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Martin A. Klingman
There is always good ground for pride when a man can look back over his
life and know that his success has been due to his own hard work. It is
well worth while to occupy a beautiful home in the consciousness that it
has been justly earned by its owner’s labor; and that home is still more
cherished if it is the dweller’s handiwork.
Martin A. Klingman was born May 14, 1859, in Highland township, Clayton
county, Iowa, the son of Lewis Klingman, formerly of Germany, and
Elizabeth (Lowe) Klingman, formerly of Connecticut. Lewis Klingman came as
a young man to America, located first in Ohio and then moved to Clayton
county, Iowa, where he married. His life was spent at the blacksmith’s
trade, though he was the owner of a farm. He was born in 1827, educated in
Germany, and was self-educated in American ways. He retired from active
labor and enjoyed the comforts of home, of which he always was a great
lover, until his death, which occurred in September, 1910. The republican
party claims him as one of its staunchest supporters. Elizabeth Lowe was
born in 1839 and died in March, 1910. She and her husband became the
parents of six children: Martin A., the subject of this sketch; Hattie,
wife of J. C. Robbins, of Illyria township (see his sketch); Ernest, of
Scott’s Bluffs, Nebraska; Nellie, the wife of Lawrence McKeller, of
Clayton county; Edward, a barber, of Elgin, Iowa; Charles, at home.
Martin A. Klingman was educated in the home schools, and lived at home,
working on the farm and in the blacksmith shop until 1883, when he got one
hundred acres of land in Illyria township. On November 14, 1880, he
married Malvina A. Peters, daughter of Alex W. and Margaret Mattocks, of
Illyria township. Mr. Peters was originally of Virginia, and his wife of
Pennsylvania. They first settled in Pleasant Valley township, then moved
to Illyria, where they now reside.
Mr. Klingman, as the result of this marriage, is the father of three
children; Elizabeth F., who married Frank Kohl, of West Union, is the
mother of two children, Mildred and Lavon; James A., who is cultivating
his father’s farm, married Louise Haueisen, of West Union, and they have a
son, Robert M., born April 20, 1910; Pearl A. is at home. In 1881 Mr.
Klingman lived in Clayton county, later in Winnebago county, then until
1909 he built his fine house in Wadena, where he now resides. He is
extremely handy with tools and can make almost anything he wants to. As he
is a skillful carpenter, he did most of the work on his house himself. He
filled the position of school director for several years, is a Republican,
and a member of the Modern Woodmen of America at Highland, Iowa. Hard work
has, in his case, brought to him a liberal reward. No citizen better
deserves the friendship of his neighbors than he.
~transcribed for the Fayette Co IAGenWeb Project by Tom and
Sharon Dorland
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