I just found the 1811 Elbing census online at the Mennonite Library and Archives (Bethel College, North Newton, Kans.) web site. They were scanned by Glenn Penner. Previously I had ordered LDS film #1344433, where it is also found. But the digital images at the MLA web site are better quality; and most importantly for a Mennonite, they are FREE!
Here is the page with my 5-greats-grandfather Gerhard Fast #660202 (1739-1828) at age 72 in Neustaedterwald. (I think the age of 75 that is given is wrong.)
NB: The MLA web site calls it the 1812 census - it was taken at the end of 1811 for the 1812 year.
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Sunday, August 28, 2016
How Do You Know What to Believe?
The Grandma database said that my
great-great-grandmother, Katharina Bergman #7126 (1834-1916) died
in Jansen, Nebraska. She was a member of the Kleine Gemeinde church, which had lived there until 1908, when they
moved to Meade, Kansas. Since the church
moved en masse, I doubted that she would
have stayed behind, especially since she was an elderly lady of 74 when they
moved. So I was skeptical of her death location in Grandma. On the other hand, she could have been on a trip back to Jansen to visit relatives when she died, so you never know.
Katharina Bergman, Genealogical Registry and Database of Mennonite Ancestry, CD-ROM, version 6 (Fresno: California Mennonite Historical Society, 2013), individual #7126. |
My grandmother also kept a family register in which she
recorded the death of Katharina Bergman, who was her grandmother. The entry (original below) says, “1916 25 Nov ist Groszmutter gestorben bei
Jak. Reimers Meade Kan (25 Nov 1916 Grandmother died at Jacob Reimers,
Meade, Kansas).”
Margaretha H. Reimer, Freundschaft Register Buch [Relatives Register Book], (Fowler, Kansas: unpublished, begun in 1923) 6. Original held by Anna (Siemens) Fast, Hillsboro, Kansas. |
Since my grandmother
was 21 years old at the time and since her grandmother died at Jacob Reimers,
her uncle’s house, she surely knew where it had happened. But I wanted some more proof. So I ordered her death certificate from the State of Kansas.
And here is the death certificate from Logan Township,
Meade County, Kansas:
Katherina Barkmann death certificate, died 25 November 1916, dated 27 November 1916, no. 60219, Office of Vital Statistics, Topeka, Kansas. |
It’s pretty hard to dispute the location of death on a
contemporary death certificate. So my grandmother’s
family register was right – Katharina Bergman did die near Meade, Kansas, and
NOT near Jansen, Nebraska. I have no idea how the wrong death place got into Grandma.
Some lessons to draw from this -
1) It is critical to check the original source.
2) We need to evaluate the likely accuracy of sources. A secondary database such as Grandma is only as accurate as the unknown person who supplied the information. My grandmother's family register - since she was likely a witness of the event - is a good source. But a contemporary death certificate signed by a doctor and an informant is a very strong source.
3) It pays to think about whether a piece of information is reasonable or not - in this case it was unlikely that an elderly widow would have stayed behind when the whole church moved.
Friday, August 26, 2016
Using the 1811 Elbing, West Prussia, Census
In late 1811, a census was taken of the Elbing region
where many Mennonites lived. This city
was under a special administrative regime because in the late 1600s, the King
of Poland had used it as collateral for a loan from the Duke of Prussia. This led to a centuries-long dispute about
whether the loan had been repaid and whether the Prussian dukes (later kings)
could take the city’s revenues to repay the loan. In 1811, the city was still under a special
administration as a result. Thus, a
separate census was taken in 1811.
My 5-greats-grandfather, Gerhard Fast #660202
(1739-1828), had five siblings whom I have identified, and I am trying to piece
together their descendants. One of those
siblings was Klaas Fast #706529 (ABT 1745-1820), and he had a son Gerhard
#117515 (ABT 1774-1830) who lived in the village of Fürstenauerweide, which in
the Elbing region. Someone had entered
the birth dates of the younger Gerhard’s six children from the Fürstenau
Lutheran church book, and I found the death dates for five of those children
who died young in the same church book.
