Saturday, August 25, 2012

Meixner Family History #10 - The Journey (Part 5)

In late August, 1881, the Meixner Family was at Castle Garden in New York harbor.  They were ready to make a new life in their newly adopted homeland.  But realizing their dream was not easy.

Castle Garden was the entry point for emigrants coming to the United States, the melting pot of the world.  In 1881 some 455,600 immigrants came to the United States.



Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
Castle Garden.  Photographed by and Published by B.W. Kilburn - Littleton, N.H., 1891.


There are several accounts about the Meixner's journey that were given to me by relatives.  They are:

 - A child died of typhoid in their homeland.
 - A child died of typhoid on the trip.
 - Once the family was at Castle Garden a crook stole or swindled them out of their money and they were left with only $40.
- The family came to Texas and worked on the Horatio "Rasche" Hearne plantation.

First I think it is very likely the first or second accounts, and possibly both, are true.  If you look at the pattern of ages of the children: 2, 5,6,7,8,10.  The gap between 2 and 5 is obvious.  Given the frequency of births at that time in history and the gap between these two ages, I think it is quite possible a child was born between those two children.  Also, it is quite possible a child was born after the child that was then age 2 and a half.  Possibly Theresia was pregnant and lost the child at birth on the trip or maybe they had a small baby that died on the trip.  Those things I don't know but it would not be unusual for them to have lost a child by this time due to the high mortality rates of that era.

The third  story above I had always discounted a little just because I didn't think they would let that happen.  In reading stories in the New York Times newspaper and other accounts of the time I can better understand how that could have happened.  These accounts tell of large numbers of people that stayed around Castle Garden working every type of thievery and swindling that you can imagine.

The last story has always held the most mystery for me.  Why did they come to Texas?  Through the years, as I did research, I became quite puzzled as to why this family would come to Texas number one and secondly why would Frank be working on a man's plantation instead of having his own farm.  The majority of immigrants from the area they came from settled in Wisconsin and Minnesota.  Very few came to Texas.  Many Germans from other areas came to Texas but not ones from this area of Bohemia and usually they started farming their own farm or farmed for others.

Only last week I e-mailed my cousin Claudia Brown.  She is Alberta (Meixner) Neve's daughter.  Alberta is my dad's younger sister and was known to me as Aunt Peaches.  Claudia has been researching longer than I have and we used to collaborate on researching our family history.  I mentioned to her I was doing a blog and told her about my desire to know why the Meixner family came to Texas.  Well to my surprise she wrote me back with the answer.  Here is the story she sent to me written as she had heard it from her mother:

 "The story goes like this:  When they landed in New York on the SS Ohio, they were taken by some con artists who came to them, spoke their language, and said, 'Let us exchange your money for you.  You can't spend this money in America.  We will bring you American money.'  Well, they didn't come back.  Grandmother Meixner (Theresa) had some money hidden in between the quilts she had packed to bring to America and they survived on it for a while."  

When I did my post a couple weeks ago I did not know this story.  I did not include in the description of the trip through Castle Garden about the exchanging of money, the legitimate exchange.  There were legitimate people on site that did money exchange at a discounted rate that allowed them to make money off the transaction and converted the immigrant's money into dollars.  However, articles in the newspapers of the time and other first person accounts talked about the fact the new immigrants could not speak our language and did not always know what was going on.  They were barraged by people trying to sell them things and trying to swindle them in some way.  If someone came to them and spoke to them in their language and offered to help exchange their money for U.S. dollars I can see they could easily have been taken in.  They knew they had to convert their money and would have thought this was what they needed to do. I can see how this very easily could happen and how it must have happened to thousands of immigrants.


