29 July 2023

Marguretta Maurer Klaiber: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023

Marguretta “Dutch Granny” Maurer Klaiber and great grand daughter Sophia Francis Crum *1892-1894.


I so admire women with strength and independence.  We often think social graces of our ancestors left women obscure, meekly working behind the scene of home life, but I don’t believe Marguretta was one of them. I mentioned her bravery in a blog post in September 2014. Her family calls her “Dutch Granny,” which is, Kentucky brogue, for Deutch (the word for the German language). 

Marguretta was born 20 December 1798 in Wurttemburg, Germany, the daughter of Johann Andreas Muarer and wife Anna Christina Glunz Maurer.  The Maurer’s, and the Klaiber’s were residents of Tuttlingen.  When Marguretta was eleven she was confirmed in the church in Tuttlingen where she would later be married.

Marguretta married Matthias Klaiber 28 June 1828 in the “Evangelische Kirche Hausen ob Verna,”  Tuttlingen.  At this writing I know of five children born to Marguretta and Matthias.  Their first child, named Matthias was born 2 April 1830 in Tuttlingen and only lived until 1 July 1830.  Our ancestor, John Andrew Klaiber, was born the following year 20 October 1831.Two daughters by the name of Anna did not live to adulthood.  Her last daughter, also named Anna was born 17 July 1839, when Marguretta was forty-one years old.

Matthias Klaiber died 19 August 1845, when Marguretta was forty-six.  John Andrew was fourteen and Anna Christina Klaiber only six.  As John Andrew reached his majority we assume he apprenticed for his trade as bootmaker.  Nine years later John Andrew Klaiber travelled to Le Havre, France where he boarded the Brother Jonathan[i] for America. 

Daughter, Anna Christina Klaiber married 17 May 1863 Johann Martin Haller in the Evangelical Church in Hausen ob Verena.    While we have some ephemera, this branch of the family has no letters written to or from Germany after John Andrew came to America.  But it is safe to assume that they were in contact.  At the age of seventy-two Marguretta Maurer Klaiber travelled from Hausen ob Verena to Hamburg to set sail on 29 June 1870 for America.



She boarded the ship Silesia under Captain Trautman, part of the Hampburg- American Packet line.  She put foot on dry land in New York 13 July 1870.  (The Silesia was built in 1869 and travelled the route from Hamburg to Le Havre and on to New York.   In 1875 she was refitted with an engine and began sailing from Hamburg to the West Indies, as well as bringing passengers to the U.S. She is said to have run aground near the island of Lobos near Uruguay in December 1899 and was scrapped.)

On her trip aboard the Silesia, Marguretta carried a bundle of clothing in white linen sheets.  Once she settled in John Andrew Klaiber’s home, in Boyd County, Kentucky, she busied herself cutting and sewing white suits and dresses for relatives. 

Marguretta lived until she was ninety-seven years old.  She died 14 September 1896 and is buried in Klaiber Cemetery.

 

 




[i] Interesting sidebar.  The Brother Jonathan arrived in NY in June 1954.  In Dec. 1854 the Brother Jonathan was smashed against the rocks of Ireland. The Charleston Daily Courier 20 Dec 1854 has   Capt. Joseph Tucker’s letter concerning the loss.

17 July 2023

Johann Andreas Klaiber aka John Andrew Klaiber: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023



Johann Andreas Klaiber aka John Andrew Klaiber was the American progenitor of our branch of the family.   He was born 20 October 1832 in Hausen ob Verena, Tuttlingen, Wurttemburg, Germany.  His parents were Matthais and Marguretta Maurer Klaiber.  He was confirmed at age 14, the same year that his father Matthias died.   One of the first emigrant guides for Germans was published the following year complete with maps of the United States including individual maps for Ohio and Kentucky[i].  Perhaps Johann viewed this as a teenager.

The oral tradition passed down through our branch of the family was that he came to America with a cousin but that they were separated in New York and the cousin never heard from again.  Everyone assumed that the cousin was also a Klaiber.  As a researcher, I had an “ah hah” moment when I found the ship passenger list.  Johann Andreas Klaiber’s maternal grandmother was Anna Chistina Gluntz.  Johann aka John came to America with cousin Christian Gluntz who settled in the Buffalo, New York area.  I am always amazed how oral history unravels and was delighted that this one had such validity.

