"SHSI Certificate of Recognition"
"Best on the Web"


Encyclopedia Dubuque

www.encyclopediadubuque.org

"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
Marshall Cohen—researcher and producer, CNN

Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




TURNER, Jeremiah M.: Difference between revisions

From Encyclopedia Dubuque
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:turner.png|left|thumb|350px|]]TURNER, Jeremiah M. (Dubuque, IA, Dec. 24, 1837--Lansing, IA, May 6, 1928) In '''A Raft Pilot's Log''', by Capt. Walter A. Blair (1929), Capt. Turner is described as  
[[Image:jturner.png|left|thumb|350px|]]TURNER, Jeremiah M. (Dubuque, IA, Dec. 24, 1837--Lansing, IA, May 6, 1928) In '''A Raft Pilot's Log''', by Capt. Walter A. Blair (1929), Capt. Turner is described as  


                 a close manager and a careful, skillful, cautious pilot. He made good average time and  
                 a close manager and a careful, skillful, cautious pilot. He made good average time and  

Revision as of 18:28, 3 December 2020

Jturner.png

TURNER, Jeremiah M. (Dubuque, IA, Dec. 24, 1837--Lansing, IA, May 6, 1928) In A Raft Pilot's Log, by Capt. Walter A. Blair (1929), Capt. Turner is described as

               a close manager and a careful, skillful, cautious pilot. He made good average time and 
               delivered his rafts in excellent condition when and where they were wanted... proved 
               his merit by his work and quit the river with a competency, which he did not lose when 
               he went ashore but increased it by successful enterprise since.

J.M. Turner engaged in towing logs and lumber on the Upper Mississippi, between St. Paul and St. Louis. Written in the 1920s, Memories of a Raft Pilot by Capt. Turner, told of his life on the Mississippi during the later years of lumbering when rafts were towed down the Mississippi by steamboats. His river activities began in 1858 and continued until 1903. He tells of steamboat and raft piloting; about rivermen, steamboat men, lumber agents; and storms and disasters on the great Mississippi.

He established the first pearl button factory in Lansing in May, 1899 andcontinued his involvement in the factory well into his 80s. The business was led by his grandson, Leo Hufschmidt, who had been raised by Jeremiah and his wife after his mother Julia died. When Mrs.Turner died in 1904 J.M. lived with Leo for the remainder of his life.

In 1924, Capt. Turner proposed the building of a nine-foot waterway from Green Bay to McGregor by way of the Fox and Wisconsin rivers. He believed a it could be made and maintained at minimum cost.

---

Source:

"Turner, Capt. Jeremiah M.," Online: http://iagenweb.org/boards/allamakee/biographies/index.cgi?read=200708