Sunday, September 30, 2012

The Wehrles, Valentine and Maria: Baden to New Orleans




 The pedigree chart above has been long in the making, collecting research, saving, throwing out and starting over again because of misinformation and erroneous data.  At this stage of writing, I'm fairly comfortable with  my above findings.  I'm still making connections going beyond my 5th generation ancestors, Joseph Wehrle, born in 1720, and wife Anna Weiss.  To add another generation will take a lot more research for accuracy, so I'm resting with what I now have.  At least for the time-being.


I'd given up on finding my 2nd great grandfather, Valentine's lineage after years of brick walls.  His father finally showed up as Johann Wehrle from Baden-Wurttemburg and his mother as Theresa Schwab, also from Baden.  Johann died in Germany, and as far as I can gather so did Theresa.  

Using a Timeline generated by my Family Tree Maker software, Valentine's father died when he was two years of age, February 1831, one year before Valentine immigrated to America.  

I haven't had such lineage success with Maria, Valentine's wife, my 2nd great grandmother, only that she was born in 1830 in "Bremen," as she reported early on in America but then changed to "Baden" in later years.  Though my family has always referred to her as Maria, she's always been listed as Mary Ann, Mary A., or simply Mary on American documents.  Her given name has appeared as Bohlweber, Bohweber, and Ballweber, none of which have unearthed any individuals.  I find, however, that "Ballweaver" is a popular German name, offering up numerous connections.  Thus far, I haven't found the right connection, but Ballweaver may be the correct maiden name of Maria.






Timeline Report for Valentine Wehrle





Yr/Age
Event
Date/Place





1828
Birth
11 Feb 1828



Baden-Württemberg, Germany

1831
Death (Father)
06 Feb 1831

2
Johann Wehrle
Hinterstraß, Baden-Württemberg, Germany



1852
Arrival
16 Apr 1852

24
From Le Havre
New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana, USA



1853
Marriage
1853

24
Marie Anne Bohweber
Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio USA



1854
Birth (Daughter)
1854

25
Mary A. Wehrle
Ohio, United States



1857
Birth (Son)
19 Feb 1857

29
Peter Wehrle
Ohio, United States



1859
Death (Mother)
1859

30
Theresa Schwab





1860
Residence
1860

31

New Albany, Floyd, Indiana, United States




1860
Birth (Son)
10 Aug 1860

32
Valentine Lawrence Wehrle
New Albany, Floyd, Indiana, United States



1862
Birth (Daughter)
Abt. 1862

33
Barbara Wehrle
Indiana






1865
Birth (Daughter)
1865

36
Ann Appolonia Wehrle
New Albany, Floyd, Indiana, United States



1866
Birth (Son)
11 Apr 1866

38
Joseph L Wehrle
New Albany, Floyd, Indiana, United States



1870
Residence
1870

41

Cincinnati Ward 18, Hamilton, Ohio, United States




1870
Birth (Daughter)
May 1870

42
Eliza Wehrle
Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, United States



1872
Residence
1872

43

Cincinnati, Ohio, USA




1874
Residence
1874

45

Cincinnati, Ohio, USA




1880
Residence
1880

51

Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, United States




1880
Marriage (Son)
08 Feb 1880

51
Valentine Lawrence Wehrle
Church, Wetzel, West Virginia, United States



1882
Residence
Bet. 1882–1883

53

Cincinnati, Ohio




1882
Marriage (Daughter)
Mar 1882

54
Ann Appolonia Wehrle
Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, United States




 
Marriage (Son)
1888

59
Joseph L Wehrle





1891
Residence
1891

62

Cincinnati, OH




1899
Death
08 Nov 1899

71

Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio





Port of Entry




Cincinnati in the 1850s was a still-young, tightly packed city.  When the Germans began settling in the “Queen City of the West,” they came to a frontier town, and everyone knows life on the frontier was hard.  They had come seeking a better life and found little or no work when they arrived.  Worse, in a short time they became objects of hate.  They were aliens, and like some other cities, Cincinnati residents believed these poor, beer-drinking immigrants would ruin their elite city. 

