Charles Kostboth (1853-1923) was a legislator in the 3rd South Dakota House of Representatives session from 1893 to 1894. He represented McCook County, South Dakota, then in the 11th District.

Charles Kostboth
Photo of Charles Kostboth from records of South Dakota House of Representatives
Charles Kostboth as a South Dakota state representative in 1893
Member of the South Dakota House of Representatives
from the 11th district
In office
1893–1894
Personal details
Born(1853-04-27)April 27, 1853
Prussia, Germany
DiedJanuary 8, 1923(1923-01-08) (aged 69)
Canistota, South Dakota
NationalityPrussia, United States
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)
Catherine (or Anna Catherine, or Katharina) Metzger
(m. 1877)
ChildrenThree daughters; five sons; a ninth child died in infancy
ResidenceCanistota, South Dakota
OccupationFarmer, banker, politician

Charles was born to Wilhelm Kostboth and Maria Sophia Dorothea Muller in Prussia, Germany. The 12-year-old Kostboth came to the United States from Germany with his parents in April 1865, through the port of New York City. They lived on a farm near McGregor, Iowa. Charles married Catherine Metzger on September 27, 1877, near her home in Clayton Center, Iowa. They moved to South Dakota two years later, claiming a homestead five miles northwest of Canistota, on the west half of section 17. Charles's parents also moved to Canistota, and his father died at Charles's farmhouse in 1900.

The couple lived as pioneers on the sparse Dakota prairie where, as Charles' obituary notes, "even claim shanties were few and far between." Charles became an American citizen by appearing at the US District Court in the second district of Dakota Territory before Judge AJ Edgerton on November 14, 1883, where Kostboth "renounced allegiance to the Emperor of Germany [sic]."[1] While on the homestead, Charles was active in public matters and held township and school offices. A doctor came from Sioux City, Iowa, and successfully performed an appendectomy on Charles who lay on the farm kitchen table. Kostboth increased the size of his farm and became one of the wealthier members of the Canistota community. He was known for his charity and generosity.

Charles, Catherine, and eight children lived on the homestead until 1912, when they moved to the town of Canistota. Kostboth was a founding member of German Lutheran Church (now Zion Lutheran Church) in Canistota. At the end of his life, Charles was president of Citizens State Bank in Canistota and Dakota State Bank in Salem, as well as treasurer of two grain elevator companies.

Kostboth suffered two partial paralytic strokes, three years and one year before his death in 1923. His cause of death was listed as senility, with secondary contributions from "chronic nephritis and hardening of the arteries", which were complications from an illness contracted around 1914. Charles Kostboth was buried on January 11, 1923, in the Canistota cemetery.

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Notes

  1. ^ The actual title was "German Emperor", not "Emperor of Germany".

Bibliography

  • Charles Kostboth at South Dakota Legislator Historical Listing
  • "Death of Charlie Kostboth". Canistota Clipper. January 11, 1923.
  • "Funeral of Charles Kostboth". Salem Special. January 18, 1923.
  • Canistota: Our Heritage and History. Canistota Clipper. 1984. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  • Doane Robinson (1904). History of South Dakota. B. F. Bowen. pp. 417. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  • South Dakota. Office of the State Auditor (1894). Biennial Report of the State Auditor of South Dakota to the Governor of South Dakota, for the Period 1892-93. p. 10. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  • South Dakota. Legislature. House of Representatives (1893). Proceedings of the House of Representatives, Third Legislative Session, State of South Dakota. Pierre: Carter. p. 4. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  • Certificate of Death, South Dakota State Board of Health: Division of Vital Statistics, 16 January 1923, 84037
  • Naturalization Certificate, vol. V0688, V0678, Yankton County, South Dakota: United States District Court: Second Judicial District of Dakota Territory, ss., 14 November 1883, pp. 416, 567