Arthur Herman Eberlein family, 1944

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Arthur Herman Eberlein family, 1944

Photograph provided by John Eberlein, 22 November 2012

Back row: Arthur Lombard Eberlein
2nd row: Arthur Herman Eberlein; Ruth Lombard Wabers (sister of Marguerite)
3rd row: Ida Lombard (mother of Marguerite); Marguerite Isabel Lombard Eberlein
4th row: Ellis Lombard Eberlein; Frank Wabers (son of Ruth)

 

John Valentine Eberlein in his Cavalry uniform

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John Valentine Eberlein enlisted in the U.S. Cavalry, 2nd regiment, on 12 January 1885 in Chicago. He served his five-year term of service and was discharged 11 January 1890 in Boise, Idaho.

John Valentine Eberlein in Cavalry uniform

Photograph provided by John Eberlein, 22 November 2012

Source: Ancestry.com, U.S. Army, Register of Enlistments, 1798-1914 (Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2007), database online. Record for John V
Eberlein.

John M. Volkman, 25

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The funeral for John Michael Volkman, 25, Bayview, will be at 10 a.m. Friday in English Funeral Chapel, Coeur d’Alene, with Reverend Kendrick Gould officiating. Burial will be at Restlawn Memorial Park.

Mr. Volkman was electrocuted Sunday at his home. He was the owner of the Rusty Scupper Inn. He attended the Lutheran Church and served with the U. S. Navy.

Surviving are his wife, Betty Jean, two daughters, Denise and Daveana, both at home, a son David at home and his parents who reside in Wisconsin.

Source: Coeur d’Alene Press, Thursday, 18 October 1973, page 10, column 1

Bayview Man Electrocuted

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A Bayview man was electrocuted Sunday when he climbed a power pole to make some repairs.

John Michael Volkman, 25, was found dead Tuesday morning in the yard at his Bayview home.

Floyd Stalder, a Kootenai County Sheriff detective, said the investigation revealed the victim apparently had climbed a power pole adjoining a driveway, attempted to reconnect the clamp from the transformer to the primary line and was electrocuted.

The investigation report concluded that the former owner of Rusty Scupper Inn died Sunday evening. The body was discovered about 9 a.m. Tuesday by Steve Spotanski and John Peterson of the First Security Bank, Coeur d’Alene when they came to the house on business.

The funeral arrangements are pending at English Funeral Chapel.

Source: Coeur d’Alene Press, Wednesday, 17 October 1973, page 14, column 3

Marriage record, Georg Malthes Eberlein and his wife Catharina Barbara, 1787

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I’m onto my second day of struggling with microfilm of the church records from Züttlingen. But I have found information about the marriage of my 2nd great grandfather, Georg Malthes Eberlein. Here is a a screen capture and below is a transcription and translation.

Thanks to contributors Bursarius and SugdenHG from the German empire forum on Familysearch.org for their help refining the transcription and translation.

Extract from the church records of Züttlingen, concerning the marriage of Georg Malthes Eberlein and Catharina Barbara Mehlaf, 1787

Transcription

Georg Mattheß Eberlein, Albrecht Eberleins,
Bürger und Gerichtsverwandter zu Züttlingen
eheliche Sohn, ist mit der von ihm geschwächten
Catharina Barbara Meelhafin
von Möckmühl, Freitags, r 7 ten September
1787. — in der Betstund kopuliert worden

Translation

Georg Malthes Eberlein, legitimate son of Albrecht Eberlein, citizen and juryman of Züttlingen, married the pregnant-by-him Catharina Barbara Meelhaf on Friday, 7 September 1787 at the praying time.

Möckmühl, Germany

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The closest “big town” to Züttlingen is Möckmühl. Katharine Barbara Mehlhaf, who married Georg Malthes Eberlein was from Möckmühl; she was grandmother of Johann Friedrich Eberlein who immigrated to the US, adopted the name “Frederick Eberlein,” and settled in Shawano, Wisconsin.

Möckmüh from the South

Lithograph by G. Engel and Caspar Obach, after 1854.

Source: Helmut Schmolz, Christhard Schrenk, Hubert Weckbach, Cities in the Lowlands – Picturesque views from the 19th Century, Weinberg 1989, Photo 88

Day 1: Church records from Züttlingen, Germany

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Microfilm of the records of the Evangelische Kirche in Züttlingen, Germany arrived this week, and I spent 3 1/2 hours at the local Family History Center looking through film #2271090 this morning.

