Thanks to all re Stewardville (Wisc). I have a request in for Olmstead Co MN because it feels right---close to Iowa where some of the KENTs also migrated to. Thanks to everyone, you get the brain going on your suggestions. It helps! ---Arlis Anderson Renfro ----- Original Message ----- From: <CKubly9527@aol.com> To: <GenWisconsin-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, July 30, 2000 7:40 PM Subject: [GenWisconsin] Re: Stewardville > In a message dated 07/30/2000 7:26:53 PM Central Daylight Time, > arenfro@worldaccessnet.com writes: > > << place called Stewardville >> > > Rollie is correct, no Stewardville in WI. I would put my money on > Stewartville, MN Olmstead County (SE Minnesota). I had the same problem the > other day with a town I couldn't find, and it was over the border in MN, not > WI. > > Best regards, > Cathy Kubly > State Coordinator, WIGenExchange > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > WIGenExchange (select desired county or record type) > http://www.genexchange.org/state.cfm?state=wi > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Help Keep Genealogy Free For Online Genealogists > http://www.genexchange.org/volunteers.cfm#cc > > > ==== GenWisconsin Mailing List ==== > > >
Thought this might interest the listmembers from MN. > Carol Just Byhre, St. Louis Park, Minnesota, has informed me of the change > in dates and time for the airing of the documentary. Please find below the > updated dates for the airing of the program on Minnesota Public > Television. > > "Schmeckfest: Food Traditions of the Germans From Russia" > > Documentary produced by Prairie Public Broadcasting, Inc, and the NDSU > Libraries, Fargo, ND, copyright 2000, 60 minutes, plus 20 minutes bonus > video, funding by North Dakota State University Libraries, and Members of > Prairie Public > > Minnesota Public Television - KTCA - Channel 2 > Saturday, August 5, 2000 - 4:15 pm (CDT) > > Minnesota Public Television - KTCA - Channel 17 > Sunday, August 17, 2000 - 7:30 pm (CDT) > > ------------------------- > > "Schmeckfest: Food Traditions of the Germans from Russia" > > The award-winning team that produced "The Germans From Russia: Children of > the Steppe, Children of the Prairie", Prairie Public Broadcasting and the > North Dakota State University Libraries, is planning the premiere of > their newest collaborative effort on Minnesota Public Television. KTCA > will air "SCHMECKFEST: FOOD TRADITIONS OF THE GERMANS FROM RUSSIA" on > Thursday, August 10 at 7:30 p.m. (CDT). > > Narrated in first-person by writer Ron Vossler, Schmeckfest is a > collection of vignettes filmed in the kitchens of cooks who > remember milking cows on cold North Dakota mornings; at a cafe that still > serves the traditional Knoepfla Soup; and at a modern Schmeckfest where, > to use the literal definition of a Schmeckfest, people celebrate with a > 'festival of food.' > > "We know this new production will be as well-received as the first Germans > from Russia documentary," said Bob Dambach, Prairie Public programming > director and producer of the series. "Viewers, both of German Russian > heritage and otherwise, praised not only the visual and technical aspects > of "THE GERMANS FROM RUSSIA", but also the depth and quality of the > content. That same attention to excellence has been put into SCHMECKFEST, > but with a narrower focus -- specifically, the importance of the > celebrations and the food ways that shaped the lives of this ethnic > group." > > "These were a people who overcame much adversity," added Michael Miller, > co-producer of the films and Bibliographer at the Germans from Russia > Heritage Collection, NDSU Libraries. "SCHMECKFEST is important to our > prairie