Difference between revisions of "John Frederick"

From MouserAncestry
Jump to: navigation, search
(biography & page link to complete biography)
(minor typos)
 
(57 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
__NOTOC__  
 
__NOTOC__  
[[Image:John Frederick.jpg|150px|left]][[Image:John Frederick 2.jpg|150px|left]]
+
{{census complete}}
In August of 1822 John Frederick was born when his mother was thirty-seven and his father thirty-eight.  He was no doubt one of the youngest children in the family, and may not have known his grandparents.  The Friedrich grandparents died shortly before he was born; his Speck grandfather had died fifteen years earlier.  Perhaps he knew his maternal grandmother; her death date isn't known. <br<His father, a wagon driver, died when he was nine years old. <br>John Frederick's father, grandfather, and great-grandfather were "drovers", wagon drivers.  He, however, is listed in the church record as a farmer. This may mean nothing more than he took care of the farmland at home, while some older brother took up the wagon routes.  <br>  He did not marry until his twenty-ninth year.<br>He met Anna Catherine Kuhnemuth who lived in the village of Frankershausen, some five miles to the north, and in 1851 they were married. (The Frederick Bible says that they were married in Hitzerode.  This was his home town, not hers, which seems curious.)  Anna Catherine was twenty-four. Johannes' mother, Anna Margarethe Speck,was still alive at that date.
+
{{page complete}}
The story of John Frederick has long fascinated his descendants, and provoked much speculation.  The kernel of information was that he had been forced to leave Germany and could not return, so his wife met him in England for the trip to America.  She was pregnant with their first child at the time. It was joked that "Aunt Mary" crossed the ocean but never saw it; Mary Frederick was born in August not long after they arrived in America in 1852.  The theories for why he had to leave included having hunted deer in the forest of the local noble landowner, a crime for which the penalty could be severe. (Hitzerode belonged to the noble of Eschwege until 1823; Frankershausen to the noble of Doernberg.) It seems doubtful however that this was the reason.  John Frederick's grandson, Fred Kline, said he knew the reason but wouldn't tell it; shooting a deer would surely not have caused such reticence.  Another theory put forth was that the church forced him to leave because Anna Catherine was pregnant but unmarried.  Church records have however been found for their marriage in 1851, before they came to America in 1852.  <br>Unless he was involved in a brawl and caused physical injury to another, the most likely explaination for his trouble is that he was simply avoiding the military draft.  The lords and cities of un-unified Germany were constantly warring and in need of soldiers. [[John Frederick Biography|(See complete biography)]] This theory is strengthened by the family tradition (from Judy King of the Kennemuth descendants) that he escaped "out the dung hole".  Even though the farms were outlying, the farm houses were built in town, in three parts: the living quarters, the hay & feed storage section, and the animal quarters.  This latter included a low doorway out which the manure was shoveled to the outside.  If John Frederick felt compelled to run through the barn and crawl out the dung hole, someone was actually at the door to draft or arrest him.  <br>He successfully made his escape and left Germany, but without Anna Catherine. He sailed for America, and the apparent suddenness of his leaving suggests he or his family had surplus funds sufficient for ship passage readily at hand.  Subsequently, he returned for Anna Catherine, but couldn't return to Germany, so met her in England, and they returned to America together.  Anna Catherine's role is unclear.  She may have known at the time, or only after he had gone, that she was pregnant.  They may have already planned to immigrate together once they were married, or the precipitous event, whatever it was, may have forced them into spur of the moment decisions and a year of anxiety.  It was said John Frederick earned enough money in America to pay for his passage back to England, and then at least four passages back to America, as Anna traveled to England with a sister and brother who came on to America with them. She was accompanied probably by Anna Elisabeth who was five years her junior, and by her brother Conrad who was ten years younger than Anna Catherine.  The three of them setting out for England would have been aged twenty-five, twenty, and fifteen. They could not have stayed long in England; just sufficient time to meet John Frederick and book passage to America.  <br>The timing of the three ocean crossings by John Frederick is rather amazing, given the weeks it took to cross the ocean by sailing ship.  He left Hitzerode sometime after being married on 20 October 1851. He spent an unknown length of time in America, undoubtedly trying to renew his funds, possibly meeting with familiar families from the Berkatal valley now living in Pennsylvania. It is doubtful he had time to go as far as western Pennsylvania to look for land.  He returned to meet Anna Catherine and her two siblings in England, and the four of them booked passage back to America.  They landed shortly before the birth of John and Anna Catherine's first child, Mary was born on 13 August, 1852, nine months and two weeks after the wedding in October the previous year.<br.They settled in Ashland Twp., Clarion County, Pennsylvania, and John took up farming. <br>Five years later Anna Catherine's parents and most of her siblings left for America as well.  It is said that John Frederick paid for all these passages. Whatever his earlier transgressions, he managed later to be solvent, and generous. <br>The original Frederick farm consisted of 86 acres.  An additional 56 acres was purchased from a neighbor, Leu Liebrum, a parcel that became known as "the Liebrum" to the family. John and Anna Catherine raised a family of seven children, six of whom survived to adulthood.  Their first daughter, Mary, and their oldest son, Frank, both married children of the Dietrich family who also had immigrated from Hitzerode. Their youngest son Jacob died at age twenty, before marrying, and their youngest daughter, Josephine, died in infancy or early childhood.  The three remaining children also married from among the German community there, either from other newly immigrated families like themselves, or as their daughter Anna Elisabeth Frederick did, married into the older established German families migrating westward from eastern Pennsylvania.  The second son, John Valentine Frederick, married Leu Liebrum's daughter, Dena.  The Bible is now in the possession of a descendant of John V. & Dena Liebrum Frederick.  The original Frederick homestead still stands, owned by another descendant of John V. and Dena Frederick.  "The Liebrum" section is across the road.  In the Liebrum Cemetery are buried various Frederick, Dietrich and Liebrum family members, including John Frederick and Anna Catherine Kennemuth. Their immigration to America began in turmoil, but because they undertook the journey, they have bequeathed to their descendants a life of opportunity.  We consider the details and mysteries of their story with curiosity and compassion; we realize their hardships and their successes with gratitude.  <br>Coda:  Among the great-great-great-great-grandsons of Andreas Frederick, his son and grandson, all wagondrivers, are several men employed in the trucking industry.  The more things change....
+
[[Image:Flag_germany.png|left]]<br style="clear:both;"/>
 
