Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Henry and Margaret Huff

Henry Huff, my fourth-great-grandfather, was born in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, on 21 May 1796. He was the son of Godfrey Huff (1753-1828) and his wife, Anna Elisabeth Hoffmann (1755-1828).

The gravestone of Henry Huff
Wright Cemetery, Albion, Indiana
He married Margaret Smith or Suton, my fourth great-grandmother, on 1 November 1821, in Tuscarawas County, Ohio. Margaret was born 3 February 1799, in Pennsylvania.

I figure that my grandfather Henry is the same Henry Huff that lived in Sandy Township, Tuscarawas County, according to the United States Federal Census from 1830 and 1840. Additionally, he lived there in 1850, per the census. He was listed as being a farmer with $3,200 in real estate. Tuscarawas County is located in eastern Ohio, and Sandy Township is located in the northeastern corner of Tuscarawas County.
Between 1850 and 1860, the family moved to Indiana. The United States Federal Census (1860) listed Henry as living in York Township, Noble County. He was recorded as being a 64-year-old farmer with $6,000 in real estate and $400 in personal estate. Their Post Office was recorded as "Wolflake & Albion," so I am guessing that they lived between the villages of Wolf Lake and Albion, Indiana.

Henry died 3 March 1870, aged 73 years, 9 months and 13 days. Margaret died 19 September 1878, in Noble County, Indiana. Henry and Margaret were buried in Wright Cemetery, in Albion.

Children of Henry and Margaret:
  1. Rebecca, born in 1827 in Tuscarawas County, Ohio.
  2. Martin, born 26 September 1827 in Sandy Township, Tuscarawas County, Ohio; he died 9 September 1884 in Ligonier, Indiana. He married Ruth Ann Shisler, 23 January 1851 in Tusacarawa County. They had the following children: Daniel Samual (1853-1898), Margaret E. (1853-1891), twins Eva C. (b. 1856) and Sevilla (b. 1856), twins Frederick Omer (1859-1932) and Henry Owen (1859-1893), Levi S. (1861-1903), Reuben (1863-1914), Alma (b. 1867), Martin Luther (1872-1942), and George Washington (1874-1887).
  3. Daniel, born in 1830 in Sandy Township, Tuscarawas County, Ohio.
  4. Phillip, born 20 September 1831 in Sandy Township, Tuscarawas County, Ohio.
  5. Reuben B., born 11 January 1839 in Sandy Township, Tuscarawas County, Ohio; he died 24 August 1914, and was buried in the Wright Cemetery, Albion, Indiana. He married Susan Hile, 23 December 1864, and they had the following children: Ernest M. (b. 1880), Isaiah (b. 1865), Joette B. (b. 1878), and William F. (b. 1871).

Monday, December 23, 2013

Matthias Warble and Elizabeth Staubs

I had always believed that I had Northern blood in my veins. By 'Northern,' I mean in regards to the North and the South, that which is divided by the Mason-Dixon line. It's true, during my years of research, I had always found my ancestors to live on the northern side.

But then, I found Matthias Warble, a fifth-great-grandfather.

Mathias was born at Antietam Creek, east of Sharpsburg, Maryland, on 1 February 1785. He was one of seven children born to Johannes Warble and his wife, Maria Salome [Sarah] Trute. At the age of 22, on 20 June 1807, at St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church in Hagerstown, Maryland, Matthias married Elizabeth Staubs. Elizabeth was born in 1787, in Washington County, Maryland. I cannot find anything on her family. I have found her last name to be also recorded as Staup or Stoup.

The United States Federal Census (1810) listed a household manned by Mathias Warble in Jefferson County, West Virginia. (At the time, Jefferson County was part of Virginia; in 1863, it was annexed into West Virginia.) This is where the Southern blood comes in! This household included one male and one female, who were each between the ages of 26 and 44 -- this would be Mathias and Elizabeth. There was also one female, under the age of 10 -- this would be their daughter, Adeline.

The United States Federal Census (1820) also stated that the family lived in Jefferson County, Virginia/West Virginia, but this time adding that they lived in Lee. (This could be a reference to Leetown.). The household was made up of eleven people, three of which were slaves. (The slaves were: one male between the ages of 14 and 25, one male over the age of 45, and one female under the age of 14.)

