Showing posts with label Jacob Barkman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacob Barkman. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Looking in the WRONG Village (Part III)



See Part I and Part II for the beginning of this story.

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.

1772 census with three Wiens households.  Source:  _____ Wientz household, 1772-1773, households #3, #5, or #9, Contributions Catastrum, Fürstenauer Weÿde village #24, Elbingschen Niederung, West Prussia, II. HA, Abt. 9, Materien, Tit. XCIII, Nr. 9, Bd. 3, p. 109, Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, Germany.
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.

Source:  Martin Wiens household, 1776 Special Consignation of Mennonite families, Fuerstenauerwiede village, West Prussia, II. HA, Abt. 9, Materien, Tit. CIX, Nr. 1, Vol. 1, Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, Germany.  Accessed online at http://www.mennonitegenealogy.com/prussia/1776MasterV5.pdf on 13 August 2016.
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.
Martin Wiens death record.  I have underlined "Martin Wiens," "5 Mart: (5 March)," and "68 Jahr 4 Monat (68 years 4 months)."  Source:  Martin Wiens death record, 5 March 1799, decedent #5, Fürstenau Lutheran death register, 1774-1819, Fürstenau, West Prussia, digital copy from Glenn Penner, Guelph, Ontario.

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). 
Source:  Mart. Wiens household, line #9, 1789 General-Nachweisung of Mennonite families in Marienwerder Department, Fuerstenauerweide village #35, II. Amt Elbing, West Prussia, II. HA, Abt. 9, Materien, Tit. CIX, Nr. 1, Vol. 1, Ad Nr. 1 vol. 2, Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, Germany.  Accessed at http://mennonitegenealogy.com/prussia/1789_Land_Census_West_Prussian_Mennonites.htm on 13 August 2016.
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!

Monday, August 15, 2016

Looking in the WRONG Village (Part II)



See Part I of “Looking in the Wrong Village” for the beginning of this story.


Since I had unexpectedly discovered that my 4-greats-grandfather Jacob Barkman #7070 (ABT 1745-1809) owned land in the village of Fürstenauerweide, Elbing, West Prussia, in the 1789 census, I decided to investigate further.  It is possible that I could find him in the West Prussian land records that Glenn Penner has scanned and that have been posted at the Mennonite Library and Archives web site.  These records of land transactions have valuable information on family relationships since husbands and wives owned land jointly.  Here is the opening screen for the land records web page:



The Malbork, Poland, archive covers the Gross Werder area of the Vistula Delta that I am interested in, while the Bydgoszcz and Toruń cover areas farther south.  So I choose the Malbork link.



A list of village names comes up, and I scroll down to find Fuerstenauerweide, on which I click.  (Note that not all villages have surviving records.)


This brings up a link to one Grundbuch.  Some villages have many Grundbücher, while others just have one.  I clicked on the link.
 
This gives me a list of images.  I went through the images one by one scanning for names.  At first, when I started looking at Grundbücher a couple years ago, it was really hard to decipher the names or even to figure out which words were names, but after some practice, they pop out of the page because they are usually written in Latin and not Gothic script.


Eventually on Image 872, I found gold.  

In the left-hand column about halfway down the left page, the list of grantees reads “1/8 Catharina geehlighte Jacob Bargmann (1/8 Catharina married to Jacob Bargmann).”  BINGO!  Jacob Barkman’s second wife, and my 4-greats-grandmother, was Catharina Wiens.   

Even better, it listed her parents, whom I had not known, at the top of the page:  Martin Wiens and Maria geb. (born) Loepp.  So I added a 5-greats-grandfather and grandmother to my ancestry chart![1]




It took me a while to figure out the substance of the transaction, but Martin Wiens and his first wife Maria Loepp had apparently bought this property in 1763 from Thomas Sawadski but had only partially paid for it.  In 1786 when his first wife Maria Loepp died, their four children inherited half of the property from her.  Thus each one got a 1/8 share, which explains the “1/8” next to Catharina’s name.  But they also were required to pay Thomas Sawadski 1/8 of the unpaid balance of the purchase price.



So now I have figured out how Jacob Barkman came to be a landowner in Fürstenauerweide:  his wife inherited land from her mother’s estate.  (Note that even though Jacob Barkman is the one listed in the census, he and his wife Catharina Wiens owned the land jointly.)   I also found his parents-in-law and a year of death for his mother-in-law.  And here is the updated ancestry chart from myself to Martin Wiens and Maria Loepp:


But at this point my knowledge of the parents-in-law, Martin Wiens and Maria Loepp, is very scanty.  Can I find more information on them?  Part III coming up.