Though the Germans were highly instrumental in making Cincinnati what it is today, first they had to fight a war in their new land to be accepted.


From France to the Queen of the South

Valentine Wehrle and Maria Ballweaver (or Bohweber) arrived in New Orleans on April 16, 1852, having boarded passage in La Havre, France, on March 3, 1852.  New Orleans was a common port for Germans who chose to travel to La Havre to board ship.  


_________________________________________________________________
Hamilton County Ohio Citizenship Records 1837-1916

... Hamilton County Ohio Citizenship Records, 1837-1916. ... Wehrle, Valentine,
26, Baden, 3/3/1852, Havre, 4/16/1852,New Orleans. ...
libraries.uc.edu/.../collections/natdec/master.php?pageNum_Recordset1=961&totalRows_Recordset1=25523-16k-Cached
________________________________________________________________________________
Wehrle, Valentine Valentine Wehrle 26 Baden 3/3/1852 Havre 4/16/1852 New Orleans T 10/09/1854 F 6 117 F
Wehrle, Valentine Valentine Wehrle 26 Baden 3/3/1852 Havre 4/16/1852 New Orleans T 10/09/1854 F
________________________________________________________________________________

Two listings exist for Valentine on the libraries.uc.edu naturalization website instead of one each individually for Valentine and Maria.  Another online Wehrle researcher supplied me with information that Valentine and Maria together made the voyage across the Atlantic, and I garner that one of the two records is for Maria.

The ship is not named, and it may take longer than I want to keep researching this.  The majority of these ships were American, so French ships may be missing, leaving an enormous gap in the records.

Germans settled in different locations depending upon when they arrived and where the best locations for economic opportunity were situated. When France, which had attempted to colonize Louisiana in the early eighteenth century with the help of Germans, assumed an important role in the cotton trade, German immigrants arrived in New Orleans and made their way up the Mississippi, Ohio, and Missouri rivers.  ~ German Americans - History, Modern era, The first germans in america http://www.everyculture.com/multi/Du-Ha/German-Americans.html#ixzz1m6PbwInb
 In his 1829 book, Report of a Journey to the Western States, Gottfried Duden wrote wonderful scenes of immigrant life in America.  One of the things important to Germans was their intellectual freedom, and Duden praised America’s free lifestyle, intellectual and otherwise.  His book was pivotal in persuading thousands of Germans to emigrate.

The failed German revolution in 1848 also stimulated emigration. Over the next ten years over a million people left Germany and settled in the United States. Some were the intellectual leaders of this rebellion, but most were impoverished Germans who had lost confidence in its government's ability to solve the country's economic problems.

Others left because they feared constant political turmoil in Germany. One prosperous innkeeper wrote after arriving in Wisconsin: 
I would prefer the civilized, cultured, Germany to America if it were still in its former orderly condition, but as it has turned out recently, and with the threatening prospect for the future of religion and politics, I prefer America. Here I can live a more quiet, and undisturbed life...
Most arrivals in America came from rural areas in Germany. These were often small farmers and farm labourers who had suffered from advances in agricultural technology during the 19th century. Many of these immigrants settled in Wisconsin, where the soil and climate was similar to that in Germany. Of the 70,000 Germans who migrated to the Deep South, about 15,000 lived in New Orleans. ~ http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAEgermany.htm

The voyage to the shores of New Orleans was not an easy one, and Valentine and Mary were aboard ship 44 days on their voyage from France to New Orleans.  Illness, crowding, and less than sanitary conditions were suffered by the immigrants.  A search of ships' manifests show a great many infants dying aboard the vessels.  

