Monday, September 30, 2013

76. Jakob Treuthardt II / was he a powder miller at Echandens?

Although I cannot prove by documents that Jakob II ran a mill at Echandens, the history indicates it.   A black powder mill (maybe more than one) existed at Echandens.   When the family moved from Echandens to Steffisburg, Jakob II became powder miller at the mill of Steffisburg.  Milling was a family business.  His two sons became powder millers, indicating that Jakob II trained his sons in the techniques of milling.   Evidence could prove my theory right or wrong.   Until that happens, there is good reason to believe that Jakob II ran a black powder mill at Steffisburg.  

In previous posts I wrote,
"... Jakob II will be choosing an entirely new direction, beginning a new chapter, getting married, having a family, and frankly, he needs to think about what he is doing."  (#64)   
"Jakob II, the eldest son of Jakob I and Barbara Treuthardt, is going to take a different life-route from his father and he will set the tone for the rest of the Treuthardt family in Switzerland."  (#58)

Considering how little I know about Jakob II, I have written a lot of imaginative things (posts #45, 58, 59, 64, 69, 71, 72).   Now we will move on to Steffisburg, where the history is more certain.  

75. Introduction to Blasting and Explosives in Mines / National Mining Museum, Leadville, Colorado

And finally, this display appears in the National Mining Museum in Leadville.

"Introduction to Blasting and Explosives in Mines"

"Between the 1830's and the 1850's, explosives became a permanent fixture in mines;  it reduced the cost of mining and helped increase productivity.

"Black powder was first adopted in America mid-17th century with the opening of the first black powder mill in Massachusetts.  It was used by the settlers to help provide food, ignite fires and for protection.   During the same period, black powder was used extensively in German mines, and by the late 17th century, its use in the mining industry had spread as far as Cornwall, England.   Later, during the mass immigrations of the 19th century, the Cornish miners (also known as 'Cousin Jacks') brought this technology and their blasting techniques to America.  They also brought the miner's candlestick, lunch bucket, and the code of signals that enable the hoist man to communicate with the miners underground.   The sudden increase in popularity and blasting usage in the mines spread quickly and powder mills were established to meet demand.

"Black powder was the only explosive used in mines until the introduction of Nitro-glycerine, and then dynamite..."  

74. Black Powder / National Mining Museum, Leadville, Colorado

Another exhibit from the National Mining Museum at Leadville, Colorado, has a simple description and explanation of black powder.   In the early gold mining efforts in Colorado, black powder was used to blast into rock crevices, dislodging the material, allowing it to be removed and processed (from which gold, if it were present, would be extracted).   The words below are taken exactly as they are displayed in the museum.  

"Black Powder"

"The term black powder was first used in the late 19th century to help distinguish between the different types of powders, e.g., gunpowder, semi smokeless powder, etc.   It was used in mines by igniting it in drill holes and cracks in rocks.

Black powder is a mixture of three components: 

1.  Potassium Nitrate:  other names include Salt Peter or Nitre
2.  Sulphur:  a bright yellow crystalline solid
3.  Charcoal:  a black substance made from burnt wood that has been deprived of oxygen and leaves an impure carbon residue

"Potassium Nitrate and Charcoal create a minor explosion, but when mixed with sulphur, the explosion is much stronger.

"Mixing all three components together form a group of gases:  carbon dioxide, nitrogen (both colorless and odorless) and potassium sulphide (a compound that reacts rapidly with water).

How it works

"When the three components are mixed together and ignited, the gases form a heat.   This heat forces the gases to expand causing an explosive force."


73. Stamp Mill / National Mining Museum, Leadville, Colorado

After walking through the excellent National Mining Museum in Leadville, Colorado, two weeks ago, and discovering an exhibit -- a diorama entitled, "Stamp Mills and Amalgamation" -- I wanted to incorporate the vignette of American gold mining into this blog in order to help us better understand the history of Swiss black powder milling as it pertains to the Treuthardt family (which will be described in forthcoming posts).  The display at the National Mining Museum was written exactly as follows:

"Stamp Mills and Amalgamation"
"As the mines went deeper and brought up larger quantities of ore, the arrastras* could no longer keep up.   Businessmen realized that stamp mills would be profitable ventures.   Stamp mills became the primary means of breaking and processing ore, and owing to the introduction of the amalgamation process, were a step forward in gold mining technology.

"At the top level of a stamp mill, larger metal grinders pound the ore into fist-sized chunks.   A step below, the chunks are smashed in water by half-ton stamps.   The resulting slurry passes through screens and drops into amalgamating pans.   How amalgamation works on a physical and chemical level is not clearly understood to this day, but it is known that if mercury is brought into contact with gold, the gold is 'drawn into' the mercury.   This results in an alloy of gold and mercury called amalgam.   After the mercury has gathered in the gold, the mercury can be removed by dissolving it in nitric acid or heating it to a vapor." 

*ARRASTRAS
Here (since we were wondering) is a description of arrastra, below, written by Kenneth Jessen.   For the rest of the interesting article, see this webpage.  

http://www.reporterherald.com/ci_21960868/arrastra-remains-near-buena-vista

"An arrastra, in its simplest terms is a grinder and dates back to the fifth century B.C.   The grinding surface is typically flat bedrock situated near a stream. A vertical pocket is drilled into the rock and a pole is placed in the pocket. Attached to the pole near its base is an arm and attached to the arm, usually by chains, are heavy drag stones. Farther up the pole is a long horizontal beam that is used to turn the center pole.  As the pole is rotated, the heavy drag stone do the grinding against the bedrock surface. Small arrastras could be human powered and draft animals were used to turn larger examples. The most common use in Colorado was to grind ore containing gold flakes. The ore was placed on the grinding surface and after hours the ore is pulverized into a fine powder. A small amount of mercury is added during the process to amalgamate the gold. The gold-mercury amalgam settles to the bedrock while the worthless rock is washed away using water from the nearby stream. The amalgam is then collected and strained through a cloth to remove most of the mercury leaving behind a gold button. The remaining mercury is driven off in a retort, condensed and reused. The gold requires further refining to remove the remaining impurities. Arrastras were used in the absence of large, efficient gold mills or in remote locations. They are very limited in the amount of material that could be processed.

"Arrastras in Colorado are rare. Many have been cut out of the bedrock and moved to museums. One example, still in its original location and relatively easy to reach, is north of Buena Vista on Fourmile Creek. It requires only a short walk from a four-wheel drive road."

"Kenneth Jessen has been a Loveland, Colorado, resident since 1965. He is an author of 18 books and more than 1,300 articles. He was an engineer for Hewlett-Packard for 33 years and now works as a full-time author, lecturer and guide."

(See also my related post #72.) 

Thursday, September 26, 2013

72. Jakob II Treuthardt, powder miller at a stamp mill


Jakob II was (almost certainly!) a powder miller.    A powder miller produced charcoal, and he added sulfur and saltpeter to make "powder," another name for gunpowder.    Although this theory has not been proven, my conjecture is that Jakob II was possibly powder miller at Echandens, where a powder mill was in operation.  

The powder mill at Echandens, Switzerland, used a stamping process to crush the powder.   The mining term "stamp mill" refers most recently to gold mining, but it was an ancient process which was primarily used from the 1500's to the 1900's.    According to Webster's definition in 1913, a stamp was a "kind of heavy hammer, or pestle, raised by water or steam power, for beating ores to powder;  anything like a pestle used for pounding or beating."   The origin of this term is from 1740-50;  but the process was in use long before that.

From one website, this is a description of a stamp mill, as follows:
[http://www.ritchiewiki.com/wiki/index.php/Stamp_Mill]

"The machines were known for their heavy, cumbersome awkwardness and difficulty to maintain.    Each stamp could weigh as much as 2,000 lbs. (907 kg).   They were also incredibly noisy and produced vibrations close to the area of installment and operation.   Some likened the noise produced by a stamp mill to that of a 'stampede of horses galloping across the land.' "  

The mill at Echandens had to close because it was in the way of the railroad which was being built.  [For further research -- The years that the railroad was built at Echandens, would indicate approximately when the mill closed.]   Sometime after Friedrich's birth in 1834, the family left Echandens.   Possibly they moved when the Echandens mill closed.     

References:
http://onlinedictionary.datasegment.com/word/stamp+mill
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/stamp-mill
http://www.ritchiewiki.com/wiki/index.php/Stamp_Mill

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

71. Treuthardt, Jakob II and Margaritha Zumstein

Husband:  Jakob II Treuthardt
Wife:        Margaritha Zumstein

Jakob II and Margaritha were Friedrich's parents.
They are my great-great-grandparents.

Grandparents of Jakob II were the [Kirchmeyer] Bartolome and wife Katharina (Tritten) Treuthardt (see posts #35, 46).   Parents of Jakob II were [Carpenter and Musikant] Jakob I and Barbara Treuthardt (see posts #43, 44, 45).    Jakob II was born at Zweisimmen in 1801, and his parents moved to Thun.

The whole unknown story of why, when and how Jakob II moved to the Canton of Vaud has already been imagined and examined (see posts #58, 59, 69).  

In 1828, when Jakob II was 27 years old, and Margaritha was 22 years old, they were married at Lausanne, Vaud Canton.    Margaritha's parents were Andreas Zumstein and Anna Glauser.  I am guessing that Margaritha was a newcomer to the Canton of Vaud, as her family seems to have come from the area of Brienz, Switzerland (that is a subject for further research). 