Caption:  "Castle Garden"
Source:  Puck Magazine
Date:  June 14, 1882
Artist:  Frank Opper

"The prevalence there of various cheats and swindlers was one of the principal arguments for development of Ellis Island in 1892."

museum.msu.edu/exhibitions/virtual/immigrationandcaricatue/exhibitionsection.html

Now the second part of the story:

  "A man from Hearne, Texas named "Rasche" Hearne owned a plantation.  1881 was enough years after the end of the Civil War that the field hands who stayed with their masters after being freed had died out, and the young ones had left the farm, so to speak.  Mr. Hearne went to new York City to recruit farm hands from the scores of immigrants who were coming to America and would pay passage on the train to Texas.  Some how Frank Meixner got in on this deal.  They rode the train from New York to Waco (per Herman Meixner who heard the story from his father Frank Meixner, Jr.)  and then took wagons and buggies to Hearne.  Hearne, Texas is named after the Hearne plantation.  They lived and worked on the cotton farm."

Remember in the last post I wrote about the Labor Exchange at Castle Garden.  My guess is that Hearne went to the Labor Exchange and Frank, desperate for a job now that his money was gone, went to the Labor Exchange and received an offer of work from Mr. Hearne.




Print Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.

The Labor Exchange - Emigrants on the Battery in Front of Castle Garden, New York.  Harper's Weekly, August15, 1868.


This is an amazing story.  Think about it.  A random act by a swindler in New York City is probably the reason I am here today.  If Frank had not lost his money and had to take a job with Mr. Hearne and maybe gone on to Minnesota I would not be here.  WOW!!!  Let that sink in a little.  Who knows but it is very interesting to think about.

Next time we'll continue the 1650 mile journey across the United States and finally get the Meixner family to Texas.


Google Maps

Reference:
maggieblanck.com/immigration
Immigration, Dennis Wepman, New York, N.Y.: Facts on File Inc. , Copywright 2008.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Next Post for Meixner Family History

I am having trouble with my shoulder this week.  I received an injection in my shoulder on Monday.  I hope this helps and I will be able to get back to the Meixner Family Journey to Texas next week.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Meixner Family History #9 - The Journey (Part 4)

On Aug 26, 1881, after what most likely was a very difficult ocean voyage, the Meixner family arrived in New York harbor.  The sight of land was certain to cause excitement throughout the ship.


Harper's Weekly, not dated, Collection of Maggie Land Blanck
The Land of Promise, Drawn by Frank Craig.

At this time in the history of the country it was just 45 years since the fall of the Alamo in Texas and 36 years since Texas became a state in the United States.  It had only been 16 years since the bitterly fought Civil War had ended.  The United States now consisted of 38 states.

Perhaps the family was able to catch a glimpse of the Brooklyn Bridge (one of the marvels of that time and  now one of the oldest suspension bridges in the U.S.)  Construction had started in 1867 and was two years from completion but the main structures of the bridge were in place and stretched high about the landscape.


Post card Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
Brooklyn Bridge, New York.

On the day the family was preparing to disembark from the ship President James Garfield lay in gave condition after being shot by an assassin on July 2nd.  He would die on Sep 19th and Chester A. Arthur would become the 21st president.

Finally the family could see land and anticipate the end of this part of their travel.  The ship's captain, in this case Gustav Meyer, was responsible for the ship's manifest listing all the passengers.



First page of the ships passenger list with the date and place of arrival as well as the name of the ship, where it sailed from and the name of the captain.  (Image from Ancestry.com)


This page lists the Meixner family.  If you look real hard you can see the names listed right in the middle of the page.  Four names above the black line running across the page is my great-grand father Franz Meixner, 33, male, butcher (occupation), Austria (country of origin), U.S. of A (country intending to inhabit), steerage (part of ship occupied by passenger on this trip).  The rest of the family follows, Theresia, Franz, Alvisia, Theresia, Antonia, Hermine, and my grand father, Herman Meixner, 2, is listed last.  (Image from Ancestry.com)

The first order of business for ships entering the harbor was to have a doctor certify there were no infectious diseases present among the passengers.  If this was the case the ship was allowed to continue to the city.  The next order of business was for the passengers and their baggage to be transferred from the ship to barges that were brought up along side the ship.  The barges were then towed by steamboats to the pier.