By 1830, it appears, Mathias and his family moved to "the North." The United States Federal Census (1830) listed the "Matheas Warkle" family as living in Jefferson Township, Montgomery County, Ohio. Jefferson Township is located southwest of the city of Dayton, Ohio. I could not find the family in the 1840 census, but the United States Federal Census (1850) maintains that Mathias and Elizabeth were still in Jefferson Township, where Mathias farmed and owned $3,900 in real estate. He died 17 August 1854 in Jackson Township, which boardered Jefferson Township to its west, and was buried in Farmersville, Jackson Township, in the Slifer Cemetery.

The United States Federal Census (1860) listed Elizabeth Warble as being the head of a household located in Jefferson Township, Montgomery County. (Her Post Office was located in Liberty.) The census stated that Elizabeth was a 75-year-old widow with $6,000 in real estate and $100 in personal estate. Living with her were Henry and Catharine Apple, as well as their children, Lucinda, age 3, and Benjamin F., age 1. Catharine was likely Catherine (Meckley) Apple. The connection betwen Elizabeth and the Apple's is unknown. Was there a relation somehow?

Elizabeth survived her husband by twelve years before she died, aged 79, on 12 November 1866. She joined Mathias in the Slifer Cemetery.

Children of Matthias and Elizabeth:
  1. Adeline, born 25 May 1809 in Shepherdstown, Virginia (now West Virginia). She died 18 February 1878, and was buried in Slifers Cemetery. Adeline married Henry Rentfrow (1810-1877), and they had the following children: Louise (1840-1878, Mrs. Hiram Gebhart), Margaret Emmline (1845-1928, Mrs. George Washington Gebhart), and Irena (1852-1863).
  2. George W., born 25 May 1810. He died 17 May 1874. George maried Cynthia Miles.
  3. A daughter, born in 1811 and died before 1830.
  4. John, born 13 April 1813. He died 25 March 1905. John was married three times: first, to Elizabeth Snyder, 22 June 1839, who died in 1878, and had 10 children; then, to Mrs. Elizabeth (Wertz) Stine, 15 October 1879, the widow of Frederick Stine; and finally, to Cynthia Stephens.
  5. Daniel, born 2 March 1816. He died in October 1864. Daniel married to Francis Furry/Farrow.
  6. Elizabeth, born 11 November 1817 in Jefferson County, Virginia (now West Virginia). She died 3 October 1901. Elizabeth married Jacob Wertz, 16 June 1839 in Montgomery County, Ohio. They had three children: Mathias (b. 22 August 1840), John (b. 30 May 1844), and Daniel (b. 31 January 1852).

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Peter HOLLAND and Anna Margaretha MILLER

Peter Holland, my fourth-great-grandfather, was born 28 April 1777, the son of Christian and Susanna Margaretha (Reimer) Holland. He was baptized 24 May 1777, at the First United Church of Christ, in Easton, Pennsylvania. His Godparents were Peter Ehler and Elisabetha (?). [1]



He married his first wife, Susanna Correll, around 1805. Susanna was born 28 February 1779, the daughter of Philip and Maria Engel (Schug) Correll. She died in March or May 1817, and was buried in the Forks Cemetery, in Stockertown, Northampton County.
 
He married his second wife, Anna Margaretha [Margaret] Miller, my fourth-great-grandmother, on 6 July 1817, at the First United Church of Christ, in Easton. Margaret was born 27 October 1792, the daughter of Jacob and Maria Sarah (Reimer) Miller. Peter's mother, Susanna Reimer Holland, and Margaret's mother, Sarah Reimer Miller, were sisters, making Peter and Margaret first cousins. 

The gravestone of Peter Holland,
Forks Cemetery, Stockertown, Pennsylvania.


Peter is listed in the United States Federal Census from 1830 and 1840, although the census is not specific as to who is in the household. The United States Federal Census (1850) lists Peter Holland, age 73, living in Plainfield Township, Northampton County, where he owned $4,500 in personal estate. No occupation is listed. The household included his wife, Margaret, age 58.; children: Susan, age 31, and Elizabeth, age 19, as well as Jeremiah Baker, age 14.
 
Peter died 20 January 1858, aged 80, and was buried in the Forks Cemetery.
 
