31 Day Genealogy Challenge – Day 13: Share a Land or Property Record

Today this challenge is a toughie. I do not possess any land or property records for anyone in my direct lines. I have transcribed descriptions of land transfers my French and German ancestors made in the early 1700s near Rodalben, Germany. They are not the actual records. In collateral lines I have land records, but not in my direct lines. So I am sharing a copier-made image of my immigrant second great grandfather Fritz Eckebrecht’s business card from the era he owned a butcher shop in Chicago. There is family speculation that this butcher shop property was owned with his brother Wilhelm and that is was built by Wilhelm, Fritz, and their father Quirinus Eckebrecht, who was mentioned on Day 10 of this challenge. I do not have the date of this business card. On the 1880 Census, Fritz’s occupation was listed as butcher.

Do you have any corrections, additions, or are we related? My email is cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net.

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks #20: Nature ~ 10th Great Grandfather Johann Andreas Koppels ~

This week’s 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks challenge is Nature.  My feature ancestor for this week is my 10th great grandfather Johann Andreas (Hanschen) Köppels.

For the past few weeks I have been discovering more and more ancestors in Thüringen, Germany.  With actual images of church records my Ancestry subscription pays for, I have traced back 5 more generations in a branch of my 3rd great grandmother’s Marie Louise Köppel’s ancestry.  I have previously written about my immigrant 3rd great grandmother in this prior post and the fact that her father owned mills.  For further clarification, she was the mother of my 2nd great grandfather Frederick “Fritz” Eckebrecht.

So long story short, I found a bunch of new ancestors in the area around Sondershausen, Thüringen, Germany.  And just on Friday, I found out that my 9th great grandfather on a connecting branch was the Schultheiss (magistrate) in a little town near Sondershausen called Berka in 1705.

Back to the featured ancestor ~ My 10th great grandfather Johann Andreas Köppels was born around 1639, possibly near Sondershausen, Germany.  His father may have been named Hans Paul and could be the man with that name that worked at Sondershausen Palace as a smith.  His mother’s name is unknown at the time of this writing.

Schwarzburg
Sondershausen location

Around 1662 Johann Andreas married my 10th great grandmother Susanna Margaretha.  Her last name is unknown.  Unfortunately, the marriage records for Sondershausen start on Ancestry after Johann Andreas and Susanna Margaretha started to baptize their children in the 1660s.

In early 1666, when Susanna Margaretha gave birth to my 9th great grandfather Hans Abraham, Johann Andreas was a harness-maker at Sondershausen Palace and a linen weaver.  Harnesses require cowhide and linen comes from the flax plant.  Both professions rely on nature, don’t they?

  Count Anton Günther I was the count at the palace at that time.

sondershausen palace.PNG
Sondershausen Palace

All in all, Johann Andreas had at least 15 children to at least 2 wives.  I counted at least 12 of them to my 10th great grandmother Susanna Margaretha.

At the time of his death in 1726, while my 9th great grandfather Hans Abraham was working as a brewer at Sondershausen Palace, Johann Andreas was recorded in the church death records as being a Meister Leinenweber (master linenweaver.)

If you would like to read more about Sondershausen Palace in English, some history of the structure is featured by clicking here.

It has been enjoyable finding these revelations in Sondershausen in my ancestry.  I look forward to digging deeper into these newly discovered branches and sharing more about them.

Do you have any comments, additions, or corrections?  Please email me at cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net.
schultheiss2

 

 

 

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks #14 – Brick Wall – Who Are Your Parents Johann Schuttler? (Immigrant #50 ~ Third Great Grandfather Johann Schuttler Part 1 ~)

Johann Schuttler, who are your parents?

Schuttler Wagon

My immigrant third great grandfather Johann Schuttler was born in Wachenheim, Alzey-Worms, Germany in 1829 and came to the United States in 1849 to live with his uncle Peter Schuttler, “The Great Chicago Wagon King.”

Background

For as long as Johann’s great grandsons and other descendants have been researching their family tree, nobody has ever verified the names of Johann’s parents. Obviously, one of his parents would have to be a sibling of his uncle Peter Schuttler.

My Great Uncle John, Johann’s great grandson, began researching his family tree, including his Schuttler ancestors, in his teens. That was the early 1920s. He did not stop researching until he passed away in 1999. His cousin Frank Eckebrecht also searched for John Schuttler’s origins for decades.