Jakob II and Margaritha settled at Echandens, north of Lausanne, where three children were born to them, Louise, Charles, and Friedrich (the last child, who was born in 1834).


Note:  In previous research I had discovered the name "Zum Stein," written as two words.    However, this is incorrect, according to my Swiss resource, Ulrich Bretscher, and the Switzerland telephone directory.   Ulrich reported to me on September 25 that he "consulted the Swiss telephone register and found 972 Zumstein entries and zero Zum Steins."  

Monday, August 26, 2013

70. Blog status August 26, 2013

My Readers -- you may be interested to know that since the beginning, this [unadvertised] blog has gotten over 2440 "hits" (as of August 26) most of them coming from the U.S.   I enjoy writing to other countries as well.      

The Russian visits are 13% of the total.   Germany is next, and then Columbia, Switzerland, Pakistan and Romania.  Other countries that have checked in are France, Brazil, Canada, Lithuania, Ukraine, Greece, Italy, United Kingdom, Ireland, Morocco, Vietnam, South Korea, Japan, and China.   The newest visitors since July are Finland, Denmark, The Netherlands, Poland, Israel and Australia.   The post which has gotten the most hits is #40, the "White Book of Sarnen."   Most of those hits were received in one day.    Among the popular posts are the William Tell entries -- I am delighted that some people recognize his name!    The Gottfried Keller entries are also of interest which pleases me very much.   The middle posts have been read more than the earliest ones.   Welcome to newcomers to my blog!


Thursday, August 15, 2013

69. Moving to the Canton of Vaud (circa 1820?)

It has been too long since we left our great-great-grandfather Treuthardt perched on a hill marveling at the grandeur of the Lake of Geneva in the Canton of Vaud.   Though we don't know when he made this journey, I picked the years around 1820.   From the Lake of Geneva, Jakob II continued on to his destination.   There he began his work -- perhaps first completing his apprenticeship before starting a job in which he was trained and skilled.   He married Margaretha and they eventually had three children.  That account is to come.

I took a few weeks off from writing posts in this blog because of two major "good-bye" events in my life;   the death and funeral of my mother;  and my husband's retirement from his 43-year career as an engineer.   We traveled to south Texas for the funeral, and to Philadelphia, PA for the retirement banquet.    

It is somewhat convenient that this unintentional break-off occurred when I was getting ready to describe the early career of Jakob II.   Before this point in the history, almost everything is conjecture.  Other than those remote dates and names and places which are based on parish records,   the rest has been "me" trying to provide a cultural background and weave a reasonable and believable record of the personages, humble and sketchy though the report is.   Hopefully you, the reader, have ascertained accurately the things I "know" and the things I am guessing at.    

Beyond this time when Jakob II moved to the Canton of Vaud, the Treuthardt account becomes more definite and I can describe the history more confidently, thanks to the guidance and knowledge given to me by some Swiss people in 2008 and after.   Still, there are places where I will insert some conjectures because they could be important to some future researcher.    Yet to come is the most exciting part of the history, and I am looking forward to sharing it with you. 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

My Mother

My Mother died on July 6.   I am taking a break from my blog temporarily.   Thank you for your thoughts and prayers for our family.   My Mother was 98 years, 10 months, and 17 days old.  

God bless you today!   

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

68. Ulrich, April 2008

Ulrich was capable of informing me by his experience as a Swiss citizen and an elected judge in his community, by his knowledge of history and his command of languages,  by his interest in and expertise at the chemistry of Swiss black powder, and by his championship status in muzzle-loading.   He introduced me to Switzerland.   He was willing to practice English reading, writing and comprehension, in corresponding with me.   Not the least, and maybe the greatest, he gave me his time.   He made -- I don't know how many -- telephone calls.   We exchanged numerous e-mails.  

He located, bought and mailed me two significant books on powder milling, books crucial to my study, that directly related to Friedrich's two powder mills (one book in German, the other in French).   In an effort to educate me about the Swiss language, which is a separate language from German, he found a CD of a children's story, sung in the Bernese Swiss which he said the Treuthardts and Kriegs would have spoken, and which my father, uncles and aunt in Texas would have understood.**

As he thought of an idea that might provide a clue for me, he would accomplish it, until he had worked up a Swiss "team" on my behalf.   Each provided information in his own specialty.   All this took place over several weeks.   Months and years later, I am still internalizing it.  
 

**Bernese Swiss is the Swiss spoken by people living in and around the environs of Bern, the capital of Switzerland, and Bern Canton which is generally the plateau region.  By comparison Züricher Swiss is the Swiss spoken by people living in and around the environs of Zürich.     

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

67. Beginning the questioning in Switzerland, with Swiss Black Powder

With years having gone by, I felt strongly that lots of information was waiting to be discovered in the country of Friedrich's origin, Switzerland.   How could I ever reach the archives that were embedded there?

As I have related, I decided to give up finding anything personal about Friedrich, but to attempt to find out something about his profession in the manufacturing of Swiss Black Powder, that mysterious substance that appeals to all men (but not so much to women).   Naturally, I knew absolutely nothing about it.    And here, with that not-so-inert substance, began popping the final phase of discoveries. 

It was as if God Himself were figuratively sweeping me along across the Atlantic Ocean deep into Europe, and flinging wide open the door to Switzerland, where He selected the only person in the world, an expert who was capable of helping me think through and process the discovery of facts in Switzerland.  

Well, I don't mean I had any visions, because of course, I did the practical thing, checked the Internet (which by now was quite developed).  There I found the excellent website of Ulrich Bretscher.   He declared in his home page, that if anybody had questions, that person should write to him.   Accepting his invitation, I wrote an email to him, and he wrote back.   I sent him easy questions at first, but as he could answer them quickly and easily, I began to think of harder questions for him.   There were no challenges too difficult for Herr Bretscher.    He was determined to answer each question, and he did.  If he didn't know for certain, he would give me his opinions and Swiss sensibilities about the subject, being my Swiss mentor from then on.  

66. Finishing the first phases of research in Texas

The beginning of my search was at the tombstone of Friedrich, my great-grandfather, who was lying in a grave at my feet.   That day I learned his name, birth and death dates.  

In 2008, the first two phases of the Treuthardt family research had been accomplished in Texas.  First, among the Kriegs, by 1997, all the information had been gathered from my extended Krieg family.   Interest in family history was percolating;  but mostly they were questions.   The second phase happened after 1997, among the Treuthardts and the Truehardts.   Those three families are all the descendants of Friedrich and his three children who immigrated to Texas.   The job of finding people to visit with about the Swiss history of the Treuthardts was reasonably complete.  

One of my near-cousins, Sue, was meanwhile occasionally doing research on Friedrich's Switzerland family at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, locating some valuable records and sharing them with me.   Besides the memories and continuing support of my cousin Margaret;  another cousin of my father's, Marguerite, lived to be past 100 years old, and she recounted to me a few of her remembrances of her grandmother, Friedrich's wife, and her own trips to Switzerland.   Their input contributed factually and emotionally, as well as affectionately, to my perception.   What lovely people we have in our family!  
 
The pursuit in Texas for Friedrich was concluded.   The rest of the story to be revealed to me came from Switzerland, where Friedrich's history began. 

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

65. Powder

In Texas our branch of the Krieg family knew that Great-grandfather Treuthardt manufactured powder in Switzerland.   His grandchildren (my father's generation) thought it was gunpowder.

Not until 1998, when I met Margaret, who was a Treuthardt, did evidence surface.   Margaret in 1985 had personally visited the powder mill where Friedrich worked.    Margaret shared her pictures with me, that she and her two sisters had taken at the mill.   She recounted their adventure visiting the mill that day.   Here was the wood storage, here was the furnace house, here was where the mixing was done, this was the mortar tester which proved the finished product.     

Here was the gate that warned, "Entrance forbidden."   That's how my searches had gone all these years.   Now I learned that people had recently entered the realm of the unknown Friedrich.  Not only Margaret, but her sisters, and her cousins, and their children, during numerous visits from the Texas Treuthardts to Switzerland's "French" powder mill.  The known facts:  a Swiss black powder manufacturing plant, a mill, at Aubonne, Canton of Vaud.     

Still needed, though, was help to comprehend black powder production of the 19th century.   The Internet was hit-and-miss on a lot of subjects, Swiss black powder being one of them.   For a few years, I found some references, but they were not productive.   I didn't pursue the idea endlessly but meanwhile the Internet developed. 

In April, 2008, searching for "Swiss black powder," I found a website.   It was a thorough description of black powder, done by a man in Switzerland, who was a chemist and made his own black powder.  He shot muskets, was a muzzle loader and had won championships the world over.   He had (and still does) a premier website, in English, which explained "everything" about black powder, its history, its composition, its features.    He invited his readers to ask him questions.  

I wrote him an email and explained I was looking for my great-grandfather Friedrich Treuthardt who had worked at La Poudrérie Fédérale, Aubonne, and that if anybody could help me, it would be the man I was writing.   The next day, by return email, I had a response from him saying modestly, "We should be able to find something."   It was an understatement.