+
[[Image:Immigrant boat.JPG|70px|left]]
It is still unknown what the date of John Frederick's first trip to America was.  It is presumed to have been in 1851 after the wedding, but that is not known for sure.  It is doubtful that he went to America at age 15 (1837), as the 1900 census indicates. He was 78 at the time of that census and probably confused the date.  Or perhaps the census taker misunderstood his gutteral German.  <br> John Frederick never learned more than a few phrases of English.  Ella Beals Wilson was his great-granddaughter.  She remembers him  keeping hard candy in his pocket for the kids, saying "Bissel candy, Huh?".  He said he was from "Hesse Kassel", and it took deciphering the Frederick family Bible in the 1990's to find that Anna Catherine was from Frankershausen, a tiny town near Kassel.  Further searches in the records of churches in the area around Frankershausen located John Frederick and earlier Frederick generations in Hitzerode and Kammerbach. Once those locations were known, Hitzerode could also be deciphered in the family Bible record.
+
=====Immigrant March 1852=====
 
<br style="clear:both;"/>
 
<br style="clear:both;"/>
  
 +
[[Image:John Frederick wedding photo cropped.jpg|140px|left]][[Image:John Frederick.jpg|150px|left]][[Image:John Frederick 2.jpg|150px|left]] <br style="clear:both;"/>[[Image:Signature John Frederick.jpg|230px|left]]<br style="clear:both;"/>
 +
<br><br>The politics & economy of Hesse Cassel in 1850: "Hesse-Kassel or Electorate Hesse (Kurhessen) (was) a mid-size German state, strategically located between the main part of Prussia and the Prussian provinces of Westphalia in western Germany, traversed by two Prussian military roads. In the 1830s and 1840s, Hesse-Kassel was known chiefly for its poverty, its archaic agrarian structure, and its acrimonious constitutional politics. In the aftermath of the 1848 revolution, the very same issues which fed the constitutional conflict of the Vormärz resurfaced and, in 1850, jelled with the Austro-Prussian contest in Germany to produce a diplomatic crisis of the first order..."<br>See:  www.ohio.edu/chastain/dh/hessek.htm<br><br>
 +
The story of Johannes Friederick, as he was known then, has long fascinated his descendants, and provoked much speculation.  The story was that he had left then-Prussia quickly and could not return. He returned to England where his wife met him for the trip to America.  She was pregnant with their first child at the time. Her sister and possibly one brother accompanied her. It was joked that "Aunt Mary" crossed the ocean but never saw it; Mary Frederick was born in August not long after they arrived in America in 1852.  John Frederick's grandson, Fred Kline, said he knew the reason he had to leave, but wouldn't tell it, so to his mind it was a serious infraction. The area was in upheaval at the time, a confrontation with Austria developing. Johannes  and Anna may have already planned to emigrate, and he was simply draft-dodging.  The older houses in both Frankershausen and Hitzerode are three-part: the family living space, an equipment and feed storage space and finally the animal quarters.  Another descendant through the Etzel line said their family story said that as their story went, "he escaped through the dung hole", where the cow manure was shoveled out of the animal quarters. So someone was at the door. I  [[John Frederick Biography|(See complete biography)]]
 +
<br> Note that [[John Frederick Dietrich]] was also born in Hitzerode Germany in 1822, the same town and year as our ancestor John Frederick.  [[John Frederick Dietrich]] settled in Allegheny County PA in 1840; his brother Wilhelm "William" Dietrich, also born in Hitzerode but in 1827, settled in Clarion Co. PA (date unknown to us) as did our John Frederick in 1852.  Our John Frederick is thought to have made his initial trip to Pennsylvania alone, perhaps to purchase land before returning to England for the 2nd voyage with his wife in 1852.  It is possible he met with [[John Frederick Dietrich]] or brother William to confer about available land; [[John Frederick Dietrich]], and possibly brother William, having arrived in 1840 would have been well settled by then.    Eventually two children of Johan Frederick would marry children of [[John Frederick Dietrich]].<br>([[Emlenton, Pennsylvania]])
 +
<br style="clear:both;"/>
 
