Margaretha Marie Cecile MEINERT

Margaretha Marie Cecile MEINERT

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Margaretha Marie Cecile MEINERT

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Geburt 11. April 1843 Ostermoor, Brunsbüttel, SH., DE nach diesem Ort suchen
Tod 31. Januar 1914 Keystone, Iowa, USA nach diesem Ort suchen
Heirat 1865 Davenport, Iowa, USA nach diesem Ort suchen

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder
1865
Davenport, Iowa, USA
Friedrich Wilhelm ZORNIG

Notizen zu dieser Person

Keystone Benton County Iowa USA

Individual: The 1910 census for Keystone, Kane Township, Benton County, Iowa states that out of 10 children born 7 were living in 1910. Obituary for Margaretha Meinert Zornig as in the paper 5 February 1914. Last week noted the passing of another of Keystone's most estimable mothers and one of Benton County's early pioneers, Mrs. Frederick W. Zornig, who died at her home here after an illness of but a few days. Margaretha Marie Cecile Meinert was born in Marne, Holstein, Germany on 11 April 1843 and died at Keystone on Saturday 31 January, aged 70 years, 9 months and 20 days.
With her parents she came to America in 1865 settling in Davenport and the same year was united in marriage to Fred W. Zornig. The following year the young couple moved to Benton County and had been a resident of this county up to the day of her death. They settled on a farm south of Keystone and this was their residence until 1892 when they retired from farm life and took up their residence in Keystone.
To Mr. and Mrs. Zornig were born 14 children, seven of whom survive the mother. Besides the husband and three sisters, one of the brothers and the three sisters still live in Germany.
The children are Mrs. George Weiss of Elberon, Mrs. Jack Fretters of Oakland, California, Mrs Otto Fink of Davenport, Mrs. H.N. Jammer of Keystone, Mrs. Peter Wiese of Elberon and Messers. John and Fred Zornig, residing here.
All the children except Mrs. Fretters were present at the funeral which was held yesterday.
The funeral was one of the largest ever held in Keystone. It is estimated that nearly 400 friends gathered at the Turner Hall to pay their last respects to one so universally respected by all.
The services were in charge of by Rev. Christianson of Dysart and internment was in the Keystone Cemetery
.[Zornig Family.FTW]

Datenbank

Titel Meinert - Familien an der Elbmündung
Beschreibung        

Meinert einfache Familie an der Elbmündung Eine Familie mit weiter Verbreitung an der  Elbmündung in den Marschen. er Name für einfache Leute, die ein Handwerk ausübten, Fischer und Seefahrer waren, Arbeiter die selten als Hausmann in den Census Listen des dänischen König auftauchten. Wieder ist es der Heimatforscher Wilhelm Johnsen der sich ihrer annahm und sich der Aufgabe unterzog die Meinerts gleichen Vornamens in einem Ort aus einander zu halten. Es gereicht dem Forscher zum Vorteil bei der Suche wenn detaillierte Ortskenntnisse vorhanden sind.   Den Kern der hier veröffentlichten Daten bildet die Stammtafel von Arien Meinert + vor 1660 auf dem Ostermoor, an der Grenze zwischen Dithmarschen und Holstein. Johnsen gibt uns in seinem Buch „... Lebensbilder aus dem Kirchspiel Brunsbüttel…“auf über 40 Seiten einen detaillierten Zustandsbericht über das Alltagsleben in der einsamen nassen Gegend an der Elbmündung am Beispiel  der Genealogie der Familie Meinert über 200 Jahr hinweg. Quellen: Kirchenbücher und Censudaten, Stammbäume. Anmerkungen Personen die vor  1920 nördlich der Elbe  geboren wurden  zählten zur  lutherischen Religion, daher ist die  Religionszugehörigkeit nur bei Abweichungen erwähnt.  Hinweis:  Oft findet man Familien der Region bis 1864 in dänischen Archiven [die Nationalität der Familien wird dann irreführenderweise als dänisch angegeben], weil die Region politisch der dänischen Krone unterstellt war.  In meinen Arbeiten wird grundsätzlich „Deutschland“ angegeben.  Abkürzungen  verwende ich für Schleswig-Holstein [ SH ] und  Deutschland [DE ] Niedersachsen [NS] u.a.  Berichtigungen, Hinweise gerne unter peterzornig@chello.at.

The Meinert family – a simple family from the Elbe estuary The Meinert family lived all over the Elbe estuary area in the marshes. The Meinerts were plain people that pursued a trade, were fishers, seamen and workers who rarely showed up as householders in the census lists of the Danish king. Once again it is the homeland researcher Wilhelm Johnsen who accepted the task of telling apart all the Meinerts with equal first names of a given town. It is advantageous for a researcher to have good knowledge of a place. The centerpiece of the data published here is the genealogical table of Arien Meinert who was born before 1660 on the Ostermoor, on the border between Dithmarschen and Holstein. In his book “… Lebensbilder aus dem Kirchspiel Brunsbüttel…” [“Stories from the Brunsbüttel parish”] he gives a detailed 40 page account about daily life in the wet, lonely region at the Elbe estuary, using the example of the Meinert family and retelling 200 years of their family history. Sources: Church registers and census data, family trees Notes: People who were born north of the Elbe before 1920 were Lutherans and thus their religion is only mentioned in case of deviation. Note: Many families that lived in the region before 1864 can be found in Danish archives [where the nationality of the families is misleadingly indicated as Danish], because the region was under the rule of the Danish crown. In my works I generally write “Germany”. I use abbreviations for Schleswig-Holstein [SH], Germany [DE], Lower Saxony [NS] and others. Please e-mail corrections and advice to peterzornig@chello.at.

 

 

   
Hochgeladen 2014-10-21 22:24:50.0
Einsender user's avatar Peter Zornig
E-Mail peterzornig@chello.at
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