heritage; it preserves a legacy of a very self-sufficient > group. The film is a chronicle of the prairie women who left no records of > their lives, but who are remembered every day in the recipes and rituals > of the kitchen: the heart of the home." > > "THE GERMANS FROM RUSSIA", the precursor to "SCHMECKFEST", is an > examination of the ethnic group's fascinating history. It has aired on 70 > public broadcasting stations in 26 states and four Canadian provinces. The > film has received the prestigious Silver Telly Award as one of the best > documentaries in America, a bronze plaque award in humanities from the > Columbus 47th Annual International Film and Video Festival, and was shown > to an international audience at the Third International Ethnic TV Festival > in Krakow, Poland. > > For more information to secure the videotapes from Prairie Public, call > 1-800-359-6900. > > For more information about the documentary videotapes including > photographs, review: > > http://www.prairiepublic.org - and click "Schmeckfest" > > http://www.lib.ndsu.nodak.edu/gerrus/projects.html - and click "Foodways > Documentary" > > For additional questions, contact: > > Michael M. Miller > Germans from Russia Bibliographer > North Dakota State University Libraries > P.O. Box 5599 > Fargo, ND 58105-5599 USA > Tel: 701-231-8416 > Fax: 701-231-7138 > Internet: mmmiller@badlands.nodak.edu > > Personal Home Page: > http://www.lib.ndsu.nodak.edu/gerrus/gr.html > > Germans from Russia Heritage Collection Menu: > http://www.lib.ndsu.nodak.edu/gerrus >
Just thought this may interest someone out there! The program, Germans from Russia: Children of the Steppe, Children of the Prairie will be aired on Saturday, August 12 at 11:30 AM. > I hope you are able to see the program. > > Ann Collins > Viewer Services > Wisconsin Public Television > (608)265-2302 >
Thanks, Rollie. I will all three of your helpful tips. I had concluded there never was a town by this name also, as my very old Encyclopedia maps have been right about most other old towns. Arlis ----- Original Message ----- From: Rollie Littlewood <rklittle@facstaff.wisc.edu> To: <GenWisconsin-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, July 30, 2000 5:47 PM Subject: Re: [GenWisconsin] Stewardville, WI ??? > At 06:35 AM 7/30/00 -0700, Arlis Anderson Renfro > <arenfro@worldaccessnet.com> wrote: > >...I have looked at old maps, the GNIS site, and cannot locate a place > called Stewardville. This info from old family history - do I have the > correct spelling? Would anyone like to make a guess where it is and > what county?... > > Using "Wisconsin Its Counties, Townships & Villages" (published in > 1994 by Origins) as a guide, I conclude there never was a place by this > name in Wisconsin (unless it was a local colloquial name, based on the > name of a nearby church, farm, etc.). The closest name which appears in > this book is Stewart, in Green County. > > Using some wildcards with GNIS, I find some "close" names in some > neighboring states: Stewardsville, McDonough Co., IL and Stewartville, > Olmsted Co., MN. > > > Rollie > > > ==== GenWisconsin Mailing List ==== > > >
New to this List - and to Wisconsin in general. I have looked at old maps, the GNIS site, and cannot locate a place called Stewardville. This info from old family history - do I have the correct spelling? Would anyone like to make a guess where it is and what county? Sure could use any ideas. Thanks. Searching to prove a marriage between: Samuel Kent & Agnes Joyce Kent, 6 Jun 1903, in Stewardville, WI. Arlis Anderson Renfro
