Georg Johann GRAUBERGER

Characteristics

Type Value Date Place Sources
name Georg Johann GRAUBERGER

Events

Type Date Place Sources
death 12. June 1948
burial
Deerfield, Kearny, Kansas, USA Find persons in this place
birth 14. March 1882
Dietel (auch Dittel, Oleschna, heute Aleshniki), Saratov, Russland Find persons in this place
marriage 13. February 1901
Dietel (auch Dittel, Oleschna, heute Aleshniki), Saratov, Russland Find persons in this place

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Marriage ??spouse_en_US??Children
13. February 1901
Dietel (auch Dittel, Oleschna, heute Aleshniki), Saratov, Russland
Marie Elisabeth STEINMETZ

Sources

1 Familienseite
Author: Daniel Bayer
  <p>Grauberger Family Website</p> MyHeritage-Stammbaum Familienseite: Familienseite Stammbaum: 78350583-1
2 Interment.net, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10111/intermentnet?itemId=3183957&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
  J. George GraubergerGeburt: 1882Tod: 1948Erdbestattung: Deerfield Cemetery, Deerfield, Kearny County, KansasInschrift: b. 1882, d. 1948, Father, s/w Mary E. GraubergerTeilt Stein mit:Mary E. GraubergerFriedhof: On Jun 28, 1892, W.P. Loucks and Amey M. Loucks, his wife, deeded to Lakin Township, five acres of land in NE/c SE/4 Section 2, Township 24S, Range 35W, to be used as a cemetery. At this time all of this area was part of Lakin Township, later it was divided and became Deerfield Township, and eventually became known as Cemetery District No. 3. In 1902 it was fenced witha neat barbwire fence. The first grave was of an unknown man who was killed by railroad cars in front of the depot in 1901. The cemetery is divided into 117 blocks. Each block contains four lots, with the exception of blocks 105 through 117, which contains only two lots. Each lot has room for five burials, with the exception of blocks 105 through 117 which have places for only three burials perlot. Blocks 1 through 13 were included in the road on the north side of the cemetery. There are 28 burials in the &quot;potters field&quot; which lies along the west fence. 17 of these are Russian Germans, brought in by the U.S. Sugar and Land Company and died during the flue epidemic during 1918-19. They have no name markers, just a cement post at the head of each grave. It is my understanding the old cemetery records were lost. Hazel Shriver, Barbara and Harold Jones are responsible for the good records they now have. This includes all existing and legible stone and marker readings which Iobtained when I visited this cemetery on Aug 22, 2006, using my digital camera. If anyone feels I have made an error, feel free to contact me. - Shari Koehn Interment.net von Clear Digital Media, Inc.

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Title Steinbach-Mees
Description
Id 56050
Upload date 2025-03-24 14:47:14.0
Submitter user's avatar Engelbert Steinbach visit the user's profile page
email engelbert@steinbach-sl.de
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