 

64. A new question for an Internet search

All these years I knew that I could not do this task alone.   While the Internet was in its infancy, so to speak, it was not of much use to me, because of the limitations of the new industry.   After all, my objective was esoteric.   But technology was a promising pathway for asking a new question I had not thought of before and indeed it wasn't possible to ask before the days of the Internet.   Though it would be difficult through the Internet to find out anything personal about my great-grandfather Friedrich, now there existed an imaginative course of discovery, using this fairly convenient electronic thoroughfare to Switzerland -- if it were successful.

This is what I decided to attempt to do.   I would try to ascertain facts about Friedrich's career through websites.   Maybe I could figure out how to describe his occupation.   Maybe in the process I could learn something about Swiss history.   Perhaps that goal was attainable in the relatively short time I have left to work, and maybe I should be content with the knowledge of this about Friedrich, a little information about his career.        


In Post #59 we left Jakob II gazing out at the Lake of Geneva around the range of years 1813-1820 (I chose 1820 to make an even number).   He should be permitted this period of rest and relaxation, for he will be choosing an entirely new direction, beginning a new chapter, getting married, having a family, and frankly, he needs to think about what he is doing.   

If I know Jakob II, and I don't, I think he is probably not resting at all but making his way as quickly as he can to his new abode in the Canton of Vaud.    So I have to hurry and tell you about what happened to me, before Jakob II arrives in (say) 1820.   I am hoping that he doesn't rush over there, because I have a lot to tell before I'm ready to continue with Jakob II.   

Saturday, June 15, 2013

63. The Internet, genealogy sites start up

During the days when, in order to make written inquiries to other countries, people typed letters, addressed, stamped and mailed envelopes, then waited for weeks to get a response, I had already picked up valuable data for my various family lines, by inquiring in Switzerland when there was a lead.   This was the old-fashioned way to get records.    The results were effective but always sparse.  

Computer technology brought efficiency, speed and promise to research.   The Internet began developing, and as it did, the genealogy sites started up.   In time, they became useful, especially the various extensive databases, which provide many leads.   Checking some of the Internet genealogy sites over the early years, however, none of the general ones were helpful for my research.    One must have a foundation for his study and use good judgement to assess the accuracy of new data.    Data can be wrong, and information gets picked up, is spread and the errors go with it.     One cannot be too cautious when it comes to giving out or gathering data.  

Friday, June 14, 2013

62. I got impatient.

I went along for some three decades, from 1977 to 2008, learning what I could about family history, being patient and trying to collect and analyze and put together seemingly trivial humble facts, being content with discoveries that certainly did build upon each other but didn't make a complete whole.    Every new little fact or idea was gratifying, and I was thrilled with all of them, as I tried to put the puzzle together in the early stages, being amazed at every new thing, especially with regard to the social side of the venture.  

Although I like the genealogy side of this pastime, more than that I love the adventures that accompany the discovery of family history, which is different from genealogy.   While genealogy is the science, family history is the art.   

All of a sudden, after about thirty years of this, I got impatient.   For ~31 years I had been working and still had not discovered what I was looking for.  Not that I knew what I was looking for, but I hadn't found it.    Most family historians have this problem.

Perhaps significantly, my age advanced a digit.   I turned 60 years of age.   There is something about 60 that gets your attention, as if one realizes he/she must accelerate his/her activities and wrap up those ambitious life goals pretty quick, while acknowledging rather acutely that ambition, not to mention the minutes allotted to one's life, is fleeting, as are energy and enthusiasm.    Genealogists know this better than most people, though in my opinion most genealogists wait too long in their lives to do their jobs.   When I looked back at my 31 years, I knew that I had begun working not one minute too soon, in 1977, with the interview of Aunt Anna, and for years before that, questioning my father and mother.

One year, not long before her death, my dear cousin Marjorie had asked me, "Well, WHEN are we going to see the results of what you have been doing all these years?"   It was a very good question and I was asking it myself.

The fact was, the study was not yet RIPE.   It was that ripeness and maturity I was seeking.   The simple reality of it was that it was too soon to wrap it up.  And I was clearly running out of time to do it.

What did I still expect to find?   I wanted to get some sense of the person, the people, who had died long before I was born.   I wanted to know, where did they live?   What were their environments?    What did they know?   What did they think about?   What did they do all day long?  How did they live?    Besides simply knowing their occupations, I wanted to know how did their occupations impact the family?   You may think, that's ridiculous and impossible, and you would be right.  On a scale of 1 to 10, the impossibility factor was greater than 11.

Especially Friedrich Treuthardt had been frustrating me with his shyness and avoidance of me, and his stubbornness to be not found by me.   I mean his essence, the invisible, intangible being (as opposed to spirit, which is totally different), which I felt so certain was waiting there to be discovered, though he had been dead since 1907.   After 100 years, the evidence gets skimpier and harder to find.   Maybe it was the 100 year mark that challenged me.    The harder I tried to find it, the more it eluded me.

By now, I had learned that many miracles happen in this venture of family history.   Nothing was too impossible.  Besides, in my childhood, remember, I had watched and read "Heidi" and had gotten something exalted from that, which encouraged me now and provided me another angle.   What I would do is to ask, seek and knock -- in Switzerland.       

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

61. Flooding in Europe, June 10, 2013

Recent unusually heavy rains have caused historic flooding of rivers in Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary and Switzerland.     Besides the extreme flooding there have been rockslides, mudslides and land subsidence, creating the need to close highways and rail traffic in some places.  
 
"The same storm that hit parts of Switzerland struck several countries in Eastern and Central Europe, leading to the evacuation of 8,000 people in Prague, and claiming the lives of 11 people across the region.  In neighbouring Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged 100 million euros ($130 million) in flood aid on Tuesday while touring hard-hit southern areas of the country.  In Hungary, a state of emergency was declared along some areas of the Danube River, where water continues to rise."

from The Local, an English language newspaper in Switzerland, June 10, 2013. 


O God, our help in ages past, our hope for years to come
Our shelter from the stormy blast and our eternal home;

Under the shadow of Thy throne Thy saints have dwelt secure; 
Sufficient is Thine arm alone, and our defense is sure. 

Time, like an ever-rolling stream, soon bears us all away,
We fly forgotten as a dream dies as the op'ning day. 

O God, our help in ages past, our hope for years to come,
Be Thou our guard while troubles last and our eternal home!

Isaac Watts (1674-1748) 
from Lutheran Service Book, #733

Saturday, June 8, 2013

60. Charles Dickens, on his approach to Lausanne and the Lake of Geneva

Charles Dickens recorded in his book, The Uncommercial Traveler, a journey he took.   He arrived at the capital of the Canton of Vaud, Lausanne, having approached it from Strasbourg, which is on the French side of Switzerland.  Dickens described similar climates, vistas and spectacles as our ancestor Jakob II Treuthardt would have encountered on his journey coming from the opposite direction.

"...[I] went up a thousand rugged ways, and looked down at a thousand woods of fir and pine..."

"[The mule] brought me safely, in his own wise way, among the passes of the Alps, and here I enjoyed a dozen climates a day, being now in the region of wind, now in the region of fire, now in the region of unmelting ice and snow.  Here, I passed over trembling domes of ice, beneath which the cataract was roaring; and here was received under arches of icicles, of unspeakable beauty; and here the sweet air was so bracing and so light, that at halting-times I rolled in the snow when I saw my mule do it, thinking that he must know best.   At this part of the journey we would come, at mid-day, into half an hour's thaw; when the rough mountain inn would be found on an island of deep mud in a sea of snow...

"I slept at religious houses, and bleak refuges of many kinds, on this journey, and by the stove at night heard stories of travelers who had perished within call, in wreaths and drifts of snow.

"Commend me to the beautiful waters among these mountains!   Though I was not of their mind:  they, being inveterately bent on getting down into the level country, and I ardently desiring to linger where I was.   What desperate leaps they took, what dark abysses they plunged into, what rocks they wore away, what echoes they invoked!  In one part where I went, they were pressed into the service carrying wood down, to be burnt next winter, as costly fuel, in Italy.   But, their fierce savage nature was not to be easily constrained, and they fought with every limb of the wood; whirling it round and round, stripping its bark away, dashing it against pointed corners, driving it out of the course, and roaring and flying at the peasants who steered it back again from the bank with long stout poles.

"Alas, concurrent streams of time and water carried me down fast, and I came, on an exquisitely clear day, to the Lausanne shore of the Lake of Geneva, where I stood looking at the bright blue water, the flushed white mountains opposite, and the boats at my feet with their furled Mediterranean sails, showing like enormous magnifications of this goose-quill pen that is now in my hand."

--This excerpt is taken from Charles Dickens'  The Uncommercial Traveler. Chapter VII, "Traveling Abroad."    This collection of Dickens' stories was first published in 1875, after his death.
In America, this is copyright-free, as the copyright has expired.   I copied this from the Kindle book.


Sunday, June 2, 2013

59. Jakob II Treuthardt moves to the Canton of Vaud (1813-1820's??)

"Something" caused Jakob II to leave Thun and and move to Echandens in the Canton of Vaud.   A couple of scenarios can be imagined.   (This part is not certain.)  Was it an opportunity for an apprenticeship at a younger age, say, about age 12 to 14 (years 1813 to 1815), when he went to live with (perhaps?) a relative or family friend in Vaud Canton?   Or did he apprentice in Thun in the profession of his choice, and later move to Echandens when a job opportunity came available?   [This is a subject to be researched by a future family historian.]  