robin thanks for your gracious offer i would like info on CALLAHAN and VAUGHAN if you are not overwhelmed with requests, info on EKLUND and CONANT would be nice also thanks in advance wayne ----- Original Message ----- From: "Robin Comeau" <rcomeau@acsu.buffalo.edu> To: <GenWisconsin-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, July 28, 2000 8:57 AM Subject: [GenWisconsin] Surnames-1924 History of Lincoln, Vilas, Oneida Bios > Most all have lengthy bios, some w/photos. Contact me for look-ups and > copies. > > (A) > Adams, Ahlert, Akey, Alban, Aldrich, Allen, Altenberg, Alton, Ament, > Ames, Anderle, Anderson, Angelbeck, Applekamp, Arneson, Aronson, > arveson, Ashton, Atcherson > (B) > Babbitt, Backstrum, Baehman, Baker, Bakken, Ball, Ballstadt, Balmer, > Barber, Barlow, Barnes, Barnum, Barrett, Barrick, Bassett, Bastian, > BAuer, BAuman, Baumgartner, Bayer,Beach, Behn, Belkey, Bennett, Bent, > Bentz, Beque, Bergstad, Bessey, Bettinger, Bettis, Beyer,Binkley, > Bisbee, Bishop, Blaisdell, Blakenburg, Bloechl, Blohm, Bloom, > Blumenstein, Bode, Boden, Bolger, Bonack, Bonfight, Bowman, Bradley, > Brann, Brewster, Briesmeister, Briggs, Broadbridge, Bromley, Bronsted, > Brooker, Brooks, Broulette, Brown, Bruns, Brunswick, Bryant, Buck, Burns > > (C) > Calder, Caldwell, Calkins, Callahan, Callsen, Cardinal, Carlin, Carlson, > Carman, Carroll, Carter, Case, Caylor, Cepress, Chabrison, Chafee, > Chamberlain, Chauvin, Cheatham, Chilsen, Christensen, Christianson, > Christopherson, Clark, Clorn, Colby, Cole, Coleman, Conant, Cone, > Confrite, Conro, Cook, Coon, Cotey, Cotter, Cottrell, Croker,Crosby, > Curran, Cutter > (D) > Daily, Danfield, Daniels, Danielson, Davies, DeHAss, DeNoyer, Denton, > Didier, Dillon, Dobbs, Doering, Dolan, Donaldson, Doriot, Dorsch, > Dorwin, Dowden, Doyle, Draeger, Drever, Du Frain, Dudley, Dunn, Durkee, > Dusel, Dutcher > (E) > Ebert, Eby, Edwin, Ehn, Eklund, Elliott, Ellis, Emden, Emerich, > Emmerling, Emmons, Enckhausen, Erickson,Eschwig, Espeseth, Evenson, > Ewald > (F) > Fabian, Fechtner, Feiler,Fero, Fett, Fischer, Flannery, Fliss, Foelkner, > Foss, Foster, Frank, Frederick, Fremstad, French, Freyberg, Frick, > Fries, Froehlich > (G) > Gabe, Gaffney, Gagen, Gahan, Garrison, Gauthier, Geiss, Gerke, Gertz, > Gibson, Gillett, Gilley, Gillie, Gilligan, Gleason, Goldstrand, > Goldynski, Goller, Gospill, Graeber, Green, Greggorie, Gregory, Greiner, > Griffith, Grill, Grinde, Griswold, Gross, Gruetzmacher, Grundy, > Gudegast, Gumtz, Guth, Gwidt > (H) > Haase, Habersaat, Habiger, Habrich, Halder, Hall, Hamlin, Hammes, Hanke, > Hansen, Hanson, Hardell, Haskell, Haugsby, Hayton, Hayward, Hazen, > Hedberg, Hedeen, Hehn, Heineman, Heinemann,Heinke, Henderson, Hendrichs, > Henry, Herman, Hess, Heth, Hibbard, Hieb, Hildebrand, Hilgermann, Hill, > Hinckley, Hinkley, Hodgdon, Hoffman, Horn, Houg, Houlahan, Howe, > Howland, Hoyt, Huber, Hunter > (J) > Jaaska, Jacks, Jackson, Jacobus, Jaeger, Jansen, Jillson, Johannes, > johnson, Jones,Josephs, Joslin, Jossart, Jungman, Juve > (K) > Kahn, Kaiser, Kamke, Kandutsch, Keller, Kennedy, Keppler, Kesler, Ketz, > Keyes, Kiepke, Kilroe, Kinney, Klade, Kleutz, Kline, Kluxdal, Knudson, > Koeller, Koerner, Kohlhoff, Kolls, Koppa, Korpal, Korth, Koth, Kraft, > Krause, Kretlow, Krimm, Kristensen, Krogman, Krohn, Krubsack, Krueger, > Krugel, Krupp, Kudick, Kuehling, Kuehne, Kuhnert, Kummer, Kunschke, > Kunz, Kurtz, Kurtzweil, Kushman > (L) > La Fave, La Renzie, Laabe, Lacau, LaChance, Lagon, Lambert, Lang, > Langdon, Larsen, Larson, Lassig, Lathrop, Laundrie, Lawler, Lawrence, > Lawton, Leadbetter, Leary, Lee, Leidiger, Leith, Lewerenz, Lick, > Lillund, Little, Lobischer, Locy, Londo,Long, Loughrin, Louk, Love, > Loveless, Lowell, Luderus, Luedtke, Luethy, Lugar, Lupton, Lytle > (M) > Maagenson,Macfarlane, MacGregor, Mack, Macomber, Madden, Major, > Manhardt, Manthey, Mapes, Markham, MArks, Markworht, MArsh, Marshall, > MArtin, Martinson, MArtz, Mason, MAttoon, MAttson, McCarthy. McCormick, > McDonald, McElrone, McGee, McGlinn, McGregor, McHenry, McIndoe, > McKenzie, McLaughlin, McNutt, McRae, Means, Medenwaldt, Meeker, Melang, > Meloy, Menefee, Meyer, Michelson, Middlestadt, Mielke, Miles, Miller, > Minahan, Mitbauer, Moe,Moen, Monro, Moore, Moran, Morey, Morgan, Morin, > Morrill, Morrison, Morse, Mulcahey, Munro, Murphy, Murray, Mussel, > Mykleby, Myre, Myszka, > (N) > Nash, Neitzke, Neldberg, Nelson, Nerli, Neu, Neuman, Neuville, Newell, > Nibler, Nichols, Nick, Nienow, Noel, Nolan, Norton, Nortwen, Nusbaum > (O) > Oberg, Oberholtzer, O'Connor, O'Day, Oelhafen, O'Hare, Oldenberg, > O'Leary, Oliver, OLkowski, OLson, O'Melia, Orr, Osborne, Osterberg, > Ostrander, Otto, Overbeck, Owen, Owens, Oxley > (P) > Packhard, Paine, Panabaker, Paquette, Parker, Parshall, Patterson, > Pattinson, Pautz, Pavlick, Peck, Pecor, Peelen, Peevy, Perinier, > Persohn, Peterman, Peterson, Pfalzgraff, Philipps, Perce, Pingel, > Pinkowski, Plautz, Plugh, Podeweltz, Poirer, Pomes, Pond, Pope, Porten, > Porter, Poutre, Powell, Prock, Pukall, Puls > (R) > Radcliffe, Radue, Rasmussen, Ravn, Ray, Raymond, Reardon, Reed, Rehfeld, > Reinhart, Rendell, Revnew, Rheaume, Rice, Richards, Richmond, Rismon, > Robbins, Roepeke, Rogahn, Rogers, Roscal, Ross, Rumery, Runge, Runke, > Rusch, Russ, Rutherford > (S) > Sailer, Saltenberger, Samuelson, Samways, Sanborn, Sandbeck, Sanderson, > Sayner, Schilling, Schlack, Schlecht, Schliesmann, Schmidt, Schoeneck, > Schrader, Schram, > Schreck, Schroeder, Schultz, Schulz, Schwager, Schwartz, Scott, Searl, > Seibel, Seidle, Seth, Seyfert, Shank, Shannon, Shape, Shelton, Shucha, > Sievert, Sievwright, Simonds, Sipps, Sisson, Slosson, Smith, Sorenson, > Sprague, St. Clair, St, Louis, Staffan, Stamp, Stange, Stanzil, Staub, > Steele, Steinmueller, Stevens, Stolle, Stone, Strandberg, Strangstad, > Straub, Strewlow,Strobel, Stumpner, Stypczski, Sutliff, Sutton, Swails, > Swanland, Swedberg, Sweet > (T) > Tank, Taylor, Teal, Thayer, Theiler, Theilman, Theriault, Thomas, > Thompson, Thurston, Tilden, Torkelson, Torphy, Trantow, Treat, Tripp, > Trumble, Turnquist, Tweedy > (U) > Uhl, Ulrich, Urbank > (V) > Valley, Van Bussum, Van Hecke, Vandervort, Vaughan, Vaughn, Verage, > Vilas, Vlach, Voight, Voss > (W) > Wagner, Walker, Wallis, Walsh, Walstad, Warner, Washburn, Weaver, > Webster, Wecks, Weed, Weesner, Weil, Weiss, Weisse, Welch, Wenzel, > Wernecke, Wesalowski, Westgate, Wetzel, Whitbeck, Whittiker, Wiegand, > Wight, Wilcox, Wilkowski, Willett, Williams, Willis, Wilson, Winger, > Winnemann, Winter, Wittman, Wolfgram, Woodzicha, Wubker, Wurl > (Y) > Yenor, Young, Youngquist > (Z) > Zander, Zastrow, Ziebell, Ziesemer, Zimbal, Zimmerman, Zimpelmann, > Zirzow > > > WHEW... > Happy Searching, > Robin > > > ==== GenWisconsin Mailing List ==== > >
Hi, New to the list... Could anyone lead me to where I can find out the legal age for marriage during 1947 - 1950? Thanks, Sharon
A few spots remain for our TOUR to New England. For more info, check this out: http://www.homestead.com/BarronCountyGenealogical/BarronCoGeneNewEnglandTour.html