Print Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
Transferring Immigrants from Steamers to the battery.
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, Jun 13, 1891.


Google Map of New York Harbor.  Pin point shows location of Castle Garden.


Magazine Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
"Landing Immigrants at Castle Garden", Harper's New Monthly Magazine, June 1884.


Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
Castle Garden.  Photographed by and Published by B.W. Kilburn - Littleton, N.H., 1891.

Castle Garden has an interesting history that you can read about online.  It was made the first official immigration center Aug 1, 1855 and was used until 1890.  Ellis Island, which opened in 1892, replaced Castle Garden and is more widely known today.

Finally the barges are tied at the wharf at Castle Garden.  Then the custom's officials examine passenger's baggage.  Once complete the baggage is sent along.  Passengers are inspected by a medical officer once again for infectious diseases.  Finally they are moved along to the rotunda where they are registered.  


Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
Immigrants Landing at Castle Garden.  Harper's Weekly, May 29, 1880.


Magazine Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
Historic America:  Castle Garden (1890), New York, The Illustrated American, March 1,1890.

If the immigrant is traveling on to other parts of the country agents from the railroad companies show them to the ticket offices and their baggage is conveyed to the train.  There is also a labor bureau attached to Castle Garden.  If the immigrant does not have a place to go or a job in his new country he might go to this location.  Laborer and employer can get together with out cost to either party.  Also, the employer is required to prove his responsibility.  Tens of thousands of immigrants found employment this way.


Print Collection of Maggie Land Blanck.
The Labor Exchange - Emigrants on the Battery in Front of Castle Garden, New York.  Harper's Weekly, August15, 1868.

If all went well the immigrant would be on his way to his new life in America.  However, it didn't always go smoothly.  I have several family accounts of what happened to the family that I need to weave into our story.

Next time the Journey Continues, but things don't go as planned.

References:
How immigrants were processed through Castle Garden on the website:  maggieblanck.com/immigration
Images from maggieblanck.com and Ancestry.com as referenced under the picture.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Meixner Family History #8 - The Journey (Part 3)

Captain Gustav Meyer was a seasoned veteran of the seas.  He had made this voyage many times, but as night fell on Aug. 20, 1881 he thought this could be his last.  Meyer had been Captain of the S.S. Ohio for several years now.  This ship was his second home and storms and rough seas were a hazard of his profession.  As the ship rolled and pitched and waves crashed over the bow he sensed this was not an average storm.  He understood the danger but didn't dwell on it.  He was too busy fighting to maintain control of the ship.

At this same time a young man of 33 was below deck being tossed about by the violent storm.  A short time before he had been on deck.  He saw the approaching storm with it's violent winds and rain, the lightening flashing like he had never seen before.  His stomach was churning with fear.  What had he done?  Why had he put his young family of 6 children and a wife in this dangerous position?  They were depending on him and now they could all be lost.  There was nothing he could do to protect them from what was ahead.

The steamship Ohio was built for the company Norddeutscher Lloyd (North German Lloyd) by Caird & Co., Greenock, Scotland.  


It was 2,394 tons, 301' long and 39' wide (about the length of a football field), clipper stem, one funnel, two masts, iron construction, single screw and had a speed of 10 knots (about 11.5 m/hr).  She made her maiden voyage from Bremen in March 1869.  The Bremen to Southampton to New York route started on Sep. 6, 1871.  There was accommodations for 84 people in first class and 600 in 3rd class or steerage.  The Captain of the ship was Gustav Meyer.

Imagine the excitement, fear, and bewilderment going through the minds of this family as they walked onto the ship Ohio in August of 1881.  The parents must have known of the dangers this trip presented.  There was a very real threat of shipwreck and disease.  Records of the time indicate numerous deaths resulted from both.

Picture in your mind heading below deck with hundreds of other passengers in steerage.  First inching your way down a ladder into the dark passageway below, looking for where you would stay, all the while trying to keep up with 6 children and all your belongings.  Looking around in the dim light you see what amounted to a wooden cell about 36 feet by 12 feet at one end tapering down to 5 feet at the other.  This would serve as so called living room and dinning room for 150 passengers.  To each side are 8 doors leading to the sleeping quarters.  Behind each door was a cramped space about 9' by 12' that would be the sleeping space for 2 or 3 families.  