{| class="wikitable"  
 
{| class="wikitable"  
 
!  || Date || Location || Notes || Sources
 
!  || Date || Location || Notes || Sources
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Birth'''    ||17 Aug 1822  ||   || || <sup class="reference"></sup>
+
| '''Birth'''    ||17 Aug 1822  ||Hitzerode,Landgraviate of Hesse Cassel  || || <sup class="reference">[7][15]</sup>
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Marriage''' || 20 Oct 1851  ||Hitzerode, Ger. || To [[Anna Catherine Kennemuth]]  || <sup class="reference"></sup>
+
| '''Marriage''' ||12 Oct 1850;<br> 20 Oct 1851  ||Hitzerode or Frankershausen, Landgraviate of Hesse Kassel (See Source notes) || To [[Anna Catherine Kenemuth]]  || <sup class="reference">[7][15]</sup>
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Death'''   || 12 Apr 1912 ||Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA  || || <sup class="reference"></sup>
+
!'''Emigration from Germany'''
 +
||March 1852||Hitzelrode, Werra-Meissner-Kreis, Hessen|| destination America  || <sup class="reference">[17]</sup>
 +
 
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Burial''' || || Lieberum "Dutch" Cemetery  || || <sup class="reference"></sup>
+
| '''Death'''    || 12 Apr 1912<sup class="reference">[8]</sup><br>expect 1926 or later<sup class="reference">[12]</sup><br>See source notes ||Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA  || || <sup class="reference">[8][12]</sup>
 +
|-
 +
| '''Burial''' || || Lieberum "Deutsch/> Dutch" Cemetery  || || <sup class="reference">[8][13][14]</sup>
 
|}
 
|}
 
+
<br style="clear:both;"/>
 
= Ancestry chart segment =
 
= Ancestry chart segment =
  
Line 29: Line 38:
 
   [[Elizabeth Anna Frederick]] --+                        +-- [[Anna Margarethe Speck]]
 
   [[Elizabeth Anna Frederick]] --+                        +-- [[Anna Margarethe Speck]]
 
   (1865-1921)                |                            (1785->1851)
 
   (1865-1921)                |                            (1785->1851)
                             +-- [[Anna Catherine Kennemuth]]
+
                             +-- [[Anna Catherine Kenemuth]]
 
                                 (1827-1889)
 
                                 (1827-1889)
Sources:  
+
Source: <sup class="reference">[12][15]</sup>
<sup class="reference"></sup>
+
 
+
 
=Children=
 
=Children=
(all children with [[Anna Catherine Kennemuth]]
+
(all children with [[Anna Catherine Kenemuth]]
 
{| class="wikitable"  
 
{| class="wikitable"  
 
! Name || Gender || Date of Birth || Birthplace || Spouse || Notes || Sources
 
! Name || Gender || Date of Birth || Birthplace || Spouse || Notes || Sources
 
|-
 
|-
| Mary Frederick ||F||13 Aug 1852  || || William "Will" Dietrich  || || <sup class="reference"></sup>  
+
| [[Mary Frederick]] ||F||13 Aug 1852  || || [[ William Dietrich|William "Will" Dietrich]]   || || <sup class="reference">[2][3][12]</sup>  
 
|-
 
|-
|Jacob C. Frederick || M ||31 Oct 1854  || ||      || || <sup class="reference"></sup>  
+
|[[Jacob C. Frederick]] || M ||31 Oct 1854  || ||      ||died 1875, age 20 || <sup class="reference">[2][3][12]</sup>  
 
|-
 
|-
| Frank J. Frederick || M ||6 Nov 1856  || || Louisa Dietrich  || || <sup class="reference"></sup>
+
| [[Frank J. Frederick]] || M ||6 Nov 1856  || || [[Louisa Dietrich]]   || || <sup class="reference">[2][3][4][12]</sup>
 
|-
 
|-
|Emma B. Frederick ||F|| 1858 || ||1) Unknown Lintz<br>2) John Henry Jury    || || <sup class="reference"></sup>  
+
|[[Emma B. Frederick]] ||F|| 1858 || ||1) William Lintz<br>2) John Henry Jury    || || <sup class="reference">[2[3][4][12]</sup>  
 
|-
 
|-
| John Valentine Frederick || M ||14 Feb 1862  || ||Dena C. Lieberum  || || <sup class="reference"></sup>
+
| [[John Valentine Frederick]] || M ||14 Feb 1862  || ||Dena C. Lieberum  || || <sup class="reference">[3][4][5][6][12]</sup>
 
|-
 
|-
|[[Elizabeth Anna Frederick|Elizabeth "Ella" Anna Frederick]] ||F||13 Feb 1865  || || John Abram Kline  ||Direct line || <sup class="reference"></sup>  
+
|[[Elizabeth Anna Frederick|Elizabeth "Ella" Anna Frederick]] ||F||13 Feb 1865  || || John Abram Kline  ||Direct line || <sup class="reference">[3][4][12]</sup>  
 
|-
 
|-
|Josephine Frederick ||F||  || || (died young)   || || <sup class="reference"></sup>  
+
|Josephine Frederick ||F||  || ||    || (died young) || <sup class="reference"></sup>  
 
