Showing posts with label Aunt Anna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aunt Anna. Show all posts

Sunday, February 24, 2013

16. Baptism Day of Anna Krieg and Louise Treuthardt, 14 February 1897

The Baptism Day of Anna Louise Krieg and Louise Elisabeth Treuthardt
February 14, 1897

These two Baptisms are documented in the 100th anniversary edition of St. Peter Lutheran Church of Walburg, Texas.   The infants are cousins, Anna Louise Krieg and Louise Elizabeth Treuthardt.   Anna's birth date is November 21, 1896.   Louise was born in December, 1896.   This picture was in the possession of Anna (my Aunt Anna) in 1977.   (See notes at the end of this post to find out how I got a copy of it.)   She told me she was one of the babies in the photo. 
 
It was February 14, and the tree was leafless.  Everyone was wearing long sleeves, and most were wearing several layers.    A few people look windblown and cool.   The children's patience was being strained, not to mention that of some other people who wished they could be someplace else.   Isn't that the way it is when people gather for a family photograph? 

The Treuthardt Grandparents

In the front row center are seated Friedrich Treuthardt, age 63, and his wife Anna Johanna Geiser Treuthardt, age 50.    Grandfather Friedrich (or Fred, as his tombstone records) lived exactly ten years, minus two days, after this picture was taken; he died February 12, 1907.  Grandmother Anna lived an additional thirty-nine years, to age 89; her death date is March 11, 1936. 

 The Babies' Parents

The honored mothers are seated on either side of the grandparents, each holding her baby.  Their husbands stand behind them--in perfect symmetry--between the wife and parent. 

Seated next to Grandfather Fred is his daughter Ida (Treuthardt) Krieg, and behind them is her husband Gottlieb Krieg.  Ida is 25 years old, and Gottlieb is age 26.  Ida is holding baby Anna.

Next to Grandmother Anna is seated her daughter-in-law Louise (Ischy) Treuthardt, holding baby Louise, and behind them, Wilhelm Treuthardt, holding his child.  Will, born in 1858, is 39 years old.  His wife Louise, born in 1865, is 32 years old. 

The three older children belong to Will and Louise Treuthardt.   He and Louise were married at St. Peter in 1891.  The three children are Frederick William, almost 5 years;  Will F., Jr., not yet 4 years; Arnold, two years old.*  The baptisms of these three children are not recorded at St. Peter.  
*These children were identified by their daughters and nieces
 in June, 1997, at the Treuhardt reunion in Holland, Texas. 


These five children are all of the grandchildren of the Treuthardts in 1897.  No other children of Gottlieb and Ida were baptized at St. Peter, as the Lutheran church at New Bern became their new church home.  Their son Oscar, born in 1899, was baptized at New Bern, and all their other children as well.  Thus the association of the Kriegs with St. Peter, Walburg/Georgetown, was terminated by 1899.    Three additional children of Will and Louise were born later than 1897 and were baptized at St. Peter.  
 
 The Pastor and his wife

In 1977 Anna Krieg Fuessel (who was one of the babies in the photo) stated that she thought the pastor and his wife are pictured at the right of the photo.  The pastor in 1897 at the Walburg Church was Rev. Johannes Mgebroff.     

In February, 1997 (exactly 100 years after this picture was taken) Eddie and I went to Clifton, Texas, for me to interview Pastor Mgebroff's son (who was also a Lutheran pastor) at their home.    Pastor Fred Mgebroff was then 89 years old.    I brought along this picture to ask Fred Mgebroff whether the man in the picture was his father.    He did positively identify his father and mother, Pastor Johannes and Mrs. Helene Mgebroff.     

Pastor J. Mgebroff is the second from the far right, back row, the nice-looking young man with a beard, and his wife stands next to him, looking towards the group.    Pastor Mgebroff was born in 1868 in the Ukraine of southern Russia.  He graduated from the Pilgermission St. Chrischona in Basel, Switzerland, and was sent to Texas as a missionary.   In this photo he would have been 29 years old.  His wife, Helene Kummel Mgebroff, was well educated in "music, voice and domestic science."  Their marriage date is September 14, 1895, so on the date of the photo they had been married for exactly one-and-one-half years.  The couple remained at St. Peter barely another year, as they left Walburg to take a call at another Texas church, in June, 1898.

The scholarly Pastor Mgebroff was a pre-eminent historian of the Lutheran Church in Texas, having researched the first 50 years of the Texas Synod, and written a comprehensive history published in 1902.   It is said that he had an extensive theological library, one of the best in Texas.   In 1919 he died suddenly at the age of 51, a great loss to the early Texas Lutheran Church.   