There are no records for Wachenheim, Alzey-Worms retained online for researchers. But I’ll get to that…

So the search continues for Johann’s parents and my intent this week is to relate what the family lore, records, and newspaper articles in the United States tell of my wagonmaker ancestor Johann Schuttler from Wachenheim.

Please note there are two Lutheran marriage records from Chicago that say Johann Schuttler was born in Wachenheim on September 26, 1829.

In 1850, Johann first appears on an American record – the Federal Census – living in Chicago with his wagonmaking uncle Peter Schuttler, Peter Schuttler’s wife Dorothy and their three children Peter, Katharina, and Henry. He is 20 years old. According to that census, Johann had been in the United States for 1 year. His first name was already Americanized to John. Later censuses, and his voter registration also support the 1849 year as his immigration year.

His Uncle – The Great Chicago Wagon King

Peter Schuttler came to the United States as a poor young man from Wachenheim in 1834 when he was 22. He worked in Buffalo and Ohio as a wagonmaker. In the early 1840s he moved to Chicago and started a small shop. Because of Chicago’s geographic location, the wagons were an excellent place for travelers to the West to purchase their transportation.

Schuttler wagons were used by pioneers, Mormons, and eventually 49ers to head west.

I found an article in the Chicago Tribune from late summer 1861 listing the names of the Vice Presidents of the Chicago War Committee that attended a war rally at Bryan Hall with other well-respected members of the Chicago community. Peter Schuttler was one of the Vice Presidents. They discussed treasonous actions, the South, and attack on Fort Sumter, and made resolutions in support of the War Department, and they, as members of the community, native born and immigrant alike, resolved to aid in the suppression of the rebellion by volunteering for the army and aiding them with supplies. It is a fascinating read.  A perspective was given on behalf of German immigrants. I could go on and on. The article printed their speeches and resolutions. If you have a newspapers.com account and would like to read it, click here.

Army Advert

Sometime after the rally, Peter Schuttler solicited for and earned a contract with the federal government in 1861 to produce artillery trucks and supply wagons for the Grand Army of the Republic.  That contract is attributed to what made his family so wealthy. Old newspapers and old genealogical records have been more accurate regarding Peter Schuttler than basic sources like Wikipedia that are editable by anyone online.

My German-American grandmother told us that the Schuttlers made wagons for the Union Army too. She was very proud of this fact.

Maybe a history of Schuttler Wagons should be created.  I would love to read something like that.

Johann Starts a Family

On December 4, 1853, Johann married my immigrant third great grandmother Louisa Gerbing in St. Paul’s First Lutheran Church in Chicago. She was the daughter of immigrants Martha Nicolai and Johann Friedrich Gerbing.

schuttler

Nine months later in late August, 1854, my second great grandmother Christine Katharina (Katy) was born. Katy later married immigrant Fritz Eckebrecht.

By 1855 John, Louisa, and Katy were living in their own dwelling in Chicago’s North Ward according to the Illinois census.

In September 1856, John and Louisa welcomed their son Charles (Karl Wilhelm) into the world. According to John’s 1890 voter registration, 1856 is also the year he became naturalized. Any such record from the courthouse in Chicago was lost in the Chicago Fire of 1871, unfortunately.

Charles later married Delia Bolton.

In August of 1858, John and Louisa had their second daughter, Louise Elizabeth Maria (Lizzie). Louise later married Edward Fuller.

In 1860, John, Louisa, and their three children are found on the Federal Census living in Chicago, Ward 7. John’s occupation is listed as wagonmaker. In several Chicago City Directories from 1861-1869, John’s occupation is listed as sawyer or wagonmaker. It is in 1870 that he starts to be listed as Foreman, at Peter Schuttler Wagon Company in the Chicago City Directories.

By 1863, John and Louisa had welcomed a fourth child into the world. Little Loretta. The following year she contracted cholera and died on September 9, 1864. Two days later, my third great grandmother Louisa passed. On September 12, 1864, John went to Graceland Cemetery and purchased the Schuttler family plot. It was in the cemetery file from Graceland that I learned the dates and causes of death of Loretta and Louisa. I also learned more about Katy Schuttler Eckebrecht’s half-sibling and stepmother.

According to family lore, at this point in my second great grandmother’s life, because her mother had passed away, Katy went to live with her uncle Peter Schuttler. Also according to the lore was that she didn’t like living there. There is a story that she couldn’t keep her napkin on her lap or something like that. Who knows how long she lived there because by early 1865, the Great Chicago Wagon King Peter Schuttler had stepped on a rusty nail, contracted a blood infection, and passed away. His son Peter II took over the reigns of the wagon company.

