Otto Fascher
Otto Fascher is another of the
sterling sons of the German Fatherland who has found in
our great American republic the opportunities through
which he has achieved definite independence and
prosperity, and Clayton county has been the stage of his
activities during the entire period of his residence in
the United States. His industry and self-reliance have
been on a parity with his ambition and integrity of
purpose, and through his own ability and well ordered
endeavors he has won secure place as one of the
substantial and popular exponents of agricultural
industry in Clayton county.
He is a loyal and progressive citizen, and that his
ability has not lacked popular appreciation is evidenced
by the fact that he is serving as trustee of Read
township, of which position he has been the efficient
incumbent since 1914.
Mr. Fascher was born in Klein Küsten, Germany, on the
9th of August, 1872, and is one of the six surviving
children of Carl and Dorothea (Welle) Fascher, the former
of whom passed his entire life in that section of the
German Empire and the latter of whom came to the United
States in 1895, the remainder of her life having been
spent in Clayton county, Iowa, where she died in the
spring of 1916, a devout communicant of the Lutheran
church, as was also her husband. Otto Fascher was reared
and educated in his native land and was twenty-four years
of age when, in 1896, he came to America and established
his home in Clayton county. Here he was employed at farm
work for a few years, and his further progress toward the
goal of independence was made by his operations on a
rented farm, where he continued his energetic labors,
when he purchased sixty acres of excellent land in
Section 5, Read township, where he has proved himself a
resourceful and energetic farmer and stock-grower and
gained prestige as one of the able and valued exponents
of these basic lines of industry in Clayton county. He
has improved his farm with good buildings and in its
various operations he avails himself of scientific
methods and the most approved modern facilities in the
way of implements and machinery. From the time of
becoming a naturalized citizen of the land of his
adoption he had given his support to the cause of the
Democratic party, and in addition to serving as township
trustee, as previously noted, he is a school director of
his district. He and his wife are communicants and
earnest supporters of the Lutheran church at St. Olaf,
from which village his farm receives service on rural
mail route No.2.
On the 21st of September, 1900, was solemnized the
marriage of Mr. Fascher to Miss Augusta Kuhn, who
likewise was born in Germany and who came with her
parents, William and Fredericka Kuhn, to America in 1894,
in which year the family home was established in Clayton
county. Here Mr. Kuhn died in 1910, and here his widow
still resides.
Of the six children of Mr. and Mrs. Fascher the first two
died in infancy; Lucy died at the age of three months and
Hilda at the age of five months. The two surviving
children are Arno, born December 25, 1903, and Leona,
born August 28, 1905.
source: History of Clayton
County, Iowa; From The Earliest Historical Times Down to
the Present; by Realto E. Price, Vol. II; pg 117-118
-submitted by S. Ferrall
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