+
 
+
 
|}
 
|}
  
Line 60: Line 65:
 
! Location || Dates || Notes || Sources
 
! Location || Dates || Notes || Sources
 
|-
 
|-
| Hitzerode, Germany  || b. 1822  || ||  
+
| Hitzerode, Germany  || b. 1822  || || <sup class="reference">[7][15]</sup>
 
|-
 
|-
|possibly Frankserhausen, Ger||by ( married)1851-1852||
+
|possibly Frankserhausen, Ger||by ( married)1851-1852||<sup class="reference"></sup>
 
|-
 
|-
| Fern, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA ||1852-d. 1912  ||  ||  
+
| Fern, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA ||1852-d. 1912  ||  ||  <sup class="reference"></sup>
 
+
   
+
 
|}
 
|}
 
= Photo Gallery =
 
= Photo Gallery =
[[Image:John Frederick at doorway.jpg|190px|left]][[Image:John Frederick in yard.jpg|200px|left]]<br style="clear: left"/>
+
[[Image:Hitzerode church.jpg|140px|left|thumb|The church at Hitzerode, Germany]][[Image:Hitzerode church 2.jpg|140px|left|thumb|Church at Hitzerode]][[Image:Hitzerode aerial photo fr Dave Roelen 8 2008.jpg|140px|left|thumb|Aerial view Hitzerode, Germany 2008]]<br style="clear: left"/>
These two photos of John Frederick appear to be at the home of John Abram Kline and Elizabeth Frederick Kline. The photo at left shows him by the side porch before it was converted to a closed-in porch. Some of the stone steps used at this house were found down nearer the woods, the remains of the first house built on the property. The woman in the doorway could be his granddaughter Annie Kline.  The photo at right shows the front yard and a bit of the front vegetable garden, then plum trees to the left
+
[[Image:John Frederick & Anna Catherine Kennemuth.jpg|270px|left|thumb|John Frederick and wife Anna Catherine Kenemuth]][[Image:Frederick Bible birth & death records.jpg|150px|left|thumb|Frederick Bible, birth & death records]][[Image:Frederick Bible, marriage record.jpg|140px|left|thumb|Frederick Bible, marriage record]]
 +
<br style="clear: left"/>
 +
Photo of John Frederick & wife Anna Catherine, and access to Frederick family Bible provided Sept.1991 by Della Frederick Francisco, now deceased.
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
[[Image:Calling Card John Frederick 4.jpg|210px|left]][[Image:Calling Card John Frederick.jpg|210px|left]][[Image:Calling Card John Frederick 2.jpg|210px|left]]
 +
<br style="clear: left"/>
 +
[[Calling Card Book|From Complete Calling Card Book of Ella A. Frederick]]
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
[[Image:Gravestone John Frederick & A Catherine Kennemuth.jpg|150px|left|thumb|Gravestone of John Frederick & wife Anna Catherine Kennemuth, Lieberum Cemetery, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA]][[Image:Gravestone Inscription Anna C & John Frederick.jpg|120px|left|thumb|Inscription for Anna C. followed by a long poetry or scripture, overlaid by the later inscription for John Frederick]] [[Image:Gravestone inscription John Frederick.jpg|180px|left|thumb|Inscription close-up, John Frederick]][[Image:Gravestone Jacob C son of J & A C Frederick.jpg|130px|left|thumb|Gravestone of Jacob C. Frederick, Lieberum Cemetery]][[Image:Liz transcribing Lieberum Cemetery.jpg|220px|left|thumb|Lieberum Cemetery, transcriptions by E. W. Williams]]
 +
<br style="clear: left"/>
 +
<br>
 +
[[Image:John Frederick at doorway.jpg|190px|left]][[Image:John Frederick in yard.jpg|200px|left]]
 +
These photos of John Frederick appear to be at the home of John Abram Kline and Elizabeth Frederick Kline. The photo at left shows him by the side porch before it was converted to a closed-in porch. Some of the stone steps used at this house were found down nearer the woods, the remains of the first house built on the property. The woman in the doorway could be his granddaughter Annie Kline.  The center photo shows the front yard and a bit of the front vegetable garden, then plum trees to the left.
 +
<br style="clear: left"/>
 
[[Image:John Frederick, Geo M Sheffer & children.jpg|175px|left|thumb|John Frederick & George M. Sheffer with grandchildren (possibly Hazel or Ailene Sheffer), Branfield & Dorothy Sheffer.]]
 
