Barry County Missouri - Fred Reinsmith -- Barry County Industrial Pioneer Fred Reinsmith -- Barry County Industrial Pioneer Written by Paul E. Jackson, Sr. My grandfather, Frederick Martin Reinsmith, was born in St. Louis, Missouri on August 1, 1882. Fred's father, Leopold Reinschmidt, a German immigrant who had served in the Civil War, brought his family to Barry County sometime before 1890, where Leopold farmed near Monett. Fred was an articulate young man; well-read and very adept at mathematics. It is ironic that he quit school at age fourteen to leave home and pursue a variety of jobs, from Harvey House cook to Bell Telephone line worker. Though these pursuits would lead Fred far away from Barry County, he would periodically return to his home, between jobs. In 1908, Fred's interest in and acquired knowledge of electricity lead him to found "Fred Reinsmith - Anything Electric" in Monett. This later became the Reinsmith Battery Company, manufacturer of automobile storage batteries. In its heyday, Reinsmith employed over fifty people; with a factory in Monett and stores in Monett and Aurora. Fred's passion for business and, no doubt, the experience of an unhappy family life in childhood, were the likely causes for him to postpone marriage and family until 1927, when, at age 45, he married 18-year-old Georgia Edith Fleetwood. They had two daughters: Georgia Edith, who died in 1929 at age 1; and Frances Marie, who married Dr. H. Dale Jackson and lives in St. Louis. The early 1930s were a time of misfortune, as Fred and Edith experienced a bitter divorce. Determined to raise his daughter, Fred sought for and spent thousands of dollars in gaining complete custody. Frances was not allowed to have any contact with her mother until adulthood. As the divorce battle raged, Fred had other legal troubles, and lost much of his business. He ran a downsized Reinsmith Battery Company with two or three employees until very shortly before his death. Fred was credited with innovations in automotive battery design and manufacture. His products were known for their quality and reliability. He had a reputation throughout Barry and Lawrence counties as a man of integrity. In the days when the Ku Klux Klan held rallies in downtown Monett, he regularly met black friends at the train station. These were railroad workers with whom he had made acquaintance during his travels as a youth. He was forever puzzled by American racism. Fred would often visit with some of the German 'old-timers' who lived near Monett, and converse with them in German. He was an accomplished angler who loved to fish the streams of southwest Missouri. Fred, who was raised Catholic, never attended church, claiming that he was not welcome there because of his divorce. He was, however, a man of faith and conviction. Fred lived in Monett until the last month of his life, when his daughter and son-in-law took him to the hospital in Harrison, Arkansas, to be near them as he suffered from the final ravages of leukemia. He died on May 25, 1962, and was buried in the Spring River Cemetery, near Verona, Missouri. Return to Online Data Index <../barry.htm>Return to Barry County © 1999 Susan Tortorelli All Rights Reserved