Robert W. Gerlach (November 29, 1896–February 17, 1993)

Evelyn Bell Gerlach (May 17, 1901–February 17, 1988)

By Edward Vipatasilpin

Early Life

Robert Gerlach was born on November 29, 1896 in the town of Rhine, Sheboygan County, Wisconsin to German immigrants Henry and Anna Gerlach.1 He had four siblings: sisters Elsie (1893) and Leta (ca. 1900), and brothers John (ca. 1906) and George (ca. 1909).2 Robert’s grandfather, William, emigrated from Germany in 1851.3 His arrival coincided with the first and smallest of four major waves of German immigration to Wisconsin in the nineteenth century. Most came from southwestern Germany as farmers who had suffered from crop blight or fled following political upheaval. William Gerlach was among the first of what became, by the 1890s, four million German Americans in Wisconsin or about 35 percent of the state’s population.4

Military Service

Gerlach World War I Draft Registration Card

When the United States entered the First World War, Congress passed the Selective Service Act of 1917 that required all men between the ages of twenty-one and thirty-one to register for the draft.5 To register, Robert reported his birth year as 1895, shown here in his draft registration card.6 He entered the Army on May 28, 1918 and trained at Camp Grant in Illinois until being released from service as a private on November 27, 1918.7

Post-Service Life

Rehm and Gerlach Marriage Announcement

Gerlach’s wife, Evelyn Bell Rehm, was born on May 17, 1901 in Sheboygan to Herman—also a German immigrant—and Emma Rehm.8 Robert and Evelyn met around 1923 in Kohler, Wisconsin. Robert’s older sister, Elsie, threw a dinner party in December of that year with her brother and Evelyn in attendance. This event may have played a role in the formation of their relationship.9 By May 21, 1926, they had married, shown here in the local newspaper announcement.10 Nearly nine months later, on March 5, 1927, Evelyn gave birth to their daughter, Joy Evelyn Gerlach.11 Robert worked as a photo engraver in Sheboygan to support his family.12

By 1940, the Gerlachs lived in Sheboygan, where the average monthly rent in 1940 was thirty dollars. Robert worked forty hours a week as a laborer earning $1,400 that year. He earned above the average salary of $956 a year for men.13 Meanwhile, Evelyn took care of their daughter and their home.14

In April 1942, shortly after the United States’ entry into World War II, the federal government instituted the Fourth Registration, known as the Old Man’s Draft, which measured the industrial capacity of the US male citizens between the ages of forty-five and sixty-four.15 Robert registered for this draft.16 He did not serve in the military in the Second World War, but he contributed to the war effort by donating money to the Sheboygan Citizens War Fund.17

In their later lives, Robert and Evelyn lived in multiple states. In the early 1950s, they moved to Des Moines, Iowa, where they lived well into the early 1970s.18 In Des Moines, Robert continued his work as a photo engraver.19 They moved down to Citrus, Florida sometime in the 1980s where Evelyn died on February 17, 1988, at the age of eighty-six.20 They had been married for over sixty years. Two years later, in July 1990, their daughter Joy died at the age of sixty-three in Alachua, Florida.21 Both Evelyn and Joy, thanks to Robert’s military service, were eligible to be buried at Florida National Cemetery in Bushnell.22 Following their deaths, Robert moved back to Wisconsin where he lived out the remainder of his days in Waupaca until his death on February 17, 1993 at the age of ninety-six.23 He was subsequently interred at the Florida National Cemetery in Bushnell on March 5, 1993, joining his wife and daughter.24

Endnotes

1“1900 United States Census,” database, Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com (accessed March 24, 2017), entry for Robert Gerlach, ED 55, Rhine, Sheboygan, Wisconsin.

2“1920 United States Census,” database, Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com (accessed March 24, 2017), entry for Robert Gerlach, ED 142, Sheboygan Ward 7, Sheboygan, Wisconsin.

3 “1900 United States Census.”

4Robert H. Zeitlin, Germans in Wisconsin (Madison, WI: Wisconsin Historical Society Press, 2013), 7-8.

5“World War I Draft Registration Cards,” National Archives, accessed March 25, 2017 https://www.archives.gov/research/military/ww1/draft-registration.

6“U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com(accessed March 25, 2017), entry for Robert Gerlach, Sheboygan, Wisconsin.

7“Young Men of the Second District off doe Camp Grant, Ill,” The Sheboygan Press, May 28, 1918, page 8, Ancestry.com; “U.S., Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com(accessed March 25, 2017), entry for Robert Gerlach, SSN 393070769.

8“1900 United States Census,” database, Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com(accessed March 24, 2017), entry for Emma Rehm, ED 79, Sheboygan Falls Village, Sheboygan, Wisconsin.

9“Entertains Friends,” The Sheboygan Press, December 11, 1923, page 5, Ancestry.com

10“Miss Evelyn Rehm and Robert Gerlach United in Marriage,” Sheboygan Press, May 21, 1926, page 4, http://ancestry.com

11“U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007,” database Ancestry.com,http://ancestry.com (accessed March 26, 2017), entry for Joy Evelyn Gerlach, SSN 392221610, Kohler Shebo, Wisconsin.

12“U.S City Directories, 1822-1995,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com(accessed April 19, 2017), entry for Robert Gerlach, Sheboygan, Wisconsin, 1926.

13“1940-2010: How Has America Changed?” United States Census Bureau, March 14, 2012, accessed April 18, 2017 https://www.census.gov/library/visualizations/2012/comm/1940-census-change.html

14“1940 United States Census,” database, Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com(accessed March 25, 2017), entry for Robert Gerlach, ED 59-48, Sheboygan, Sheboygan, Wisconsin.

15“Old Man’s Draft,” The Newberry, accessed July 4, 2017, https://www.newberry.org/old-mans-draft.

16“U.S., World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1942,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com (accessed March 25, 2017), entry for Robert Gerlach, Serial Number 2207, Sheboygan, Wisconsin.

17“Additional Donations to War Fund Listed,” The Sheboygan Press, July 8, 1942, page 5, Ancestry.com

18“Obituaries: Mrs. Leta Scanlan,” The Sheboygan Press, January, 23, 1973, page 8, Ancestry.com

19“US City Directories, 1822-1995,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com(accessed March 28, 2017), entry for Robert W. Gerlach, Des Moines, Iowa.

20“Florida Death Index, 1877-1988,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com (accessed March 28, 2017), entry for Evelyn B Gerlach, Citrus, Florida.

21“Florida Death Index, 1877-1988,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com (accessed March 28, 2017), entry for Joy E Gerlach, Alachua, Florida.

22National Cemetery Administration, "Evelyn Bell Gerlach," US Department of Veterans Affairs, accessed March 28, 2017, https://gravelocator.cem.va.gov/NGLMap?ID=2252245;
National Cemetery Administration, "Joy E. Gerlach," US Department of Veterans Affairs, accessed March 28, 2017, https://gravelocator.cem.va.gov/NGLMap?ID=3177988

23“Wisconsin Death Index 1959-1997,” database Ancestry.com, http://ancestry.com (accessed March 28, 2017), entry for Robert W Gerlach, Certificate number 005121.

24National Cemetery Administration, "Robert W. Gerlach," US Department of Veterans Affairs, accessed March 28, 2017, https://gravelocator.cem.va.gov/NGLMap?ID=1886544

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