It is a marvel that the little community of Swiss people had such a knowledgeable and excellent resource of spiritual care during those years.   Our history might be different if they had not had this influence.     

Notes:    
Within the year 1997, the Pastor Mgebroff whom we visited at Clifton TX, had died.   
Originally this picture was in the collection of my grandmother Ida Krieg, then she passed it on to her daughter Anna (my Aunt Anna), whose Baptism Day is recorded here.  After Anna's death, Anna's son Reinhold and his wife Katherine inherited the pictures and album.   At a family reunion Katherine showed the album to me, and I recognized it as the same one Aunt Anna had showed me in 1977.   The snapshot was small, not more than 5 x 4 inches.    My husband Eddie Kolodziej took a picture of the snapshot.   
It is a tribute to the quality of these old photographs, that even when enlarged, the images, details, and faces are clear.    Eddie took the picture with an SLR camera.   I doubt these days that digital reproductions are capable of doing as well, being limited by pixels. 
Other people in the picture have been identified, however, I will not make those identifications yet.    It is enough to know that these people were a majority of the Swiss people who had immigrated to Georgetown, with their descendants.   It is fairly safe to say that most of the people in this picture (who are 20 years or older) were born in Switzerland.        
 

This information comes from a paper that I wrote in 1997, 100 years after the photograph was taken.

I used this picture in August, 2008 on the invitation to the Krieg, Treuthardt, Walther reunion in Georgetown, Texas at Christ Lutheran Church.   

Saturday, February 23, 2013

14. Walburg, Texas, St. Peter Lutheran Church, 1890's


The Texas-Swiss community of the 1890’s and early 1900’s
The 100th Anniversary book of
St. Peter Lutheran Church, Walburg TX

Another year, Roy (always on the lookout for clues for me) brought to my attention a particular church history book – the church where Gottlieb and Ida were married in 1895.    St. Peter Lutheran Church of Walburg TX had been established in 1889One hundred years later, in 1989, St. Peter Lutheran Church published a history book, to commemorate the church's 100th anniversary.  Roy lent me his copy to read.   This marvelous history was an eye-opener!   



The records of the church revealed many events for the Treuthardt family.    All three Treuthardt children who immigrated to Texas, Will, Ida and Arnold, had been married at St. Peter Lutheran Church, and most of their children were baptized there.     Friedrich Treuthardt and his wife Anna were mentioned several times as Baptismal sponsors to various infants.   It was discovered that Friedrich had died on the 5th wedding anniversary of Arnold and Louise Treuthardt.

One can perceive here the strong network among Swiss families.    Interrelationships among Treuthardts, Bouffards and Ischys leaped from the pages.   For instance, the Krieg children had two Aunt Louise Treuthardts.    They were identified here, one Louise Ischy married to Will, and the other Louise Bouffard married to Arnold.   Families and friends!   Names and dates!     With the information from the St. Peter history, my Treuthardt study was fortified with marriages, starting with Will Treuthardt and Louise Ischy’s marriage in 1891, baptisms, confirmations and deaths, including Friedrich's.   

Walburg is quite a distance from Georgetown, over ten miles.   How could it be that Georgetown residents were attached to the Walburg church?   

This question was partially addressed in three sources which I found then and in future years, in which obscure reference was made to “the Georgetown congregation.”   The Walburg church record tells that special services were held in Georgetown for awhile, lead first by Pastor Collmann (who confirmed Ida in 1893), and then by the scholarly and faithful Lutheran pastor John Mgebroff, who spoke German but also was fluent in French. 

[He is one of my favorite Lutheran missionaries to Texas!   He was especially influential in recording the Lutheran church history of Texas, 50 years after the first missionary was sent to Texas.   In 1997 I met and interviewed Pastor John Mgebroff’s son Pastor Fred Mgebroff at Clifton TX, shortly before Fred's death that same year.   The second Pastor Mgebroff identified his father and mother in Aunt Anna’s Baptism picture of 1897.]       

The three references to the Georgetown congregation that I found were as follows:
1)  a brief mention in the St. Peter history; 
2)  Ida’s confirmation certificate; 
3)  Georgetown listed as “a preaching station” in a 50-year history of the Lutheran church in Texas written by Pastor Mgebroff.    

This information seems to have been forgotten today. 

However, Marguerite Treuthardt Whitehead confirmed to me that the Lutherans met in Georgetown.   I believe they worshiped in the Presbyterian church basement.    When the Lutheran pastors no longer served Georgetown (probably after Pastor Mgebroff's short term), then there was no longer a Lutheran presence in Georgetown.    I would not overlook the possibility that the services were conducted in French some of the time, since so many of the Swiss-Texans spoke only French.   Pastor Mgebroff, from the Black Sea area of Europe and the son of a merchant, knew many languages.