DL: Did anyone die from your family during that time because of the war?
TS: No, other than John the two years previous, nobody did. And I know of no injuries incurred as well. I just found a first-hand account here of how the Schmitz family was warned. Would this be a place to read that?
DL: Sure. Tell us who it is from and when it was published.
TS: A man named Greg Lalonde. I’ve met Greg a few times, he lives in the Twin Cities and sent me this. It’s from a Minneapolis newspaper in 1925; I don’t know whether it was the Tribune or what it was then. I won’t read the whole thing, but just how the family was found. This little excerpt I’ll read refers to John Schmitz, and it’s his daughter actually saying this:
“Father came home to build another cabin and on April 27th, 1860 while seated in the cellar he had dug, he was shot in the back and killed. Mother, determined to hold the claim, and with the help of two of my uncles, managed to get along until the outbreak occurred.”
Now she’s going to the first person here, telling about how she’s living with her Uncle Peter Schmitz and they’re at supper:
“We were at dinner and the cabin door was open. I heard a scream, and looking out, saw a neighbor boy running toward the house. His right arm hung limp and he was red with blood. When he reached the door he couldn’t speak, and I’ve never since seen such a look of horror in anyone’s eyes. We realized what had happened and hastily began preparations for flight while the boy sobbed out his story. His mother, two brothers and three sisters had been killed in their home. The boy and his father escaped. We learned afterwards that the father had hidden in a hollow tree. Our trip to New Ulm could not be called a flight, as we rode in an old farm wagon drawn by oxen. While we were hitching the oxen together we could see Indians all about us a mile away. Homes were in flames and we could see groups being attacked. The confusion in New Ulm was awful, Mrs. Thule continued, women were running around screaming and wringing their hands. Many had lost their reason.”
Mrs. Thule then told of being placed in the cellar with a number of others.
“They told us to set the powder afire and blow us all up if the Indians took the town,” she said. “We were told that would be better than capture.”
Now the story that I told just previous to reading this, was not based solely on that; I’ve got many accounts of this. So this just validates and adds a little color. I’d never heard of the boy coming to warn the family. The family, by the way, lives about 4 miles away from New Ulm, 4 miles west and south, just perhaps a half a mile from the little town of Essig. So it’s nearby.
DL: The little boy ran how far?
TS: Well, working with Darla at the Historical Society here, the only one we could figure out who lived near enough to them, and would have had the type of family loss that he suffered--although this account and the actual is off “by a brother” -- it’s a funny way to say that- would have been a man named John Bluehm. Knowing where he lived, where the Schmitz farm was, and corroborating that with the loss of family, it probably was that young man.