Butte, Montana News

One other thing to note from family lore is that the richer Schuttlers in Chicago – I believe Peter II – would buy clothes for John’s children.

In early February, 1865, John remarried. He married German immigrant Caroline Lehman who may have been pregnant. In early April, 1865, William Frank was born. Caroline had a brother named William by the way. Whether the child was adopted or his mother was Caroline, nobody can say for sure. Take a guess, you may be correct.  Then in 1868, John and Caroline welcomed a daughter they named Caroline (Carrie).

When the Chicago Fire happened in October of 1871, John packed his family in his Schuttler wagon, left town, and they all watched the fire from the prairie. When they went home, it was considered a family miracle that their home did not burn. Sadly, Schuttler’s Wagon Company did in fact burn down so they built a newer, bigger factory.

Between 1870 up to his date of death, various Chicago City Directories listed John’s occupation as foreman, Peter Schuttler Wagon Company.

schuttlerfactory

The Census Oddities Post-Louisa’s Death

The 1870 Federal Census was the first Federal Census after the death of my third great grandmother. According to the 1870 census the family was living in Chicago’s 10th Ward, and someone informed the census taker that John did not just have the occupation of foreman but he was “foreman – Peter Schuttler wagons.” They also informed the census taker that the 5 year old boy living there was named Peter. William Frank, who would have been 5 is not to be found on that census.

The same was on the 1880 census with his occupation and also for the name of the child that would be the same age as William Frank. By that point my second great grandmother was not living there, because she was married to Fritz Eckebrecht with children in 1880.

By the time of the 1900 Federal Census, all of John’s children had moved out of the house. It was just John and Caroline. It was stated to the census taker that he was born in September of 1829, that his year of immigration to the United States was 1849 and that he was a Naturalized citizen. Also, the census taker transcribed that he was unable to read, unable to write, could not speak English, and that he owned a home that was mortgaged. One more tidbit on that census was that the census taker was informed that John was married for 46 years to Caroline Lehman. He was not. He was married to her for 45 years. Also, Caroline was noted as having the ability to speak English, and was the mother of 5 children and 4 were alive. I count two.

Since John did not speak English, and I suppose with all of the Germans in Chicago he had no need to, who had been giving the information to the census takers in English since 1870? Likely his second wife?

William Frank/Peter – According to the 1865 Chicago birth index, the child born in April 1865 was named William Frank and later censuses, City Directories, death record, and his mother’s death notice referred to that individual as William Frank.

There is one more record to note for John that I found (outside the church records that will be explained in an upcoming week), as I previously mentioned, in 1890, John indicated on his voter registration that he was born in Germany and was naturalized in 1856 in the Courthouse of Cook County.

Newsworthy Events at Schuttler Wagons during Johann’s Tenure

The following events took place at Schuttler Wagons during Johann’s tenure.  Some of these events happened while he was the Foreman.  These events were all found in articles in the Chicago Tribune.

  • In 1858 there was a small fire at the factory.  Some wood shavings caught on fire.  It was put out before anyone was harmed.
  • The same type of fire happened in 1859 and was put out before it quickly spread.
  • In 1861 the company obtained a contract with the Grand Army of the Republic.
  • In March of 1866 another wood shavings fire happened and was put out before it spread.
  • Later that year, Schuttler wagons were used by showman P.T. Barnum at the Paris Expedition.
  • One week before the Chicago Fire of 1871, Schuttler Wagons had purchased land to go ahead with building a better, larger factory.  Talk about timing!
  • In December 1876 a worker was cleaning oil off machinery when a belt broke loose, threw him to the ceiling, and killed him instantly.
  • Labor unrest/marches of 1877 shutdown all of the factories in the factory district and notably Schuttler Wagons was one of those companies.

Johann’s Death and the Schuttler Cemetery File

On January 21, 1906, at age 76, John Schuttler passed away. His death certificate listed no parents. On January 23, 1906, his death notice ran in the Chicago Tribune and Chicago’s German language newspaper Abenpost. I have both. The notices listed his residence, age, current wife, the names of his four living children (including Frank Schuttler) and stated he was a grandfather and great grandfather, as well as the date and time of his funeral at Graceland Cemetery. (My great grandmother Caroline Eckebrecht was already married with children. Therefore, some of my grandmother’s siblings had likely met their great grandfather John Schuttler.) No parents or relatives in Germany were listed on either notice. He did not receive the type of obituary his cousin Peter Schuttler II received that took up most of one page of the Chicago Tribune.

