Thank you Juergen, I get confused not being familiar with German geography. Sometime a map does not even help. (With a maiden name of Krueger who came from Garnsee now Gardeja, Poland, I have always wanted to learn German but that ship sailed) Her husband came from Wolnzach. Marianne Sutter did his genealogy for us. Is Wolnzach near this Teisendorf? I will have to go back and look at all the responses I printed off. People have been so kind to help. Anyway, do you know what I should look for in contacting the LDS for films? If I hit a dead end here, I could possibly write to someone in Tiesendorf. Names were mangled in immigration records and they wrote down whatever they heard. I guess it was easier just to let it be and go by the spelling instead of trying to correct it. This makes sense as I know there was a distance from Deisendorf and Wolnzach and no one has found any Isenberger's near Diesendorf. And again thank you very much. Mary -----Original Message----- From: Juergen Weigelt Sent: Friday, January 03, 2014 4:03 AM To: baden-wurttemberg@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [BW] concerning a post in Dec Hello Mary Ann, in one of your documents it is 3 times clearly Rosina Ir(r)enberger Deisendorf (in) *Bavaria*. That's not the Deisendorf that is in the Seefelden records as the Seefelden-Deisendorf is not in Bavaria but Baden. I think it may be todays Teisendorf in Bavaria because according to the german telephone book there are still living Ihrenberger in the area around Teisendorf. Also in the Seefelden record in which I did a lot of research there are no Irrenbergers at all. Best regards Juergen Am 03.01.2014 04:48, schrieb Mary Ann Dess: > Hello, I know this time of year is quite busy. If anyone has a chance, > would you please look at the documents I posted the end of December and > see if you agree the spelling of Isenberger. Thanks Happy New Year > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
It has been called to my attention that my fat fingers typed my email address wrong. Please try: mhoerig@wi.rr.com My apologies, Marvin Hoerig in WI
Hello Mary Ann, in one of your documents it is 3 times clearly Rosina Ir(r)enberger Deisendorf (in) *Bavaria*. That's not the Deisendorf that is in the Seefelden records as the Seefelden-Deisendorf is not in Bavaria but Baden. I think it may be todays Teisendorf in Bavaria because according to the german telephone book there are still living Ihrenberger in the area around Teisendorf. Also in the Seefelden record in which I did a lot of research there are no Irrenbergers at all. Best regards Juergen Am 03.01.2014 04:48, schrieb Mary Ann Dess: > Hello, I know this time of year is quite busy. If anyone has a chance, would you please look at the documents I posted the end of December and see if you agree the spelling of Isenberger. Thanks Happy New Year > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Could this name have morphed into "Eisenbarger"? A family I have researched for a friend. The family came from Germany, lived in Iowa and then moved into Missouri. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mary Ann Dess" <madess@comcast.net> To: <BADEN-WURTTEMBERG@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, January 02, 2014 9:48 PM Subject: [BW] concerning a post in Dec : Hello, I know this time of year is quite busy. If anyone has a chance, would you please look at the documents I posted the end of December and see if you agree the spelling of Isenberger. Thanks Happy New Year : : ------------------------------- : To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hello, I know this time of year is quite busy. If anyone has a chance, would you please look at the documents I posted the end of December and see if you agree the spelling of Isenberger. Thanks Happy New Year
Marvin: If you can find time, I am looking for the surname of Zang b. 1795c. in Goldbach, Bavaria. Thank you. Dottie On 01/02/14, Marvin Hoerig<mhoerig@wi.rr.com> wrote: I now have some statistics that were gleaned from the list of prisoners held in Fort A at Rastatt during the Baden Revolution in 1848 and 1849. Some are rather surprising but most were to be expected. There were 38, 432 Prisoners on the list There were 37,552 that claimed to be Deutsch There were 53 home countries listed There were 37,198 towns and villages listed There were 177 females There are several hundred records that have no given name listed There only 7,080 prisoners with their ages listed The youngest prisoner with an age listed was 14 The oldest prisoner with an age listed was 77 There were 34,653 prisoners from Baden, Bayern had 576, France 