And speaking of routes, since we love the challenges of transportation so much, how did he get there?

In ca. 1813-1820 (whatever year Jakob II moved to Echandens) this was not merely a relatively easy 135-kilometer (83 miles) jaunt by car of 1 hour 23 minutes by today's directions (Google maps, Sunday, June 2, 2013).    Echandens is virtually due west of Thun, but west from Thun, formidable mountains stand in the way.  (That part is certain.)  

Jakob II had two basic choices for his itinerary.   If he truly wanted to take a direct short cut, and if he were undaunted by a convoluted path through the mountains, and/or if he were accompanied by a guide familiar with the route, he would have been capable of navigating the torturous mountainous route -- the one not recommended in any shape or form, on June 2, 2013 by Google maps.  This was a hazardous journey by coach or cart or horse or mule, complete with poor paths, boulders and rockslides, stormy weather, raging rivers and toll booths.    Is that not a precarious forecast?   (This came from my imagining a raw mountain ride.  I have personally seen an [Italian] raging toll collector.)  

However, that journey taken halfway (or thereabouts) would have been advantageous in one way.  If he did take that mountain route, halfway there he would have landed in Zweisimmen, his home village, happy surprise with rejoicing and welcomes at his arrival, a comfortable bed with blankets, rest and much food and supplies!    I think he should have stayed awhile before his departure to the stranger land.    The rest of the way riding out of the mountains would be harder.  Once he arrived safely down to the Lake of Geneva, though, he would have made his way around the countryside and towns, a little more directly and with beautiful vistas of the lake, to remind him of Thun and make him homesick.

However, if he had headed north from Thun to Berne -- a relatively straight and level highway which today is the A6;  from Berne he would have turned west and then south toward the Lake of Geneva, a longer but easier (and maybe more boring) journey on the A1.

I've made my choice.    In my 20's and 30's I might have taken a slight chance on the short cut with dramatic mountain scenery, if I were accompanied by a reliable guide and if I did not have to ride an animal who put one leg or two out over the cliff.   But now, in my 60's I would most definitely choose the longer and steadier ride with the less exciting views, by car.   We will "see" the Lake of Geneva soon enough.

Though this entire post is imaginary, and only theory, I will let my Swiss guides tell me whether there is any ounce of truth to it.   This much IS truth.   Jakob II was born in Zweisimmen, spent part of his life in Thun, and then moved to Echandens.   Even now, let's call this 1820, he is just a kid.

In the next posts I will introduce him and tell you more factual and imaginary things.   If there are corrections to be made, I'll let you know later.        


58. The next generation of Treuthardts -- which route would Jakob II take?

The last we heard of the Treuthardts (see posts #43, 44, 45), Jakob (the 1st) was working as a carpenter in Thun, and he died there in 1830, at the age of 50, prematurely, we should think.    Some of the five (minimum) children of Jakob I and Barbara (whose two oldest daughters were named Barbara, I and II), all of whom were born at Zweisimmen, were still living in the family home in Thun at the death of their father (if all the children were alive).  His widow Barbara moved back to Zweisimmen eventually.

If you think this is confusing, don't worry, you don't have to memorize another name just yet.   Their eldest son was naturally named Jakob.  To keep him clearly distinguished from his father, henceforth I will call him Jakob (the 2nd) or II.   Ha!  Yes, it is confusing, and I am constantly having to look at the sequence -- is this Jakob I or II?   Jakob II or I?  

So we go on to the next generation, Jakob II.    Jakob II's parents (you recall this -- but I had to go back to look it up) were married in 1800, a great, good, extremely round, even number that is enjoyable to remember.   Jakob was born in 1801.   Since he was named after his father (as well as probably several other ancestors and uncles), and he was born the year after his parents were married, you may believe (as I do) that he was indeed the eldest.

I am only telling you what I know for certain, to keep things clear.   I know less about Jakob I than Jakob II.   So will you!   

If you are an eldest son, you probably have the most responsibility of your siblings, but you are also privileged, as I believe Jakob II was.   Order in the family is important, in a variety of ways.   The parents of a firstborn son are energetic and interested in educating him to the best of their ability.   A relative or family friend may be in a position to give him an opportunity for training and a job.   From time immemorial parents have hoped to save money for the sending-off of their firstborn to a good and useful profession, so he can take care of his parents in their old age.   Look at Martin Luther of Wittenburg, Germany, for example.   His father worked hard and long in the coal mines to educate him to be a lawyer, but all Martin did was to avert a lightning stroke, become a monk and change the world.    By the time the next-in-line children get their turn, the parents are already wearing down, as we may be certain Hans Luther was pretty disappointed and upset at his son Martin for wasting his money. 

Jakob II, the eldest son of Jakob I and Barbara Treuthardt, is going to take a different life-route from his father and he will set the tone for the rest of the Treuthardt family in Switzerland.

57. From America to Switzerland, the good and the bad news

There were absolutely direct connections between the Swiss village Zweisimmen and the doomed North Carolina settlement of 1710.    The communications from the settlers were written for the benefit of anybody who cared to learn from their experiences.   But in particular the settlers were writing to their relatives and former neighbors, the Swiss people.   Their messages were not missed -- America was a place of promise and dreams, opportunity and freedom.  

One gets the feeling that many in Europe were already making their arrangements for overseas travel, and packing their bags with the intention of joining the North Carolina Swiss farmers.   Then they got the news that the settlement had been annihilated.

Did they continue to pack and to remain determined in their intentions to move to America?   Many did, for this North Carolina location eventually became distinctly Swiss and was named New Bern.

But for others, the time was not ripe for immigration to America.

Sunday, May 26, 2013

56. Zweisimmen folks knew all about New Bern, North Carolina

Why do I dwell on the circumstances of the 1710-11 settlement in North Carolina?   First, to show that migrations from Europe, specifically Switzerland, were taking place early in U.S. history.

Second, to point out that communications went back and forth between Europe and America.   People all around Switzerland were aware of the American colony's beginnings -- for these letters of the settlers were posted home (certainly through Mr. Ritter of Bern!) and distributed.   These letters requested money, supplies, equipment, knives and axes, among other things.  Don't you know that the distribution of these letters was widespread among Swiss as well as Germans.   The English were already there, having arrived in 1705.   One Swiss man wrote,
We live along a stream called Neuse.   There six years ago the first [people], English, until two years ago [when] the Swiss people [came], began the cultivation.   They are, as it seems to me, rather rich in cattle, all sorts of crops, the finest tree-fruit, and that, the whole year [except for] two months.   From the nature of things we were behind in that regard, so that we do not have it yet;  but we hope, through God's blessings to get it.   We came shortly before Christmas and we have by God's blessings ... much stronger houses than the English; have also cleared land in addition, and the most have put fences around."(Note:  the writer of the letter says the Swiss people came "two years ago," and it is possible that there were early Swiss experimenters in this project of attempting to settle an American shore.)
News that brilliant and full of dreams could not be hidden in Europe.   The hope of a new beginning of life in the Americas was tempting, especially to those who were not among the rich and ruling classes.

Third, this relates directly to  Zweisimmen.   One of the letter writers, Samuel Jacob Gabley, writes that he married Margreth Pfund of Zweysimmen.   Another one, Jacob Waehre, writes that he is "of Zweysimmen."   Their letters certainly would have found their way to Zweisimmen and been read by all who could read!   The Treuthardts read the letters from people who were their friends and acquaintances.    

Fourth, similar names to Treuthardt are mentioned in the letters.   Jacob Waehre sends greetings to "Truwhart and their whole house";  and "Heinrich Egender of St. Stephan's Court and his whole house for his sons Jacob and Peter Treuthart."

Another writer identified only as "V. H. T." sends greetings to several. 

I am delivering the greeting of us all to our dear and faithful pastor, to the whole number of honored persons, especially Godfather Kilchmeyer Dreuthart and Andreas Aescher, Christen Jantz.   

There are in these letters three variant spellings of Treuthardt -- Truwhart, Treuthart, and Dreuthart.   ("D" was a precursor to "T", notably at a time before spellings were standarized.)   Because Dreuthart was Godfather to V. H. T., it might be that V. H. too was a Treuthardt.   

Because I cannot see the original letter, I don't know whether Kilchmeyer is transcribed correctly.  It may be that the word is actually Kirchmeyer.   When I googled for "Kilchmeyer" it directed me first to "Kirchmeyer," so my theory is not unrealistic.  However, Kilchmeyer is actually a name that was prominent in Reformation Switzerland, and it might have been an unusual first name?   I doubt it though.   The Swiss did not try to be creative with first names.     It must remain unknown whether the word is Kilchmeyer or Kirchmeyer.   If it turns out to be Kirchmeyer, you can guess what I would say about that.   (See Post #35)    As for whether any of these Truwharts, Treutharts or Dreutharts are persons of interest to our family history, you can probably guess what I would say about that too.  
  

55. Swiss colony in North Carolina, the end of it in 1711

From this website,
ncpedia.org/german-settlers
we learn the frightful end of the Swiss colony at New Bern.