The John Schuttler Graceland Cemetery file contained information on the death dates and causes of death for Louisa and Loretta since any other previous information regarding their deaths would have burned in the Chicago Fire of 1871. The file also contained a diagram of how the coffins were placed for burial on the Schuttler plot. The plot does not contain my ancestor Katy Schuttler Eckebrecht, nor does it contain the grave of my great grandmother Caroline Eckebrecht Leies. But my great grandmother was mentioned in the file as a living heir of John as was John’s and Louisa’s daughter Louise Schuttler Fuller. Also mentioned was John’s daughter’s Carrie.

The Schuttler plot contains the graves of Louisa, her daughter Loretta, her son Charles (d 1896), John, Caroline Lehman (d 1910), and William Frank (d 1918.)

Why did the file contain the names of the living relatives? They were mapped out in the file on pupose. After William Frank passed away, his sister Carrie had an affidavit placed in the Schuttler cemetery file as to his paternity so he could be buried in the plot next to Caroline Lehman. She was the one that mapped out my third great grandfather’s living descendants.

For me the file was a bit of a goldmine because without it, I would not have learned what happened to my third great grandmother Louisa.

This is the end of Part 1 –

The rest of the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenges for April are as follows and will continue featuring Johann Schuttler:

-Week #15 Challenge is DNA – (Part 2 – Do my three DNA tests help at all? I promise to keep my Ancestry.com rant to a minimum.)

-Week #16 Challenge is Out of Place – (Part 3 – What the Mayor of Wachenheim sent me regarding Peter Schuttler’s siblings and ancestry.)

-Week #17 Challenge is At Worship – (Part 4 – Research of the people mentioned in the Lutheran Church Records in Chicago and what church records may be on Archion.de.)

ecard

Do you know who his parents really are? 

-cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

Women’s History Month/Immigrant #49 ~ Third Great Grandmother Louisa Anna Elisabetha Gerbing Schuttler ~ Mother of my first American born ancestor

1853_Chicago_Bird's_Eye_view

My immigrant third great grandmother Louisa Gerbing Schuttler was born in 1836 in Vieselbach, Prussia and came to the United States in 1852 with her immediate family at the age of 16.  She is the mother of my first American born ancestor.

Louisa Anna Elisabetha Gerbing was born to Martha Nicolai from Niederzimmern and Johann Friedrich Gerbing from Vieselbach.  As my previous post on her parents mentions, her father was a mason by trade.  She was their third oldest child and oldest daughter.

In 1852 she left Hamburg for Quebec City, Quebec in a voyage that would take approximately three months.

The following siblings came with Louisa:

Franz (Frank) Gerbing

Christian Gerbing

Dorothea (Dora) Gerbing 

Mary Gerbing  

On December 4, 1853, Louisa married another German immigrant – my third great grandfather Johann Schuttler – in St. Paul’s First Lutheran Church in Chicago.  The minister that performed their wedding ceremony was Reverend Wunder.  In case you are wondering why the year of birth on her marriage record is not 1836, and for more about their marriage record, please see my previous post  Today’s Anniversary ~ Third Great Grandparents Louisa Gerbing and Johann Schuttler ~.

schuttler

Nine months later, Louisa had her first child – Christine Catharina (Katy) Schuttler (my ancestress), 1854-1915.  She married immigrant Frederick “Fritz” Eckebrecht.

The rest of her children are as follows:

Karl Wilhelm (Charles) Schuttler, 1856-1896; married Delia Bolton

Elisabetha (Louise) Maria Schuttler, 1858-1922; married Edward Fuller

Loretta Schuttler, 1863-1864

In September 1864, Loretta and Louisa contracted cholera during an outbreak in Chicago.  My third great grandmother lost Loretta on September 9th.  Two days later, Louisa also passed.  She was only 28 years old.  My second great grandmother was only 10.

To bury his wife and 1 year old daughter, my third great grandfather Johann bought what I call “The Schuttler and descendants burial plot” in Graceland Cemetery, Chicago.  Through the suggestion of another researcher, I ordered a copy of the Schuttler cemetery file and was lucky enough to find an affidavit verifying a graph of Johann’s descendants drawn out in the early 1900s inside the file.  (There will be more on this file and my struggle searching for the parents of Johann Schuttler of Peter Schuttler Wagon Company in the next 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge “Brick Wall.”)

