Showing posts with label Tuttlingen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tuttlingen. Show all posts

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.

03 October 2020

Klaiber Cousins Separated During Immigration

 

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2020

 

As I was posting my last article, going down memory lane about my first publication, Klaiber Cousins, almost 50 years ago, the telephone rang.  A bubbly Klaiber cousin, Nanette Couch called[i].  Hubby and I met Nanette in 2019.  She is in the midst of her genealogy journey and brought an aunt along to honor Klaiber Cemetery.  I immediately knew she would become an excellent researcher.  She had questions.  She had ideas. She was excited.

As I picked up the phone I told her the call was serendipitous since I just wrote the article about the booklet that started my own journey.  Nan had been reflecting about the 6 June 1854 United States arrival of Johann Andreas (John Andrew Klaiber) from Havre to New York. 

I sent her the notice from the New York Herald dated 7 June announcing the arrival of the Brother Jonathan which was part of the Tucker line.   She wondered why they chose Le Havre port instead of Hamburg which was about the same distance from Tuttlingen in opposite directions.  She talked about steerage. She questions where money to pay for the trip for a twenty-two year old came from.  Then she mentioned a seventeen year old passenger with the surname Glunz. 

The alerts in my brain went off. Nanette’s inquisitive mind led me back to my lecture days when I told students to be sure and review notations and collected materials on a regular basis as new information surfaced.  I had not practiced what I preached.  I had not looked at my copies of the manifest of the Brother Jonathan in many years. Yet once kirche (church) records from the area were digitized I had dutifully charted the Klaiber ancestors and discovered his mother’s name.  We simply call Marguretta Maurer Klaiber “Dutch Granny”.  At that moment  Nan’s lilting voice chatted on & I knew that over the years we – no I – had made some early genealogy mistakes. 

“Dutch Granny’s” mother was Anna Christina Glunz who married Johann Andreas Maurer.  It was right there in my files but I had not reviewed my material.  My other mistake was assuming that the cousin had the surname Klaiber.  Never assume in genealogy.

I began writing down the stories when I married in 1968. They came from the various branches of the ten children of John and Mary Ann McBrayer Klaiber and were pretty consistent in the telling.  One of these little stories was that John Andrew Klaiber came to America with a cousin. They were separated in New York and the cousin never heard from again.  Not even a story but a simple, short statement.

Once I located the manifest I remember being very disappointed that no other Klaiber surnames appeared among the passengers.  Family members never gave up hope that they might find that cousin.  In 1949, as one of the last drawings Robert Ripley did, John Andrew’s son, James Matthew Klaiber, appeared in the newspaper article Believe It or Not having voted in the same precinct for 70 years.  Letters flooded in from Klaiber’s around the United States.  My “in-laws” felt strongly that there was a connection with the Klaiber’s, at that time in Buffalo.  They saved the letters[ii]. But they could not tell me why they felt a connection to the Buffalo families.  I spent a lot of time tracking the New York and Pennsylvania branches through those letters.  Yes, they all seemed to lead back to Hausen Ob Verena, Tuttlingen, Wurttemburg.  But immigration dates did not fall into place with our progenitor s journey and the separated cousin.  I was still making the assumption mistake.

The ship’s clerk entered the passenger names in the order that they came.  Johann Klaiber, age 22,  is entry 298. Entry 299 is Christian Gluntz (as spelled) age 17.  John Klaiber made it to Cincinnati and from Cincinnati up river to Catlettsburg, Boyd County, Kentucky.  He immediately set up shop as a bootmaker.

Christian Glunz was born 31 August 1836 in Tuttlingen[iii].  The son of Christian and Anna Burer Glunz, he ultimately is a 3rd cousin of “Dutch Granny”. His name is listed in the Wurttemberg Immigration Index series by Trudy Schenk. The index indicates his destination was Ohio.

 


Brother Jonathan,6 June 1854 from Le Havre, France to New York

 The Balch Institute shares one of several emigrant guides on their web page.  THE GERMAN IN AMERICA, or ADVICE AND INSTRUCTION FOR GERMAN EMIGRANTS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA  was published in 1851 and might have been one the Klaiber family reviewed.  