177, Hessen-Darmstadt 350, Hessen-Kassel 463, Prussia 344, Württemberg 549, and less than a hundred each from all the other countries. There were 3 prisoners from the USA and 3 from England. I suspect that these 38,432 guys were less than thrilled at being incarcerated. No doubt they were less that forthcoming about the personal information given to their jailers. The small numbers of records that have ages listed makes it difficult for genealogists to identify ancestors. Most records have a town of residence listed but that is not necessarily where the prisoner was born. There is a column for place of birth which is used far less than the residence column. In the lookups I have done, I have not included any marriage information because most answers recorded are the same; single-NO - married-No - - impossible to tell which may be correct. I still do look-ups but only for one surname per email. I no longer do Face Book and will not answer requests for look-ups sent to the BW list. I will answer all requests as my time permits and in the order received, but only if sent to my email address and the word "Prisoners" is on the subject line. (this is to keep List Administrators happy) I will send (to your email address only - not to BW list) a list of towns and villages if I can figure out how to narrow it down to a manageably size. In the future, I hope to be able to do residence look-ups in addition to the surname look-ups. There is a lot of great information here but not for every one of the prisoners. I have answered several hundred requests over the past few years and am aware of only a half dozen or so cases of toppled "brick walls". I console myself by thinking I just wasn't notified of some of the successes. Marvin Hoerig in WI [1]mhoerif@wi.rr.com ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN[2]-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message References 1. mailto:mhoerif@wi.rr.com 2. mailto:-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com
I now have some statistics that were gleaned from the list of prisoners held in Fort A at Rastatt during the Baden Revolution in 1848 and 1849. Some are rather surprising but most were to be expected. There were 38, 432 Prisoners on the list There were 37,552 that claimed to be Deutsch There were 53 home countries listed There were 37,198 towns and villages listed There were 177 females There are several hundred records that have no given name listed There only 7,080 prisoners with their ages listed The youngest prisoner with an age listed was 14 The oldest prisoner with an age listed was 77 There were 34,653 prisoners from Baden, Bayern had 576, France 177, Hessen-Darmstadt 350, Hessen-Kassel 463, Prussia 344, Württemberg 549, and less than a hundred each from all the other countries. There were 3 prisoners from the USA and 3 from England. I suspect that these 38,432 guys were less than thrilled at being incarcerated. No doubt they were less that forthcoming about the personal information given to their jailers. The small numbers of records that have ages listed makes it difficult for genealogists to identify ancestors. Most records have a town of residence listed but that is not necessarily where the prisoner was born. There is a column for place of birth which is used far less than the residence column. In the lookups I have done, I have not included any marriage information because most answers recorded are the same; single-NO - married-No - - impossible to tell which may be correct. I still do look-ups but only for one surname per email. I no longer do Face Book and will not answer requests for look-ups sent to the BW list. I will answer all requests as my time permits and in the order received, but only if sent to my email address and the word "Prisoners" is on the subject line. (this is to keep List Administrators happy) I will send (to your email address only - not to BW list) a list of towns and villages if I can figure out how to narrow it down to a manageably size. In the future, I hope to be able to do residence look-ups in addition to the surname look-ups. There is a lot of great information here but not for every one of the prisoners. I have answered several hundred requests over the past few years and am aware of only a half dozen or so cases of toppled "brick walls". I console myself by thinking I just wasn't notified of some of the successes. Marvin Hoerig in WI mhoerif@wi.rr.com
Patricia Stasch sent me a link to directupload to post these. There is not much information besides the spelling of her name. It is definitely an “ I “ but not sure on two of them what comes after it. Thanks for looking.