Finally you are under way.  Now you are thinking of two weeks in these conditions.  Then comes the sea sickness.  My dad remembered hearing that everyone was sick and vomiting on the trip.  You can feel the stifling muggy heat, you can smell the foul odors, and then there is that smell of vomit.  Then when the seas turned really rough you can hear the shifting trunks and other items such as your tin cups, plates and eating utensils as they are thrown about.  You hear the creaking of the wood, the waves crashing against the ship.  You are holding on for dear life to keep from being thrown about the ship and being injured.  Parents trying to hold on to children.  People are in bunks moaning, groaning, and retching.  Accounts from this time frame say most everyone on the ship would get seasick.  People got very little sleep.

The opening account at the top is fiction but could very well be close to the facts.  Think of the size of a modern cruise ship.  It is about 1,000' by 120' and the tonnage is over 100,000 tons!  I've been on a cruise ship in pretty high waves and it was difficult to walk (and I have also been seasick, and it is miserable).  These ships are over 3 times bigger than the ship Ohio and the tonnage is massive compared to the Ohio.  This steamship would have been tossed about a great deal by a big storm.

Accounts in the New York Times in August 1881 tell of storms in the Atlantic.  Several date lines in the Times dated Aug. 26th and 30th talk about damage to ships caused by the storms.  Quoting from an article on Aug. 17th:  "The Captain reports boisterous weather during the whole passage.  The sun was seen only twice.  Yesterday the steamer passed ... a large coppered vessel, bottom up."

The Ohio arrived in New York harbour on August 26, 1881.

This would have been an absolutely miserable, gut wrenching, dangerous trip. 

Next time:  The Journey continues to Texas.

References:
Website:  Gjenvick-Gjonvik Archives; Steerage Accommodations on the Cunard Steamship Line - 1879
Website:  Understanding Your Ancestors: Immigrant Ancestors: Voyage to the U.S.
Website:  New York Times images found on Ancestry.com

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Meixner Family History #7 - The Journey (Part 2)

I last talked about the Meixner family as they set out by train to Bremen and the port of Bremen or Bremerhaven.  I suggested this was probably not a comfortable trip but I bet that kids being kids they were excited about their new adventure they were undertaking.  Probably they had some kind of games they played to pass the time.  They must have gazed out the window at the picturesque scenery that passed by as they wound through the mountains with dense forests and rushing streams.  They traveled in late July so the county side would have been decked out in it's summer colors.

Here are some pictures of the country side from my trip to Austria and Germany.  These were taken in the month of June.











There were probably other children on the train, possibly ones they knew.  During this period people emigrated in groups so it is possible they had other families from the area and possibly from their own home town traveling with them.  Though I don't have documentation of the names, relatives told me they knew of families that lived in Texas that made the trip with the Meixner family.  Yes, more research.

Then finally the arrival at Bremerhaven.  These are images from the website:  maggieblanck.com.  The first one shows the city of Bremen in the upper left hand area near the North Sea.  Bremerhaven is not shown but would be on the port opening to the North Sea.


This image shows Bremerhaven in the 1880s.


This image is Bremerhaven port with a Norddeutscher Lloyd steamer at the dock.



Upon arrival at Bremerhaven the family would have secured their passage to America.  It is possible that they were ale to do this before they left home as part of a package.  My aunt told me she saw paperwork that said the cost of passage was $1,000.  I don't know if this was all the way from their home to Texas but according to my research the cost of steerage on a steamship in the late 1800s was $30 to $35 per person.  The $1,000 number would indicate to me this was the cost for the entire trip.

The website:  understandingyourancestors.com stated that families generally had to scrimp and save for years to be able to put the money together to be able to emigrate.  It may have cost as much as 1/3 of a laborer's annual income to pay for an average sized family to emigrate to the U.S.

