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Joseph Mallmann

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Joseph Mallmann

Birth
Death
24 Nov 1956 (aged 71)
Burial
School Hill, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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JOSEPH MALLMANN

Joseph Mallmann, 71, a School Hill farmer, died of a sudden heart attack in
his home at 11:15 p.m. Saturday.
Born Sept. 21, 1885, in the same Manitowoc County farm home in which he died,
Mr. Mallmann was a son of the late Peter and Anna Mallmann.
He attended school near his home and as a young man assisted his father in
operating the homestead farm. He took over the farm in later years, continuing
to operate it until death.
On June 20, 1944 he married Teckla Schierl of Hayton.
He was a member of the Holy Name society of Holy Trinity Catholic Parish, School
Hill.
Surviving are his wife; six sisters, Mrs. John Fahres, Mrs. Leopold Altenbach,
Mrs. John Hess, Mrs. Clara Wilbert and Mrs. Lena Tilger, all of Sheboygan, and
Mrs. Hubert Kretsch, Manitowoc; and four brothers, Frank and John, Sheboygan,
Jake, Chilton, and William, Monterey Park, Calif.
He was preceded in death by a stepson, John J. Mallmann, 25, who was killed in
an auto crash the past April on Highway 32 near Ada.
The requiem mass will be celebrated at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at Holy Trinity
Catholic Church following brief 9 o’clock rites at the Kellenbenz Funeral Home,
St. Nazianz. Burial will be in the parish cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 o’clock this evening. The rosary
will be recited there at 8 p.m. tonight and Tuesday, with Holy Name men offering
the prayers Tuesday evening.
Sheboygan Press, November 26, 1956 P. 12
*********
SCHOOL HILL MAN INJURED BY A MAD BULL
Joseph Mallman, a well known farmer at School Hill, this county, is in a
precarious condition at his home as result of an attack by a mad bull
yesterday. Mallman's head is cut open and his body is terribly bruised as
result having been trampled by the animal. Reports today are that Mallman
will probably survive.
Mallman was leading the bull by a rope, while his father Peter Mallman held
another rope and was walking behind the animal. The bull started to run and
the father was forced to release his hold on the one rope and the son could
not hold the infuriated animal with the other rope and was knocked down and
trampled upon, the bull striking Mallman's head with his hoofs.
When the injured man was rescued and removed to the house it was found that
the gash cut in his head exposed the brain and that his bodily bruises were
many and serious and that internal injuries may also have been inflicted.
Physicians were summoned and every car is being given the injured man, whose
condition is such that no one is permitted to see him.
Manitowoc Herald News, April 27, 1920 p.1
*********
(son of Peter and Anna Mallmann)
JOSEPH MALLMANN

Joseph Mallmann, 71, a School Hill farmer, died of a sudden heart attack in
his home at 11:15 p.m. Saturday.
Born Sept. 21, 1885, in the same Manitowoc County farm home in which he died,
Mr. Mallmann was a son of the late Peter and Anna Mallmann.
He attended school near his home and as a young man assisted his father in
operating the homestead farm. He took over the farm in later years, continuing
to operate it until death.
On June 20, 1944 he married Teckla Schierl of Hayton.
He was a member of the Holy Name society of Holy Trinity Catholic Parish, School
Hill.
Surviving are his wife; six sisters, Mrs. John Fahres, Mrs. Leopold Altenbach,
Mrs. John Hess, Mrs. Clara Wilbert and Mrs. Lena Tilger, all of Sheboygan, and
Mrs. Hubert Kretsch, Manitowoc; and four brothers, Frank and John, Sheboygan,
Jake, Chilton, and William, Monterey Park, Calif.
He was preceded in death by a stepson, John J. Mallmann, 25, who was killed in
an auto crash the past April on Highway 32 near Ada.
The requiem mass will be celebrated at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at Holy Trinity
Catholic Church following brief 9 o’clock rites at the Kellenbenz Funeral Home,
St. Nazianz. Burial will be in the parish cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 o’clock this evening. The rosary
will be recited there at 8 p.m. tonight and Tuesday, with Holy Name men offering
the prayers Tuesday evening.
Sheboygan Press, November 26, 1956 P. 12
*********
SCHOOL HILL MAN INJURED BY A MAD BULL
Joseph Mallman, a well known farmer at School Hill, this county, is in a
precarious condition at his home as result of an attack by a mad bull
yesterday. Mallman's head is cut open and his body is terribly bruised as
result having been trampled by the animal. Reports today are that Mallman
will probably survive.
Mallman was leading the bull by a rope, while his father Peter Mallman held
another rope and was walking behind the animal. The bull started to run and
the father was forced to release his hold on the one rope and the son could
not hold the infuriated animal with the other rope and was knocked down and
trampled upon, the bull striking Mallman's head with his hoofs.
When the injured man was rescued and removed to the house it was found that
the gash cut in his head exposed the brain and that his bodily bruises were
many and serious and that internal injuries may also have been inflicted.
Physicians were summoned and every car is being given the injured man, whose
condition is such that no one is permitted to see him.
Manitowoc Herald News, April 27, 1920 p.1
*********
(son of Peter and Anna Mallmann)


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