http://s1.directupload.net/file/d/3488/ypw5e5ss_jpg.htm http://s7.directupload.net/file/d/3488/46c73wu3_jpg.htm
Mary Ann, the easiest way to show us the records is to upload the pics and send us the link. You can use http://www.directupload.net or any other similar service. This is the page I was referring to (left side) http://s7.directupload.net/file/d/3488/ygwvgnaq_pdf.htm Greetings, Patricia -- privat: Metzinger Str. 29 72555 Metzingen (-Neuhausen), BW ============================================================== Patricia Stasch Klassische Archäologin Fax+Anrufbeantworter-Nr: 03212-1102645 (Anruf wird als *.wav, Fax als *.pdf in der eMailbox abgelegt) ============================================================== Zitat von Mary Ann Dess <madess@comcast.net>: > I have looked in all my documents. On their immigration records, > Rosina was 25 years old in 1855 which would make the year 1830. > After that, some of the years vary. Is there any way I can scan and > send to someone the actual records I have with her name on them and > place of birth on them. They are in German. > > The spelling of her surname on records starts with an “I” but I am > having a hard time reading the rest. I understand name changes are > common when going through immigration. We have been looking for 8 > years to find a record of her death which occurred before 1870 the > year of his second marriage. We have located the family except her. > > I looked in the Deisendorf records and can’t understand the writing. > And again many thanks. > > ------------------------------- >
Hallo Dieter, macht Spass, da drin zu lesen! Es gibt einen Eintrag, der ungefähr passen könnte, im Jahr 1822 (Nr. 10, Bild 142 - Register der Geborenen Bild 143). 1822, 7. August, getauft am 8. August Rosalia, außerehel. Tochter der ledigen Agathe Wey (?) Taufzeuge Johann Wey, ledig Vater des Kindes: Johann Georg Rosenberger <https://www2.landesarchiv-bw.de/ofs21/lesezeichen/index.php?notizen%5B2242332_142%5D=Notiz&setzeOlfLesezeichen=2242332&seite=Bild+142&datei=05_0000495762_0142_5-495762-142.png&extern=1&speichereNotizen=&loescheLesezeichen=&lesezeichenAusfuehrlich=1> Mary Ann, there is a Rosalia ROSENBERGER, born 7 Aug 1822. Mother was Agathe Wey, unmarried Father was Johann Georg Rosenberger Greetings, Patricia -- privat: Metzinger Str. 29 72555 Metzingen (-Neuhausen), BW ============================================================== Patricia Stasch Klassische Archäologin Fax+Anrufbeantworter-Nr: 03212-1102645 (Anruf wird als *.wav, Fax als *.pdf in der eMailbox abgelegt) ============================================================== Zitat von Dieter Joos <djoos@dieter-joos.de>: > Mary Ann, Ruth, > > Deisendorf was until 1946 affiliated to the parish of Seefelden not to > Ueberlingen. So the church books of Seefelden are the relevant books > that contain the church records for Deisendorf. > > As already has been mentioned by another contribution there are indeed > Deisendorf records online for the time period 1810 - 1870. These records > are duplicates of the church reords the minister once to deliver to the > Grandduchal government in Karlsruhe. > > Here is the link that leads directly to the Deisendorf records: > > https://www2.landesarchiv-bw.de/ofs21/bild_zoom/thumbnails.php?bestand=10028&id=2242332&syssuche=&logik= > > Regards > Dieter > -- > Dieter Joos > Ueberlingen / Bodensee, Germany > Webmaster of RootsWeb's Baden-Wuerttemberg Mailing List > > Am 30.12.2013 15:51, schrieb Ruth Kittner: >> Mary Ann, Deisendorf is a charming village north of Lake Constance, and >> baptisms, marriages and deaths *should* be in the church records for >> Ueberlingen am Bodensee. >> In the FHC library, church records for Ueberlingen are bizarrely cataloged >> under Ueberlingen am Ried, though, which is an entirely different entity. >> Ub am Ried is a fleck near Singen and Ub am Bodensee is a former imperial >> city on the north shore of Lake Constance. The Ub am Bodensee records >> *are* available at the FHC. The film number is *939656. *Good luck! Ruth >> >> >> On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 8:59 AM, Fred H Held <fhheld@netzero.net> wrote: >> >>> Mary Ann, >>> >>> ShtetlSeeker shows Deisendorf is a small village >>> about 2.5 mile E of Überlingen. This is the home >>> territory of one of the list monitors. >>> >>> The LDS Family History Library catalog does not >>> have any entry for that village, but the church >>> records of nearby Überlingen have been >>> microfilmed. The family