John Andrew Klaiber was twenty-two years old when he decided to come to America in 1854.  The closest port was Le Havre, France which could be reached via the Rhine River.  The “Maritime Intelligence” published in the New York Herald, 7 June 1854, announced the arrival of the ship “Brother Jonathan” which had left 7 May from Havre with 416 passengers.  Entry #298 was Johann Klaiber and #299 Christian Gluntz.  The ship docked in New York on the 6th.  A month long crossing.

Joseph Tucker was master of the Brother Jonathan. Tucker’s father owned a shipping firm in Wiscasset, Maine, which was a major center of trade.  By this time another important publication helped guide German’s, giving instructions, as well as a beginners guide to the English language.[ii]  In this publication item #6 stated that whoever traveled from New York to the west by way of Buffalo…does best to take on one the two great railroads… 

The ship manifest does not list occupation but Klaiber was a bootmaker by trade who made his way to Catlettsburg, then Greenup County, Kentucky. 

On 1 November 1855 John Andrew Klaiber married Mary Ann McBrayer, daughter of James R. and Anna Sanders McBrayer in Carter County, Kentucky.   In April 1857 Klaiber leased property from William Hampton on Division Street in Catlettsburg where he  ran his business.[iii]  Their first child James Matthew Klaiber was born 21 June 1857.

A likeable fellow, Klaiber was a charter member of the Odd Fellows Lodge in Catlettsburg.[iv]  The same year John Andrew Klaiber became a naturalized Citizen of the United States in Circuit Court of Greenup County, Kentucky. By 1861 the family was living on the left hand fork of Catletts Creek, now Boyd County, on land he purchased from Richard and Mary Scott.[v]

By 1864 his business had grown and he was able to purchase the Division Street property which was a portion of the old tavern house lot of William Hampton[vi].    They also owned property on Panola Street. Catlettsburg was a prospering community and bustling river front town. During the Civil War government stores were set up not far from the Division Street property. In 1864 troops marched through the town.  As the war came to a close the logging trade once again flourished and with it a growth of hotels and saloons.

With six children and more on the way, John Andrew and his wife Mary Ann finally settled on Garner, leading to East Fork and back to the Big Sandy River. The road to their property was nothing more than the creek bed later known as Long Branch. The family still traded in Catlettsburg, sold and repaired shoes, and were also able to tap further into the logging trade, by logging the land and hauling the logs, on skids pulled by oxen to the river wharf.

John Andrew Klaiber was just as active with Garner community affairs as he was with his business in Catlettsburg.  He is listed as an officer of  Green Hill Lodge #521 which had a building at that time on our road and is listed as a Master Mason.  He along with a future son-in-law and a few others helped build a “double house” on the poor house farm located on the road in 1876.[vii]  As a citizen he was now required to serve on juries and was sitting on the month long jury when George Ellis was brought back from Lexington and arraigned for killing Robbie Gibbons in May 1882.[viii]  A social post in the Ashland paper in June 1884 announced “the Sunday School on Garner is said to be the most interesting one in the county. Rev. John Klaiber is superintendent.”

John Andrew Klaiber’s mother Marguretta had come over to America in 1870 and died 14 September 1896 while living with the Klaiber’s.  She was buried in what today is Klaiber Cemetery. “Whispers from the Grave” is being done in alpha order and there will be a future blog concerning her[ix].  In May 1899 John Andrew Klaiber purchased a section of what was then known as Sexton Cemetery from Henry Powell and Julina McCormack Sexton.[x]  It was one of several deeds drafted for a very small portion of what is now known as Klaiber Cemetery.  “… commencing at the southwest corner of the graveyard at or near the corner post of a stone marked A…. containing 1/8 of an acre…have the privilege of ingress and egress at any and all times…”  The cemetery has far outgrown any of these early deeds with the Klaiber’s simply donating more of the area for burials over the years.

In April 1919 The West Virginia Methodist News published an article about the Klaiber’s stating their home had always been the home of the Methodist preacher Rev. John Martin (no relation to compiler) who so often visited their home in their young days would retire to a room upstairs for prayer and study and called the room the prophets room. At the time of the article it stated that in about 1917 Mr. Klaiber fell and dislocated his hip. The Article was submitted by Mrs. J. C. McGlothlin.  

John Andrew Klaiber died 4 December 1920.  On his death certificate it is interesting to note that under burial the word Sexton was marked out and Hood written over.  Many of the cemeteries, especially in our area, are named for people that own the surrounding property.  Today we try to standardize the names and the cemetery is listed with the state of Kentucky as Klaiber Cemetery.