[[Image:John Frederick, Geo M Sheffer & children.jpg|175px|left|thumb|John Frederick & George M. Sheffer with grandchildren (possibly Hazel or Ailene Sheffer), Branfield & Dorothy Sheffer.]]
 
[[Image:John A. Kline family & John Frederick.jpg |200px|left|thumb|Family of John A. Kline, with John Frederick at far right]]
 
[[Image:John A. Kline family & John Frederick.jpg |200px|left|thumb|Family of John A. Kline, with John Frederick at far right]]
The family of John Abram Kline poses with John Frederick in front of the Kline farmhouse. From left to right are Beulah Gladys Kline, James Elgie Beals, Winnifred May Kline, J. Austin Sheffer, Anna Catherine Kline, Frederick Edwin Kline, John Abram Kline, Mary Philistia Kline, Elizabeth Anna Frederick, Sarah Elenore Myers Sheffer (Mrs. George M. Sheffer) in white blouse, and John Frederick.
+
The family of John Abram Kline poses with John Frederick in front of the Kline farmhouse. From l.to rt. Beulah Gladys Kline, James Elgie Beals, Winnifred May Kline, J. Austin Sheffer, Anna Catherine Kline, Frederick Edwin Kline, John Abram Kline, Mary Philistia Kline, Elizabeth Anna Frederick, Sarah Elenore Myers Sheffer (Mrs. George M. Sheffer) in white blouse, and John Frederick.
 
<br style="clear: left"/>
 
<br style="clear: left"/>
Photo of John Frederick & George M. Sheffer with grandchildren provided by Ed Barry.<br> Remaining photos probided by E W Williams, from collection of Winnifred Kline Beals.
 
  
 
= Sources =
 
= Sources =
Line 82: Line 99:
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
! '''1'''  
+
! '''1'''
| '''[[Source:_1900_United_States_Federal_Census|1900 United States Federal Census]]''',Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA District 1 pg 5, ln. 84-89. Date of census: 11 June 1900.<br>John Frederick born Aug 1822, age 77,married, (length of marriage not recorded; was actually widowered), born Germany, both parents born Germany, year of immigration 1837,number of years in the US 63, naturalized, farmer, owns farm free of mortgage.<br>John V. Frederick, son, born Feb 1863, age 37, married 6 yrs, born PA, parents born Ger.<br>Denie Frederick, daughter-in-law, born Dec. 1875, age 24, married 6 yrs, mother of 3 children, all 3 living.<br>Dellie Frederick, g-dau. born Oct 1894, age 5, she & parents born PA<br>William Frederick, g-son, born Oct 1895, age 4, all born PA<br> Harvey Frederick, g-son, born May 1898, age 2, all born PA.
+
| '''1850 census'''.  None of the Fredericks listed were a particularly good match.  John was not naturalized at this point (see 1910 census).
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
! '''2'''
 +
| '''1860 United States federal Census''', Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA, pg 11.  Census dated 4 July, 1860.  Lines 22-27 list: John Fredrick, head, age 40, farmer, $600 real, $150 personal prop. born Hesse, Ger.; Catherine, age 35, born Hesse;  children: Mary, 8; Jacob, 6; Franklin, 4; Emma, 1.  Children all born PA.
 +
| [[Image:1860 census pa clarion ashland pg 11.jpg|50px|left]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
! '''3'''
 +
| '''1870 United States federal Census''', Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA, pg 18.  Census dated 8 July, 1870.  Lines 15-22 list: John Fredrick, head, age 47, farmer; Catherine, age 43, keeping house.  Both born Hesse, all parents foriegn born.  Children: Mary, 17; Jacob, 15, in school; Frank J., age 13, in school; Emma, 11, in school; John, 8; Alice, 5.  Children all born PA.
 +
| [[Image:1870 census pa clarion ashland pg 18.jpg|50px|left]]
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
! '''4'''
 +
| '''1880 United States federal Census''', Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA Dist 63, pg 9.  Census dated 9 June 1880.  Lines 43-49 list: John Frederick, head, age 56, farmer, $1500 real, $829 personal property; Anna C., wife, age 53, keeping home.  Both (and all parents) born Kuhrhessen.  Children: Frank J., age 23, farmer; Emma, 21, divorced, at home; John V., 18, in school, Anna Alice, 15 in school.  Children all born PA (parents b. Kuhrhessen), all read, write, speak English; Anna Bertha L., granddau., 3, born PA, parents born PA.
 +
| [[Image:1880 census pa clarion ashland dist 63 pg 9.jpg|50px|left]]
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
! '''5'''
 +
| '''1900 United States Federal Census''',Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA District 1 pg 5, ln. 84-89. Date of census: 11 June 1900.<br>John Frederick born Aug 1822, age 77,married, (length of marriage not recorded; was actually widowered), born Germany, both parents born Germany, year of immigration 1837,number of years in the US 63, naturalized, farmer, owns farm free of mortgage.<br>John V. Frederick, son, born Feb 1863, age 37, married 6 yrs, born PA, parents born Ger.<br>Denie Frederick, daughter-in-law, born Dec. 1875, age 24, married 6 yrs, mother of 3 children, all 3 living.<br>Dellie Frederick, g-dau. born Oct 1894, age 5, she & parents born PA<br>William Frederick, g-son, born Oct 1895, age 4, all born PA<br> Harvey Frederick, g-son, born May 1898, age 2, all born PA.
 