Louisa counts the following individuals among her descendants:

  • Her daughter Louise Fuller is buried in historic Congressional Cemetery – National Burial Ground on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
  • Her great grandson Colonel Gerard M. Leies is buried in Arlington National Cemetery
  • Her great great grandson (through her son Charles Schuttler) was Sergeant Glenn Charles Stromback and is on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Panel 46W, Line 24.  He was a Purple Heart Recipient.  See: His Memorial Page

Please contact me if I have missed someone!  I obviously haven’t found all of her descendants.

The photo below is a picture of my second great grandmother Katy Schuttler.  It was said she had red hair.  I wonder if she took after her mother.Katharina Schuttler

Sources:

Hamburg Passenger Lists

Vieselbach, Germany Lutheran Church Records

St. Paul’s First Lutheran Church Records

1860 Federal Census

Graceland Cemetery’s file

Find-a-Grave

-cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

Immigrants #38 – #40 ~ Marie Louise Koppel Eckebrecht (mill owner’s daughter), Johann Quirinus Eckebrecht (baker), and Wilhelm Carl Eckebrecht (saloon keeper) ~

Updated February 24, 2024

My 3rd great grandmother Marie Louise Koppel was born in Koerner, Thüringen, Germany in 1817 and came to the United States in 1866 with my third great grandfather  Quirinus Eckebrecht and 5 of their 6 children.  Wilhelm Carl Eckebrecht was one of these children.

Great Uncle John and his first cousin Frank Eckebrecht researched the Eckebrecht roots for decades.  Some of the information contained in this post comes from their research.  They did the hardest stuff before the internet was born.

Marie Louise Koppel

Marie Louise Koppel was born at 1:00 a.m. on August 2, 1817 in Koerner to miller Johann Christoph Koppel and Anna Dorothea Maria Grabe.  According to the good folks in the Thüringen Ancestry group on facebook, Grabe is a common surname in the areas surrounding Koerner.

I spent some time examining the microfilms for Koerner that were available from Family Search before the Latter Day Saints discontinued microfilm ordering.  I was able to locate the marriage of Marie Louise’s parents in 1816.  Anna Dorothea Maria Grabe was the daughter of Johann Christoph Grabe.  Her mother was unnamed in the available records, although an indexed record on Ancestry, transcribed by volunteers, says that her mother may have been Sophia Maria Schuts.

*I don’t have faith in indexed records on Ancestry or Family Search in which I cannot see the original document.  In this case, as with many of this line of Germans, the original record is not available to American researchers without being a member of the Latter Days Saints or at one of their computers.*

The microfilms contained the first marriage of Marie Louise’s father Johann Chrisoph Koppel and revealed that he was from Rothenberg bei Neustadt, Germany.  Which no longers exists on a map.  There is a Neustadt about 30 miles away from Koerner.

Johann Christoph Koppel owned at least two mills in 1812 Koerner when he married his first wife Anna Elisabeth Schaefer.  One was the Mahlmuhle which was a corn mill.  The second mill he owned at that time was called Lochmuhle.

In 1816 Marie Louise’s father married her mother Anna Dorothea Maria Grabe.   On that record and on the baptismal records of Marie Louise in 1817 and her siblings, he was noted as the owner of the Reithmuhle.  

There is a beautiful genealogy group on Facebook called Genealogy Translations.  A translator kindly translated Marie Louise’s baptism for me and then scanned for me a book about the history of Sondershausen area mills!

The genealogy angel in the translations group proceeded to translate the portion of the book for me on the Reithmuhle!

Reithmuhle was the new name of the Lochmuhle in Koerner. Koerner is on the River Unstrut.  The Reithmuhle is at the west end of the village on the Heuberg Hill, on Notter Creek and the mill was still there in 1900.

Remember the mills because they come up later.

I found at least 5 other Marie Louise Koppel siblings in the records for Koerner and Clingen.

I traced the Koppel line back to my 12th great grandfather Claus who was alive in the late 1500s in the Sondershausen area of Thüringen.  Of that information, I only know his name and estimated birth year.  His grandchildren were servants in Sondershausen Palace and a Mayor of Berka.  I know nothing of the life of Marie Louise Koppel’s mother and her parents beyond their names.  Perhaps that will change with my Archion subscription.