For information about your trip to Beaver Dam, go to: http://www.50states.com/city/wisconsin.htm Click on the community of Beaver Dam. The library in Beaver Dam is across the street and down a little from the Beaver Dam Middle School. Easy to find. Also easy to find is the Horicon Library, whose librarians I have found to be very pleasant and helpful. Beaver Dam has marriage and death indexes kept in ring binders behind the circulation desk. All the newspaper microfilm is readily accessible, but you have to sign up for a one-hour block of time on the only microfilm reader. Usually not a problem. I was the only one using it the other day when I was there. Good luck with your research. All the biographies from the the two volumes of the History of Northern Wisconsin and the History of Dodge County are online at the GenExchange Wisconsin site. (URL below, click on biographies). Have a nice trip! Best regards, Cathy Kubly State Coordinator, WIGenExchange ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WIGenExchange (select desired county or record type) http://www.genexchange.org/state.cfm?state=wi ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Help Keep Genealogy Free For Online Genealogists http://www.genexchange.org/volunteers.cfm#cc
An unidentified person asked: > Are there mortality census for all WI Counties? I am interested in St. Croix > 1880's The 1850, 1860, 1870, and 1880 federal censuses included Mortality Schedules for the year preceding the enumeration. They list deaths from June 1 through May 31 of 184950, 185960, 186970, and 187980 and include information on the deceaseds name, sex, age, color (white, black, mulatto), whether widowed, place of birth, month in which death occurred, profession/occupation/trade, cause of death, and number of days ill. In 1870, they added parents birthplaces, and in 1880, the place where a disease was contracted and how long the deceased person was a resident of the area. Check the LDS to see what they have available on microfilm. A good resource for finding out information like this is: The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy by Szucs and Luebking, available at most public libraries. Hope this helps, Kathy Lenerz
In a message dated 07/29/2000 5:09:56 AM Central Daylight Time, grubisic@netwurx.net writes: << a lot of ethnic societies recruited immigrants >> Enjoyed reading your post Ashley. The only thing I would add is that sometimes religious groups immigrated, or "removed" as the old county history books say, to other areas in clumps as well. One group that comes to mind is the Strangite Mormons who settled in Jackson County, WI. Best regards, Cathy Kubly State Coordinator, WIGenExchange ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WIGenExchange (select desired county or record type) http://www.genexchange.org/state.cfm?state=wi ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Help Keep Genealogy Free For Online Genealogists http://www.genexchange.org/volunteers.cfm#cc
Robin- We appreciate all the time and effort you are spending in our lookups. I would like you to lookup MORGAN, when you have time. Muriel
Hi all! Please pass this on to all you mail list. A great project going on here. Linda -----Original Message----- From: Pooky4830@aol.com [mailto:Pooky4830@aol.com] Sent: Friday, July 28, 2000 11:00 PM To: SOUTH-CENTRAL-KENTUCKY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [SCKY] Genealogy Look Up Forum Hello!! I have created a Website of Volunteers who will do various types of Look Ups such as Census, Cemetery, Marriage, and much more. I even have a message board for people to post messages looking for family information. I am also looking for new volunteers to help out to do look ups. Please tell everyone you know that is doing genealogy. The more people who visit the website and use it, the longer it will stay online. Mike Genealogy Look Up Forum: http://www.expage.com/page/genealogylookup ==== SOUTH-CENTRAL-KENTUCKY Mailing List ====
In a message dated 7/29/2000 8:59:40 AM Central Daylight Time, ves@globaldialog.com writes: > they were only buried on these institutions cemetery when they had no close > relatives A slight correction - the family also had the option (at least in Minnesota) of refusing the body, and so the person would also be buried at the institution. Star O