|[[Image:1900 census pa clarion ashland dist 1 pg 5.jpg|50px|left]]
 
|[[Image:1900 census pa clarion ashland dist 1 pg 5.jpg|50px|left]]
 +
 +
|-
 +
! '''6'''
 +
| '''1910 United States federal Census''', Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA Dist 1. Pg 7A.  Dated 5-6 May 1910.  Lines 3-8 list: John V. Frederick, head, age 47, mar. 16 yrs, b. PA, father and mother born Germany, General farming, owns farm, no mortgage; Dena, wife, age 34, mar. 16 yrs, 3 children, all alive, b. PA, father and mother born Germany; Della, age 15; William W., age 14; Harvey, age 11.  Children all bo. PA (along with parents), all read, write, speak English; John, father, age 87, widow, born Germany, naturalized in 1852.
 +
Also on page are two families of Kennemuths.
 +
| [[Image:1910 census pa clarion ashland dist 1 pg 7a.jpg|50px|left]]
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
! '''2'''  
+
! '''7'''  
 
| '''Frederick Bible''', published in Philadelphia 1882. <br>Marriage record: "12 October 1850 in Hitzerode John Friederich  Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth  Franckersausen<br> Birth records: "Johannes Friederich geboren 17 August 1822 fon Hitzerode.  Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth 27 February 1827 in Franckersausen.  Sie is gestorben 1889 Junie 26.  John Friederich Efrau. Sie war alt 62 yer 4 monat 7 day.  Tauf (wahr) irh."  John Friederich born 17 Aug. 1822 in Hitzerode.  Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth 27 Feb. 1827 in Franckersausen. She died 26 June 1889. Wife of John Friederich.  She was 62 years 4 months & 7 days old. She was baptized.  
 
| '''Frederick Bible''', published in Philadelphia 1882. <br>Marriage record: "12 October 1850 in Hitzerode John Friederich  Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth  Franckersausen<br> Birth records: "Johannes Friederich geboren 17 August 1822 fon Hitzerode.  Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth 27 February 1827 in Franckersausen.  Sie is gestorben 1889 Junie 26.  John Friederich Efrau. Sie war alt 62 yer 4 monat 7 day.  Tauf (wahr) irh."  John Friederich born 17 Aug. 1822 in Hitzerode.  Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth 27 Feb. 1827 in Franckersausen. She died 26 June 1889. Wife of John Friederich.  She was 62 years 4 months & 7 days old. She was baptized.  
 
