Bio of the STIMLER Family, Benton Co., MN USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, material may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material, AND permission is obtained from the contributor of the file. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organizations. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for non-commercial purposes, MUST obtain the written consent of the contributor, OR the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. Made available to The USGenWeb Archives by: Joe Hall Herewith is a history of the Stimler Family who lived in Benton County. The data presented is from ouyr family's genealogical study. The Stimler Family The Stimler (also spelled Stimmler) family for about 250 years was located in the area of Wilwisheim, Rhin Bas, France, a part of the fertile Rhine Valley. During 1570 to 1840 when our direct ancestors lived there, this area changed hands between the Barvarians, French, Prussians, etc. The emigration from Alsace was driven by rural overpopulation and the consequent competition for jobs at lower wages than prevailed in the rest of France. Poverty, resulting in malnutrition and disease, both in the cities and the countryside, was an added factor. It has been established that between 1832 and 1867 more than twenty thousand Alsatians emigrated to the United States. The Stimlers Come to America The emigrant Stimler group consisted of three brothers: Johann (Anthony's grandfather) and two of his brothers. One brother stayed in the Philadelphia area, which was where they originally settled, a very common area for German-speaking individuals in the 1840s. Another brother traveled south into the Carolinas following the southern trail for new lands. The third, Johann moved to Minnesota. Two of Johanns's sons had preceded him to Minnesota. His son, Valentine, traveled to Minnesota to become a priest and was eventually associated with St. John's Abbey, outside of the town of St. John, north of St. Cloud. Father Valentine worked in many small churches, specializing in aiding churches experiencing financial trouble; he was also the head disciplinarian at the Abbey school for awhile beginning in 1867. Franz Anton (Anthony's father) served three tours in the Civil War, first as a sergeant and then twice as a private. Franz came west lured by plentiful, cheap farm land available in the "Northwest Territory" of which Minnesota was a part. Before he left Pennsylvania at the end of the Civil War, he married Crescentia Sohn and they moved west together. His father, Johan, followed and they all settled in Carver County. Anthony Valentine "Tony" was born in Laketown twp., Carver County, eventually settling on a farm in Benton County, later starting a blacksmith shop in Duelm. Here he met and married Mary Theresa (nee Kampa), who was born in St. George. They reared their nine children and spent their lives in Duelm, until Tony Stimler moved his blacksmith shop to Foley in 1903. In 1904 the family home was moved by logging sled to Foley. Tony established a automobile garage and the first used car sales along with his Ford dealership in 1911. Tony & Mary Stimler's children were Rupert, Helen, Alma Florence, Marie, Leona, Joseph, Ann, and Delores Joe Hall joehall@mninter.net