(Imagine how shattering it must have been to lose five of six children before
the age of nine.) Here is how the family
looked:
Gerhard Klaas Fast, Genealogical Registry and Database of Mennonite Ancestry, CD-ROM, version 6 as updated by author (Fresno: California Mennonite Historical Society, 2013), individual #117515. |
Then I got to wondering if he was in the 1811 Elbing
census, which was taken near the end of 1811, so I checked Adalbert Goertz’extraction. And I found him as expected
in Fürstenauerweide:
I’m sure it is him because the family data matches. Notice that no wife is listed – there is only
a blank in the space where the age of the wife would be shown. His first wife, Helena Wiebe died in October
1811, so it fits that she is not listed.
Three children’s ages are listed – 10, 8, and 3 years. He had three children still living, Helena,
Nicolaus, and Katharina, whose ages were 9, 6, and 4 years based on their exact
birth dates from the Lutheran church book.
Remember that ages in census records were not very exact back then, so
this fits well enough. Two of those
children, Helena and Nicolaus, died in late December 1811, but they are still
listed in the census. Since the census
was taken near the end of 1811, the family information fits the census.
The census also adds another useful piece of information –
he was an Arbeitsman, a laborer. This means that there is not much point in
searching for land records in Fürstenauerweide.
And it also tells us that they were poor. In 1819, Gerhard Fast and his second wife
Barbara Isaac and his remaining daughter Katharina emigrated to Russia, to start
a new life as a landowner in the village of Rudnerweide, Molotschna Colony.
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Looking in the WRONG Village (Part III)
In the previous posts in this series, I explained how I
found my 5-greats-grandparents, Martin Wiens and Maria Loepp, in the West Prussian
land records. I wanted to flesh out
their lives as much as possible, so there are a few other places to look for
information.
First, the 1772 census.
When Prussia seized a large piece of Polish territory in 1772, including
the Gross Werder and other areas where many Mennonites lived, they immediately
conducted a census to establish tax liabilities for all the inhabitants. When I checked the village of
Fürstenauerweide, where Martin and Maria Wiens owned land, I found them – sort
of. There were three heads of household
named “Wientz,” but no first names or the number of family members were listed. I checked the index for the 1772 census and
found no other Martin Wiens, so I knew he must be one of these three.
In the 1776 census, there are three Wiens heads of
household listed, but this time their first names are given – Arend, Jacob, and
Martin. (Presumably, these are the same
three Wienses as in 1772, but we cannot be sure without checking each one
individually since one could have died and another married and started his own
household.) It’s very likely that this Martin
Wiens is the one I’m looking for.
And on his extraction of the 1776 census, Glenn Penner
has added a serendipitous note to Martin Wiens “1739-99 (Luth/Fuerstenau).” He kindly sent me a copy of Martin Wiens’
death record from the Fürstenau Lutheran church book, which showed that he died on 5 March
1799 in Fürstenauerweide at the age of 68 years, 4 months, and was buried on 11
March. From his age at death, I could
calculate that he was born in ABT Dec 1730.
Finally, I checked the 1789 census of Mennonite landowners, and I found Martin Wiens living in Fürstenauerweide and owning 18
morgens 158 ruten of land (about 26 acres).
To summarize these three posts on Martin Wiens – I started
out being curious why Jacob Barkman was not listed in any of the censuses in
Neustӓdterwald, the village where he owned land at the time of his death. When I checked for his name in the other
villages in the 1789 census, I saw that he owned land in the neighboring
village, the “wrong” village, of Fürstenauerweide. When I checked the land records for
Fürstenauerweide, I found the land that he owned and that his wife Katharina
Wiens had inherited it from her parents Martin Wiens and Maria Loepp when her
mother Maria Loepp died. I had not known
of Martin Wiens and Maria Loepp before this.
When I checked for Martin Wiens in the 1772, 1776, and 1789 census, I
found him living in Fürstenauerweide in all three. And a note on the extraction of the 1776
census led me to his death record, which gave his birth date also. So a little curiosity about Jacob Barkman led
to discovering his parents-in-law and quite a bit of information about them!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)