+
|Re. place of marriage, see ([[Frederick Bible Translation Notes]]).
 +
|-
 +
!'''8'''
 +
|'''Gravestone transcription'''Lieberum Cemetery, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA, 1991 by Elizabeth Wilson Williams:
 +
*"Mrs. Anna C.  Wife of John Frederick  Born Feb. 27 1827  Died June 24 1889 Age 62 yrs 4m 24d". (There appears to be poetry, small & illegible, beneath her inscription, with John Frederick's inscription engraved over part of it.) "John Frederick B. Aug 17, 1822 D. Apr. 12  1912"
 +
<br>Lieberum Cemetery transcriptions June 2007 by E W Williams:
 +
* Jacob C, son of J. & A. C.Frederick, Apr ___ 1875 aged 20 yrs & 1 d.
 +
|-
 +
!'''9'''
 +
|'''Letter from Emma Jury''' , Fertigs, PA, Jan. 7, 1912, apparently to her sister Mary Dietrich. Names Estella, Papa/Father, Charley, Anna, John, Willie, Coates, Mabel, Edna, Dena, Ella. Signed Emma Jury. A note in German added and signed by John Friederich. A quarter of one page missing.
 +
|[[Image:Emma Jury letter p 1.jpg|50px|left]][[Image:Emma Jury letter p 2.jpg|50px|right]]
 +
[[Emma Jury letter Jan. 12, 1912|(See transcript)]]
 +
|-
 +
!'''10'''
 +
|'''Personal correspondence from Elna Frederick Whitling''', granddaughter of John V. Frederick.
 +
|-
 +
!'''11'''
 +
|'''Interview with Della Frederick Francisco''', 1991, granddaughter of John V. Frederick. Examined the Frederick Bible, various photographs, handwritten pages of notes from Jane Frederick.
 +
|-
 +
!'''12'''
 +
|'''Research Manuscript of Ella May Beals (Wilson)''' researched 1975-1985, including personal knowledge and interviews of her siblings Robert Beals and Bertha Beals (Chambers), and of her aunt Mary P. Kline (Fillgrove).
 +
* Her notes say he spoke almost no English. He would offer the children hard candy from his pocket and say "Bissel candy, huh?". Sometimes, clinging to the candy, would be bits of loose tobacco also in his pocket.  He smoked a pipe.  He said he was from Hesse Kassel, Germany (which is the nearest large city in the area). She noted that he enjoyed getting presents and "having a fuss made over him" at Christmas. She noted the history of his having to leave Germany quickly for undisclosed reasons (see biography above).
 +
*Ella Beals (Wilson) left the impression with her daughter that she had known her great-grandfather when she was a young child.  However, according to his gravestone inscription, John Frederick died 5 years before Ella Beals (Wilson) was born. She includes the 1812 death date in her research notes, source not specified, so either overlooked its error, or concurred. See source notes: Sheffer children born 1918 & 1921 in photo with John Frederick. 
 +
|
 +
|-
 +
!'''13'''
 +
|'''Research of Nancy Elizabeth Beals (Walls)''', 1975-ongoing, in the Venango/Clarion Counties border area, including cemetery inventories, obituary collections, church records and library research, and interviews of community members.
 +
|
 +
|-
 +
!'''14'''
 +
|'''Bertha I. Beals (Chambers)''' personal knowledge give through oral interviews and accompanying on farm and cemetery visits in Venango & Clarion Counties, PA.
 +
|
 +
|-
 +
! '''15'''
 +
| '''Research of Dr. Kurt Guenther''', parish at Albungen where the registers (after 1804) of Hitzerode are preserved.  (Older registers, since 1626, preserved at Frankershausen).
 +
*Johannes Friedrich, occupation carrier, born 4.3.1784; 16./20. 11 1831 (died 16th buried 20th Nov. 1831), at Hitzerode; married 23.7.1804 at (Hitzerode), to Anna Margarethe Speck (alive in 1851). 
 +
*Their son, '''Johannes Friedrich''', farmer,  was born at Hitzerode 17th Aug. 1822, christened 25th Aug 1822. His godfather was Jacob Speck, musician.  Johannes Friedrich married 20 Oct 1851, at (Hitzerode)/Frankershausen (See source notes), to Anna Catharine Kuehnemuth. She was born in Frankershausen 27 Feb 1827; daughter of the shopkeeper Jacob Kuenemuth and Dorothea Schindewolf.  She was age 23 when married.
 +
|See full text of report, [[Kurt Guenther Research, Church Records of Frankershausen & Hitzerode, Germany]]
 +
|-
 +
!'''16'''
 +
|'''Research & personal correspondence of Wilda Dietrich Dehart''', 1992-1997.
 +
* [[Emma B. Frederick]]'s first daughter, Bertha Frederick, was raised by her grandparents John & Catherine Frederick.  Bertha did housekeeping for John Frederick after Catherine died, so possibly knew more of their history.  Bertha's daughter Alvida Coates related the following:<br> When John (Johannes) Frederick left Germany, he escaped through "the dung hole", an opening for removing manure from the animal quarters section of the 3-part house/barn. So, apparently someone was at the door waiting to either arrest or conscript him. <br>After Catherine Kennemuth (Frederick) died in 1889, John made several trips to Pittsburgh to visit daughter Mary Frederick (Dietrich). '' John remarried, and the 2nd wife committed suicide''.
 +
|-
 +
!'''17'''
 +
|'''Records of the Hessian Institute for Regional History''', research of [[Elizabeth Ann Wilson|EWW]]. Johannes Frederich departed Hitzelrode-Meissner-Kreis, Hesse, Germany in March of 1852; destination United
 +
States.
 
|}
 
|}
 
  
 
===Source notes===
 
===Source notes===
*Hitzerode, Germany is about 20 miles SE of Kassel, in Hesse.
+
*Hitzerode, Germany is about 20 miles SE of Kassel, in Hesse. Frankershausen is several miles from Hitzerode.  Both are quite small towns.  In 1852 and before, they were part of the Landgraviate of Hesse Cassel, NOT Kurhessen, a Natzi division of the Province of Hesse Nassau, as some researchers have it.
 +
* Dr. Kurt Guenther, in typing up his notes on the Frederick & Kuhnemuth families, has indicated on the Frederick page that John Frederick & Anna Catherine Kuhnemuth were married in Hitzerode.  On the Kuhnemuth page he indicates that they were married in Frankershausen. 
 
* Lieberum Cemetery (land donated by the Lieberum family), also known as the "Dutch" (ie German) cemetery, is near the old Frederick farm.  The cemetery is possibly at the site of the former St. Johns Reform Church.
 
