Kuechler, Jacob, 1823-1893

Born in Schoellenbach, Hesse-Darmstadt, Jacob Kuechler (1823-1893) graduated from the University of Giessen with a degree in civil engineering and forestry before immigrating to Texas in 1847 with the Darmstadt colony. He settled in Fredericksburg following the collapse of the Fisher-Miller Land Grant in Bettina. In 1853, Kuechler gained citizenship and married Marie Petri three years later. He farmed and surveyed for Gillespie County until the outbreak of the Civil War. Kuechler also pioneered the study of dendrochronolgy.

Following the secession of Texas from the Union, Kuechler was appointed by Sam Houston to enroll state militia troops in Gillespie County. After signing up only German Unionists for his company, Governor Francis Lubbock disbanded it. Kuechler then survived the Battle of the Nueces while serving as a guide for German Unionists attempting to flee to Mexico. Kuechler escaped to Mexico, where he surveyed in the North until his return to Texas in 1867. Kuechler was then appointed deputy collector of customs in San Antonio and became a leading spokesman for Republican Germans during Reconstruction. In addition, he was elected to the state Constitutional Convention of 1868-69, appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office from 1870 to 1874, and surveyed land for various railroads in the state.

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