Margaret was listed in the United States Federal Census (1860) as living in Plainfield Township (post office: Easton) and working as a seamstress. Also living with her was her daughter, Susan Mark, and two grandchildren, Mary and Susan Mark. The United States Federal Census (1870) listed Margaret as living in Plainfield Township (but this time, her Post Office was in Belfast). Also in the household was her daughter, Susan Holland, 57, Catharine Holland, 25, and Edna Holland, age 4.
 
Margaret survived her husband by twenty years, almost to the day. She died 23 January 1878, and was buried in the Forks Cemetery, next to Peter.
 
Peter and Susanna had four children:
  1. Sarah, born 22 October 1806. She died in 1887.
  2. John, born 9 Janaury 1809.
  3. Julianna, born 21 December 1810.
  4. Maria Anna, born 28 June 1814.  She died 25 August 1868. She married a Mr. Becker.
Peter and Anna had five children:
  1. Susanna, born 30 August 1818. She died 26 August 1877. She married a Mr. Mark, and they had two children: Mary C. and Susan.
  2. Jacob, born around 1820. He married Matilda Uhler, and they had nine children: William H. (b. 1844), Cecilia (b. 1846), Helena (b. 1848), James Franklin (b. 30 November 1850), Albert (b. 1852), Emma (b. 1856), Edna (b. 1859), Anna M. (b. 1860), and Jacob H. (b. August 1863).
  3. Abraham, born around 1822.
  4. Elizabeth, born around 1831. She married Levi Michael, and they had one daughter, Ellen (b. about 1860).
  5. Matilda. She was married to a Mr. Kotz.

Christian Holland (1755-1811?)

The earliest Holland ancestor I can find is Christian Holland, my fifth-great-grandfather, who was born 7 May 1755 in Northampton County, Pennsylvania.

There was a Christian Holland, a nailsmith, who was assessed in Easton, Pennsylvania, on 2 January 1776. (At this time, Christian would have been about twenty-one years of age.) His home was located on Town Lot No. 124. This home, number 46 on this map, is located near the present-day intersection of Ferry Street and North Third. There was a Christian Holland mentioned in the church records at St. John's Lutheran Church, Easton, from the 1770s and 1780s, and it is possible that this may be the same Christian Holland.

Christian married Susanna Margaretha Reimer. Susanna was born in Williams Township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania. She was the daughter of Johann Valentine and Anna Margaretha (Steier) Reimer.

Christian and Susanna were the Godparents of Maria Catharine Moritz, daughter of William and Anna Eva Moritz, who was born 8 December 1754 and baptized 8 June 1777. A Pennsylvania Septennial census, dated 1786, lists a Christian Holland living in Easton.

Susanna died around 1794. Christian died 1 February 1811 in Plainfield Township, Northampton County.

Christian and Susanna had three sons:
  1. Christian, born 7 May 1775.
  2. Johannes
  3. Peter, born 28 April 1778. He died 20 January 1858.

Osmun

My fifth-great-grandfather, John Osmun, was born in New Jersey on 30 August 1770. His parentage is unknown. Details of his early life cannot be found, due to the ambigious nature of early census records. What is known is that he was married to my fifth-great-grandmother, Rebecca Bellis, who was born in 1777.

In 1800, there was a John Osmun living in Morris and Sussex Counties, in New Jersey. This may have been him, as John and Rebecca's daughter, Elizabeth (born in 1806), was born in "Mansfield," which may be a reference to Mansfield Townhip, which was at the time located in Sussex County (it is now part of Warren County).

John died, aged 57, on 7 June 1828, in Macungie, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. In 1829, at the Orphans' Court proceedings, John is said to have left ten children, although only nine can be found. After John's death, guardians were named for the minor children: Jonas Faust was the guardian for daughters Abigail and Rebecca; Jacob Shuler, of Macungie Township, was the guardian for Catherine; and John Bellis, of Bethlehem Township, Northampton County, was the guardian for Sarah and William. It is possible that John was a relation of Rebecca; were they brother and sister?

Rebecca was living with her daughter, Abigail, in South Whitehall Township, Lehigh County. She lived to a remarkable old age, as evidenced in the United States Federal Census (1860), which recorded 84-year-old Rebecca, disabled, living in the Lehigh County Almshouse, in South Whitehall Township.

