This file part of www.sainthenryparish.org website
Joseph Wolfram
1881 - 1953
Residences
included Ixonia, Gopher Hill Road, where he was born at the Wolfram Homestead
Farm; then 523 N. Washington St in circa 1897, 1551 Oconomowoc Ave. circa 1915,
703 Division St. circa 1917, 207 Cole Street circa 1921 [Watertown City
Directories].
Joe
had been born on his grandfather's farm that sat on the dividing line of Ixonia
and Watertown townships. The house he
was born into had been built in the German tradition with white stucco plaster
finish on the sides with exposed oak timbers that crossed in the Old World
Bavarian style. It had a fieldstone
foundation that could have served as storage cellar as well as housing animals.
The
front of the house faced south looking toward
A
photograph of this small house remains but the structure was demolished after
the farm was sold in 1905.

The
Griebenow family lived on the property for the next hundred years---at least
until 2003. There is a small creek
flowing through on the west side of the driveway and on a hillside are still
remnants of the apple orchard that was once prolific.
Joe's
grandfather had bought farm land that was heavily wooded with a hilltop
providing protection from easterly winds and lower wetlands to the west. His grandfather had settled there in
September of 1864 after emigrating from Germany and marrying a girl he had met
on the journey over the Atlantic Ocean.
His grandfather was a widower with children in June of 1875 when Joe's
parents married and moved into the farmhouse they were to share with Karl and
his other five children still living at home.
1875-1897
The
Wolfram family lived on Gopher Hill Farm until Joe was 16 yr. old. Grandfather Karl had sold the farm to his
son, Anton, signing it over to him on
In
1897 Grandfather Karl moved with son Anton and his family into the city of
Watertown to a small house at
With
Joseph being 16 years of age, with older but unmarried sisters, it is
understandable that they may not have been able to make a living on the
farm. When they moved into town, young
Joe became employed as an interior painter and wallpaper hanger while sister
Helen worked at a millinery shop on
1902-03
15
Oct 1902 -- Joe's sister Anna married William NEIS and Dec 1902; Grandfather
Karl dies; then 27 Jan 1903 Joe's sister Helen
marries Charles Lutovsky (later Mayor Lutovsky, Watertown politician); 02
May 1903 younger brother Ed dies, age 14 of enlarged heart.
Joe's
mother did not like living at the
1904
St
Henry's Marriage Record Book (June 7, 1904) shows Joseph married Augusta Stock. He had been living at
1905
Bohemian Community
By
1905, Joe was farming again with his new bride in Dodge County at the Flor
farm. His parents had moved to
Even
today, a descendant of the Bohemian community, the Bruenig family, allows
garden rental plots near the river bank where locals can easily tend their own
kitchen gardens.
Submitted by Karren Wolfram - 2003
Interment is in the parish cemetery.