[1] Fuerstenauerweide Grundbuch Blatt 13, Kreis Elbing, Malbork, Poland, Archive, Fond 341, File 198.  Accessed online at https://mla.bethelks.edu/archives/VI_53/Malbork/Fuerstenauerweide/Fuerstenauerweide%20Grundbuch%20Malbork%20Archives%20Fond%20341%20File%20198/IMG_0872.JPG on 25 July 2016.

Saturday, August 13, 2016

Looking in the WRONG Village (Part I)



I was looking for my 4-greats-grandfather Jacob Barkman #7070 (ABT 1745-1809) in the 1772, 1776, and 1789 West Prussian censuses.  I know from the Fürstenau Lutheran church book that he died in the village of Neustädterwald on 13 November 1809.[1]  I also know from the Neustädterwald land records that he owned land there when he died.[2]  But I could not find him in any of those censuses in Neustädterwald.  Then I realized that since he only married in 1777,[3] it is possible that he was still living at home in 1772 and 1776, so he might not have had a separate household and thus not been listed in either of those censuses.  But by 1789, he was about 44 years old and had a wife and daughter, so he should have had a separate household.  On the other hand, the 1789 census is different because it only listed Mennonite landowners, so if he had acquired his Neustädterwald land after 1789, he might not have been listed there either.  Nonetheless there is a good chance he was in the 1789 census.

Death record for Jacob Barkman in Fürstenau Lutheran church book, 13 November 1809.
I was using an extraction of the 1789 census prepared by Adalbert Görtz that is organized by village[4].  But instead of giving up when I could not find Jacob Barkman in Neustädterwald, I thought I should search for him in the entire census using the CTRL-F function.  And that proved to be a most crucial decision.  Instead of Jacob Barkman being in Neustädterwald in 1789, he owned 17 morgens 282 ruten of land (about 11 acres) in the neighboring village of Fürstenauerweide about three miles to the south![5]

Extraction of 1789 census of Jacob Barkman in Fürstenauerweide, Elbing, West Prussia.
So this fleshes out my sketch of his life a bit.  He probably only moved to the village of Neustädterwald in the 1790s, that is in his 50s.  And before that he had probably lived in the nearby village of Fürstenauerweide.  (I say “probably” because land ownership is not exactly the same as residence.)  This illustrates how mobile Mennonites were at the end of the 18th century.  They were often not born in the village where they were married or where they lived as an adult or where they died.  And the lure of land ownership often drew them to another village.



And this raises another question – what was Jacob Barkman doing in Fürstenauerweide?  And should I not check the West Prussian land records to see if his Grundbuch has survived?  Stay tuned for Part II.





[1] Jacob Bergmann death record, 13 November 1809, Fuerstenau Lutheran church book, Death register 1774-1819, Fuerstenau, West Prussia, p. 416.  Accessed on LDS microfilm #208103.

[2] Neustaedterwald Grundbuch Blatt 13, Amt Tiegenhof, Malbork, Poland, Archive, Fond 341, File 3192.  Accessed online at https://mla.bethelks.edu/archives/VI_53/Malbork/Neustaedterwald/Neustaedterwald%20Blatt%2013%20Malbork%20Archives%20Fond%20341%20File%203192/IMG_0250.JPG.

[3] Jacob Barckman and Margareta Classen marriage record, 29 April 1777, Heubuden Mennonite church book, 1773-1815, Heubuden, West Prussia, p. 13.  Accessed online at https://mla.bethelks.edu/archives/cong_321/ok57/013.jpg on 27 December 2015.

[4] http://mennonitegenealogy.com/prussia/1789_Land_Census_West_Prussian_Mennonites.htm


[5] Jacob Bergmann household, 1789 General-Nachweisung of Mennonite families in Marienwerder Department, Fuerstenauerweide village #35, 15. Amt Tiegenhof, West Prussia, II. HA, Abt. 9, Materien, Tit. CIX, Nr. 1, Vol. 1, Ad Nr. 1 vol. 2, Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, Germany.  Accessed at http://mennonitegenealogy.com/prussia/1789_Land_Census_West_Prussian_Mennonites.htm on 25 July 2016.