Johann Quirinus Eckebrecht

Marie Louise Koppel married my third great grandfather Quirinus Eckebrecht on December 27, 1843.

Frank Eckebrecht had this data.  It was in my tree on Ancestry.  On Ancestry I kept getting a hint for a man named Johann Auerinus Erbeborn marrying on that same date in the same area of Germany to a lady with the same name of my third great grandmother.  These transcription indexes are done by volunteers and reviewed by two other volunteers before they are published on Ancestry.

Auerinus Erbeborn comes in second to the volunteer transcription of the ship manifest for his son Grity Eckebrecht for Fritz.  Another oldie but goodie was the transcription error from the ship manifest for Augelo Ferarco (Angelo Ferraro.)  This is why I do not trust the indexes on Ancestry, ESPECIALLY WHEN I CANNOT SEE THE ORIGINAL RECORD!  

According to Frank Eckebrecht’s research, Quirinus was born in 1816 in Grossmehlra, Schwarzburg – Sondershausen, Thüringen to Johann Heinrich Eckebrecht and Anna Elisabetha Dorre.  He had at least 5 siblings.

Germany.PNG
As you can see, Koerner and Grossmehlra are not far apart and are at the dead center of current day Germany

Frank traced this Eckebrecht line back to Wollersleben, Nordhausen, Thüringen and a Christian Eckebrecht, my 7th great grandfather, born in 1660.  He was a commoner.  Through volunteer transcribed indexed records on Ancestry, again, if they are accurate, I traced Anna Elisabetha Dorre’s line back to my sixth great grandfather named Heinrich Christoph Dorre.  Because these are only indexes, I know nothing of this line except names and dates. Perhaps that will change with my Archion subscription.

On May 25, 1866, Quirinus, Marie Louise,  and 5 of their 6 children arrived at the Port of New York on the ship the Jenny.  Here the index transcribers have Quirinus named as Oerenuos.  They sailed from Bremen on a trip that would have taken 2 and 1/2 to 3 months to sail.  The occupation of Quirinus was listed as baker.  Uncle John said they left to escape the growing power of the Kaiser.

Eckebrecht

The family’s destination was Chicago where the oldest son, Immigrant #8 ~ Carl Johann Eckebrecht, Grocery Company Owner, Saddle-Maker, Carpenter, and Foreman had already arrived.

These are the children that came in 1866 with Quirinus and Marie Louise:

Immigrant 6 Auguste Eckebrecht, domestic servant

Immigrants 21 and 22 ~ Eduard Eckebrecht of the 4th Cavalry Regiment and Heinrich Ferdinand Christoph Eckebrecht a Druggist

Immigrant #28 ~ 2nd Great Grandfather Frederick “Fritz” Eckebrecht, Carpenter and Butcher (the one that spent time with the Comanches)

Wilhelm Carl (William)

On the 1870 Census, Quirinus, Marie Louise, sons Carl Wilhelm, Henry, and Edward were living in Chicago’s 17th Ward.  Quirinus was listed as a laborer, while Marie was listed as keeping house.  Carl Wilhelm was a carpenter, Henry was a laborer, and the youngest Edward was still at school.

NEW:  In 1871, the Great Chicago Fire consumed large portions of the city.  Like the Schuttlers I have written a lot about, the house of Quirinus and Marie Louise at 218 North Avenue did not burn.  Their son Charles lived across the street and his house did not burn either.  218 North Avenue was just outside the burn district.  After my second great grandfather Fritz was widowed in 1915, he moved into 218 North Avenue.  

In the 13 years Marie Louise was alive here in the United States, she suffered from asthma, according to her death record.  She passed away in 1879 and was buried in Wunders Cemetery in Chicago.

Frank’s research data relates that she was the owner of the Rottermuhle in Germany when she passed.  My first theory is thus:  there was an American misspelling on the estate document and she may have been the owner of the Reithmuhle.  Would this mean her parents and siblings were deceased?  I cannot locate any records about them in Germany on Ancestry.

My second theory involves Quirinus.  Since he was a baker when he came here, he may have worked at a mill, maybe even Marie Louise’s father’s mill, or his father owned a mill as we have seen in Grandma’s other German mill owning ancestors, that sons and daughters of mill owners often marry each other.

The Chicago City Directories listed Quirinus as a laborer in the years leading up to the 1880 Census and in the year’s after it.  In 1880, when I found him on the census indexed by an Ancestry volunteer as Kareneus, he was listed as a widower, living with his oldest son Charles (Carl), and again was listed as a laborer.  He died in 1884 and is also buried in Wunders Cemetery.

