Found Photo Project #7
By Eilene Lyon
I found this family portrait in an antique store in Sandpoint, Idaho. The only information on it is a name written in pencil on the back: Arthur Eckermann. I was astonished to discover this is a unique name and found him quite quickly. This does not show the entire Eckermann family, but it was taken on the 440-acre family ranch near Cottonwood, Idaho County, Idaho.
Herman Gottfried Eckermann was born in Germany in 1850 and immigrated to Iowa with his family when he was just four years old.1 In 1882 he married Helene Christine Rave in Davenport, Iowa.2 Helene (the mother on the left side of the picture) was born in Iowa in 1862 to German immigrant parents.3 Therefore their children are of fully German heritage. Three of their sons died very young and are buried in Iowa.4

Herman purchased the McCafferty ranch near Cottonwood and moved his family to Idaho in November 1899.5 He immediately began construction on the house in this photograph, completed in the summer of 1900.6 The Eckermanns had three surviving sons and seven daughters. The youngest, Agnes (next to her mother), was born in Idaho in 1903.7
Arthur Eckermann is the boy on the right side of the photograph. According to news reports, Arthur was a champion speller. He and his sisters consistently ranked at the top of their classes in their Cottonwood school district.

Based on the marriage dates of the daughters, I’ve placed this photograph in late summer or fall 1911. Two daughters were married by then and a third would marry the following March.
So, aside from little Agnes, the other girls in the picture are likely to be (oldest to youngest): Adele, Annine, Hilda, and Thekla. Which is which? I don’t know! My best guess is left-to-right: Adele, Thekla, Hilda, Annine. And let’s not forget the doggie next to Agnes.
No photographs of any of the people in this image have come to light on Ancestry or FindAGrave. I also have not found any descendants for now.
Annine married Hellmuth Peter Lage on March 5, 1912.8 Nine days later, her father Herman committed suicide by emptying a gun into his abdomen. The news of his death and of Annine’s marriage both appeared on the front page of the same newspaper.9 What an odd juxtaposition!
No one could understand why Herman did this. His farm was quite successful and several of his children were married and it seemed like all was well in the household.
The land remained in the family for many years (and maybe it still is). I found a property map from 1939 showing that Agnes and her oldest brother, Edward, owned it.10 There are no buildings on any of it today, except possibly a pole barn. The house in the photo probably no longer exists.

Helene died in 1930 at age 68.11 Edward never married and live to 78. A son named Gustav (single) died of multiple sclerosis at age 49.12 Arthur married, had two children, and died of a heart attack at 62.13 The daughters all lived into their 80s and 90s, except Johanna (1890-1932) who also died of a heart attack, complicated by peritonitis and appendicitis.14
All the girls except Agnes, the youngest, had children, so hopefully someday I will be able to reunite this lovely portrait with the Eckermann descendants.
Herman G. Eckermann and family on Ancestry.com
Feature image: Eckermann family on their ranch about 1911. Image size is 8.5″ x 6.5″. (Collection of the author)
- Herman Gottfried Eckermann: Custodian: Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche Luebeck; Film Number: 247508; Page Number: 490;491 – via Ancestry. Herman Eckermann: The National Archives and Records Administration; Washington, D.C.; Passenger and Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at and Departing from Ogdensburg, New York, 5/27/1948 – 11/28/1972; Microfilm Serial or NAID: M237, 1820-1897 – via Ancestry. ↩
- Hermann G. Eckermann and Helene Christine Rave: owa Department of Public Health; Des Moines, Iowa; Iowa Marriage Records, 1880–1922; Record Type: Marriage – via Ancestry. ↩
- Helene Christiane Rave: Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Archives; Elk Grove Village, Illinois; Congregational Records – via Ancestry. ↩
- https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/100678887/fredrich-w-eckermann ↩
- “H.G. Eckerman and family arrived…” Cottonwood Report, November 24, 1899, Newspapers.com. ↩
- “H.G. Eckerman has a fine residence nearly completed.” Cottonwood Report, August 24, 1900, Newspapers.com. ↩
- https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/157875893/agnes-c-leatherman ↩
- Annie C. Eckermann and Helmuth Peter Lage: Ancestry.com. Idaho, U.S., Select Marriages, 1878-1898; 1903-1942 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2014. ↩
- “Many Weddings” and “Prominent Cottonwood Rancher Committed Suicide Today” Idaho County Free Press, March 14, 1912 p. 1, Newspapers.com. ↩
- Idaho County 1939, Metsker Maps https://www.historicmapworks.com/Atlas/US/28987/Idaho+County+1939/ ↩
- Helene C. Eckermann: Ancestry.com. Idaho, U.S., Death Index, 1890-1964 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2003. ↩
- Gustav Bernhard Eckermann: Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics; Boise, Idaho; Death Index and Images, 1911-1969 – via Ancestry. ↩
- Arthur Herman Eckermann: Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics; Boise, Idaho; Death Index and Images, 1911-1969 – via Ancestry. ↩
- Johanna Helen Reuter: Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics; Boise, Idaho; Death Index and Images, 1911-1969 – via Ancestry. ↩


