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- From a Newpaper Article"Sons of the Pioneers"
Alton R Lane, a retired business man of Huntley, has resided all his life in that community.
His father Augustus C. Lane, was born in Cattaraugus county, New york, in 1832. When 21 years of age, he came west to Oshkosh, Wis., making that journey on horseback by way of Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago and Milwaukee. Four years later. July, 1857 he came to Winnebago, arriving the day of the Spirit Lake Masacre in Iowa. He took claim to a tract of land, stayed two years, then went back to Wis. to marry Elizabeth Fairbanks.
Several years later Augustus Lane and wife came back to Minnesota and were living in Blue Earth county at the time of the New Ulm massacre in 1862. They were witnesses to this terrible affair.
In 1864 the Lanes settled on a farm in Verona township and resided there for 40 years. It was on this farm that Alton Lane and his Brothers and sisters were born. Perhaps some of them were born in the log house their parents built.
"Continued under Alton Lane"
From Lane Family Genealogy by Evertt Richard Lane
Augustus left New York and migrated to Oshkosh, Wisconsin in 1853 when he was 21 years old. He spent some time there, then went to Minnesota, but shortly tereafter returned to New York where he remained for ten months before returning to Wisconsin and Minnesota. In 1857 he arrived in Faribault County, Minnesota and took claim to a track of land in Verona township where he resided for two years. He then sold out and returned to Waupun, Wisconsin, remaining there only two years. He married Elizabeth Fairbanks, July 4, 1860 in Waupun, Wisconsin. Later that year they moved to Blue Earth, Minnesota. We was a witness to the massacre in New Ulm in 1863. Later that year they returned to Waupun and in 1864 he make his last move. He returned to Faribault County, Minnesota nad homesteaded 200 acres of land in Verona Township. At first they lived in a log cabin and endured many hardships but over the years he prospered and was able to have a fine house, large barn, grainery, windmill, and a six acre grove. He was an ardent Prohibitionist and an active church member. When he died he still owned the farm he had homesteaded in 1864.
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