William Eckebrecht

William (Wilhelm Carl) Eckebrecht, as mentioned before, arrived here in 1866.  He was born in 1851 in Schwarzburg, Thüringen.  In 1870, as stated before, he lived with his parents and was a carpenter.

In 1874 he married another German immigrant named Maria (Mary) Wilhemine Johanna Kohlmorgen from Mecklenburg – Vorpommern.  She was the daughter of Christian Theodor Kaspar Kohlmorgen and Julie Marie Sophie Hill.

On the 1880 Census, he was working as a harness-maker.

By the mid-1890s, William was a saloon-keeper.  I found a newspaper clipping suggesting that William was in the saloon business with his brother Edward.  Unfortunately I don’t know the name of the saloon.  William passed away young in 1899 leaving behind his wife and three children:

Otto Eckebrecht, owned an engraving business m. Viola Legare

Hugo Charles Eckebrecht m. Ottilia Fischer, a Pomeranian German immigrant

Martha Eckebrecht m. Paul Emil Schultz, a Pomeranian German immigrant

WilliamEckebrecht

Were other Eckebrechts already here before the oldest son Carl Johann Eckebrecht got here?  Were there other Koppels already here?  The Eckebrechts followed their oldest son to America, making that classic chain migration as I have seen with my other German ancestors.  Who did he follow?

I have at least three Eckebrecht photos.  Two are from the 19th Century and one is from the 1960s.  Please email me for copies.  

Thank you to those distant Eckebrecht cousins that have sent me messages and encouraged me to keep swapping and sharing data!  I have finished posting about all of the immigrant Eckebrechts that we could find.  If I find more, I will post about them here!  For the descendants of Fritz, there will be one more post about the Multi-Faceted Man.  

Do you have any updates, edits, or corrections?  I would love to hear from you.  Because WordPress does not always alert me to your comments, please send me a message at the email address below.  Thank you!

cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

Sources:

Sondershausen church records via Ancestry.com

Koerner baptisms and marriages via the LDS

Indexed Clingen District baptisms via Ancestry.com

Schlotheimer Kurier, Amtsblatt der Verwaltungsgemeinschaft

Indexed Selected Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials from Thuringia via Ancestry.com

Uncle John and Frank Eckebrecht

New York Passenger Lists

Chicago City Directories

Federal Censuses

Cook County Birth, Marriage, and Death Indexes

Newspapers.com

Find-a-Grave

The immigrants left in this family history challenge are: some of the Italians on my paternal side, more on Louis Kirsch, all of the Gerbings (Eeeeeeee!), Martha Nicolai, and my mystery wagon-guy Johann Schuttler.

Immigrant #28 ~ 2nd Great Grandfather Frederick “Fritz” Eckebrecht, Carpenter and Butcher

Uncle John researched his Thuringian, multi-faceted, immigrant grandfather Fritz Eckebrecht for decades.  Fritz was my second great grandfather and everyone in the family knows his name.  My little niece giggled when she heard his name for the first time.  From a young age we were told he was “taken” by Comanches in Texas and was made to be a butcher for them.  After he left Texas and the Comanches, he went to Chicago to work for hire “re-building Chicago after the fire with his carpentry” talents.  Later, he opened a butcher shop there, using the skills he learned while with the Comanches.  He spoke Comanche and when you read more of Uncle John’s research you wonder how much of a captive he really was.

Uncle John’s own words and research were posted here previously:

The Multi-Faceted Life Of Fred Eckebrecht 1848-1920.

The other day I was looking for Fritz’s obituary at newspapers.com and came across this intriguing little snippet from the January 6, 1888 edition of The Chicago Inter-Ocean:

 

Fritz.CookCountyCriminalTheInterOcean6.Jan.1888
This fell under the head for Cook County Criminal Court

Fritz, what went on there? 

I couldn’t help but notice this is the time period that Uncle John surmised my second great grandmother Katharina Schuttler had left him for a few years.  There was no other reference in the newspapers to this.  It looks like they were released on bond doesn’t it?  By the way, F.W. Westfall was a wealthy Chicago real estate developer.

So Cook County Clerk of the Circuit Court Archives has criminal records dating back to right after the fire of 1871.

Maybe we will be lucky and a copy of Fritz’s case still exists…

 

cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net