John and Rebecca had nine children:
  1. Samuel, born around 1797. He died 25 November 1836 in South Whitehall Township, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. He married Maria Magdalena Miller, 27 August 1818, and had the following children: Reuben, Eli, Peter, John, Thomas (b. 31 March 1833) and Sarah.
  2. John Jr.*
  3. Elizabeth, born 10 March 1806. She died 15 February 1890 in Elwood, Will County, Illinois. She was first married to Joseph Rhdoes, 10 August 1827, and they had five children: Rebecca (b. 27 February 1829), Eli (b. 23 December 1830), Elovina (b. 1 September 1833), Sarah Ann (b. 2 December 1841), and Sophia (b. 20 December 1846.) Joseph died 22 August 1851 in Naperville. She then married Frederick Nehs, 26 September 1852.
  4. Margaret, born 16 November 1808. She died 29 April 1898 in Chicago, Illinois. She married the Rev. Benjamin Franklin Deamer, and they had three children: Caroline (b. 2 January 1841), Solomon (b. 1843), and Catherine Amelia (b. 15 February 1845).
  5. Abigail, born around 1811. She died 23 January 1890 in Naperville, Illinois. She married Solomon Drissler, around 1833, and had the following children: Rebecca Susanna (b. 28 January 1843), Mary E. (b. 28 August 1846), Milton F. (b. 9 December 1850), Ervie, and Howard.
  6. Rebecca, born in 1813. She married Ruben Breifogle, 7 August 1831.
  7. Sarah, born 1 February 1816. She died 5 January 1887. She was married to Daniel Gangewere, around 1840, and they had one son, Daniel Jr. She later married Nathan Sell, 29 December 1846.
  8. Catherine, born 6 August 1818. She died 30 May 1897 in Allentown. She was married to Israel Trexler, 1838.
  9. William, born 13 October 1821. He died 29 June 1898 in Allentown. He married Lovina Berndt.
======================================================================================

John Osmun Jr., my fourth-great-grandfather, was born 25 November 1803, also in New Jersey. He married Eliza Strauss on 23 August 1829, in Macungie. Eliza was born 15 August 1811, in South Whitehall Township, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania.

The 1860 United States Federal Census (1860) listed John and "Eliz" Osmun as living in Hanover Township, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania (post office being Rittersville). John had $200 in personal estate and his occupation was listed as "locktender." John is said to have also been a laborer, hotel keeper and book agent, as well as being the Coroner for Lehigh County from 1875 to 1878.

I could not find John or Eliza in the United States Federal Census from 1870 or 1880. John died, aged 80 years, on 19 June 1884, in Allentown, and was buried in the Union-West End Cemetery, Allentown.

I did find, in the City Directory for Easton, Pennsylvania (1884), an Eliza Osmun, a widow, boarding at The Arlington, a hotel. She died 28 June 1888, and was buried next to John.

John and Eliza had nine children:
  1. Tilghman*
  2. George W., born around 1836. He was a sailor in 1860.
  3. Richard, born around 1842. He was a machinist in 1860. He drowned in the flood of 1862.
  4. Andrew, born around 1843.
  5. Rebecca, born around 1846. She married Milton Walt, of Allentown.
  6. John J., born around 1847.
  7. Eliza, born around 1849.
  8. Jacob, born around 1855.
  9. Isabella, born around 1859. She was unmarried at the time of her father's death.
  10. Flora, married James Ross of Mauch Chunk (Jim Thorpe), Pennsylvania.
=======================================================================================

Tilghman Osmun, my third-great-grandfather, was born 9 December 1832. He married his first wife, my third great-grandmother, Amelia (last name unknown). Amelia was born 30 May 1833. The United States Federal Census (1860) listed Tilghman as a tailor, and his family lived in Allentown, Third Ward. He owned $1,000 in real estate, and $200 in his personal estate. When Tilghman registered in the draft during the Civil War, he stated he was a 30-year-old man living in Allentown. Again, his occupation was listed as "Tailor." The United States Federal Census (1870) listed "Tilgh Osman" as a 37-year-old tailor with $11,000 in real estate and $6,000 in personal estate. Amelia died 3 May 1877.