The largest influx of German people to North Carolina occurred in the eighteenth century, beginning with a joint effort between a Swiss land company and the British Crown to settle 100 families of German Palatines in the town of New Bern on the Neuse and Trent River in 1710.   The colony flourished and prospered for 18 months, but in 1711 the colony was virtually destroyed after suffering an attack by Tusacarora Indians.    



54. Swiss migration to colonial North Carolina in 1711: hopes and dreams

The following is quoted directly from "The Colonial Records Project," of the Historical Publications Section in Raleigh, NC.

The Colonial Records Project
Jan-Michael Poff, Editor 
Historical Publications Section 
4622 Mail Service Center
Raleigh, NC 27699-4622 

These letters of 1711, written by the successful original Swiss settlers to New Bern, North Carolina, were translated by The Colonial Records Project from German into English, in a collection called, "Christoph von Graffenried's Account of the Founding of New Bern," edited by Vincent H. Todd, Ph.D., "Copies of Various Letters from North Carolina."   The website is at
http://www.ncpublications.com/colonial/Bookshelf/Graff/Letters.htm


In their letters to home, the Swiss colonists to New Bern, North Carolina in 1711 wrote about their impressions and experiences.
We are in a very good and fat land.   I am in hopes that within a year I shall have over a hundred head of horses, cattle, swine.
Regarding the land in general.   It is almost wholly forest, with indescribably beautiful cedar wood, poplars, oaks, beech, walnut and chestnut trees... and so many other fragrant trees that I cannot describe the hundredth part.
I am in hopes that if I stay well to provide five or six households with food and drink for possibly a year long.
I live well and happy and would not wish to have remained at home... [A colonist] can get land as much as he needs.  He can keep as much stock as he is able.  Swine cost nothing to keep.  Cattle go the whole year on pasture, become fat and good to butcher by themselves.
I will soon take up a plantation which comprises toward three hundred acres. 
One can have as much swine and cattle as he wants without labor and expense.
No one has any desire to be back in Switzerland, for one can eat but little meat in Switzerland, but here in Carolina I need have no anxiety from this year on, that every year I should not butcher thirty or forty to fifty swine, more if I wish.
... we went about a hundred hours by water and land, yet always guided and fed, and the people everywhere have done us much kindness and there is in this country no innkeeper.  All go from one place to another for nothing...
If one would present me with the whole lowland, in order that I should go back again to Switzerland and take up the former service I would not do it on account of the freedom of conscience.
The place and the country, the rivers where we now live and dwell is a good soil, and cattle raising also good and safe, and there is freedom in North Carolina.
But there are those other things which suggest hardship --
The land is good, but the beginning is hard, the journey dangerous.  My two children, Maria and Hansli died at Rotterdam in Holland and were buried in the common burial place.
The land is uncultivated, yet is to be hoped tolerably fruitful; but yet I would not cause any one to come here, nor would I advise it, because of the costly and difficult journey over the fearful and wild sea.  Yet we arrived safely and suffered little sickness, and for my part, did not get here so badly.   For old and young it is hard...  The great God has kept all.   To be sure it has cost much and gone slowly in these expensive, hard, war times.
Of vermin, snakes, and such like, there is not so much as they tell of in Europe.  I have seen crocodiles by the water, but they soon fled.  One should not trust to supporting himself with game, for there are no wild oxen or swine.
I do not lack food nor clothes, but money is rather scarce in this country.
We have no minister but we hope soon to get one.
But one thing lies heavy on us which I a cannot write without weeping, namely the lack of a true and a zealous pastor.   We have, indeed, prayers in our houses every Sunday, but the zeal to cleanse away the canker of our old sins is so small that it is to be feared it will consume everything to the foundation, if the pitying God does not come to our help.
We have no women folks that wash and mend for us.
The greatest failing and lack here in Carolina is that too few people are here, and no good mills.   There is one being built by us people who are in Carolina.
There is a great lack of German women folks.
No one else of us Siebentaler people has died, but of the others though, three Palatines.  Of the people among whom we live, however, a good many have died.
This place has been entirely uninhabited, for we have not seen any signs nor heard that anything else ever was here except the so-called wild and naked Indians.   But they are not wild, for they come to us often and like to get clothes of us... they guide the Christians through the forest and show new ways...  Some also can speak English well.   They have an idol and hold festivals at certain times.   But I am sorry to say, of the true God they do not want to know anything.
Brought here hale and hearty, the shoemaker Moritz did not die till he was on his farm.  He was well on the whole journey. 

53. Early Swiss migration to the U.S. - 1710, North Carolina


In days long before Texas was imagined or the United States was established, in 1710 a group of Swiss people made a voyage across the ocean and colonized themselves in [present-day] North Carolina.   The city where they settled, still in existence today, is New Bern.   An Internet website dedicated to recording the efforts of these first colonists is called "The Colonial Records Project," of the Historical Publications Section in Raleigh, NC.

The Colonial Records Project
Jan-Michael Poff, Editor 
Historical Publications Section 
4622 Mail Service Center
Raleigh, NC 27699-4622 

The original settlers -- the successful ones -- wrote letters back home in the following year, 1711.   These letters, translated by The Colonial Records Project from German into English, are in a collection called, "Christoph von Graffenried's Account of the Founding of New Bern," edited by Vincent H. Todd, Ph.D., "Copies of Various Letters from North Carolina."   The website is at
http://www.ncpublications.com/colonial/Bookshelf/Graff/Letters.htm

A detailed reading of these letters (12 pages single-spaced) written by various people, reveals quite a few interesting circumstances concerning this settlement dating to 1711.   I have extracted from the entirety of the letters concise instructions to Swiss people for a move to the colonies.
   
1)  Make arrangements with Mr. Ritter of Bern, to sail to the colonies.
   "Those who intend to go must call upon Mr. Ritter, so that when the other people wish to go they may travel together."

2)  Upon arrival in the colony, plan to lease/purchase land, a venture overseen by the Governor, Christoph von Graffenried, "citizen of Bern, formerly mayor, now landgrave in Carolina."    Von Graffenried distributed lands to the tenants/settlers under certain conditions. 

3)  The conditions were as follows:
Our Count von Graffenried will supply them with good land; after this he will give them a four-year lease, supply them with stock and furniture, so that they can thenceforth be well supplied their life long, if they have luck.
This intriguing notation in a certain booklet printed before this time, about 1709 (or earlier?) in Frankfurt, Germany, advertised a colony.    "With regard to the rearing of cattle.  It costs almost nothing for the raising, as the booklet printed at Frankfurt says, for all stock pastures in the winter as well as in the summer.   And I know of nothing to find fault with in the booklet mentioned regarding these two items, although it writes of South Carolina."  

With such promises, about a hundred persons spoke to Mr. Ritter, made arrangements to travel, departed Bern on March 8, 1710, made their way across to the coast of England and set sail on the 24th of July for Virginia.   They cast anchor in Virginia on September 10th.

Not all of the colonial letter writers stated where in Switzerland they were from.   I was especially interested in two references to "Zweysimmen."   Remember, Zweisimmen is the Heimat of the Treuthardts. 

Saturday, May 18, 2013

52. Review of my blog

In this 52nd post, I review what has been posted since January, 2013.   My introductory posts wandered from topic to topic, the way it was when I started working on family history, with no idea what to expect or whether the venture would be a worthwhile attempt.  Beginning in 1977 with the interview of my Aunt Anna in west Texas, the Switzerland history of the Treuthardts unfolded at last in 2008, when I located a man in Switzerland who worked extensively and generously to help me to expand this history.    

The album of Aunt Anna contained the picture of the Swiss immigrants of Vaud Canton.   They were gathered for a double-Baptism day of two infant granddaughters of Friedrich and Anna Treuthardt in Walburg, Texas.   [See Post #15]  The people in the picture were unknown to me.   Years later, discovery of the book of St. Peter Lutheran Church, Williamson County, Texas commemorating the church's 100th  anniversary introduced me to the French-speaking Swiss community* of 1890 to early 1900's.  Listings of Marriages, Births, and Baptisms indicate that the Swiss immigrants married each other and had families.  

The families had their children baptized into the church.   The Christian acts speak through the ages.   That the Baptisms occurred in the Lutheran church rather than Methodist or other, was due to the diligence, persistence and determination of the early Lutheran missionaries to Texas, from 1854 on.   They did not take lightly that the European immigrants to Texas were without means of divine service and worship, teaching and preaching of doctrine.   [My Grandfather Gottlieb Walter was one of those early Lutheran missionaries, but that is the subject of another family history blog.]   One of many ways that church membership was important, was orderly record-keeping;   this side benefit enabled me, more than 100 years later, to learn how the Swiss immigrants became interrelated through marriage.    
  
In February and March I posted briefly on specific birthdays and deaths of three ancestors, Friedrich and Anna Treuthardt, and their daughter Ida.    I incorporated a few memories from annual family reunions of the 1980's through 1990's.   Our most recent and final large-scale family reunion was held in 2008, with an attendance of 89, at Christ Lutheran Church in Georgetown, TX.   

Sneakily and rather quickly (starting with Post #23) I "departed" from Texas into Switzerland, and we have been there ever since.   We went back to the 1400's and that White Book which originated in Sarnen.   We investigated briefly the legend of William Tell, the iconic Swiss folk hero.   In order to apprehend rural Swiss culture in the early 1800's, I quoted good Swiss literature of author Gottfried Keller, who describes a community theatre "performance" of William Tell, presented in the Zurich area around 1840's.   