It was confusing and daunting and overwhelming, even though I speak some German. To begin with, the reel started with some 17th century family books (Familien-register), which hadn’t been mentioned in the film notes. The handwriting was miniscule and heavily overlaid on the page, and there was a lot of Latin! I kept scrolling through and eventually realized that the records were not from Züttlingen but from a nearby town named Widdern. Luckily I kept scrolling and eventually came to records from Züttlingen. (And the family books from Widdern seemed to be arranged alphabetically — I hope this is true for the records from Züttlingen also …)

Even once I was at the records from Züttlingen, I still felt at a loss. There were some pages that didn’t look like anything I’d seen in the online course that I had taken — Lists of people and dates. Later, when I looked at the film notes for the reel, I tentatively identified them as “Kommunionen 1778-1785”.

Still, I made some progress. I found some Eberleins in the lists of people being confirmed; it seems that groups of 14-year-olds were confirmed in the spring of each year:

  • 1803: Christina Eberlein, c. 1790 Mai
  • 1806 Jos. [not-yet-deciphered] Eberlein, c 1792
  • 1808: Christophe Gottlieb Eberlein, c. 1794

I have no idea (yet) where these people fit in with my great-great grand father and his family — perhaps siblings of his father?

I also came away with two printouts of partial pages from a register of birth and baptismal information. These are partial because I did not realize that the record spanned both pages of the register. (Did I mention that I was overwhelmed? Having an empty stomach didn’t help, either.)

I’ll start with a screen capture of the column headers; click the image if you want to see it in full resolution:
Column headings from baptismal records

From left-to-right:

  • Name des Kindes — Name of child
  • Eltern — Parents
  • Ort von Geburt — Place of birth
  • Zeit der Geburt — Day and time of birth
  • Ort, Zeit der Taufe — Day and time of baptism
  • Taufzeugen — Godparents

And here is a screen capture with the actual, albeit partial information for a sister of my great-great grandfather:

Baptismal record for Johanna Magdalene Rosine Eberlein, born 1829 in Züttlingen, Germany

Here’s a first attempt at a transcription of the record:

  • Johanna Magdalene Rosine
  • Friedrich Albrecht Eberlein, Bürger u. [?] ins Züttlingen ux. Eva Catharina, geb. Ullrichin
  • Zütt-lingen (broken across lines)
  • 1829 1. Januar [?] 9-10 U.
  • Zütt-lingen [?]
  • 1) Georg Malthes Eberl…
    des Geo. Malth. Eberle …
    2) Magdalene Ehefr…
    [?]
    3  Joh. [?],
    4  Rosine, Ehefrau
    [?] des Züttlingen

Lots to mull over here — I’m looking forward to my next trip to the Family History Center.

Things I learned:

  • Expect that your first encounter with German church records will be overwhelming. Don’t expect more than to get a sense of what is on the reel.
  • Start with the Familien-register. If you find a record for the family, you’ll have dates and names and — very important — a sense of what the names look like in Deutsche Schrift (German script). I was lucky in that I had a extract from the Familien-register that relatives got from the church pastor back in 1951, so I had a starting place.
  • If you have materials that show the names of your people in old script — photocopies, photographs, whatever — bring them, as well as a cheat sheet of the alphabet. You can download PDFs of the alphabet and sheets for practicing writing the letters (the best way to learn them) from the BYU German Script Tutorial.
  • Print off a copy of the Family History Center notes for the collection. (I didn’t, and I needed it badly as I struggled to make sense of what I was seeing.)
  • If you find materials about your people, print copies as you go along. Take the microfilm off the reader without rewinding it, so you keep your place. (I had no idea that this was OK to do …)
  • If you are overwhelmed with the content, print copies of representative pages. Take them home and decipher them.
  • Use a camera to take photos of the microfilm as it is displayed on the reader.

Overall, I’ve made progress. Good progress — more than I thought before I began writing this post.

Family portrait, William and Kate (Eberlein) Reichel, 1901

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William and Kate Reichel family portrait

Left-to-right
Back row: Mary Katherine; Herman Otto; William Charles
Middle row: Katherine (Eberlein) Reichel; Emil Conrad; William August Reichel
Front row: Frederick Gustave

Source: Heritage Center, Shawano, Wisconsin