He married his second wife, Mrs. Sarah Ann Merkel. Sarah was born 21 February 1847. Her maiden name is unknown, but she was the widow of Phaon Merkel, with whom she had one daughter, Amanda. The United States Federal Census (1880) listed Tilghman, again as a tailor, and Sarah, living with their children in Allentown. Sometime after this, within the next year, Tilghman purchased the farm of Jonas Musselman, of Quakertown.

Tilghman died 11 August 1884, in Quakertown, and was buried in the Union-West End Cemetery. Sarah remained in Quakertown, as shown in the United States Federal Census (1900), which listed a widowed Sarah living at 1325 West Broad Street, Quakertown with her 16-year-old granddaughter, Lottie Nagle. Sarah died 23 March 1901. The Quakertown Free Press reported the death of Sarah Osmun, widow of Tilghman, aged 54 years old. She was buried in the Union Cemetery, in Quakertown.

Tilghman and Amelia had four children:
  1. Mary Jane*
  2. Henry T., born in 1860. He died in 1940, and was buried in the Union-West End Cemetery, Allentown.  He was married to Kate Steinbach (1854-1937), and they had at least one daughter, Elizabeth Florence (1887-1918).
  3. George, born around 1867.
  4. Emma Matilda, born in October 1868. She married Henry Kemmerer Klein, 26 December 1891, and they had three children: J. Robert (b. December 1891), Herman Otto (b. April 1895), and Lillian Naomi (b. February 1898).
  • Due to the large gap between the births of Henry and George, I would bet that there may have been a few children born to Tilghman and Amelia who died in infancy or early childhood (before the 1870 census).
Tilghman and Sarah did not have any children, biologically, but Tilghman did adopt Sarah's daughter from her first marriage:
  1. Amanda, born 17 March 1866. She died 10 March 1905, and was buried in the Union Cemetery, Quakertown. She was married to Cyrus Nagel.

For more information on the continuation of the Osman family into the Weisbach family, please refer to the blog entry "Weisbach, Weissbach" (dated 22 December 2013).

Weisbach, Weißbach

Weisbach, my mother's name. The name I have tattooed on my left arm. Translated into English, it roughly means "white water."

I can only go back as far as my fifth-great-grandfather, Andreas Weißbach (or Weissbach, if you eschew the ß in favor of the double-s). The only thing I know about him is that he married my fifth-great-grandmother, Catharina Charlotta Schaffernin on 18 April 1766, at Meisenheim, Bad Kreuznach, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

I'll admit it here first: I am somewhat -- if not completely -- ignorant of German geography. I know that Bavaria is in the south and Berlin is up in the north (right?), and Cologne, otherwise known as Koln, is located in the west. That is it, so if you asked me where Meisenheim is, I'd shrug my shoulders. So, I turned to my good friend, Wikipedia, to learn more: Meisenheim is located in the western part of the country and as of 2012, it had a population of 2,833. So it's a relatively small town. It also appears that 62 percent of the population there, as of 2013, were Evangelical Christians. The record I found for Andreas and Catharina hints to "Evangelisch," which I take to mean they fell into this religion. (My German is rusty. Just ask my mother....I mean, mater.)

Andreas and Catharina had at least one son, also named Andreas Weißbach, my fourth-great-grandfather, who was born 6 December 1778, and was baptized (again, in "Evangelisch") on 18 December 1778, in Meisenheim. I'm guessing since there is a twelve year gap between their marriage and the birth of Andreas, it is likely there were other children. Andreas, the younger, appears to fall under the same fate as his father, research wise, as the only thing I know about him, other than his birth and baptism information, is that he married my fourth-great-grandmother, Maria Elisabetha Schmidt, on 30 March 1812, in Meisenheim.

As the generations go by, more and more information can be found about the family. Andreas and Maria Elisabetha had at least one child, a son named Frederich Carl Weisbach, my third-great-grandfather, who was baptised in Meisenheim on 23 May 1816. (I can't find a birthdate, but it was probably in May 1816.) He was the immigrant ancestor; an immigration list says that Fredrick Weisbach, aged 21 years, arrived in New York on 14 August 1837 on the Ship Majestic. The record stated that his destination was Ohio, although it looks as though he didn't make it that far and settled in Pennsylvania instead.