may be recorded in the >>> Überlingen records. Visit your local LDS family >>> History Center or participating library to rent >>> the microfilm. I would start with the one that >>> contains the Familienbuch >>> (<https://familysearch.org/films/lookup/product/view/?id=1&film=939657 >>>> 939657). >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> At 02:01 AM 12/30/2013, you wrote: >>>> rom: "Mary Ann Dess" <madess@comcast.net> >>>> Subject: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany >>>> >>>> Hello, I am hoping someone can tell me where I >>>> may obtain information on the birth of a g >>>> grandmother in Deisendorf, Germany about >>>> 1828. She was Catholic. I do not have any idea >>>> where to start looking and would appreciate any >>>> help and advise. Her name was Rosina >>>> Isenberger. I have the date of her marriage and >>>> immigration to the US. Thanks in advance. >>> ____________________________________________________________
Thank you but sad to say, I do not think this is the correct one. I rechecked the information and her immigration papers states she was 25 in 1855. -----Original Message----- From: Patricia Stasch Sent: Monday, December 30, 2013 2:55 PM To: baden-wurttemberg@rootsweb.com ; Dieter Joos Subject: Re: [BW] Deisendorf, Filial of Seefelden, 1822 Hallo Dieter, macht Spass, da drin zu lesen! Es gibt einen Eintrag, der ungefähr passen könnte, im Jahr 1822 (Nr. 10, Bild 142 - Register der Geborenen Bild 143). 1822, 7. August, getauft am 8. August Rosalia, außerehel. Tochter der ledigen Agathe Wey (?) Taufzeuge Johann Wey, ledig Vater des Kindes: Johann Georg Rosenberger <https://www2.landesarchiv-bw.de/ofs21/lesezeichen/index.php?notizen%5B2242332_142%5D=Notiz&setzeOlfLesezeichen=2242332&seite=Bild+142&datei=05_0000495762_0142_5-495762-142.png&extern=1&speichereNotizen=&loescheLesezeichen=&lesezeichenAusfuehrlich=1> Mary Ann, there is a Rosalia ROSENBERGER, born 7 Aug 1822. Mother was Agathe Wey, unmarried Father was Johann Georg Rosenberger Greetings, Patricia -- privat: Metzinger Str. 29 72555 Metzingen (-Neuhausen), BW ============================================================== Patricia Stasch Klassische Archäologin Fax+Anrufbeantworter-Nr: 03212-1102645 (Anruf wird als *.wav, Fax als *.pdf in der eMailbox abgelegt) ============================================================== Zitat von Dieter Joos <djoos@dieter-joos.de>: > Mary Ann, Ruth, > > Deisendorf was until 1946 affiliated to the parish of Seefelden not to > Ueberlingen. So the church books of Seefelden are the relevant books > that contain the church records for Deisendorf. > > As already has been mentioned by another contribution there are indeed > Deisendorf records online for the time period 1810 - 1870. These records > are duplicates of the church reords the minister once to deliver to the > Grandduchal government in Karlsruhe. > > Here is the link that leads directly to the Deisendorf records: > > https://www2.landesarchiv-bw.de/ofs21/bild_zoom/thumbnails.php?bestand=10028&id=2242332&syssuche=&logik= > > Regards > Dieter > -- > Dieter Joos > Ueberlingen / Bodensee, Germany > Webmaster of RootsWeb's Baden-Wuerttemberg Mailing List > > Am 30.12.2013 15:51, schrieb Ruth Kittner: >> Mary Ann, Deisendorf is a charming village north of Lake Constance, and >> baptisms, marriages and deaths *should* be in the church records for >> Ueberlingen am Bodensee. >> In the FHC library, church records for Ueberlingen are bizarrely >> cataloged >> under Ueberlingen am Ried, though, which is an entirely different entity. >> Ub am Ried is a fleck near Singen and Ub am Bodensee is a former imperial >> city on the north shore of Lake Constance. The Ub am Bodensee records >> *are* available at the FHC. The film number is *939656. *Good luck! >> Ruth >> >> >> On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 8:59 AM, Fred H Held <fhheld@netzero.net> wrote: >> >>> Mary Ann, >>> >>> ShtetlSeeker shows Deisendorf is a small village >>> about 2.5 mile E of Überlingen. This is the home >>> territory of one of the list monitors. >>> >>> The LDS Family History Library catalog does not >>> have any entry for that village, but the church >>> records of nearby Überlingen have been >>> microfilmed. The family may be recorded in the >>> Überlingen records. Visit your local LDS family >>> History Center or participating library to rent >>> the microfilm. I would start with the one that >>> contains the Familienbuch >>> (<https://familysearch.org/films/lookup/product/view/?id=1&film=939657 >>>> 939657). >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> At 02:01 AM 12/30/2013, you wrote: >>>> rom: "Mary Ann Dess" <madess@comcast.net> >>>> Subject: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany >>>> >>>> Hello, I am hoping someone can tell me where I >>>> may obtain information on the birth of a g >>>> grandmother in Deisendorf, Germany about >>>> 1828. She was Catholic. I do not have any idea >>>> where to start looking and would appreciate any >>>> help and advise. Her name was Rosina >>>> Isenberger. I have the date of her marriage and >>>> immigration to the US. Thanks in advance. >>> ____________________________________________________________ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Mary Ann, Ruth, Deisendorf was until 1946 affiliated to the parish of Seefelden not to Ueberlingen. So the church books of Seefelden are the relevant books that contain the church records for Deisendorf. As already has been mentioned by another contribution there are indeed Deisendorf records online for the time period 1810 - 1870. These records are duplicates of the church reords the minister once to deliver to the Grandduchal government in Karlsruhe. Here is the link that leads directly to the Deisendorf records: https://www2.landesarchiv-bw.de/ofs21/bild_zoom/thumbnails.php?bestand=10028&id=2242332&syssuche=&logik= Regards Dieter -- Dieter Joos Ueberlingen / Bodensee, Germany Webmaster of RootsWeb's Baden-Wuerttemberg Mailing List Am 30.12.2013 15:51, schrieb Ruth Kittner: > Mary Ann, Deisendorf is a charming village north of Lake Constance, and > baptisms, marriages and deaths *should* be in the church records for > Ueberlingen am Bodensee. > In the FHC library, church records for Ueberlingen are bizarrely cataloged > under Ueberlingen am Ried, though, which is an entirely different entity. > Ub am Ried is a fleck near Singen and Ub am Bodensee is a former imperial > city on the north shore of Lake Constance. The Ub am Bodensee records > *are* available at the FHC. The film number is *939656. *Good luck! Ruth > > > On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 8:59 AM, Fred H Held <fhheld@netzero.net> wrote: > >> Mary Ann, >> >> ShtetlSeeker shows Deisendorf is a small village >> about 2.5 mile E of Überlingen. This is the home >> territory of one of the list monitors. >> >> The LDS Family History Library catalog does not >> have any entry for that village, but the church >> records of nearby Überlingen have been >> microfilmed. The family may be recorded in the >> Überlingen records. Visit your local LDS family >> History Center or participating library to rent >> the microfilm. I would start with the one that >> contains the Familienbuch >> (<https://familysearch.org/films/lookup/product/view/?id=1&film=939657 >>> 939657). >> >> >> >> >> >> At 02:01 AM 12/30/2013, you wrote: >>> rom: "Mary Ann Dess" <madess@comcast.net> >>> Subject: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany >>> >>> Hello, I am hoping someone can tell me where I >>> may obtain information on the birth of a g >>> grandmother in Deisendorf, Germany about >>> 1828. She was Catholic. I do not have any idea >>> where to start looking and would appreciate any >>> help and advise. Her name was Rosina >>> Isenberger. I have the date of her marriage and >>> immigration to the US. Thanks in advance. >> ____________________________________________________________ >> Do THIS before eating carbs (every time) >> 1 EASY tip to increase fat-burning, lower blood sugar & decrease fat >> storage >> http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3241/52c17c0aede8c7c0a1157st02duc >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' >> without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
I have looked in all my documents. On their immigration records, Rosina was 25 years old in 1855 which would make the year 1830. After that, some of the years vary. Is there any way I can scan and send to someone the actual records I have with her name on them and place of birth on them. They are in German. The spelling of her surname on records starts with an “I” but I am having a hard time reading the rest. I understand name changes are common when going through immigration. We have been looking for 8 years to find a record of her death which occurred before 1870 the year of his second marriage. We have located the family except her. I looked in the Deisendorf records and can’t understand the writing. And again many thanks.