Also, quoting from the above website:  "Once emigrants arrived at the port of departure, a few obstacles remained.  Emigrants had to pass various physical exams to ensure a certain level of health before embarking.  This was to prevent the spread of disease while on board as well as to prevent diseases from being carried to the destination country.  Physical exams and eye exams sometimes held emigrants up for days or even an entire week."

Finally the time comes to board the ship.  This is a picture of the ship S.S. Ohio (Steam Ship Ohio).  This is the ship Frank, Theresa and family traveled on to America.


Next time, the journey continues to America.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Armistead Family History #1 - Shirley Plantation

I'm taking a short side trip today to talk about a different family.  I was putting pictures in a photo album from last year and came across pictures of a trip Kay and I took to Virginia along with her cousin Tom Wilkinson.  Those pictures triggered some very fond memories of the trip and also I remembered a very exciting story about the Armisteads I came across while I was there.  I just couldn't wait to share it.

I am so thankful that Frank Meixner came to Texas in 1881 bringing along his two year old son Harmon.  I am also very thankful that Robert Stewart Armistead came to Texas from Florida sometime in the 1870s, got married, and had a daughter, Alice, who coincidentally was born in 1881.  Both families settled in Bell County, TX. Twenty four years later Alice and Harmon were married.  They are my grandparents.  So of course the Armisteads are equally as important to me as the Meixners.

When we set out on our trip to Virginia I had 3 things in mind that I wanted to accomplish:  see the scenery, do research on Kay and Tom's great grandparents, Fanny and William Cabell, (they lived in Amherst County, VA but we can not locate William's parents), and visit some of the historical sites that are such a huge part of American History located in Virginia.

The scenery was spectacular.






I highly recommend a family vacation to Virginia.  The historical triangle of Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown, and Yorktown is a must see.  In that triangle you have, established in 1607, the first enduring English settlement in the New World, (Jamestown), the colonial capital of Virginia 1699-1754, (Colonial Williamsburg), and the site of the decisive last major battle of the American Revolution in 1781, (Yorktown).

But what about the interesting story of the Armisteads you say?

On one of our side trips we took a drive a little northwest of Williamsburg toward Charles City to visit a place called Shirley Plantation.  It is the oldest of the great plantations along the James River.  The land for the plantation was granted by King James in 1613 and is still going strong today.

It is a very interesting place to see.  It has a number of buildings from the 18th and 19th century you can walk through as well as the Great House of Shirley.  This house was completed in 1738.  The Great House is where I found my surprise.

Below is a picture as you approach the Great House.  Below that is a picture inside the smoke house, only one of the many old buildings on the property you can tour.


After we entered the main room of this magnificent old home, the guide gave us the history of the home and pointed out several paintings in the room.  One of the first portraits was that of Judith Armistead Carter.  As soon as he said the name I recognized it from my genealogy records.  Judith Armistead was married to Robert "King" Carter.  To quote their book on the plantation "...Robert "King" Carter, the wealthiest man in North America.  Owning over 50 working plantations and over 330,000 acres of land, Robert was called "King" because his wealth was said to rival that of the King of England."

Below is Judith Armistead Carter's portrait.



Robert and Judith had 5 children.  Their son, John Carter, married Elizabeth Hill who had inherited Shirley Plantation from her father.  They would begin building the Great House shortly after their marriage in 1723 but it would take 15 years before it was completed in 1738.  The plantation has remained in the Hill-Carter Family for eleven generations.

I was very excited when I heard Judith's name because I am related to her.  Her grandfather is also my 9th great-grandfather, William "The Emigrant" Armistead, who came to America about 1635 and settled in Virginia.  You've got to admit.  That's pretty cool!

A day or so latter we visited Yorktown.  It is really fascinating to walk where history was made and to realize you are walking the same paths some of our nations historical figures had walked.  We visited Grace Church, established in 1634 and of course I had to visit the cemetery.