On 6 October 1841, in Macungie, Pennsylvania, Frederich married my third-great-grandmother, Louisa Garden. Census records state that Louisa (or Lucetta in some records, or Louisette according to the gravestone of her daughter) was born around 1821 in Pennsylvania, and that her parents were also born in Pennsylvania. I find her surname to be intriguing, and I don't know why. It's just a feeling I get when I hear it. I can't find any more information on her parents, whom I have recorded as Mr. and Mrs. Garden. When I searched the United States Federal Census (1830) for any Garden families, I found a household headed by a John Garden, who lived in Longswamp Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania. In this household was a nine-year-old girl -- unfortunately in 1830, U.S. censuses were not specific in regards to names and other information and instead just listed the genders and ages of household members. Longswamp Township, Berks County, borders the Macungie area, so it is possible that Louisa belonged to this family.

Frederich and Louisa had at least three children:
  1. Maria A., born 21 March 1842. She died the day after her first birthday, on 22 March 1843, and was buried in Saint Paul's UCC Cemetery, in Trexlertown.
  2. Charles Frederich, my great-great-grandfather, born 20 April 1852.
  3. Rosa, born in 1857. She died 22 April 1938.
  • I am intrigued by the ten-year gap between the birth of Maria and Charles. Were there more children? Was the loss of their infant daughter so great that they mourned for ten years before trying for another child?
Frederich and Louisa cannot be found in the United States Federal Census (1850), but in the next census, from 1860, it lists them as living in Allentown, Pennsylvania (Macungie is a suburb of Allentown), in the First Ward. Frederic was recorded as being a laborer with $100 in personal estate, and that his birthplace was "Meisenheim."

From 5 September 1861 to 24 September 1864, Frederich was a Private in Company G, in the 47th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Infantry during the Civil War.

The United States Federal Census (1870) listed the "Weissbach" family as still living in the First Ward of Allentown, although it is unknown if they were still at the same address as in 1860. This census, however, offers more insight. For starters, it noted that the family -- Frederich and Louisa, along with their children, 18-year-old Charles and 13-year-old Rosa, could not read or write. It is possible that the census may have eluded to the English language and that Frederich, who had immigrated as a young man, may be more well-versed in the German language. The census now says that he is from "Prussia," and that he is a "Worker in R. Mill," while his son, Charles, is a worker in a foundry. It also notes that Frederich's parents are foreign born, and that Charles and Rosa's father is foreign born, thus again stating that Louisa was American-born, as were her parents, the aforementioned Mr. and Mrs. Garden.

The United States Federal Census (1880), which again lists Frederich "Weissbach" as being Prussian-born (as well as his parents), shows that by this time, the household was just Frederich, a laborer, and Louisa (or Lucetta, as the censuses appear to call her.), who kept house. The census is more specific in regards to their address; the Weisbach's were living on Third Street.

A census of the U.S. National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, dated 1882, stated that Frederich was admitted to the home, in Hampton, Virginia, on 19 October 1882, at the age of 66. His disability was recorded as "rheumation" It appears that Frederich remained living there for the rest of his life, which would end on 23 April 1894, due to senile debility and disease of the heart.

His son, Charles, my great-great-grandfather, had remained in Allentown. He married my great-great-grandmother, Mary Jane Osman (Osmun), on 22 October 1872, in Allentown. He was 20, and she was seventeen. She was born 17 September 1855, in Pennsylvania. Mary was the daughter of Tilghman and Amelia Osman/Osmun, and the family had also lived in Allentown.   [Check back, as I will write an entry on the Osman/Osmun family.]

Charles and Mary Jane made their home in Allentown. They had the following children:
  1. Tilghman Charles, my great-grandfather, born in April 1875.
  2. Bertha, born around 1878. She married a Mr. Magee.
  3. Henry, born 28 January 1878. He died 6 November 1882, and was buried in the Union-West End Cemetery, Allentown.
  4. Edgar, born around 1881 or 1882.
  • There was a Claude W. Weisbach, who was born 10 June 1889 and died 25 August 1894, who was buried in the Union-West End Cemetery. Seeing as the only Weisbach family buried there was Charles', is it possible that Claude was another of their children?
     
The United States Federal Census (1880) stated that the Charles Weisbach family lived at 135 Sixth Street, Allentown. (There is now a North Sixth Street and a South Sixth Street, so it is difficult to locate this address accurately.) Charles, aged 29, was a worker in a foundry, while Mary, age 23, kept home with the three children.

