WELCOME TO HERMAN HEBERER'S PAGE!




This is Herman (on right) with brother (Abel?).




			Herman Heberer was born on October 28, 1847. 
			His father was Thomas Heberer
			His mother was Caroline Fredicker Heberer(nee Voelcker)
			He was born in Bellville, St. Clair Co. Illinois.
			Herman never married 
			He died on January 18, 1941 at 11:45am from bronchial congestion.

			His obituary states he was one of the ten children:

			I have found the names of 4.

			Charles Thomas Heberer. 
			Ewald Heberer who died on April 29, 1872.
			Augustus
			Abel L.

			His obituary says "Mr. Heberer was a most interesting man to speak to 
			because of his wide and diversified education and his knowledge of the 
			lore and history of Belleville and this communinty.  He was born here on
			October 28, 1846, and except for the few years that he attended schools 
			in St. Louis and in Effingham County and the time during which he lived 
			with his parents in Centralia, he spent practically his entire 93 years 
			in Belleville.  When a youth he attended the public school of Belleville 
			which stood where the Lincoln Hotel now is situated.  His father was 
			Thomas Heberer, a saddler, who came from Germany to make Belleville his 
			home, and his mother, also a native of Germany, was the late 
			Caroline Fredicker Heberer.  While young Herman was still going to 
			school the Civil War broke out.  He said that times were hard then, 
			but in spite of all that, his father sent him to an academy in 
			St. Louis which was near the old French market.  There, among other 
			things, he studied English, French and German.  In later years he could 
			speak both English and German fluently.  After conducting the saddlery 
			business for many years, Mr. Heberer's father acquired a brewery on the
			southeast corner of North Second and West A Streets and the 
			old Bellevile Park, just accross the street.  "That was during the 
			time when 13 breweries and three distilleries flourished in Belleville, 
			all at the same time," he related several years ago.  "And no one ever 
			got drunk, either.  The beer and whisky were shipped to all parts of 
			the country--New Orleans, St. Louis, Cincinnati," he related.  "From my
			father's brewery the beer was shipped to O'Fallon and from there to 
			Sandoval and Centralia from where it was delivered to all parts of the
			country."  Later the Heberers moved to Centralia where they maintained 
			a large depot for the outgoing beer.  Young Herman was again sent to 
			school, this time to St. Joseph's College, a seminary by Franciscan brothers 
			in Effingham County.  He studied there two years, and then returned
			to Belleville with his folks.  Here he remained until his death.  His father
			died in 1871; his mother in 1903.  Only one of the ten children in the
			family is now living.  He is a brother, Charles Heberer, who formerly
			resided in Correctionville, IA., after having spent much of his life in
			France studying art.  Charles, having obtained international recognition
			for many of his paintings, went to France two years ago to dispose of his 
			property and return to the United States with his paintings.  He was last 
			heard from just before the part of France in which he lived was occupied 
			by the Nazi army.  A niece and nephew, children of Charles Heberer, survive.
			They are Mrs. Albert Houk, residing in Arthur, Ia., and Charles Ogden Heberer,
			residing in Oklahoma.

			He owned some property in Centralia, Ill. which he bought from his father.
			It was in this little town that his brother Charles Thomas was born.
			He helped run a brewery in Belleville, Ill. with his father and Uncles Adam and Henry.
			He is Buried in Walnut Hill Cemetery sec 802 along side his parents,
			and Uncle Adam, a 14 year old brother Ewald Heberer that died on April 29, 1872.
			



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