section of the diocese west of the Father of Waters.
With the arrival
of the Benedictines at St. Cloud in May, 1856, the church, so carefully
fathered by Father Pierz, received a new impetus. For the next
ninety-eight years St. James Parish, Jacobs Prairie, would be under
their care. In giving a list of the missions and what he found
there, the first Benedictine to care for the prairie church, Rev. Bruno
Riss, O.S.B., stated it very simply: "At St. James, also, a log chapel
16x20 or 24 stood finished."[9] This is a short but glowing tribute to
the concern of the people of those first two years. At St. Joseph
the chapel with a residence was still in the process of being
built. Of the two mission stations, St. James was to receive the
preference for a while, because of the unfinished state of the
buildings at St. Joseph and because of the Know Nothing bigotry the
monks met there. As Father Bruno succinctly put it:
|
||||||||||||
|
At St. Joseph
there was a log church and pastoral residence under construction.
But a few turbulent spirits agitated against the expected monks and
went so far as to send a petition to the Bishop of St. Paul begging him
not to inflict the monks upon them and not to permit them to come to
St. Joseph. In consequence the misguided hot-heads had no
services until August.[1O]
|
||||||||||||
|
To settle such a
state of affairs and to get the life of his young church off to a
zealous beginning Bishop Cretin of St. Paul summoned Rev. Francis X.
Weninger, the famous Jesuit missionary, to conduct missions in the
parishes of his vast diocese. Towards the end of June, 1856, the
Jesuit arrived in Stearns county and opened a mission at St.
Cloud. Missions at Sank Rapids, St. Augusta, St. James, St.
Joseph, and Richmond followed. Father Bruno, who assisted Father
Weninger, reported that during their three day stay at St. James they
took lodgings at the home of Michael Brixius. While there they
discovered that Father Pierz had claimed 160 acres for the church at
St. Jacob "and in the opinion of men of that day had invested heavily
to secure the claim, however, with a result as discouraging as the one
just recorded, the claim was jumped and deemed first-rate booty."[11]
On the eve of the
Feast of the Assumption as the two priests were finishing up the
mission at Richmond, news came to Father Bruno from Prior Demetrius de
Marogna the superior of the Benedictine community at St. Cloud, that he
was immediately to take up residence at St. Joseph and from there care
for the parishes at St. Jacob and Richmond.[12] Both men returned
to St. Joseph that very night and celebrated the Assumption, 1856, at
Father Bruno's new parish. The tragedy which followed their arrival in
St. Joseph and the two years of suffering the immigrants were about to
undergo can only fittingly be described by the pastor who led them
through the plague.
|
||||||||||||
|
The 15th (sic) of
August, on which day P. Weninger preached a sermon in St. Joseph, was
the beginning of a two years after-mission sent by Divine Providence.
During the discourse of the missionary a heavy darkness suddenly set
in, accompanied, as we thought, by a tremendous hailstorm, the clatter
of which drowned the voice of the preacher. But it was something worse
than hail stones, for when we left the church our eyes beheld nothing
but greedy grasshoppers, which had darkened the sun and in their
descent had struck so heavily upon the roof of the chapel.
This small,
voracious, yet invincible monster had in a short time devastated all
that grows and blooms upon the face of the earth. Within about two or
three days the fields presented the appearance of having been newly
plowed. Then an indescribable misery entered the homes of the poor
settlers of Stearns county. The entire harvest was a dead loss for
those settlers who had their abodes in the region during the previous
year; those who had settled during the year of the famine had no crop
to lose, as they had not planted any.
The first terrible
winter was at hand. The few victuals that remained were soon
consumed, prices rose enormously, because the nearest market was at St.
Paul, and it required a full week to make a trip with an ox-team.
Still hope did not die. What would man be without hope? Spring
came; seed wheat stood at two dollars a bushel, but it was bought and
sowed. But the new brood of grasshoppers suffered nothing to
grow, except peas. Everything else became their prey. They
found their way into the houses and destroyed what clothing they could
reach. In the church not a thread of cloth could remain exposed,
everything was locked up in presses. Even the priest at the altar
was not secure from their attacks; before Mass the hoppers had to be
swept off the altar. The priest had to dress hastily, place the
altar cloths upon the altar and be careful to keep the Sacred Host
covered with the paten, and at the elevation had to leave the pall upon
the chalice. During the Mass the altar-boys were kept busy
driving away the insolent insects with whips from the vestments of the
priest.[13]
|
||||||||||||
|
During the winter
of 1856-57 the Rev. Alexius Roetzer, O.S.B., occasionally helped out at
St. James. Together the two Benedictines watched and helped their flock
who had based their hopes for survival on the harvest of the coming
year. But in the second year of the plague the hoppers were as hungry
as they had been in the first. Cattle died from scarcity of food
and blood poisoning caused by the bites of the grasshoppers. They were
so numerous that one worker hung his coat on a fence post while plowing
a field; and when he returned to pick it up at noon, nothing remained
but buttons. In May, 1857, a decisive step was taken to get rid of the
pests. The four pastors of the county, Fathers Bruno, Cornelius,
Clement, and Alexius, proposed to their congregations that they vow an
annual procession on the feast of St. Ulric, July 4, and on that of St.
