B.H. Lueck. For about forty years
the subject of this record has been a resident of
Guttenberg and active in its business affairs. A
public spirited man, he has done his share toward the
upbuilding and prosperity of the place in which for
some three decades he has successfully conducted an
extensive and lucrative trade in lumber and building
material, furnishing supplies in his line for most of
the buildings erected in this town and the adjoining
townships.
Mr. Lueck comes of hardy and thrifty German stock, to
whom, perhaps more than to any others, is due the
condition of prosperity in which Clayton County finds
itself to-day, as they developed the land from the
wild prairie, making fertile farms and founding
enterprising villages here and there.
The birth of our subject occurred in Germany in 1824,
and his father, B. Lueck, died in the Fatherland, of
which he too was a native. The boyhood and youth of
our subject were passed in Germany, where he received
a good education in his mother tongue. On arriving at
a suitable age, in accordance with the laws of his
land, he entered the German army, where he remained
for six years, and during that time participated in
three battles, doing valiant service.
It was in 1853, when nearly thirty years of age, that
Mr. Lueck decided that he would come to the United
States, believing that the opportunities here
afforded for advancement and the acquisition of a
fortune were greater than in his own land. After long
weeks spent upon the bosom of the deep in the slow
sailing-vessel of the period, he arrived at New
Orleans, from which he proceeded by way of the
Mississippi and the Ohio to Cincinnati, where he
remained for about two years. In 1855 he came to
Guttenberg, and worked at various lines of business
whereby he could obtain a livelihood for eleven
years. Being very industrious and frugal in his
manner of life, he regularly laid aside a portion of
his wages, in time acquiring a neat little sum, which
he invested in the lumber business in 1866, embarking
in trade for himself. Since that time he has steadily
advanced, and now numbers many regular customers who
were won to him by his uniform honesty and
truthfulness and by his unfailing courtesy. All kinds
of lumber used in the construction of houses, barns,
fences, etc. he keeps regularly in stock, and sells
at the lowest market prices.
In 1858 our subject was married to Miss Anna Eilers,
whose birth also occurred in the Fatherland, and who
survived her marriage but two years. The present wife
of our subject, also born in the Fatherland, was
before her marriage Miss Mary Albers. Their union was
blessed with eight children, but only three of the
number yet survive. Those living are John, Henry and
Joseph, and they, with their parents, are members of,
and regular attendants on the services of the
Catholic Church of this city.
Since becoming a naturalized citizen of the United
States, Mr. Lueck has voted for the nominees of the
Democratic party. Like every true patriot, he is
interested in the welfare of the Government and in
the cause of education, and holds that his own
private and personal interests are secondary to the
general and public good.