Rule #1: "Never suffer yourself to be so misguided in Germany, as to pay in advance your fare from New-York to the interior of America. You can gain nothing by this, but lose much.  Pay your passage only to New-York, and no farther".

 

Rule # 6 "Whoever travels from New-York to the West by way of Buffalo, generally does best, to take one of the two great railroads, which lead there from New-York; that is, the Albany and Buffalo railroad and the New-York and Erie railroad.  If you choose to travel by the first mentioned, take a steamboat from New-York to Albany and there at the railroad station buy a ticket for Buffalo.  But you can also take a ticket for N. York; and you do well to enquire, for that purpose, in the office of the German Society, for the Agent of the Albany and Buffalo R.R. Co.  But if you choose to travel by the New-York and Erie railroad, you have merely to go to the railroad station which is on the North River, at the end of Duane-street.  From there it goes at first 25 miles up the Hudson by steamboat, then by railroad in a northwest direction directly through to Dunkirk on lake Erie, and from thence by steamboat to Cleveland, Sandusky, Detroit, &c."

By 1860 John Andrew Klaiber, the shoe/boot maker is established and appears on the census in Boyd County, Kentucky. 


Sandy Valley Advocate 20 August 1859


Christian Glunz has migrated to Marshall, Clark County, Illinois where his occupation is also cited as a shoemaker.  How I wish the elder Klaiber’s were still with us so I could shout that, thanks to yet another Klaiber cousin, Nan, we found that immigration separation.  We had not lost him, I was simply looking at it the wrong way.

Christian Glunz’s parents, Christian and Anna Burer Glunz made the journey to America the following year.  The elder Christian died 30 May 1880 in Alta, California[iv].  Son Christian died 22 April 1915 in Oakland, California.  Apparently never crossing paths with our branch of Klaiber’s again (Or am I making another assumption?).

The Klaiber’s, Maurers, Glunz, Hallers, and Linck’s are just a few of the names that intertwine in Hausen ob Verena, Tuttlingen.  It did not take me long to make contact with Jillaine Smith who has done diligent work on the Glunz family and is connected to families in both Buffalo and Cincinnati.

“Dutch Granny’s” brother Johann Jacob Maurer had a grandson Gustave Hermann Mauer Born in 1831 who came to America.  Gustave died in 1893 in Grass Valley, California.  There is no indication from our branch of the family that she had contact with this family after they arrived in America.

 

Marguretta aka “Dutch Granny” also had a brother Andreas Mauer, born 17 Oct 1802, that married Maria Klaiber,[v] and a sister Anna Maria born 2 Dec 1811 that married Michael Klaiber.[vi]  We all have twisted branches.

 

I continue to learn.  There is another Haller family that settled in Greenup and Later Boyd county, Kentucky at about the same time.  Nellis Haller[vii], a local genie, has graciously shared her notations.  The family of Frederick Haller born in Saxony and wife Charlotte Hiper[viii] do not appear to have ties to the Tuttlingen, Wurttemberg Haller’s at this point in the research. 

 

 Our genealogy journey will continue together. The journey continues with fresh eyes, lessons learned, and stories told.

 

 



[i] Desc. Of Harrison Elsworth Klaiber s/o John Andrew Klaiber

[ii] The letters and other material of extended Klaiber families is now a part of the vertical file collection of the Boyd County Public Library

[iii] Evangelische Kirche Hausen ob Verena (OA. Tuttlingen)

[iv] Daily Alta California, 2 June 1880, .

[v] d/o Johann Christian Klaiber

[vi] Michael Klaiber b 1809 s/o Matthias Klaiber and Ursula Strom

[vii] Nellis Rae Ellis Haller

[viii] Charlotte d/o John George and Charlotte Bingener Hiper.  The elder Charlotte married #2 Henry Menshousen.  The Menshouse families well known in Boyd County, KY.

26 September 2020

 Klaiber Cousins

Compiled by Teresa Martin Klaiber 2020



“Dutch Granny” Marguretta Maurer Klaiber with Sophia Crum daughter of Maggie Klaiber Crum. Maggie died age 18 months and is buried in Klaiber Cemetery in an unmarked grave.