[i] Bromme, Taugott, Rathgeber fur Auswanderungslustige, A guide for German Emigrants. Suttgart 1846

[ii] Princeton University Library Special Collection PULIFA 2.0 Joseph Tucker Papers

[iii] KY Boyd dbk 3 p 447

[iv] Armstrong, Jim “Parade Scene” Historical Daily Independent, 14 March 1977, Catlettsburg Memories

[v] KY, Boyd deed bk 1 page 153

[vi] KY Boyd Deed book 1 p 506

[vii] KY Bod Court Order bk 3 Nov. term

[viii] The Ashland Tragedy page 329

[ix] Whispers From the Grave is NOT a complete list of all buried in the cemetery but does contain many of the oldest .

[x] KY, Boyd deed book 29 p 613

13 July 2023

James Matthew Klaiber: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023

 

     




 

James Matthew Klaiber, the son of John Andrew and Mary Ann McBrayer Klaiber was  born 21 June 1857 in Catlettsburg, then Greenup County, Kentucky.  He died 22 December 1949 on Garner in Boyd County, Kentucky and is buried in Klaiber Cemetery.  This compiler’s husband was two years old and watched the casket being carried by horse and sled runner wagon, in the snow, up the hill to the cemetery.

I wrote a more detailed description, which you can read, and posted his Blacksmith journal in 1999. Just hover over the word Blacksmith and click to go to the link.  My husband and I cherish his blacksmith journal as well as his desk which was nailed on the wall of his tiny shop on the side of the hill. 

 

 


 

 


   

 

In June 1947, just three months after the birth of James David Klaiber, the family had a dinner for the entire family to honor James Matthew Klaiber’s 90th birthday. At the age of 92, in 1949,  James Matthew Klaiber appeared in Ripley’s Believe It or Not.  The art work, taken from a submitted photograph, was said to be one of the last, if not the last done by Ripley himself.

 



 



07 July 2023

Baby Daughter Klaiber: Whispers from the Grave; Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, Kentucky

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2023



 

I was asked why I am doing individual bio’s on the loved ones in Klaiber Cemetery when they are also posted on Find-A-Grave and in several public databases.  In genealogy, there is no such thing as to much information. Databases are cut and dry and Find-A-Grave is not always maintained by a cemetery trustee nor a person that grew up with these folks. That said I have walked among these people for fifty-six years as a Klaiber and grew up with many of them prior to that. It is the stories and their lives that are important to me. As long as we remember them, they are still with us.

Baby Klaiber is very personal to us, never forgotten and very loved.  She will always be my husband’s “baby sister” even though she was the eldest.  She was born to John Henry and Elsie Ellis Rucker Klaiber April 15, 1945 at St. Mary’s in Huntington, Cabell County, West Virginia.  Elsie mourned her always and talked about her many times with me.  The tiny infant was born with what today we know as severe spinal bifida. In the 1940’s few survived any form of spinal bifida. According to Elsie her sweet daughter lived less than an hour.  Exhausted and needing care herself Elsie never saw nor held her.  It broke her heart. 

Spinal bifida is caused by a lack of folic acid. The Klaiber’s kept a wonderful garden, canned and the table was always full. Elsie would wonder if it was the lack of fresh leafy vegetables during the winter months.  Each time she shared her sadness she brought out the tiny crochet bonnet that she kept that was to be for the baby.  Sadly, I do not know who made it, but I cherish it.



Elsie recorded her birth and death in the family bible.  She thought there was no official record.  Years later, determined to find some sort of paper trail, I began to dig deeper into Cabell County, West Virginia records.  Over the years, researching I became aware that many babies that were stillborn or lived for a very short time only had one record, usually the death record. With a line by line search, aware that Klaiber gets mis-spelled I found her death recorded in Volume 6 page 7K of the Register of Deaths for Cabell County: “Klaibert – female, stillborn, Huntington, single. Information proved by G. A. Ratcliff, the attending physician.”   The parent’s names are not even listed.  Simply put she is listed as “Stillborn Klaibert.” 

Each year a dear neighbor puts flowers on John and Elsie’s headstone, on Memorial day,  and leaves flowers for the baby as well.  She is loved, she is remembered and I hope our sons will keep their tiny aunt’s memory alive in years to come.