George C. Thilenius
George Christian Thilenius was a German-born American politician, soldier, and businessman from the state of Missouri. He is known for the being a Missouri state representative, mayor of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and for the Colonel George C. Thilenius House which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Biography
Early life
Born in the Kingdom of Hanover, his merchant father was also named George Christian Thilenius. He attended private school in Hanover and at age 15 became a merchant apprentice in the city of Göttingen. After the failed Revolutions of 1848, his family fled to St. Louis, Missouri, where he and his father opened a store. He came to Missouri on May 5, 1848. In 1853, he traveled to Cuba where stayed for three years working in the sugar refining business. When he returned to Missouri, he moved to the city of Cape Girardeau where he entered into partnership in a general store business. On March 8, 1857, he married Margaret Fromann with whom he eventually had four children.Military life
Like most German-Americans in Missouri, he sided with the Union during the American Civil War. He served three months in the Union Army and three years in the state militia. Thilenius was present at the Battle of Camp Jackson. When he returned to Cape Girardeau, he helped to organize a mostly German local militia unit known as the Cape Home Guard, and he was elected first lieutenant. He eventually was promoted to the rank of colonel. Thilenius recruited 110 local civilians to construct four forts in Cape Girardeau.On November 19, 1864, Lieutenant Colonel George Thilenius led the 56th Missouri militia in a skirmish at Reeves' Mill in Wayne County, Missouri, and the following day he led them in a skirmish at Buckskull in Randolph County, Arkansas.