"From the Old to the New World" shows German emigrants boarding a steamer in Hamburg, to New York.Harper’s Weekly, (New York) November 7, 1874
When Valentine and Maria arrived on the shores of New Orleans in 1852, believing they'd reached the land of milk and honey, from reports passed on to German residents from those already on America’s shores, they may have had a rude awakening.  Assuming of course that the crowded, filthy voyage from their homeland hadn't already given away some of what lie ahead.

Queen of the South:

Taken from Queen of the South: New Orleans, 1853-1862, the Journal of Thomas K. Wharton, edited by Samuel Wilson, Jr.,F.A.I.A., Patricia Brady, and Lynn D. Adams
The nineteenth century was malodorous. After all, vehicles were horse or  mule-drawn,   regular  bathing  was uncommon, open gutters clogged with sewage lined the streets, and garbage was frequently left to fester. No wonder sweet-smelling plants — sweet olives, jasmine, gardenias, roses — were planted at the entrances to homes, not just for their beauty, but to counteract the pungent smells of the street…
Death and despair hung over New Orleans like a miasma that summer (1853).  Longtime residents had acquired some  degrees  of   immunity   from  the fever, but the sword of pestilence cut down unsuspecting natives and attacked areas of the countryside formerly believed safe from infection.  
Unacclimated newcomers contracted the disease and died by the thousands.  Apparently perfectly well one day, victims  would  suddenly  be   s t ruck  with fever, jaundice, black vomit, and delirium, dying the following day. Others would linger for several days, unexplainably dying or surviving. Whole families died here, children there, and parents
elsewhere. So many children lost parents in 1853 that orphanages were opened to take care of them.
Some of the diseases were brought over on the immigrant ships, like the great Irish famine and disease from 1845-52, resulting in approximately a million immigrants being transported to America. 

Yellow fever was one of the most dreaded diseases in port cities of the United States.  Immigrants at all ports had to be examined by inspectors for signs of any infectious disease, and if any were found, the ship was quarantined.  Typhoid epidemics flared in Philadelphia in 1837 and throughout the U.S. between 1861 and 1865.  (http://genealogical-gleanings.com)

Additionally, influenza posed great threats in 1850 in America, and an epidemic occurred worldwide in 1857 to 1859.  .

This is the city – the Queen of the South – and the country, America, which was the new home to Valentine and Maria when they off-boarded at the Port of New Orleans.

Other factors at the time in America added to the climate the Wehrles entered into.  Slavery was popular, in the 1850s, in New Orleans and many other states, and thousands of slaves were advertised in the newspapers—in the classified section.  Sentiments of the German immigrants were mixed.  Many of the poor laborers were against freedom for the slaves because of fear of losing jobs to them.  Some were sympathetic to the cause and joined the abolitionists.

I have no way of knowing when or how Valentine and Maria traveled from New Orleans to Cincinnati.  The most common form of transportation at the time, in the 1850s, was by river and following the rivers on dirt roads by horse or horse and buggy, or of course on foot. 

Steamboats were in operation in the 1850s and were probably the most popular form of travel, if one could afford it.  By means of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, one could board a steamship and travel
from New Orleans to Cincinnati.  The Erie Canal provided for travelers to and from New York and other eastern ports.

Steam locomotion had been invented but not to the extent that, even if someone could afford the fare, had easy access to a train carrying him directly to his destination.  As Thomas Wharton journal describes:  
…People  who  didn’t own horses or carriages had to hire them  from  a   livery   stable   or  walk.
I don’t know if Valentine owned a horse and carriage, or a horse and wagon, or if he had money left over from crossing the Atlantic. 

I don’t know how long he and Maria stayed in New Orleans after April 1852, but I do know that they were married in Hamilton County, Cincinnati, on December 12, 1853, a space of 20 months since arriving in the new country.

Valentine and Mary's marriage 12 December 1853.  This records shows Mary's given name as Bohweber.
The first U.S. Census to show Valentine and Maria was the 1870 Cincinnati record, which shows they had relocated to Indiana in 1860 and returned 10 years later to Hamilton County, Cincinnati.