I can't tell you home much I appreciate everyone's help. I will let you know of my progress. Thanks. -----Original Message----- From: Dieter Joos Sent: Monday, December 30, 2013 2:10 PM To: baden-wurttemberg@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany Mary Ann, Ruth, Deisendorf was until 1946 affiliated to the parish of Seefelden not to Ueberlingen. So the church books of Seefelden are the relevant books that contain the church records for Deisendorf. As already has been mentioned by another contribution there are indeed Deisendorf records online for the time period 1810 - 1870. These records are duplicates of the church reords the minister once to deliver to the Grandduchal government in Karlsruhe. Here is the link that leads directly to the Deisendorf records: https://www2.landesarchiv-bw.de/ofs21/bild_zoom/thumbnails.php?bestand=10028&id=2242332&syssuche=&logik= Regards Dieter -- Dieter Joos Ueberlingen / Bodensee, Germany Webmaster of RootsWeb's Baden-Wuerttemberg Mailing List Am 30.12.2013 15:51, schrieb Ruth Kittner: > Mary Ann, Deisendorf is a charming village north of Lake Constance, and > baptisms, marriages and deaths *should* be in the church records for > Ueberlingen am Bodensee. > In the FHC library, church records for Ueberlingen are bizarrely cataloged > under Ueberlingen am Ried, though, which is an entirely different entity. > Ub am Ried is a fleck near Singen and Ub am Bodensee is a former imperial > city on the north shore of Lake Constance. The Ub am Bodensee records > *are* available at the FHC. The film number is *939656. *Good luck! > Ruth > > > On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 8:59 AM, Fred H Held <fhheld@netzero.net> wrote: > >> Mary Ann, >> >> ShtetlSeeker shows Deisendorf is a small village >> about 2.5 mile E of Überlingen. This is the home >> territory of one of the list monitors. >> >> The LDS Family History Library catalog does not >> have any entry for that village, but the church >> records of nearby Überlingen have been >> microfilmed. The family may be recorded in the >> Überlingen records. Visit your local LDS family >> History Center or participating library to rent >> the microfilm. I would start with the one that >> contains the Familienbuch >> (<https://familysearch.org/films/lookup/product/view/?id=1&film=939657 >>> 939657). >> >> >> >> >> >> At 02:01 AM 12/30/2013, you wrote: >>> rom: "Mary Ann Dess" <madess@comcast.net> >>> Subject: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany >>> >>> Hello, I am hoping someone can tell me where I >>> may obtain information on the birth of a g >>> grandmother in Deisendorf, Germany about >>> 1828. She was Catholic. I do not have any idea >>> where to start looking and would appreciate any >>> help and advise. Her name was Rosina >>> Isenberger. I have the date of her marriage and >>> immigration to the US. Thanks in advance. >> ____________________________________________________________ >> Do THIS before eating carbs (every time) >> 1 EASY tip to increase fat-burning, lower blood sugar & decrease fat >> storage >> http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3241/52c17c0aede8c7c0a1157st02duc >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' >> without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Patrick, I was lucky enough to obtain a document on her husband's second marriage that listed his first wife, Rosina, and spelling of her surname and where she was from. A Marianne Sutter did research for me on her husband and his family. He lived quite a distance away. So it is a puzzle how they met. She could find no record of her in his area of Wolnzach, Germany. And I have the family history after they settled upon arrival in the US. If anyone knows of a researcher in the Deisendorf area, please let me know. I am going to have to call the LDS about the film. I appreciate everyone's help and thank you. -----Original Message----- From: Patrick Turner Sent: Monday, December 30, 2013 11:52 AM To: baden-wurttemberg@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany On 12/29/2013 9:09 PM, Mary Ann Dess wrote: > Rosina Isenberger Have You tried famiysearch.og https://familysearch.org/search/record/results#count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARosina~%20%2Bsurname%3AIsenberger~ PT ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
