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| Parents: Education: Marriage: Vocation: |
Joseph Kampa Theresa Balder 4th Grade Magdalene "Lena" Otilia Haaf St. Lawrence Parish Church Duelm, Minnesota October 1899 Manager of blacksmith shop [Source: 1930 Federal Census] |
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| Children: | Edmund Peter | Mar. 4, 1901 | † June 25, 1961 |
| Frances Katherine | Dec. 13, 1902 | † Jan. 31, 1994 | |
| Ernest George | Oct. 16, 1905 | † Mar. 18, 1979 | |
| Martha Teresa | Nov. 9, 1906 | † Dec. 15, 2001 | |
| Alfred | 1908 | † 1908 | |
| Alvina Marie | Aug. 5, 1911 | † Apr. 6, 1989 | |
| Donald Joseph | Apr. 24, 1914 | † Jan. 31, 1999 | |
| Louise Elinor | Dec. 30, 1916 | † Jan. 26, 2015 | |
| Eugene David | Apr. 7, 1922 | † Dec. 19, 2004 | |
| Dorothy Alice | June 28, 1924 | † Aug. 12, 2012 | |
| Notes: | At the time of the 1880 federal census, Joseph was 3 years old and living with his parents and five siblings, August |
| (age 10), Annie Mary (age 9), Francis (age 7), Charles (age 5), and Mary (age 1) in St. George,
Benton County, MN. His father was working as a farmer at the time. [Source: NA Film No. T9-0615,
p. 169A] At the time of the July 9, 1895 Minnesota state census Joseph was 18 years old and living with his parents and nine siblings on the family farm in St. George Township, Benton Co. MN. Joseph said he had been living there all his life, and that both his parents were of foreign birth. In the United States Census for 1900, Joseph Leander Kampa and Bertha Dingmann (née Stimmler)'s brother Paul Stimmler are both listed as boarders in the Dingmann household. On September 12, 1918, Joseph was 41 years old and working as a blacksmith in Claremont, Dodge, Minnesota. He was of medium height and build, with gray eyes and dark hair. In the April 4, 1930 census, Joseph was 53 years old and living with his wife Lena and their four youngest children in their own home in Claremont, Minnesota. Their house was valued at $2,500 (approximately $25,000 in 2001 dollars) and the family owned a radio. Excerpts mentioning Joseph Kampa from A Chronicle of Claremont Township and Village: A History of Claremont, Dodge County, Minnesota, Compiled from material contributed by past and present Claremont residents, edited by Jessie Marsh Bowen: "Only a couple of years after the windmill's completion, the big wheel was split in two by a sudden wind, and was replaced by a 60-foot wheel of another make. John McCormick about this time bought the present Dodds farm from an eastern owner named Lysander Jacoby, and moved from the Simpson place near Manchester Lake, where he had been living. Frank Ebenhoh came in 1876, taking land northwest of town. Ed Owen, a former soldier, built and ran a blacksmith shop about where now stands the one that was owned and operated so long by Jos. Kampa." [p. 52] (Gene Kampa's memories of his father): "Joe always went by J. L. Kampa in his business dealings. ... Dad always went deer hunting each fall and he would often stop and visit his siblings when he went north." (Marge Randall's memories of Joseph L. Kampa): "I wish I could remember more about great-uncle Joe Kampa. I really don't remember much about him - probably only saw him a couple times and that would be at funerals. I don't think he was much of a kid person as some of the other uncles were." |
| Ancestry: | The Balder Line |
| The Franz Kampa Line | |
| The Stimmler/Stimler Line [through marriage] | |


Hunting buddy Sam Mosher* and Joe Kampa.
... about the only deer they ever got!
* According to A Chronicle of Claremont, Sam Moser was the town barber for 22 years.


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