With only a few facts to go on, we have been introduced to Treuthardt relatives in Switzerland, beginning with the Kirchmeyer Bartolome and his wife Katharina (married ca. 1770 - only a guess) in Zweisimmen, and continuing with the family of the carpenter and Musikant Jakob and his wife Barbara (married in 1800) in the area of Thun.   The legends of ancient Switzerland could have been related in detail by our distant ancestors;   and perhaps they participated in or observed community events similar to that described by Keller.     

This blog is a mere start to tell the history of the Treuthardt family in Switzerland.   If God is willing, then I am too, to continue relating family facts and events which have come to me over the years.   What I have not learned is to be discovered by some future family historian.  

My Audience -- you may be interested to know that since the beginning, this blog has gotten over 1800 "hits" (as of May 26) most of them coming from the U.S.   I have barely advertised this blog, only to a few key family members in Texas.   Additionally, other countries have discovered this blog.   More than 10% of the hits have come from Russia.   Germany is next, and then Columbia, Switzerland, Pakistan.  Other countries that have checked in are France, Brazil, Canada, Lithuania, Ukraine, Greece, Italy, United Kingdom, Ireland, Morocco, Vietnam, South Korea and China.    The post which has gotten the most hits is #40, the "White Book of Sarnen."   Most of those hits were received in one day.    At times I felt a little overwhelmed about this global publicity, but I won't stop now.   Welcome to newcomers to my blog!   
 

*Note:  the Treuthardts spoke, read and wrote German as well as French and Swiss.  





51. Gottfried Keller, William Tell (the actor) shoots the apple off his son's head

The community performance of Schiller's William Tell drew a great crowd, and everybody awaited this unforgettable, exciting scene, William Tell's shooting the apple off his son's head.  Tell was played by a serious and sober actor who in real life was an innkeeper.  Several generations of his family had managed the inn before him, and most likely, more generations succeeded him.   Thus, he himself was an icon.   Altdorf is where the original event took place.   Mr. Gessler is the enemy.

This is my final installment of passages from Gottfried Keller's Green Henry, though this is not the finale in the play.      


[Note: Permission to quote from Gottfried Keller's book was granted to me on May 2, 2013 from Alma Books / Alma Classics, London House, 243-253 Lower Mortlake Road, Richmond, Surrey TW9 2LL, United Kingdom.]
    
Excerpt from Chapter 14
Tell
by Gottfried Keller

Then quite unexpectedly, Tell appeared, going on his way alone with his boy.  He was a competent, solid innkeeper, and a marksman, a respected and dependable man of about forty years old, who had been spontaneously and unanimously chosen for Tell.  He had dressed himself just as the people had always imagined the old Swiss to be dressed -- in red and white with a great deal of puffing and braiding, red and white feathers in his little crenellated red and white hat.   In addition, he wore a silk scarf across his breast, and even if all this were anything but appropriate for the simple huntsman, yet the seriousness of the man showed how greatly he was honouring the conception of the hero, as he understood it, by this pomp;  for in this sense, Tell was not merely a plain huntsman, but was also a political protector and a saint, who could not be imagined otherwise than in the colours of his country, in velvet and silk, with waving plumes.   But in his honest simplicity, our Tell had no suspicion of the irony of his splendid attire;  he walked composedly on... with his young son who was decked out like a kind of little god...

At last we arrived at the small market town which for today was our Altdorf.   When we rode through the ancient gateway, we found the little town which consisted simply of one rather large square, quite lively already, full of music and banners, and all the houses decorated with branches of fir.   Mr. Gessler was just riding out to commit a few evil deeds in the surrounding neighbourhood... 

[People] soon streamed in at the gateway;  for... the majority of them did want very much to see the chief events which were so venerated and so full of significance, and above all, Tell's shot.   Already, from the window of the town-hall, we could see the pikemen arriving with their detested pole, setting it up in the middle of the market-place, and proclaiming the decree to the beating of drums.   Now the square was cleared, all the people, in costume and otherwise, were made to stand aside, and the crowds swarmed at all the windows, on the steps, on the wooden balconies, on the roofs.   The two guards were marching up and down near the pole; now came Tell, walking across the market square with his boy, greeted by roaring applause;  he did not hold the conversation with the child but at once engaged in the sinister dispute with the officers, which the people followed in tense excitement...

Now we rode in, to the sound of the trumpets, and found the scene in full swing, Tell in great distress, and the people all agog, and only too much disposed to snatch their hero away from his oppressors.   But when the Governor began his speech, there was quiet.   The speeches were not delivered theatrically and with gesture, but more in the manner of a public reading, sonorously, monotonously, and in rather a singsong tone, because after all, it was poetry;  they were audible to the whole market-place and if someone, being over-awed, failed to make himself understood, the people called out:  "Louder, louder!"  they were greatly delighted to hear the passage once again, and did not allow the repetition to destroy their illusion... But the national humour asserted itself in the very kernel of the play, when it came to Tell's shot. 

At this point, whenever Tell's deed was enacted in the old fashion, it had from time immemorial been the customary joke for the boy to take the apple off his head during the altercation and coolly to begin to eat it, to the huge delight of the people.   This diversion was smuggled into today's performance too, and when Gessler furiously demanded of the boy what he meant by it, the boy returned impudently:  "Sir!  My father is such a good marksman that he would be ashamed to shoot at an apple as big as this one!   Put an apple on my head that is no bigger than your mercy and my father will be all the better able to hit it!"

When Tell shot, he seemed almost to regret that he had not his rifle in his hand but had to content himself with a "stage shot."  He really did tremble involuntarily as he took aim, so keenly did he feel the honour of being allowed to enact this sacred scene.  And when he held the second arrow threateningly under the tyrant's eyes, while all the people looked on in breathless anxiety, then the hand holding the arrow trembled again, his eyes gave Gessler a piercing look, and for a moment his voice raised to such a pitch of passion that Gessler turned pale, and a shiver of terror went through the whole market-place.  Then a glad, deep-voiced murmur arose, they all shook hands and said the innkeeper was a real man, and so long as we had such men as he, we were in no danger.   

[excerpts from pp. 268-272]

50. Gottfried Keller, The Merrymaking begins at dawn on Shrove Tuesday


[Note: Permission to quote from Gottfried Keller's book was granted to me on May 2, 2013 from Alma Books / Alma Classics, London House, 243-253 Lower Mortlake Road, Richmond, Surrey TW9 2LL, United Kingdom.]

Excerpt from Chapter 13
The Carnival Play
by Gottfried Keller

The dawn of the momentous, eagerly-longed-for day came, bringing the loveliest morning;  the sky was bright and cloudless, and this February it was already so warm that the trees were in bud and the meadows were growing green.  At sunrise, just as the white horse was standing beside the sparkling little river being washed, there was the sound of Alpine horns and cow-bells coming down through the village, and a procession of more than a hundred magnificent cows, wearing garlands and bells, came along, accompanied by a great crowd of young men and girls, going up the valley into the villages, giving the impression of a ceremonial escorting of the cattle to their mountain pasturage.   The people had only needed to don their ancient traditional Sunday costume, excluding any novelties that had come into use, and with the addition of some choice ornaments belonging to parents or grandparents, to look perfectly splendid and very picturesque... 

Then they stopped in front of our house and the mill next door, and as they greeted each other, and vociferously called for drinks, there was a sudden joyous confusion of singing, shouting and laughter, and we got up from the abundant breakfast..   Quickly we went into the crowd with the wine jars and number of glasses that had been put ready beforehand, my uncle and his wife coming after with great baskets full of the local confectionery.   This preliminary merrymaking, far from being an indication that everybody would be tired out very early, was the sure herald of a long day of pleasure... My aunt inspected the beautiful cattle and pronounced them to be fine, stroked and softly scratched famous cows that were well known to her, and cracked a thousand jokes with the young people;  my uncle poured out wine incessantly... 

In the middle of the crowd we ran into the people from the mill who had attacked the enemy from the other side, led by the young miller who, in the person of an armour-clad knight, was ponderously clattering around, and allowing his ancient iron garment to be looked at and fingered with respectful veneration.   

At last, however, the procession moved on.. Outside the village, we saw masses of bright, glittering colour on all sides, moving towards us, and [in] a quarter of an hour, we came to a tavern at a cross-roads... In the next village... came a procession with drum and fife, bearing the Hat on the pole, to proclaim the insulting law in the surrounding neighbourhood.   For this was the beauty of it all, that none of the theatrical limitations were kept to, they did not aim at surprise, but went about freely hither and thither, as they might in real life, and met, as if of their own accord, where the action was to take place.  There was something to see and laugh at everywhere, though at the same time, where the serious acting was going on, everybody turned up and was reverently attentive.   

Our procession had already grown considerably, augmented further by the addition of a number of men on horseback, and pedestrians too, all belonging to the knightly retinue.  

[excerpts from pp. 265-267]

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

49. Gottfried Keller, Narrative describing the choice of costumes and clothing for the play William Tell

If you ever had to design a costume for Halloween, you will enjoy Green Henry's description of how he designed and prepared the "historical" clothing and costumes for himself and Anna, a real teenager who was just younger than Green Henry.  Anna was shy and had to be coaxed into the actress mode.  