I didn't see anyone responding to your query so will suggest that a lot of ethnic societies recruited immigrants. The German groups were said to be both better organized and had more money. Many German families had been here long enough to have some economic success, even as early as 1850. In the midwest, pre-civil war is very early. Ohio was then referred to as in the West. As a sidebar, the midwest division of USTennisAssociation was, until a couple of years ago, the Western division. Historical impairment being endemic, it caused endless confusion, probably for at least 50 of the last, oh, 110 years, and has now been renamed. Some societies bought land before recruiting. I suspect it was more common to recruit on faith and hope but again, some German groups were better organized. Some promoters had good reputations and recruited relatively reliably. Many or perhaps most individual promoters were in it for the money and scams were very common. After the Homestead Act, during the Civil War, the situation changed. In Wisconsin, at least, it changed again with the logging off of the north woods. The great Chicago fire is eclipsed in deaths by the Peshtigo, WI, fire of the same week in 1872 (maybe 1871). The logging companies made money on the logs and then sold off the land, much of it thru brokers who recruited recent immigrants to the USA to their "cleared land." The stumps were, of course, horrendous and most places had no water. Sometimes a whole village would resettle together. I recall hearing from a descendant how her grandparents village priest brought them all to America together in the 1870's. She was horrified the priest would have had such power; I suspect the story wasn't uncommon. The date would tie into German unification. Unclaimed land would eventually been sold for back taxes: it reverted to the probably county authorities, they sold it to a neighbor who wanted to expand his/her holdings. Failed homesteads were sold this way too. You've written Green Bay, Mantowoc county. Green Bay as a city I believe to be in Brown county. Manitowoc is nearby. Good hunting, Ashley ------------------------------------------------------------------------ NancyL916@aol.com wrote: > >From a totally ignorant new Yorker who doesn't know a thing outside of her NY > boundaries. > :) > Were there certain German Societies in the 1850s that would sponser > immigrants, by way of the promise of land? > I saw an interesting post on a NY list, where someone said a German Society > would sponser a whole group from a certain area in Germany (by way of > literature..Like a sales pitch.) to lure them to the midwest where land was > promised. From NY they booked passage for points further west. > Question..Would the land have had to be bought before they even left the > homeland? > Question..If it was BUT they never left NY, what would happen to the land if > they didn't claim it? > I.m looking at Green Bay, Mantowoc County. > Thanks > Nancy > > <A HREF="http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~blkyn/Bklyn.Info.Page.html"> > Brooklyn Info Page</A> > > ==== GenWisconsin Mailing List ====