What were the reasons for moving to Indiana and then returning?  A study of U.S. history may prove what drove the 1850s ancestors to make these decisions.

Next:  Valentine and Marie.  The Indiana Years.


Friday, September 21, 2012

The Deans of Orangeburg & Muses Mill



I found my Dean ancestors in the rural spots of Orangeburg and Muses Mill,  in Kentucky, because of the information provided by my great grandfather, John Dean, on his and Nellie’s marriage record.

I located his parents, my 2nd great grandparents, Elisha and Elizabeth (Betsey) Dean, in the 1870 Census.  John, however, listed his mother's name as Betsy Jacobs, and for a long time I was unable to find any information on her.  As I prepared to post this chapter here on the blog and include it in the book manuscript for printing, I finally gave in and changed Betsey's last name to "Jenkins," the name that kept popping up and which I repeatedly ignored.  After all, John may have told the court clerk Jenkins, and the clerk heard Jacobs.  Just goes to say, you have to dig deep in genealogy.  

No sooner than I changed the name, and I got a hit.  The best hit, Betsey's parents.  And Betsey is really Sarah Elizabeth Jenkins.  

As John’s marriage information states, his parents resided in Mason County, Kentucky.  The town, it turns out, was Orangeburg, at least when I first found them.  Later I'd clear up the issue of people by the same name appearing in Muses Mill, Flemming County, Kentucky, which I'd also repeatedly ignored.    



I also turned up sublings for my great grandfather John, though their parentage is split between different fathers, an issue that drove me almost insane for over a year.  The above pedigree chart shows John's brothers, Daniel, James, and Leander, and a daughter Mary Dean.  

On the 1860 census for Morgan County, Orangeburg, Daniel and Mary are identified with the last name, Martin.  Elisha, my great grandfather, is the only Dean besides his mother Elizabeth.  Two additional residents of the 1860 home include Elizabeth "Leakins" age 30, and James N. Leakins, age 9.  Another Ancestry member changed the last name of these two to "Jenkins."  All future records reflect Jenkins.


1860 United States Federal Census about Elizabeth Dean

Name:Elizabeth Dean
Age in 1860:80
Birth Year:abt 1780
Birthplace:Virginia
Home in 1860:Division 2, Morgan, Kentucky
Gender:Female
Post Office:West Liberty
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
Elisha Dean35
Elizabeth Dean80
Daniel Martin45
Mary L Martin7
Elizabeth Leakins30
James N Leakins9


Elizabeth Leakins, or Jenkins as it should be, is eventually shown on further records as Elizabeth, or Betsey, Dean, wife of Elisha.  James N. Leakins (Jenkins), it can be concluded was born to Elizabeth and given her maiden name.  Is Elisha the father?  It looks likely, since Elizabeth and the child are living with Elisha along with his mother and brother.

James eventually becomes James Newton Dean, identified trough multiple other Ancestry family trees.

James Newton Jenkins Dean,
prior to his death on July 26, 1927,
in Kankakee, Illinois

The Martin children of Elizabeth Dean are later also identified as Deans, though Daniel, in the 1850 census bore the last name Dean.  Here in 1860, he is Daniel Martin, and in 1870 he is still Martin, age 55, as head of household, still residing in Orangeburg, listed right above Elisha and Elizabeth Dean.  The Martins and the Deans stayed together throughout most all census records.



1870 United States Federal Census about Daniel Martin

Name:Daniel Martin
Age in 1870:55
Birth Year:abt 1815
Birthplace:Tennessee
Home in 1870:Orangeburg, Mason, Kentucky
Race:White
Gender:Male
Post Office:Orangeburg
Value of real estate:View image
Household Members:
NameAge
Daniel Martin55
Jane Martin26
Hartle Martin4
Wolford Martin3
Ariary Martin2


Jane is identified as Daniel's wife in a later census, though on this one for 1870, I was unsure because of her young age.  In the 1880 census, Daniel's birthplace is listed as Kentucky, but I've found that a lot of residents  list the state they're living in at the time as their birthplace, or they are not sure, and the census taker lists the state for them.  Every other record for Daniel states Tennessee as his birthplace.