As a youngster Green Henry wore green garments ("a suit for Sundays and one for week-days").   That is how he got his name.   His mother made these clothes out of his (deceased) father's uniforms and civilian clothes -- which were all green.   Henry got a reputation for wearing renewed green garments and he states,  "... I made use of my green popularity..." 

In this passage, the character Gessler was the enemy the tyrant.   Green Henry acted the role Rudenz, a less important character (whose role had few speaking parts).   Anna was playing a girl's part and had no lines to recite.  

[Permission to quote from Gottfried Keller's book was granted to me on May 2, 2013 by Alma Books / Alma Classics, London House, 243-253 Lower Mortlake Road, Richmond, Surrey TW9 2LL, United Kingdom.]     

Excerpt from Chapter 13
The Carnival Play
by Gottfried Keller

In my uncle's house I was a veritable factotum, trying hard to make the clothing of the sons as historical as possible, and to restrain the daughters in their desire to dress themselves up in very modern fashion...  All my uncle's children wanted to take part, and they tried too to persuade Anna...  But she absolutely refused to consent... until the schoolmaster, who had for a long time been enthusiastic over this matter of making the old crude buffoonery into something more dignified, definitely desired her to do her share too...  She could easily grace Gessler's knightly train as a silent character.   Gessler's train had formerly been presented, in accordance with the popular sense of humour, as rather shoddy and uncouth-looking, the tyrant in particular being very grotesque and ridiculous; but I had now carried my point that the governor's procession must be most brilliant and lordly, because there was nothing striking in a victory over an abject-looking foe...  The most difficult thing was to make [Anna] ride;  in my uncle's stable there was a white horse, round as a ball and easy-tempered, which had never hurt a hair of anybody's head, and which my uncle used to ride across the country.  In the loft there was a lady's saddle, forgotten relic of the old times;  this was covered afresh with red plush taken from a venerable armchair, and the first time Anna was in the saddle everything went splendidly, especially as the miller, our neighbour and an expert rider, gave her a few lessons, and in the end Anna had a good deal of pleasure from the old horse.   A great curtain of bright green Damask which had once been the hangings of a four-poster bed was cut up and transformed into a riding-habit, and the schoolmaster possessed as an old heirloom a crown made of plaited silver filigree, such as brides used to wear.   Anna's bright golden hair was delicately braided about the temples, but below it was spread out and hung down its full length, and then the crown was set on it;  she wore a broad gold necklace too, and on my advice some rings, put on over her white gloves, and when she tried on this whole costume for the first time, she looked not only like a knight's lady, but like a Queen of the Fairies too, and the whole household was lost in admiration of her loveliness...  Meanwhile I had not been idle; I and my cousins had been dabbling in the saddler's craft, and had covered my uncle's not over-clean bridle reins with some red silk stuff that we had bought cheap... for it would not do for Anna's hands to come into contact with the old leather.  

I had long since made the arrangements for my own costume, choosing one that was green and sportsmanlike, and on account of its extreme simplicity within reach of my moderate means.   Yet it was still tolerably true to period;  a big cinnamon-brown quilt was, without being injured, turned into a cloak with voluminous folds and it covered the deficiencies; on my back I carried a crossbow, and on my head I wore a grey felt hat.   But, since there is a weak side to everybody, I buckled around me the long sword of Toledo [Spain] steel from the attic;  I had admonished all the rest to be historically correct, had myself fetched from the armouries quantities of weapons of the right period, and yet I chose this Spanish spit, and I cannot to this day imagine what my idea was!   

[excerpts from pp. 263-265] 

48. Gottfried Keller, How arms and armour were chosen for the play, William Tell

Gottfried Keller's Green Henry describes a Swiss community pageant that took place sometime in the early 1800's.   The story of William Tell was performed by the whole community, with important speaking roles going to prominent individuals.   The actors and spectators proceeded from town to town enacting the story as they went along.   In order to tell Tell's story in an authentic way, the most important props are ancient arms and armour!   

Reflect for a minute and imagine how many individual pieces were forged over the centuries for the many wars in Europe (and elsewhere).  Thousands of arms and suits of armour have survived and may be viewed in museums all over the world.    Large collections exist of swords and shields, spears, clubs, crossbows, halberds, helmets, guns, and all manner of iron and steel accessories.   Suits of armour may come in whole body or half, and parts of the body can be enclosed by steel and iron (without sacrificing movements of parts).     These items are available at auctions all over the world.   For instance, you might obtain a complete set of armour at auction for $30,000, though it may be a little beat up from use and the passage of time.     

So it was over the centuries that the towns and villages inherited their own collections of arms and armour, and it was to those armouries (in this case, Swiss) that the man Green Henry trudged with his sponsors to borrow hardware to furnish the village actors with props.    

Here is another selection from Green Henry the semi-autobiography of Gottfried Keller.  
[Note:  Permission to quote from Gottfried Keller's book was granted to me on May 2, 2013 from Alma Books / Alma Classics, London House, 243-253 Lower Mortlake Road, Richmond, Surrey TW9 2LL, United Kingdom.] 

Excerpt from Chapter 13,
The Carnival Play
by Gottfried Keller

I proved useful during the preparations and was entrusted with several matters which had to be attended to in the town.  I rummaged through all the shops where there was likely to be mock jewelry and fancy costumes, and tried to recommend whatever was most fit for the purpose...   I even came into contact with the officials of the Republic, and had occasion to prove myself a valiant champion of my district, for I was given the choice and charge of the old weapons which the authorities conceded to us on condition that every care was taken of them.   But as there were several similar festivals taking place just at this time, nearly all the supplies had to be given out, and only the most valuable trophies, those associated with certain definite memories, were left.   Besides this, the delegates of the various communities disputed over the weapons; they all wanted the same thing, although the same thing was not suitable for all; a number of great broadswords, and cudgels with iron spikes, which I had selected for my company, were on the point of being absolutely wrested from me by a rival, in spite of my pointing out to him that for the period from which his people had chosen their scene, he ought to have something altogether different.  In the end I appealed to the man in charge of the weapons who said I was right, and the sturdy innkeeper from the village, who was standing behind me to carry the things away, was triumphant and gave me his friendly approval.   But my rivals now thought I was a dangerous fellow who seized the best before anyone else had a chance, and they dogged my footsteps into all the old armouries, picking out just what I had my eye on, so that it was only by dint of the greatest persistence that I was able to get hold of one more load of iron helmets and halberds for my tyrant's mounted troops.   So I felt very important as I settled with the curators the inventory of the things they were handing over to us, although the innkeeper was the real guarantor, and had to sign it.   

[excerpts from pp. 262-263]

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

47. Gottfried Keller, Description of a Swiss village production of the play William Tell

Gottfried Keller (1819-1890) was a Swiss author.   His short stories and novels are from the 19th century German-language literature of the "realistic school."   His semi-autobiographical book Green Henry which portrays life around Zurich, Switzerland during the early 1800's, is considered by some critics to be among the greatest Swiss literature.   The first edition of Green Henry was published about 1854-55.  It was translated into English in 1960.
 
Keller, Gottfried, Green Henry, Translator A.M. Holt:   
John Calder, London, England, 
This English translation of 'Der Gruene Heinrich' by Gottfried Keller 
first published in 1960 by 
 John Calder (Publishers) Ltd, 
17 Sackville Street,  London, w.1
Printed in Great Britain by the Ditchling Press, Hassocks, Sussex.
c 1960. 

When I came upon these chapters in Green Henry, I was enthralled.   I hope you too like this account.  In the next posts, I quote some selections from Keller's book.   Keller describes how a "neighborhood" (a collection of small villages) in a region around Zurich, Switzerland, collaborated to present a theatrical production for the celebration of Shrove Tuesday (the day before Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent leading up to Easter Sunday).   "Henry" was invited to help organize this performance for his village.   This event (or others like it) occurred around the 1840's. 

Previous to becoming Reformed territory, this former Catholic region celebrated the day with "buffoonery."   After the buffoonery was abandoned, the people wanted to commemorate the end of winter and to celebrate a form of "Carnival" in February, but with more dignity.    They opted for the theme of patriotism, and a retelling of the story of our favorite Swiss hero, William Tell from the play by Schiller.

[Note: Permission to quote from Gottfried Keller's book was granted to me on May 2, 2013 from Alma Books / Alma Classics, London House, 243-253 Lower Mortlake Road, Richmond, Surrey TW9 2LL, United Kingdom.]
      
The following is a passage from the book.  

Excerpt from Chapter 13 
"The Carnival Play"
by Gottfried Keller

Some weeks after the New Year... several places in the neighbourhood were going to join... and make the Shrove-tide celebrations more splendid by holding a grand dramatic pageant.   The Catholic Carnival fun of olden days had been preserved by us in the form of a general Spring festival, and in recent years the previous uncouth buffoonery had gradually given way to patriotic theatrical performances in the open air...  Sometimes a Swiss battle would be enacted, sometimes an episode in the life of a famous hero, and these performances were rehearsed and carried out with more or less seriousness and display according to the measure of the culture and wealth of the district...  My own village... had been invited by a neighbouring small market town to join in a great performance of "William Tell," so my relations invited me back to the village to take part in the preparations, because I was credited with some experience and skill, especially in painting... I did not have to be asked twice, but went out there for a day or two every week, and these regular expeditions in the early part of the year, when the fields and forests were often thick with snow, were the greatest delight to me.   I was able to see the country in winter now, and the country people's winter work and recreation, and how they get ready for the coming of Spring. 