Oh I hope you can reunite them with the old photo, and also the legacy you’ve created for them!
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I will continue the search!
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Hi Eilene. I am so excited to have found this article while researching my grandfather Arthur Hermann Eckermann. I am the daughter of Charles Herman Eckermann who died in 1998. My brother Arthur Charles Eckermann is the only remaining male with the Eckermann name. I had heard some of this background and met Agnes and several of grandpa’s sisters when I was a child. I was only 7 years when grandpa died. This is absolutely so exciting to find this history.
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Hi Linda, Thanks for commenting on the story! I am glad you found the information interesting. The three photos I had did make their way to family a while back, to descendants of Minnie Eckermann Reuter. They were thrilled to have them. Your cousin Tracy has also been in touch. It makes me happy when my research has good outcomes.
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My name is Arthur Charles Eckermann
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How intriguing – you are a real life treasure hunter
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It’s a fun hobby, indeed. Right up my alley.
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Great Job of researching. I often wonder how the photographs I find got to be where I found them. I bet in many cases that would be a story worth telling. I do hope you find a home for the picture. I wish more people who do genealogy would spare some time and effort to find homes for these photographs.
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At least there’s you and me! I know there are others, too. Usually someone has the photos and no heirs to claim them when they die. Or the executor simply dumps them at an estate sale. I’m glad there are people who do put them in antique stores and sell cheap rather than tossing them.
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Great photo of the ranch, Eilene, and your attentive research into their lives is interesting.
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I really enjoy doing it and preserving a little family history that descendants might find online someday.
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Fascinating story. Thanks for the photos and research.
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Glad you like it. I hope a descendant finds the story some day and gets in touch.
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That would be so rewarding.
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It makes me happy.
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👍🏼
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Detective Lyon strikes again! Intriguing story. I especially wonder about the father’s motive for killing himself, poor man.
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I think there was some speculation about a health issue. But I can’t recall finding a death certificate for him, though I do have them for other family members. I’ll have to check when Idaho started issuing them. It varied by county.
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Very impressive detective work!
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It really helped that there could only be the one Arthur Eckermann! Can’t get any simpler. John Smith? Ha!
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Good point! 🙂 I have I very long series of John Browns in my family tree. Try keeping those people straight!
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I actually DO have a John Smith in my tree. Lots of Smiths. Ugh.
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Ugh, indeed. Very frustrating.
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Smith is about as common as Butler (my maiden name) down these parts.
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Fortunately, my maiden name (Halse) is extremely uncommon.
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Once again you have cracked the case.
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Open and shut
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🙂
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An interesting family and I agree with placing good news and bad news for the same family together on the front page – what was the newspaper editor thinking Eilene? The picture of the entire family posing at the farm in the fields was unique and different from the usual posed picture grouped together. You have uncovered a lot of facts about this family.
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Yes, it’s not the usual family portrait at all. The newspaper editor really missed the boat there!
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The family was proud of the farm and their efforts! The editor sure did come up with an odd pair of headlines.
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Yes, Anabel is right calling Detective Lyon 😉 It would be interesting to hear what the family’s perspective is on your research. If you asked 10 people who were at the same event or timeline there would be 10 varied accounts of what happened. Arty family portrait. Cotton farms always reminds me of slavery and never in a good light.
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I hope I will get in touch with a descendant at some point. There has to be someone interested in their family history. I didn’t see any cotton in this farm. Not something that would likely grow up north in Idaho.
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What a great job you’ve done in finding all this about the family. I hope some descendant will Google their ancestors’ names and find your blog!
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I hope so, too. I was fortunate that the Cottonwood newspapers were online. Even a few years ago there were few Idaho papers digitized.
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My friend, I love that an antique store photo sent you down a rabbit hole into a world otherwise forgotten!
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I love doing this. I still have quite a few to research, but it will have to wait a few months.
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I can tell you enjoy it. Isn’t it wonderful having a pastime that brings you joy and that challenges you?
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The best kind! And I hope it might bring others a little joy, too.
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Even better!
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What a wonderful photo. And if it weren’t for people like you doing the research and putting things together so much would be lost forever.
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Would that I could reunite all the displaced photos. I feel that somewhere out there are missing images of my ancestors, yet to come to light.
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Oh, that would be wonderful!
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This is utterly fascinating, Eilene! I do hope you can reunite family with photo!
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I’ll keep digging!
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I know you will!
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I find old photos taken on farms intriguing. Such an innocence to them that belies the hard work. I hope you’re about to connect photo with family.
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I have a good bit more digging to do. I agree with you about the setting. I sense their pride in their crops. It’s very satisfying to grow your own food. We’ve lost a lot of that.
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I was sure I’d commented on this post when I first read it! A photo to treasure, but how tragic Hermann died by suicide, especially so close to the marriage of his daughter.
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And a strange way of doing it. It tends to support the disease theory. Perhaps he was “killing” a tumor.
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Wow, great work finding out all this information
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Thank you!
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Love your work on this and look forward to finding out more. Did the newspaper article report his death as a suicide? If so, then you are simply re-telling the story and not divulging “new” details. If not, then maybe it should be reported as “death by gunshot”? It could have been an accident with the gun – cleaning it or something else. In any case, I now know you would be sensitive to reporting something like that and your research would back it up.
I am curious why insurance companies owned property around them and how that would come about. Any thoughts?
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Yes, this was a newspaper story, which has also been posted on Find a Grave. I really don’t know anything about the insurance companies, but they may have held a mortgage. There may have been more crossover in that regard back then. It could also have some sort of investment.
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My name is Arthur Charles Eckermann. I am the sole decindant of the Eckermann family. I am very interested in getting more information on this subject. Please contact me at your convenience.
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Hi Arthur,
Perhaps you are on one line, but I have been in touch with other Eckermann descendants, still living in Idaho. What information were you looking for in particular?
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