Daniel's wife Jane is actually Jane Jenkins, Sara Elizabeth's sister.  I finally discovered this from another Ancestry member who is researching the Martins.  

My Ancestry friend claims Mary L. Martin, seen above in the 1860 census, is the daughter of Daniel.  This makes sense because on that census Mary age 7, is listed right below Daniel, age 45.  

The two brothers, Elisha and Daniel, and both their children are living together, along with the children's grandmother, Elizabeth, and Elisha's child's mother, Sarah Elizabeth Jenkins.  But there are several listings of Mary Dean and/or Mary Martin, and I wonder if they are all one and the same girl.  


  • The first occurrence of Mary is in 1860, identified as Mary L. Martin, born in 1853, age 7 
  • The next census, 1870, lists a Mary Dean, born in 1854, age now 16
  • The 1880 census lists E. Mary Dean, born in 1860, age 20


 It's confusing, to say the least, and therein lies the challenge of genealogy.  I will at some point combine the three Marys and see where that leads, but for now I'll leave it as is.

The 1880 census shows James N. Dean living in Fleming County, Muses Mill, married to Sarah Dean and a son, Elisha, age two, most likely named after his grandfather Elisha Dean, even if James started out being a Martin.  The adult James lists Elisha as his father until his death (although it appears as "Elijah" one time).  

Young Elisha, born in 1878, probably in Muses Mill, appears in later census records including his obituary on September 18, 1958:




Elisha, Sr., had a son, Elisha Edward Dean, Jr., who died this year.  I wish I'd discovered this lineage before so I could have known him.
Elisha Edward Dean, Jr.
1933 - 2012
Brooksburg, Jefferson County, Indiana




Elisha and Betsey
My Grandfather Frank Dean's Grandparents

Elisha and Betsy Dean were the parents of James, Mary, and my great grandfather John.  Elisha was born about 1827 in Tennessee, where I now live.  I like that.

I know that Elisha Dean served in the Civil War.


Name:Elisha Dean
Residence:Sub DistrictKentucky
Class:2
Congressional District:9th
Age on 1 July 1863:40
Estimated Birth Year:abt 1823
Race:White
Place of Birth:Kentucky

View original image



My 2nd Great Grandfather's mother always listed her name on census records as Elizabeth Dean, though one record shows Elisha giving her the name Elizabeth Martin.  He does not specify his father's name, nor have I been able to pin it down.  As already discussed, the Martin family boasts of many members and were closely connected to the Deans all through the 1800s.   The families appear on records living together or in the dwelling next door or a few doors away.  

What exactly the connection to the Martins is can only be completely solved by discovering the person Elizabeth Dean married before calling herself a Dean and giving birth to a Dean child.  

She was born in Virginia about 1780 and gave birth to children in Tennessee, and then moved to Kentucky.  I've been unable to locate a for-sure husband in any of those states.  

The name Willis Dean keeps popping up on Ancestry, and who indeed takes up a lot of genealogical geography on the internet.  Many of his ancestors still reside in Tennessee, in cities and towns rather close to me.  I wish I could prove relationship to this large family, but so far I've not been successful.

I did finally discover, just recently, 2nd Great Grandmother Betsey Jenkins' parents, Solomon Jenkins and Laney Ellis.  Solomon was born in 1796 in in North Carolina, and died in 1870 in Morgan County, Kentucky.  Laney Ellis, daughter of Willis Ellis, and Elizabeth, was born in 1799, in North Carolina, and also died in 1870, like her husband, in Morgan County.  Eventually, armed with these facts, I may be able to delve further back in history and discover new ancestors.


Perhaps more research eventually will carry me back to some exciting bygone era, but for now I’m ready to publish what I have managed to excavate out of a very large genealogical mountain.