Buried in the cemetery are William Nelson and his son Thomas Nelson, Jr.  William Nelson was president of the Governors Council in Virginia and served as acting governor.  Thomas Nelson, Jr. was one of the most powerful and influential men in Virginia.  He was active in the movement to separate the colonies.  As a  Virginia delegate to the Continental Congress he signed the Declaration of Independence.  Back in Virginia during the revolution he was asked to manage Virginia's military and civil policy.  When the state's funds ran low he borrowed heavily on his personal security which ended up destroying his personal wealth.  He died a pauper.  

The Nelson house:



William's wife and Thomas' mother was Elizabeth Carter Burwell.  Elizabeth's parents were Nathaniel B Burwell and Elizabeth Carter.  Her grandparents (Elizabeth Carter's parents) were....you guessed it.... Robert "King" Carter and Judith Armistead Carter.

So I accidentally came across several of my Armistead relatives, and some pretty impressive relatives they are as well.  In addition, according to the FamousKin.com website, Robert "King" Carter and Judith Armistead Carter's great-great grandson was none other than Robert E. Lee.

The Armistead Family Tree has many distinguished and prominent people on it that had an impact on the history of our country.  I hope to talk more about these relatives in the future but for now I wanted to relate how exciting it was to walk along the historical pathways in Virginia and realize so many of my ancestors walked there before me.

If you would like more information about any thing in this post please e-mail me.  I will be happy to share family trees, information, pictures, etc.

I'll get back to my next installment on the Meixners next week.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Meixner Family History #6 - The Journey

Once Frank and Theresa made the decision to go, how did they get to America?  How long did it take for them to actually be on their way?

By 1881 Frank's father was deceased.  I do not know about his mother or Theresa's parents.  Frank had at least one sister living at that time.  I have records of her marriage and the births of her children after 1881.

How hard it must have been to say good-bye to family and friends knowing you would most likely never see them again.  Also to leave behind most of their belongings, their old life, country, and language and head for an all new beginning.

The 1871 marriage record of Franz (Frank) and Theresa stated he was an innkeeper.  This was basically a house where they rented rooms to workers of the town that did not have homes of their own.  Did he sell this place to raise the money to pay for their trip to America?  

The next step would have been to get their train tickets and head to Bremerhaven.  This would be their port of departure for America.  I am certain they rode the train to Bremerhaven.  There were thousands of miles of train track in Europe by 1881.

Here are some pictures of trains I found on Wikipedia that would have been in operation in the 1880s.



   
I don't know the route they took from Abtsdorf.  Below is a google map of the route you might take today.  I don't think the route was too much different then but obviously it would have been along the rail lines in use at the time.


This route shows to be about 850 kilometers or 530 miles.  Probably longer and certainly a lot slower back then.

All that is left is for the 33 year old Frank and Theresa is to take their suitcases and trunks and cram them as full as they can with their belongings, take the hands of Herman (Harmon in the U.S.) aged 2, Herminia (5), Theresia (6), Antonia (7), Alvisa (8), and Franz (Frank) (10), and head to the train station to travel some 4300 miles to America.  WOW!!  That took some courage.  I've never lived outside the state of Texas.

So they headed out on the several days journey by train.  I can't imagine this was a very comfortable trip to Bremerhaven.

Next:  The Journey (part 2)


Sunday, July 1, 2012

Meixner Family History #5 - The Decision

We know Frank and Theresa Meixner immigrated to the U.S. in 1881.  What we don't know is why.  I'll explore some possibilities.

I mentioned in post #3 that tensions between the Czech and German populations in Bohemia may have been a contributing factor in the decision. There were several other reasons for leaving.  Of course it is likely that all of these reasons were contribuitng factors.

All numbered paragraphs below are from the article: Landskroner Emigration to the American Midwest , by Edward G. Langer, Copyright 1001, Edward G. Langer.  All quotes will be from the article.  Google it and read the article.  It is very interesting.

Landskron is a district right next to the District of Leitomischel.  Leitomischel is the district where Frank and Theresa lived.  The town of Landskron was only a few miles to the northeast of Abtsdorf.  I think the same conditions would have existed in Leitomischel.