On 12/29/2013 9:09 PM, Mary Ann Dess wrote: > Rosina Isenberger Have You tried famiysearch.og https://familysearch.org/search/record/results#count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3ARosina~%20%2Bsurname%3AIsenberger~ PT
Mary Ann, Deisendorf is a charming village north of Lake Constance, and baptisms, marriages and deaths *should* be in the church records for Ueberlingen am Bodensee. In the FHC library, church records for Ueberlingen are bizarrely cataloged under Ueberlingen am Ried, though, which is an entirely different entity. Ub am Ried is a fleck near Singen and Ub am Bodensee is a former imperial city on the north shore of Lake Constance. The Ub am Bodensee records *are* available at the FHC. The film number is *939656. *Good luck! Ruth On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 8:59 AM, Fred H Held <fhheld@netzero.net> wrote: > Mary Ann, > > ShtetlSeeker shows Deisendorf is a small village > about 2.5 mile E of Überlingen. This is the home > territory of one of the list monitors. > > The LDS Family History Library catalog does not > have any entry for that village, but the church > records of nearby Überlingen have been > microfilmed. The family may be recorded in the > Überlingen records. Visit your local LDS family > History Center or participating library to rent > the microfilm. I would start with the one that > contains the Familienbuch > (<https://familysearch.org/films/lookup/product/view/?id=1&film=939657 > >939657). > > > > > > At 02:01 AM 12/30/2013, you wrote: > >rom: "Mary Ann Dess" <madess@comcast.net> > >Subject: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany > > > >Hello, I am hoping someone can tell me where I > >may obtain information on the birth of a g > >grandmother in Deisendorf, Germany about > >1828. She was Catholic. I do not have any idea > >where to start looking and would appreciate any > >help and advise. Her name was Rosina > >Isenberger. I have the date of her marriage and > >immigration to the US. Thanks in advance. > ____________________________________________________________ > Do THIS before eating carbs (every time) > 1 EASY tip to increase fat-burning, lower blood sugar & decrease fat > storage > http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3241/52c17c0aede8c7c0a1157st02duc > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' > without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Hello, the church book duplicates for Deisendorf near Überlingen (at the lake of Constance) are online: https://www2.landesarchiv-bw.de/ofs21/olf/struktur.php?bestand=10028 Regards, Baden Genealogy Group On Mon, Dec 30, 2013 at 4:09 AM, Mary Ann Dess <madess@comcast.net> wrote: > Hello, I am hoping someone can tell me where I may obtain information on > the birth of a g grandmother in Deisendorf, Germany about 1828. She was > Catholic. I do not have any idea where to start looking and would > appreciate any help and advise. Her name was Rosina Isenberger. I have > the date of her marriage and immigration to the US. Thanks in advance. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > BADEN-WURTTEMBERG-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' > without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Mary Ann, ShtetlSeeker shows Deisendorf is a small village about 2.5 mile E of Überlingen. This is the home territory of one of the list monitors. The LDS Family History Library catalog does not have any entry for that village, but the church records of nearby Überlingen have been microfilmed. The family may be recorded in the Überlingen records. Visit your local LDS family History Center or participating library to rent the microfilm. I would start with the one that contains the Familienbuch (<https://familysearch.org/films/lookup/product/view/?id=1&film=939657>939657). At 02:01 AM 12/30/2013, you wrote: >rom: "Mary Ann Dess" <madess@comcast.net> >Subject: [BW] Information needed on Deisendorf Germany > >Hello, I am hoping someone can tell me where I >may obtain information on the birth of a g >grandmother in Deisendorf, Germany about >1828. She was Catholic. I do not have any idea >where to start looking and would appreciate any >help and advise. Her name was Rosina >Isenberger. I have the date of her marriage and >immigration to the US. Thanks in advance. ____________________________________________________________ Do THIS before eating carbs (every time) 1 EASY tip to increase fat-burning, lower blood sugar & decrease fat storage http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3241/52c17c0aede8c7c0a1157st02duc