hmtl5 Conrad Casten: McKeown Genealogy
Conrad Casten

Conrad Casten

Male 1882 - 1966  (84 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Conrad CastenConrad Casten was born on 13 May 1882 in Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa; died in May 1966 in Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: farmer
    • Census: 1930, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa
    • Census: 1940, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa

    Notes:

    Mr. and Mrs. James McKeown and son, Ralph, are en route to Winnipeg, Can., for a visit with friends. Mr. an Mrs. Conrad Casten expect to move over to the McKeown farm and look after things during their absence.
    Quad-City Times, Davenport, Iowa. Tuesday, 24 August 1926, page 2.


    Morning Sun, Ia., Nov. 15. – Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Casten moved to town this week and will occupy the Duryea home in the northwest part of town.
    The Muscatine Journal, Muscatine, Iowa. Monday, 15 November 1926.


    Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Casten moved their household goods Monday to Marsh, where they will be partners in a grocery store.
    The Muscatine Journal, Muscatine, Iowa. Tuesday, 7 December 1926.


    Morning Sun News-Herald, Morning Sun, Iowa, 12 May 1966, page 1. Conrad Casten, 83, of Morning Sun, died Friday. He was born near Marsh, May 13, 1882, son of Samuel and Charlotte Lind Casten. December 14, 1922, he married Elsie McKeown at Morning Sun. He farmed in the Morning Sun community and worked at IAAP for 13 years until his retirement in 1955. He was a member of the Presbyterian church. Surviving: the wife; a son, Herman, of Cedar Rapids; and two grandchildren. Services: 2 p.m. Sunday, United Presbyterian church, Morning Sun, Rev. Edward Fish; Elmood cemetery.


    Buried:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7477845/h_-conrad-casten

    Township Trustees-1, Lot 60

    Conrad married Elsie Leah McKeown on 14 Dec 1922 in Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa. Elsie (daughter of James Alexander McKeown and Eva Laura Bandy) was born on 28 May 1901 in Mediapolis, Des Moines County, Iowa; died on 25 Apr 1975; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Johnnie Casten  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Jun 1926 in Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa; died on 28 Jun 1926 in Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa.
    2. 3. Herman James Casten  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Oct 1927 in Iowa; died on 22 May 2004 in Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa; was cremated in Elmwood Cemetery, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Johnnie CastenJohnnie Casten Descendancy chart to this point (1.Conrad1) was born on 28 Jun 1926 in Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa; died on 28 Jun 1926 in Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    https://iowagravestones.org/gs_view.php?id=52937

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7477846/johnnie-casten

    J. C. Brown's Addition, lot 103


  2. 3.  Herman James CastenHerman James Casten Descendancy chart to this point (1.Conrad1) was born on 14 Oct 1927 in Iowa; died on 22 May 2004 in Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa; was cremated in Elmwood Cemetery, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: truck drive and business agent for Teamsters Local No.238

    Notes:

    C.R. voice falls silent
    City Council-meeting regular Casten, 76, commits suicide
    By Rick Smith, The Gazette
    Cedar Rapids – H.J. “Doc” Casten has been a regular citizen voice at City Council meetings and the kind of critic elected officials come to love.
    A former truck drive and business agent for Teamsters Local No.238, he always sprinkled suggestions for better government with a good thing to say about the city and the council.
    It was a dependable mix. Casten 76, never surprised.
    Until now.
    After emergency colon surgery and the pain and discomfort that his wife said would not subside in the month following the surgery, the mild-mannered Casten killed himself at his home, 187 Carter St. NW.
    His wife Shirley, said she had gone to the pharmacy May 22 to pick up some stomach medicine for him and found him dead when she returned.
    Shirley Casten said her husband had insisted on no obituary, no funeral and no burial. He was cremated.
    Mayor Paul Pate said this week that the suicide startled and saddened him and his council colleagues.
    :He’s always been upbeat, uplifting,” Pate said. “He never complained about himself. He always had good things to say about the city.”
    Shirley Casten said her husband began attending council meetings several years ago when he tired of people who would complain about City Hall but would never go there to voice an opinion. He decided he would.
    Some probably thought Casten showed at the council gatherings – which are taped for telecast on the local cable station – so he could see himself on TV. But he couldn’t.
    “We don’t have cable,” his wife said.
    The respectful retiree sat apart from the handful of other citizen regulars who often speak at council meetings, and it was his stew of praise and suggestions that earned Casten credibility among council members, Pate said.
    “He’d say, “This is one I think you missed, and I hope you do better the next time,’” the mayor said.
    Casten was a strong advocate for veterans, public transportation and public safely and recently had been named to a City Hall task force to study the city’s police helicopter program.
    This spring Casten suggested that the council delay more spending on bike trails so it could save some jabs slated for layoff at the Street Department.
    In the past, he questioned why the council raised the bar from $5,000 to $10,000 on the size of city purchases that needed council review, saying, “Accountability, when you’re handling large sums of other people’s money, cannot be overdone.”
    Casten had been known, too, to tell the council to be careful raising taxes and utility rates, saying the increase hit retirees hard.
    “I don’t want to leave Cedar Rapids, but every time someone aims at my pocketbook, I have to look at a road map,” Casten said once.
    Casten, who grew up in Morning Sun in Louisa County, was called “Doc” and not his given name, Herman. The nickname stuck after he returned from mechanic school as a young man with a doctor of mechanics certificate, his wife said.
    Shirley Casten said she met her husband in the Kansas City area and they married a week later. They were married 51 years and had a son and daughter, she said.
    After heart surgery a few years ago, he made a point to walking two miles every day in his neighborhood.
    “Sometime it took him a while to get back here if he found somebody to talk to,” Shirley Casten said. “People said he always knew what was going on in the neighborhood.”
    More than that, he made it a point to try to know what was going on in all of Cedar Rapids.
    But he never hinted that he knew it all or that he ever would.
    “He was a gentleman, “Pate said. “He was a breath of fresh air. He’s a voice we’re going to miss.
    The Gazette, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Friday, 11 June 2004.


    Buried:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/203324769/herman-j-casten

    Elmwood Gardens Addition-B, Block 1, Lot 14N

    Family/Spouse: Shirley Jean Mullison. Shirley was born on 2 Oct 1928 in Shenandoah, Page County, Iowa; died on 2 Aug 2013; was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Morning Sun, Louisa County, Iowa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]