Wilhelmina would have born born circa possibly 1820 to 1830? Maybe as early as 1810? I don't know European history well enough to know if Pomerania was an independent state at that time. It might even have been part of Napoleon's empire. Who controlled it? If it was Slavic, the y of Yandry could simply be how it was pronounced and not how it was spelt. Try Jandry or Jandrj or Jandrij, possibly even Jandric, Jandrits, Jandrich, Jendrij, Jendric, Jendrich, and so on. Kruger is often Anglicized as Krueger or sometimes Krieger. Interesting story. I'd delight in hearing more about them and how you are managing in finding things out. Good hunting, Ashley ------------------------------------------------------------------------ JVB56@aol.com wrote: > My Great Grandmother, Wilhelmina was married to Christian Heuer of Wollin, > Pommern. She was married twice previously.Her daughter, Bertha married to > Charles Krueger and William Knapps, children, Hattie and > Gustaf,William,August and Paul(Don't know which children go with which > husband) .Her Daughter, Johanna b. 1850, was married previously and had two > daughters.Then married Charles FW Kohls in Milwaukee, WI and had Alma Kohls > Naps, Clara Kohls Wolfgramm,and a son.On Alma Naps social security app it > lists her mother as Johanna Kruger. I don't know if that was her previously > married name or her original maiden name. > Wilhelmina d.1905 in Milwaukee, sons Charles and August Heuer, Johanna and > Bertha,all came to America in 1882.Wilhelmina settled in Milwaukee and > married for a 4th and 5th time. I am having a hard time with these relatives > because of all of Wilhelmina's and daughter's marriages.Wilhelmina's maiden > name supposedly was Yandrey but have found no record anywhere. Any assistance > would be greatly appreciated. > > ==== GenWisconsin Mailing List ====
Researching ARNESON/ANDERSON (Thron/d and wife Ingebjørg) OSTGARD (O.K., wife Midlred, foster daughter (niece) Lillian) Star O
Here are my names I am searching in WI. ENGBERG - Sweden Uppsala Lan)>Chicago IL,>Florence Co. WI,>MI WICKSTROM - Swede-Finn>Florence Co. WI.>MI ERICKSON - Swede-Finn> Florence Co. WI.>Vilas Co. WI.> ? > MI Krooks, Rannar & Oling are tied with the Erickson name but I don't think they were in Wisconsin, just Michigan Cidney
I am researching the surname KUHL. Did you ever come across that in your research or lineage? I wonderedif your name was a spinoff of KUHL. I am intertwined with Wisconsin. Susan At 11:54 PM 7/28/00 -0400, you wrote: >My Great Grandmother, Wilhelmina was married to Christian Heuer of Wollin, >Pommern. She was married twice previously.Her daughter, Bertha married to >Charles Krueger and William Knapps, children, Hattie and >Gustaf,William,August and Paul(Don't know which children go with which >husband) .Her Daughter, Johanna b. 1850, was married previously and had two >daughters.Then married Charles FW Kohls in Milwaukee, WI and had Alma Kohls >Naps, Clara Kohls Wolfgramm,and a son.On Alma Naps social security app it >lists her mother as Johanna Kruger. I don't know if that was her previously >married name or her original maiden name. >Wilhelmina d.1905 in Milwaukee, sons Charles and August Heuer, Johanna and >Bertha,all came to America in 1882.Wilhelmina settled in Milwaukee and >married for a 4th and 5th time. I am having a hard time with these relatives >because of all of Wilhelmina's and daughter's marriages.Wilhelmina's maiden >name supposedly was Yandrey but have found no record anywhere. Any assistance >would be greatly appreciated. > > >==== GenWisconsin Mailing List ====
Could someone that might be planning a trip to Madison Historical Library do a look up for me? Only a few libraries around the country have this book. BENJAMIN VINING OF NH (Some of the Vinings came to WI) Search Terms: NEHG (1) Database: PERiodical Source Index (PERSI) Bibliography Combined Matches: 1 Periodical Title: New England Historical and Genealogical Register General Subject Area: U.S. Topics: Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine Issues per Year: 4 Other Titles: Notes: ACPL Holdings: v.1- 1847- ACPL Call Number: OPEN ISSN Number: 0028-4785 Thanks, Karolyn