| From The Columbian, date unknown: |
"The German brothers named Proebstel, their
wives and offspring made up one of the largest families settling in
Clark County [in Washington state, USA] in the early days. A community
east of Orchards was named for the family, and a church still carries
the Proebstel name.
"The four brothers arrived here from Missouri in time to take
donation land claims in the early 1850s. Andrew took out a claim just
northwest of Orchards, and John, Valentine and Jacob Proebstel settled
near what is now Proebstel. Andrew departed in several years for the
Midwest, and his land was purchased by Jacob Proebstel.
"At least two other Proebstel brothers also lived in Clark County
in the early days. J.C. Proebstel, born in 1854,
a son of John Proebstel, remembered that the family residence was
a log cabin chinked with mud and moss to keep out skunks, wood rats
and bad weather. Indians were the nearest neighbors, and wolves, bears
and cougars prowled the Proebstel area.J.C. Proebstel also recalled:
'...our roads were pack trails. We subsisted chiefly
on game and fish and berries. Our stock fed on the grass and the
native meadows. To establish our livestock we would exchange pigs
for calves, colts for cows, and cow and a calf for a horse.'
"A visitor to the Proebstel area in 1876 reported Jacob Proebstel
Sr. was growing grain and clover. At the nearby John Proebstel farm,
the owner had cleared a large amount of brush and logs. He told the
visitor 'there is no country in the world' he preferred to that area.
"A post office named Proebstel was established in 1886 with Francis
and Herman Proebstel, two sons of John Proebstel,
in charge at the start. Several other postmasters also were on duty
before the office was discontinued in 1907. Although farming was the
Proebstels' main occupation in the earliest days, some of the family
eventually went to Vancouver. William W. Proebstel was proprietor
of the Exchange Hotel on Main Street between Third and Fourth streets
in the 1880s, and the Reception Saloon in the same vicinity in the
'90s. Andrew J. Proebstel, son of Jacob Proebstel Sr., also was active
in the business district.
"He worked for a while for his brother, Jacob Jr., who owned
a general merchandise store, and later was in business with partners
at several stores. He aided his son-in-law, Frank Wilcox, in establishing
an auto company in 1907 and spent much time in that business in later
years, in addition to serving as bailiff at Clark County Court." |
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