|
Jo Daviess County IL
Biographies

Joseph Barnard
Joseph Barnard (deceased) was at the
time of his death a prominent business and
public man in Galena. He was a young man
of more than ordinary ability and promise,
and, although cut down in early manhood, had already built up a good business, and' his success in
life was assured, his prospects for the future having been very bright. He was born in Nackenheim, Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany, Jan. 31, 1856.
His father, Bartholemew Bernard, who is supposed
to have been a native and life-long resident of the
same place, was the proprietor of a vineyard, and
was in comfortable circumstances. The mother of our
subject was Catherine (Braun) Bernard, who died
some years since. Our subject received a substantial education in the excellent schools of his native
land, which he attended very steadily during his
boyhood. At the age of seventeen, with youthful
ambition, and a desire to see more of the world, he
determined to try life in America. After his arrival in this country, he spent one year in New
York City, and at the expiration of that time, came
to Galena. He began his career here by working
in the kitchen of a river-steamer, and soon became
head cook. He followed that occupation for four
years, and then was employed in a gas factory for
eight months. After that our subject bought out
a wood and coalyard. and established himself in
business, adding the sale of farm implements, and
he continued in that line until the time of his death,
building up an extensive and profitable trade. The
business is now conducted by his brother-in-law,
A. Heid.
Mr. Bernard was married Jan. 3, 1878, to Miss
Mary Heid, and their union was blessed to them by
the birth of four children, as follows: Theresa, born
Aug. 31, 1879; Frank Joseph, born Aug. 13, 1881;
Annie Catherine, born Dec. 3,1883; Joseph Albert,
born Feb. 3, 1886, and died Dec. 6, 1887. Mrs.
Bernard is a lady of great intelligence, and of
pleasing manners. She is a true mother, and is devoted to the care of her children. She is a native
of Rock Island, III., and a daughter of Frank and
Mary Theresa (Schroeder) Heid, natives, respectively, of Bavaria and Hanover, Germany. Her
paternal grandfather, Tobias Heid, so far as known,
spent his entire life in Bavaria. Her father came to
America when a young man and was married in
Louisville, Ky. He had learned the trade of gas-fitter in the old country, and removing to Rock
Island, he followed that calling there. In 1861 he
came to Galena, and after pursuing the same trade
here for awhile, he became engineer of the motor
works, but he has now retired from active labor.
Mrs. Bernard's mother came to America with her
sister, and settled in Louisville. Ky., and there
made the acquaintance of her husband. They were
both charter members of St. Mary's Catholic Church,
with which they are still identified. Of their union
seven children have been born, as follows: John,
Mary, Frank, Joseph, August, Clara, and Frances.
Mr. Bernard was a fine representative of the
self-made men of our country, as he came here a
poor boy, and owed his elevation in after life to
the dominance of a strong will, a clear head, and a
good capacity for work. He interested himself in
political affairs, and was one of the prominent Democrats of this city. His fellow-citizens early selected
him as a man in every way fitted for the responsibilities of public office, and elected him to be city
Alderman, which position he held for two terms of
twenty-four months, and was serving out a third
term, when his untimely death closed his career.
Not only was Galena thus deprived of an honorable and useful citizen, his neighbors of a kind
friend; but his stricken family, to whom he was devotedly attached, lost the most thoughtful and
tender of husbands, and the most loving and wisest
of fathers. The strong hope of immortality, that is
planted in every breast, can be the only consolation
for the dropping out of life's circle of such a man.
We would say to his friends in the words of the
poets, "The death which you lament, is but a great
event in the life of the soul. It is a change, and
not a dissolution. It is the gate to a new sphere,
where the hopes and the dreams of earth shall be
turned to sight, and the broken circles of life be
rounded to the perfect orb."
Transcribed by Christine Walters Portrait and Biographical Album of Jo Daviess and Carroll Counties, Illinois (1889), p. 696.

|