PIONEER LOG HOMES
RELATE TO EARLY HISTORY

Joe Kampa's Log Cabin, built in 1870, Duelm, MN; Das Heim der Familie Kampa im Jahre 1870 in Duelm, MN.

The sturdy log homes the Pioneer settlers built over a hundred years ago were just as rugged and strong as the pioneers. The log homes were well built and many lasted over 100 years. A typical home was the log house that stood on the Joe Kampa homestead in St. George Township.
The Joe Kampa Homestead was a Government Patent Deed direct from the United States of America. The Patent Deed was issued at the General Land Office in St. Cloud under the signature of Rutherford B. Hayes, President of the United States. The deed was for an 80-acre tract of land, the East half of the NE 1/4 of Section 28 in St. George Township. The old wagon road, the first trail through Benton County from Sauk Rapids to the Rum River settlement of Princeton ran through part of the Kampa land. Joe Kampa came to America from Germany and was one of the early settlers in the Duelm area. Many settlers used the old wagon trail from Sauk Rapids as they travelled East to settle in the Benton County wilderness.
The above photo of the Kampa home was taken in the year 1961. The log house was being torn down and a new one built on the farm. The logs that built the Kampa home were not discarded after being used 90 years. They ended up at Popple Creek and were used to build a bridge. At the time the house was torn down it was 90 years old indicating it had been built in 1871. Four generations of the Kampa family have lived in that home.
The original home, built of logs, faced the wagon road. The oak logs were hewed on each side and each log was notched to fit well and lock at the corners. Fourteen children became members of the Kampa family and the addition of a kitchen was added on the right side of the home.
The old log house was home for fifteen children, six girls and nine boys and the parents. It was crowded, but the sturdy log building was warm and cozy. The home was heated by a barrel-type iron stove that stood on four legs. Cooking and baking was done on the cast-iron range with lids on top and an oven for baking. The girls in the family shared one bedroom and the boys shared another room. There were three bedrooms on the upper floor and an attic above the kitchen.
More German families began to settle in St. George Township and the old log church of St. Lawrence became the center of community life and later the settlement of Duelm was established. When the railroad went through Benton County, two roads of travel developed from the Duelm area. One road was half a mile west of Duelm, going north by the Kampa farm to the St. George Town Hall, and then turned northwest to the Parent Station on the railroad. The John Marshall store was in operation and it was a distance of about 4 miles to Parent. Another new trail through the woods went half a mile east of Duelm, then turned north on a route by the Hubert Youngman farm, on east of the big slough, by the Henry Bros. and Kevin Latterell farms to the Foley Bros. settlement on the railroad. The new roads opened a route of travel for groceries, supplies and mail, much closer to home then traveling to Sauk Rapids, the County Seat. For some it was closer to travel to Parent than Foley.
The children of the early families attended school in District 26. The school house was about half a mile west of Duelm, on the west side of the road where it turned north and crossed Stoney Brook. The Kampa children walked three-quarters of a mile to get to the school.
About the same time the school was built, the early settlers built a hall on the east side of the road across from the school. The hall was a meeting place where dances and parties were held by the neighbors. The hall was used for a long time after that.
When the Kampa children grew up, few of them remained in the County. Bertha Kampa married Roy Latterell, a mechanic and member of the Latterell Bros. Orchestra in Foley. A daughter, Mary, married Tony Stimler, who started a blacksmith shop in Foley and then established the first Ford Auto Agency in Foley and built the big Ford Garage on the corner north of the Locker Plant. They were life-long residents of Foley. A daughter, Anna, married Blase Abfalter and farmed in St. George Township.
Seven of the boys left home to enter various fields. One was a barber, another was a buttermaker, one was a sheet metal worker and some went into business and worked on their own. One son, Louis, took over the farm which is now owned by his son, Ralph. He will soon turn over the place to his son and the fourth generation of the Kampa family will own the old government homestead with the Deed from the President of the United States.
-- from "Picture Story of Early Foley Days"
Benton County News, Foley, Benton County, Minnesota
Photo provided by Ed Chmielewski

Stimler Family Crest      Kampa Family Crest
Last modified: August 14, 2003
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