As a foundation for their play, they took Schiller's "Tell" of which there were a great many copies to be had, in a school edition... It is a book that the people are very familiar with, because it admirably expresses their opinions and everything they hold for truth; and of course a mortal will seldom take it amiss if [Tell] is idealized a little, or even a great deal, poetically.

By far the greater part of the mass of actors were to represent the people, in the form of shepherds, peasants, fishermen and hunters, and had to go in a crowd from one stage to another, wherever the action was taking place, carried on by those who considered themselves qualified to play a prominent part.   There were young girls in the crowd too, mostly there in order to take part in the general singing, the individual female parts being played by boys.   The scenes of the real action were allotted variously to the different localities... so that both those who were in costume, and the crowds of spectators, had to progress solemnly from one spot to another.

[excerpts from pp. 261-262]

Monday, May 6, 2013

46. Treuthardt, Bartolome, how old was he in 1810?

Harkening back for a moment to the Kirchmeyer Bartolome, whose birth and death dates are unknown to me, let's consider a note on the 1810 birth record of his granddaughter Elizabeth Magdalena.    Her father Jakob I is listed as the "Alt Kirchmeyers Sohn," which is the "son of the old Kirchmeyer."   By 1810 Bartolome had impressively acquired the adjective "Alt," which certainly did not apply to most people in those days.   It is a title of respect and honor.

How old is "Alt" in 1810 in Zweisimmen?    It makes me wonder whether Bartolome had recently died, and that this was one last fond reference to him as the Kirchmeyer of Zweisimmen.   An ordinary gravedigger would not have been immortalized this way.   If he was born circa 1740 and died circa 1810, which are my tentative guesses, he would have been about 70 years old.

Bartolome was a dedicated father to give opportunities for his children to receive educations.   As the Kirchmeyer it would have been important to Bartolome to teach his children to read and write.   Bartolome and Katharina taught their own children, either by themselves or by sending them to school.   His three sons would have apprenticed for vocations, whether in Zweisimmen or some other place, as for instance, Jakob I apprenticed in carpentry work.    Jakob I received an adequate music education to have earned the title "Musikant" by 1830, only twenty years later.   I maintain that a music education would have required an early childhood start, previous to the apprenticeship.   That could only have been accomplished by parents, whether taught by them or others.    Jakob's siblings had the opportunity to train in music as well, if they were talented and interested.

Was Bartolome's death the precipitating factor that encouraged Jakob I and Barbara to move to Thun?   If Jakob I were responsible for his parents in their old age, and if Katharina, Bartolome's wife, had already died, and if Bartolome died around the time of Elizabeth's birth, Jakob I may have decided to depart from Zweisimmen after the death of his parents, after his sixth child was born.

These are points for future research.  

(See also my post #35.)   

Saturday, May 4, 2013

45. Treuthardt, Jakob I and Barbara, their family and his profession

   (Continued from post 44)

Jakob I and Barbara lived at Zweisimmen and their six children were born there, between 1801 and 1810.   Their children were Jakob II [who is our ancestor], Johannes, Barbara I, Barbara II, Samuel, and Elizabeth Magdalena.    The first Barbara died, either at birth or within her first year.   Another daughter followed, and she was named Barbara to retain the name in the family.  Thus, they had five living children (born between 1801 and 1810) including three sons and two daughters.    At Elizabeth's birth her father was 31 and her mother was 33 years old.   

Since the father of Jakob I was the Kirchmeyer, and Barbara's father was the town scribe, I surmise that the Treuthardt and Hutzli children including Jakob I and Barbara, were literate.   Their five children too would have learned to read and write.  It is not far-fetched to say that basic education was important even in these early times.

Sometime after the birth of their sixth child Elizabeth Magdalena, Jakob I and Barbara moved to Thun, a large, bustling and industrious place with a long history.   Apparently he found better work and better pay in Thun.  This theme of "better opportunity someplace else" is how families disperse.

Jakob I and Barbara lived at "Schertzligen" (a district[?] of Thun) on Frutigenstrasse, a long, wide street nowadays.    Today this is a center of traffic and activity, near Lake Thun, where the River Aare flows into the lake at the far eastern end of Thun.

Jakob I lived in the Thun area only about twenty years.   On the 1830 death record of Jakob I are two notations, where we learn his profession.  

Jakob I was a Schreiner, which by definition is "Carpenter, woodworker, one who makes things out of wood, joiner, craftsman who works with wood."    Maybe Jakob was employed building boats, or maybe he handcrafted furniture or built cabinetry or houses.   

A Schreiner would certainly have apprenticed in his vocation, beginning about age 12-14 years old.   Was Jakob I apprenticed in Zweisimmen, or was he sent to Thun to apprentice with a relative or friend?   We don't know how Jakob I learned his trade.    

Jakob I was also a "Musikant," which by definition is "Musician, performer, one who plays a musical instrument professionally."   (Jakob I might have crafted his own wood instrument, or perhaps he was an organist.)   From an infant who perhaps cried at his Baptism to impress his Baptismal sponsor the choir director, Jakob I earned and deserved a concise descriptor on his death record.   We may believe that he was taught music well from his early childhood, considering the connection with the church through his father Bartolome the Kirchmeyer.   

Jakob I barely lived to be middle aged.   He died on January 19, 1830 at the age of 49.

The Treuthardts of our branch never returned to Zweisimmen, other than Jakob I's wife Barbara who moved back to Zweisimmen after her husband's death.    Barbara died at the age of 72 on March 22, 1850.

[Grandfather] Jakob I died four years before his grandson Friedrich Treuthardt was born.  Barbara lived in Zweisimmen and would have known Friedrich, who was 16 years old when his grandmother died.    


You can find Frutigenstrasse on Google maps.   The exciting way is to search first for Lake Thun, to view the beautiful expansive lake.    Find the city of Thun, at the northern end of the lake.    Zoom in right at that tip where the lake narrows.    Look to the left of the lake, and you will see the big street Frutigenstrasse.   Around Frutigenstrasse are also the Eisenbahnstrasse (Railroad Street) and Schulstrasse (School street).   There was no railroad in Thun until 1859.    Railroad street was not so named at that time.   On the other hand, School street might actually have had a school on it in the early 1800's.  

A search for Kirche Schertzligen, Frutigerstrasse, Thun, Switzerland, brings up a church near the lake.  On the Internet are some postcards of "Kirche Schertzligen, Switzerland" depicted around 1900, when the church was still a church.    We drove past this church in 2009 on a beautiful September Sunday afternoon.   That day at the old church were a great number of people visiting a special art exhibition.   The parking situation looked formidable and we did not stop.   


Why does it matter to know where the individuals lived?   Because a death record from the Heimat, or "home base" of a person may not have as much information on it as the death record from the person's residence and place of death.  

The facts in the town registers were researched by Hans Joder in 2008 for Annamarie.
About Barbara's return to Zweisimmen, Mr. Joder suggested, "Maybe she lived with relatives there.  Or maybe she made use of her citizen-rights there, where a Swiss city is committed to care for" its natives. 

Beyond the bare facts that are revealed by the registries of the towns, the above expanded, extended version of the history of Jakob I and Barbara is the opinion (through evidence and extrapolation) of Annamarie.   

Look again at the Google map and locate Sarnen.   From Thun, draw the arc of the lake, and follow it to the right as it makes a smile, past Interlaken, Brienz, and Lungern, and you will find Sarnen.  

44. Treuthardt, Jakob I and Barbara Hutzli, their marriage, 1800

   (Continued from post 43) 
Husband:  Jakob Treuthardt (I, first Jakob) 
Wife:        Barbara Hutzli

They were Friedrich's grandparents.
They are my great-great-great-grandparents.

In 1800 Jakob Treuthardt and Barbara Hutzli were married at the Zweisimmen church.   There is to this day an old church standing in Zweisimmen.   Surely this was the Kirchmeyer's workplace and the site of the wedding.   Barbara's father Jakob Hutzli was the town scribe.   Most likely the marriage record of the Treuthardts was handwritten by Barbara's father.  

Following the civil and church rules, there would have been "banns" announcing the couple's intention to marry.   The banns would have been read in church on three Sundays three months before the wedding.    If someone objected to the wedding, he would speak up.   [This reading out of banns is still a custom today in the Church of England.] 

We can imagine that the wedding between the children of the Kirchmeyer and the town scribe was an event to which many Zweisimmen villagers (and beyond!) gave their blessings and gifts.  But no gift cards;  rather, a wooden carved butter mold or a hand-woven cup towel, maybe embroidery work on linen, or a utensil for the kitchen. 

Other gift suggestions:  a cow, a goat, chickens, horseshoes, vegetable seeds, a quilt handmade by the ladies of the village for weeks before.   Since this was Switzerland, it is very likely that some of the men who were skilled in woodworking made furniture for the couple's new home.  

Can you think of other gifts a couple might have received in 1800?    Did the guests celebrate the wedding, banquet and dance for a day?  three days?  a week?    

Above are two gifts for an American bride in 2011 -- a garter knitted by a friend, and a handkerchief crocheted around the edges by Swiss friend, Verena.