We all start our quest about family as a “genealogy newbie”.  We have to start somewhere. That first step is what has become tagged as “grandma’s attic.” Start with what you know about yourself, what family artifacts you discover  in the attic and question relatives.   I spent several early years of my journey writing down all the wonderful tales about my “married into” Klaiber family.  They had welcomed me with open arms and I am very proud to be a member of this wonderful family.

And while my first few publications leave a lot to be desired, from time to time family members ask about them today.  With three little boys to raise, no extra money for self-publication, I decided I wanted to share what I had gathered. In 1981, sitting at the kitchen table in Burlington County, New Jersey, surrounded by answered questionnaires, and piles of notes and interviews I began to compile Klaiber Cousins.  With a cherished Klaiber family group picture and a local printer who had never done a genealogy compilation I was proud of my first endeavor.



Back Row: John, Margaret, Charles. Elizabeth Fannin, Nelson. Seated: Dutch Granny, John Andrew, Mary on lap of Miriam, Lorain “Raney” standing, James Matthew, Harrison standing, Kate holding baby Anna.

In 1981, living in New Jersey, it was a long trip back to Kentucky where progenitor John Andrew Klaiber had settled, to access records.  With the help of established “genies” I ordered microfilm after microfilm, cranking page after page to find census, that today we readily tap on-line in a blink of an eye.

I heard the wonderful stories about the bravery of John Andrew’s mother who everyone simply called “Dutch Granny”.  John settled in what would become Boyd County, Kentucky.  He came to America on the ship Brother Jonathan in 1854.  He married Mary Ann McBrayer the following year in what was then Carter County, Kentucky.  In 1859 he was naturalized in Greenup County, Kentucky.  Yes, you must learn the genealogy of your family AND the history of countries and counties.

 

His widowed mother Marguretta departed Hamburg on the Ship Silesia in June 1870.  From New York she would follow her son’s path to Cincinnati and come up river to Catlettsburg, Kentucky.  She was 71 years old. This compiler is now 71, with health issues, and am awed that she made this trip to America where they lived out their remaining years. 

Her son was at that time living on Panola Street in Catlettsburg, a successful boot maker in town.  By 1883 he moved the family out to Garner. Garner is now my home as well and God willing I will be able to live out my remaining time here as well.

When writing Klaiber Cousin’s we did not know “Dutch Granny’s” maiden name.  We knew the family was from Wurttemberg. We now have established the family was from lovely Hausen Ob Verena in Tuttlingen. Thanks to the wonderful diligence and advancement in technology and placing digitized records on-line we know she is Marguretta Maurer daughter of Johann Andreas Maurer and Anna Christina Glunz[i] Maurer.  She Married John Andrew Klaiber’s father Matthais Klaiber 29 June 1829 in Hausen ob Verena, Tuttlingen, Wurttemberg, Germany.  We are honored to be back in Kentucky, caring for the land and the cemetery where she lays at peace in the on our farm.



Klaiber Cemetery, Boyd County, KY

 A wonderful serendipity is that we chose to name our youngest Klaiber son Matthew in 1975, after James Matthew Klaiber not knowing that we were also honoring his 3rd great grandfather. We have three wonderful sons that carry on the Klaiber name.

With better records and lots more experience I now have a documented tree from Johann Andreas (John Andrew) Klaiber back four more generations. But for me it will always be the stories and the history teaching me lessons along the way. The chart is just a guide.



(For proper documentation please contact compiler)

 

A quick search at Worldcat.org shows Klaiber Cousins in local libraries as well as the Library of Congress, FHL and New York Public Library System.  The publication also got a mention in several “Who’s who in U.S. Writers, editors & Poets”. I don’t feel like I can take credit for any material in any genealogy. I did compile that is true.  But no compilation could be done in genealogy without all the wonderful gathered information and documents.  It takes a family community.

If you stop by to honor John Andrew, Mary Ann and “Dutch Granny,” in Klaiber Cemetery please take a few minutes to come share your stories at our log home across the road.  Come sit a spell and have a cuppa with me.  The whisper of the stories and the memories shared is truly the definition of genealogy.

 



[i] Stay tuned for the next addition of my blog concerning the Glunz/Gluntz surname