Allentown city directories helped form an important part of research as this gave me insight on where and when Charles and Mary lived. It appears that while Charles and Mary moved around a lot, they remained in Hamilton District neighborhood, located in the south central part of Allentown:
  • 1887 - Charles, a moulder, and Mary lived at 434 Willow Street
  • 1889 - Charles, a moulder, lived at 528 Hickory Street
  • 1890 - Charles, a moulder, lived at 528 Hickory Street
  • 1894 - Charles, a moulder, and Mary, lived at 121 South Sixth Street.
  • 1895 - Charles and Mary lived at 121 South Sixth Street
Between 1895 and 1900, Charles and Mary were divorced. The United States Federal Census (1900) listed Charles as being a 48-year-old moulder who was divorced and boarding at the home of Samuel and Mary Kemmerer, located at 513 Chestnut Street, in the Hamilton District. Curiously, in the same census, I find his ex-wife, Mary Weisbach, who is listed in the census as being a 45-year-old widow! Again, like Charles, Mary remained a few blocks away from their previous residence. Mary and her son, Edgar, lived at 923 Hamilton Street. (Judging by the number of households living at this address in 1900, I am presuming that this was an apartment building. The building is now home to a pawn shop, but it is a five or six story building, which appears to accommodate apartments.) Also interestingly enough, the census stated that Mary had only one child, who was also living: Edgar. (There is no mention of Tilghman, Bertha or Henry; even as they were adults, they would still be mentioned. Odd.) Mary was stated as working as a mender at a knitting mill. She would die later that year, on 21 November 1900. (While I do not have a copy of the obituary, I remember reading it once and it stated that Mary had suffered from headaches and had collapsed at the factory, where she died.) Mary was buried in the Union-West End Cemetery, Allentown.

On 30 May 1901, Charles married his second wife, Savannah Fietta Ibach. Savannah was born 30 November 1866, the daughter of William and Mary Ibach. Savannah was, like Charles, a divorcee; the United States Federal Census (1900) listed Savannah as being a 30-year-old divorced woman living with her sister, Carrie Ibach, at 321 North Law Street, Allentown. She had one child, although this child was not living with her in Allentown.

Charles and Savannah had one daughter:
  1. Marian, born around 1904.
In 1903, Charles and Savannah lived at 321 North Law (the same residence where Savannah lived with her sister in 1900). Charles' occupation was listed as moulder. Also living in the household was his daughter, Bertha, a silk worker. The United States Federal Census (1920) listed Charles and Savannah as living at 514 Pine Street. In addition to their daughter, Marian, the family had a boarder, 25-year-old Charles P. Raine.

Savannah died 6 July 1922, and was buried in the Union-West End Cemetery, Allentown. Charles survived her  by eight months before he died, on 28 March 1923, and was buried next to Savannah.

The eldest of Charles and Mary (Osman) Weisbach's children, Tilghman was raised in Allentown. In 1894, Tilghman was working as a wire worker and living at 121 South 6th Street.

He was first married to  Lillie E. Trumbauer, around 1896. [The United States Federal Census (1910) stated that Tilghman had been married for 14 years.]. Lillian was born 13 May 1876, the daughter of Franklin John and Emma Matilda (George) Trumbauer.

Tilghman and Lillie had the following children:
  1. Arthur Stanley, born around 1898 or 1899.
  2. Lillian M., born in 1900 and died in 1992. She married a Mr. Merkle and had three children.
  3. Warren Tillman, baptized 20 August 1903 at the Asbury United Methodist Church, in Allentown. He died sometime before 1910.
  4. ?, died in infancy or early childhood; died before 1910.
  5. ?, died in infancy or early childhood; died before 1910. The United States Federal Census (1910) stated that Tilghman had five children, only two of which were living; those living children were Arthur and Lillian, so the remaining three were Warren and the two other unknown children who died before 1910.
  6. Carlton John, born 27 April 1910, and baptized 11 March 1917 at Salem United Church of Christ, Allentown.
  7. Frederick Charles, born 8 October 1912, and baptized 11 March 1917 at Salem United Church of Christ, Allentown.
Like his father, it appears that Tilghman did not stay living at the same place for too long, as city directories give a variety of addresses for him:
  • 1901 - Tilghman, a silk worker, and Lillie lived at 441 North 8th Street, rear, Allentown.
  • 1906 - Tilghman, a laborer, lived in the Emaus borough.
  • 1907 - Tilghman, a moulder, and Lillie lived at 1149 Lawrence.
Tilghman, Lillie, and their children Arthur and Lillian, lived at 362 North 3rd Street, Allentown, according to the city directory from 1903. Tilghman was listed as being a "silk worker." The United States Federal Census (1910) says that while Tilghman, a moulder in a brass foundry, is listed as being married, he was not living with his wife. Instead, he was a boarder at the home of Violet Dougherty, at 18 South Eighth Street, Allentown. If this was a separation, Tilghman and Lillie were apparently reconcilled as two more children were born to them. However, in 1914, they were divorced.