Magnus, September 6, since these two saints were venerated in southern
Germany as the special patrons of those afflicted as the settlers
were. They made the vow, and as Father Bruno put it:
|
||||||||||||
|
And behold, God
heard us who were weak and helpless against such small insects.
In the early days of June the young brood was ready for work; a brisk
northwest wind set in and carried a whole cloud of the little fiends
with it to other climes. Some weeks later we read in the papers
that a multitude of hoppers had settled at Buffalo, N.Y., and that
great numbers had fallen into Lake Erie. One week later a southwest
breeze carried off the rest from our territory and we learnt that they
subsequently afflicted the northeastern parts of Dakota and our
neighbor Canada. We were saved.[14]
|
||||||||||||
|
Two interesting
incidents which Father Bruno records as having happened during the
plague took place at Jacobs Prairie. The first is the story of
the miraculous crop which came to a farmer with faith:
|
||||||||||||
|
The spring of '57
came; the young brood of grasshoppers crept to the surface, but the old
man ordered his sons to sow wheat and oats. The boys said,
'Father, this is in vain; the hoppers will not let anything grow.
Let us have the seed.' But the old man insisted, 'No, boys, we
will do our part and plant as usual. But let me tell you this; if
God gives us a harvest we shall give one third to God and the Church;
the second third shall be the part for the poor, while for ourselves we
will reserve the balance. Now if the good God wishes to accept
our gift He will permit it to grow.' And so it happened. It
seemed as though the hoppers could not find this farm. The yield
was about one half the usual crop, while other farmers had no crop
whatever. Agreeable to his promise he delivered to me two thirds
of the entire yield for distribution.[15]
|
||||||||||||
|
The second
incident Father Bruno records as happening during the plague at St.
James was the saving of one of the monks' lives by the only chicken and
egg left in Stearns county. Father Bruno gives a first hand
account of it as follows:
|
||||||||||||
|
The hoppers left
us in 1857. Still fourteen months of misery was the general lot
until the time of the next harvest. Father Clement, although a
powerful man, succumbed under the pressure of this calamity. He
was seized by typhoid, as physicians call it, but it was probably the
result of endurance and starvation. For several weeks he was
completely unconscious of his surroundings, etc. Light, but
nutritious diet was prescribed for him, but we had no bread in the
house, moreover no means to obtain it. The hens enjoyed the
grasshopper banquet and perished in great numbers. The physician
prescribed chicken soup and eggs. I canvassed the farms of the
vicinity and finally succeeded in finding at St. James, one old hen and
one egg. For the hen I paid $1, for the egg $.25, and after this
I had no more materials for chicken soup . . . . God helped me in the
emergency and my patient recovered.[16]
|
||||||||||||
|
The German
settlers did not shirk in fulfilling their vow. The votive
processions on July 4 and September 6 were made as impressive as
possible. It was arranged that the congregations of St. Cloud and
St. Augusta should proceed on the road to St. Joseph until they reached
the crossing of the Sauk river, at which point they were to be met by
the people of St. Joseph, St. James, and Richmond. Here they
offered solemn thanksgiving services under the sky. This was on
July 4. Jacobs Prairie was designated for the September 6 pilgrimage.
In the years that
followed the processions lost their importance and the people began to
forget about their vow, but Divine Providence caught them up short in
the 1870's when the hoppers returned in greater force than ever.
The people increased their prayers; and in thanksgiving for their final
deliverance from the plague, erected "Mary Help of Christians Chapel" a
half mile east of Cold Spring.[17]
Grasshoppers and
scarcity of food failed to stop the normal growth of the parish in its
early years. New settlers were moving in at regular
intervals. The early records of the parish yield such names as
George Brunner, Michael Kellner and Simon Thull, who had settled west
of the church property (section one of Wakefield Township) in what was
called the Bavarian Settlement. To the southwest, toward what was
later to be called Cold Spring, Marcus Maurin, Nicholas Jacoby, Peter
Kaiser, Michael Witzman, John Theis, and John Waelter made
claims. In the southeast section of the parish were Nicholas
Kirsch, Michael Hansen, Peter Hansen, Michael Boos, Valentine Garding,
Mathias Ahles, Pierre Thomey, and others. These and such families
as Nicholas and Theodore Jacobs, Michael Brixius, Mathias Hansen,
George Leither, Mathias Feien, George Scherer, Joseph Jonas, and
Michael Fuchs were the early builders of the parish.
On August 5, 1856,
the first recorded baptism was held at Jacobs Prairie. It was
Anna Maria Brunner, the daughter of George Brunner and Mary
Uleman. She had been born the previous day in a covered wagon in
the Bavarian settlement, since no houses had yet been erected
there. This first child of the settlement later became the wife
of Christian Dreis, who was the village marshal of Cold Spring for over
forty years.[18]
No sooner had the
first trouble with the grasshoppers ended than there were new crises to
be met. In 1858 the first log church was destroyed by fire, but
another one was soon erected in its place under the guidance of the
Rev. Clement Staub, O.S.B., who had taken over the parish in May,
1857. The new pastor ministered not only to the souls of the
faithful, but to their bodies as well. In those early days when
physicians were rare in the rural areas, it was a blessing if the
priest could take care of the whole man. Father Clement has been
described as follows:
|
||||||||||||