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Gladys VanDenHeuvel

Gladys VanDenHeuvel

NIAGARA, Wis. — Gladys Freeman VanDenHeuvel of Niagara, Wis., laid to rest on Feb. 5, 2026, at home with her family at the age of 93.

She was born May 17, 1932, in Iron Mountain to Dewey and Irene (Peters) Freeman of the County N farm.

She graduated in 1951 and married Leslie Bjorkman at the Niagara Chapel on Chapman Road.

Gladys grew up working the farm, milking cows and planting crops seed by seed on her belly on the buckboard pulled behind by their horse. Being raised where seasonal loggers boarded a big log cabin behind the small farmhouse, she carried in heated water for many years, picked berries and tended animals. All meals were prepared and eaten in a long building called the summer kitchen. They had a two-hole outhouse and walked wherever they went. There were no cars then, so one got to know their neighbors to get a drink.

With a family of 11 children and 2-3 Genrich family, tending gardens was a community project, a work ethic that was passed down to grandchildren to learn on the hottest of days. She would say, “Bruce and I were the hardest workers on the farm and the last two alive.” Now Bruce carries the legacy with his son, Charlie, managing the cattle farm.

Glady was a jolly person; smiles came quickly and she was always willing to help those in need. She assisted many elderly with rides and household chores and worked at the Pembine Feed Mill. She drove pulp trucks with Pattersons, cooked at Four Seasons, and fed many of acquaintance on the old Barker Farm where she had a long summer kitchen: a room with incubators, a butcher table, a wringer washer, drying racks, kettles, and the aroma of vittles cooking. Her first paid job was as a bartender, which found her 35 year career in 10 taverns from Beecher, Aurora, to Spread Eagle; she even owned the Hideway Bar in Aurora with many patrons from all over. Being the early morning riser, she helped Tinker open her summer kitchen for many seasons. Thanks to Gladys, we all learned to get our red rubber boots on, get our hands dirty, and give more than you receive.

She was a member of the American Legion Auxiliary, Homemakers Club, Protestant Church, and Tavern League.

Her surviving family includes her brother, Bruce Freeman; her children, Linda (Dennis) Conrad, Donald (Debbie) Bjorkman, and Evelyn “Tink” and Earl “Butch” Rugg; grandchildren Melissa Welter, Matt Schettler, Dawn Rock, Nichole Blomquist, Jason D. Bjorkman, Earl III “Sonny” Rugg, April Rugg, Beau Rugg, and Leah (Kyle) West; 19 great-grandchildren; a great-great-grandchild; 12 stepchildren; and many nieces, nephews, neighbors and dear friends.

Relatives departed are her husbands, Leslie Bjorkman, Arnold Barker, and Roger VanDenHeuvel, who passed in 1994; siblings Sonny, Putty, Rufus, Dennix Freeman, Janet Davis, Mabel Chartier, Anna Mae Larsch, Alice Hayes, and Carmen Harvath; son-in-laws Larry Schettler and Dennis Conrad; Michael Catlow McDonald; a special niece, Nancy; and countless friends and family.

There will be a Celebration of Life at a later date.

The family would like to extend their sincerest gratefulness to Dr. and Mrs. John L. Loewen and their loving nurses, Doctors Morel and their kind nurses, the MMC-Dickinson Home Health Nurses, Aid and staff, and Karen Klenke with the Prayer Shawl Ministry.

Condolences to the family of Gladys Freeman VanDenHeuvel may be expressed online at www.ernashfuneralhomes.com.

The family has entrusted the Erickson-Rochon & Nash Funeral Home of Iron Mountain with the arrangements.