In 1915, Tilghman was working as a silk weaver and living at 910 Maple Street, Allentown.

Tilghman married his second wife, Ida Caroline Holland, my great-grandmother, on 18 February 1918. Ida was born 11 January 1887, the daughter of Jeremiah and Ellamanda (Kurtz) Holland. [I will be writing entries on the Holland and Kurtz families.] Like her husband, Ida was a divorcee. Her first husband was Leo Zanazzi, an Italian, whom she married in 1905. They had two daughters, Alma, and a daughter who died at birth. They were separated in 1908, but were not legally divorced until 1917. During their separation, Alma was living in a common-law marriage with a man named Nelson Prutzman, and from this union, she had a daughter, Claire. (While Alma went by Zanazzi, Claire used Weisbach as her surname.)

Tilghman and Ida had two children:
  1. a daughter, who was born in July 1918 and died at birth.
  2. Charles George, my grandfather, born 26 November 1921. 
When Tilghman enlisted to serve during World War I, in September 1918, he recorded his address as "12th Street, Catasauqua." He gave "ribbon weaver" as his occupation, and his employer was the Allentown Silk Company.
The United States Federal Census (1920) stated that Tilghman and Ida were living in rented accomodations at 524 Race Street, Catasauqua. Tilghman and Ida were both listed as being silk weavers.

The City Directories show that Tilghman and Ida moved around:
  • 1919 - Tilghman, a ribbon weaver, and Ida, lived at 408 Race Street, Catasauqua.
  • 1924 - Tilghman, a silk worker, and Ida lived at 123 North 7th Street, Allentown.
  • 1925 - Tilghman, a ribbon weaver, and Ida, lived at 216 North Church, Allentown.
  • 1926 - Tilghman, a janitor, and Ida lived at 216 North Church.
  • 1928 - Tilghman, a silk weaver, and Ida lived at 216 North Church.
My grandfather recalled that his mother became sick -- possibly with what sounds like sinus cancer -- and entered the hospital (Allentown General Hospital) where she died on 16 January 1929, just five days after her 42nd birthday. She was buried in the Schoenersville Cemetery. After Ida's death, my grandfather recalled, Tilghman developed a mistrust of doctors. Tilghman remained living in Allentown.  A city directory from 1929 and the United States Federal Census (1930) stated that Tilghman, a silk weaver, lived at 436 Chew Street. In 1945, and from 1947 to 1949, Tilghman lived at 625 Turner Street and worked as a shuttle worker. He died in October 1953, and was buried next to Ida.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Welcome to my blog, I Am A Mutt.

It's true. I'm a mutt. Nothing about me is full-blooded anything. I am a mixture of many different cultures, traditions, languages and creeds. I'm part Native American. My grandfather was 100 percent Norwegian. I have a great-great-great-great-great-grandmother that was Inuit (Eskimo). Some of my ancestors were ministers. Some were merchants. Others were Mennonites.

The purpose of this blog is to allow me to research and report on my ancestors. One day, I may write a blog post about a great-great-great-great-grandfather who helped establish a village in New York state. Another day, I may write about my attempts to learn the language that some ancestors spoke. Maybe I tried a dish native to my "father land." It is the intention of this blog to motivate others to explore what makes them them, and to honor those who came before us (after all, if it wasn't for our great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents, we wouldn't be here!)

Also, if you see a surname that also appears in your family, we might be related! Feel free to contact me (at james.c.falcon@gmail.com) and we can explore that further. I'm always looking to meet new cousins!

James