1)  "Until 1848, the people of the district of Landskron were still subject to feudal restrictions limiting their ability to move and requiring them to provide certain services to the local ruling class.  In 1848, revolutions rocked much of Europe.  When the Revolution of 1848 began in the Austrian Empire, the landless peasants hoped there would be a land reform that would give them land."  Unfortunately nothing came out of this revolution that helped the peasants regarding securing land.  There was one very big result, however, that effected them greatly.  The landless received the right to emigrate from the Empire.  The peasants started to take advantage of this right.

2)  "Another reason why people emigrated was to escape the effects of imperial wars.  The Austrian Empire was involved in frequent wars, resulting in increasing taxes and the drafting of young men sent to fight in distant locations."

3)  Improved food and sanitary conditions in the mid-1800" resulted in a population explosion and overpopulation.  The direct effect was limited opportunities for young people.  Housing conditions were difficult with people crammed into small one-room houses.  "There was little virgin land in the area, and subdividing the existing farms would have made them unprofitable.  There was little local industry to provide work for the excess farm population."

4)  "By the 1850's, numerous sources encouraged European peoples to emigrate to America.  'How-to-emigrate' books extolled America's virtues, especially the freedom and cheap land available in America.  Rail and shipping interests made emigration sound very attractive in an attempt to increase their business."  Once relatives and friends settle in America they wrote letters back telling everyone how great things were in their new land.

A very difficult decision to leave your homeland and family and friends even with all the compelling reasons I have mentioned.  That decision had to be made even more difficult when you consider the distance they would be traveling and the dangers they would face.  What ever the reasons that prompted Frank and Theresa to decide as they did I am very grateful that they did.  That is the reason I and all their Meixner descendants reading this are here today.

Next up will be "The Journey".


Thursday, June 28, 2012

Meixner Family History #4

I had a question come up after my last Meixner Family History post.  I was asked "So are we of German decent?  Bohemian? Czech? Austrian?"

After all the reading and research I have done about this question, I say that I am of Germanic decent.

The area of Bohemia that our German ancestors migrated into was almost completely of Germanic decent.  There were few people of Czech decent according to the population schedules.  Our ancestors spoke and read the German language and indeed were German as that is who they lived among and who they married.  


It is no different if a military family moved to Germany today and lived on the base.  If they were there 20 years and their daughter married another American service man's son and had children those descendants would still be American even though they were born in another country, right? 


On my Mom's side of the family I found that she is of Scotch-Irish decent.  I saw the explanation that these descendants came from settlers that moved from Scotland to Ireland but maintained their Scottish communities there and intermarried with other Scottish men and women before migrating to the U.S.  They were not half Scotch and half Irish.  The term denoted Scottish people that had been living in Ireland before moving to the U.S.  


I hope this helps.  Ultimately we each have to answer the questions "who am I" and "where did I come from" in our own way.  I claim German, Scottish, & English among my ancestors and I am proud of all of them.  It's what makes up who I am as an American.





I think that combination turned out a pretty good looking bunch of kids.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Father's Day June 17

I had a wonderful Father's Day on the 17th.  Thought I'd share some things I received from my grandchildren.

First is Maggie's handcrafted Father's Day card.



And a photobook of Maggie pictures for her Pop Pop, as she is now calling me.  Lots of wonderful pictures.  I only included a few.







From Connor and Caleb a bucket that said "Granny Kay & Pa Pa Rock!"  Inside were dozens of hand painted rocks with notes from Connor and Caleb.  They are now in our rock garden around our fountain.  Also a great picture Kristina took of the boys.  




Also in the basket were letters for Granny Kay and PaPa.  (I forgot to note that this basket was for Granny Kay too.)  I hope you can read their answers to the questions in the letters.  Very cute.





Like I said above it was a wonderful day and I love my children, children-in-laws, and my wonderful grandchildren!!  I hope all of you fathers out there had one just as special.