* Lieberum Cemetery (land donated by the Lieberum family), also known as the "Dutch" (ie German) cemetery, is near the old Frederick farm.  The cemetery is possibly at the site of the former St. Johns Reform Church.
 +
* It is still unknown what the date of John Frederick's first trip to America was.  It is presumed to have been in 1851 after the wedding, but that is not known for sure.  It is doubtful that he went to America at age 15 (1837), as the 1900 census indicates. He was 78 at the time of that census and probably confused the date.  Or perhaps the census taker misunderstood his gutteral German accent.
 +
* The note (see sources, Wilda Dietrich DeHart) by a great-granddaughter  (Alvida Coates) of John Frederick that he married a 2nd time, has not been heard by us from any other family source.  That the 2nd wife committed suicide may have induced reticence among the older generation; that the marriage was possibly short may have meant that the younger generation of his other great-grandchildren wouldn't remember.  The 2nd marriage is conceivable, but presently unconfirmed by primary source data.
 +
*John Frederick spent Christmas of 1912 at daughter Emma Jury's house; possibly he lived there. Her letter reported his having a bad cold.  If his gravestone inscription is accurate, he died 3 months later.  This inscription's accuracy is now in question.
 +
*The 1912 death date is in question; Ella Beals (Wilson), born 1917, said that she had known her great-grandfather as a  young child; that she had probably been about age 7 when he died (i.e. ~1924). Her memories were few, but she related how he would offer hard candy ("Bissel candy, huh?") to the grandchildren from his pocket, and strands of loose pipe tobacco would be stuck to it; and that he said he was from what sounded to her like "Hessey Kussel" (Hesse Cassel).  There is also a photograph of John Frederick with his great-grandchildren Wm.Otis Branfield Sheffer and his sister Dorothy Sheffer, born in 1918 and 1921 respectively.  In the photo Dorothy appears to be 4 or 5 years old, so the year may be 1925 or 1926.
  
 
=Conjecture=
 
=Conjecture=
*The 1900 census reports John Frederick as immigrating in 1837, when he would have been only 15 years old. This date may be erroneous. It is believed that he did come to America once, before returning and immigrating with his wife in 1852.   
+
*The 1900 census reports John Frederick as immigrating in 1837, when he would have been only 15 years old. This date may be erroneous. It is believed that he did come to America once, before returning and immigrating with his wife in 1852.
 +
 
 +
=Research=
 +
* The 1880 census of Richland Township, Clarion Co. PA lists August Frederick age 55, shoemaker, b. Hesse Cassel; Elizabeth, age 58, housewife, b. Hesse Cassel; Charles, age 25, shoemaker, b. Hesse CasselNote: August Frederick is only 3 years younger than John Frederick. Age-wise they could be cousins, or even siblings.  However, "Hesse Cassel" is a political area, and Frederick is a common name.  We believe that John Frederick's grand-daughter Mary P. Kline, who was interviewed for this genealogy, would have known if related Fredericks had lived in the neighboring township.
 +
 
 
=Research Wishlist=
 
=Research Wishlist=
 +
* Obituaries for John Frederick, Anna C.(Frederick), & possibly unknown 2nd wife of John Frederick, a suicide.

Latest revision as of 13:16, 29 April 2023

Census complete.png
Page complete.png
Flag germany.png

Immigrant boat.JPG
[edit] Immigrant March 1852


John Frederick wedding photo cropped.jpg
John Frederick.jpg
John Frederick 2.jpg

Signature John Frederick.jpg



The politics & economy of Hesse Cassel in 1850: "Hesse-Kassel or Electorate Hesse (Kurhessen) (was) a mid-size German state, strategically located between the main part of Prussia and the Prussian provinces of Westphalia in western Germany, traversed by two Prussian military roads. In the 1830s and 1840s, Hesse-Kassel was known chiefly for its poverty, its archaic agrarian structure, and its acrimonious constitutional politics. In the aftermath of the 1848 revolution, the very same issues which fed the constitutional conflict of the Vormärz resurfaced and, in 1850, jelled with the Austro-Prussian contest in Germany to produce a diplomatic crisis of the first order..."
See: www.ohio.edu/chastain/dh/hessek.htm

The story of Johannes Friederick, as he was known then, has long fascinated his descendants, and provoked much speculation. The story was that he had left then-Prussia quickly and could not return. He returned to England where his wife met him for the trip to America. She was pregnant with their first child at the time. Her sister and possibly one brother accompanied her. It was joked that "Aunt Mary" crossed the ocean but never saw it; Mary Frederick was born in August not long after they arrived in America in 1852. John Frederick's grandson, Fred Kline, said he knew the reason he had to leave, but wouldn't tell it, so to his mind it was a serious infraction. The area was in upheaval at the time, a confrontation with Austria developing. Johannes and Anna may have already planned to emigrate, and he was simply draft-dodging. The older houses in both Frankershausen and Hitzerode are three-part: the family living space, an equipment and feed storage space and finally the animal quarters. Another descendant through the Etzel line said their family story said that as their story went, "he escaped through the dung hole", where the cow manure was shoveled out of the animal quarters. So someone was at the door. I (See complete biography)
Note that John Frederick Dietrich was also born in Hitzerode Germany in 1822, the same town and year as our ancestor John Frederick. John Frederick Dietrich settled in Allegheny County PA in 1840; his brother Wilhelm "William" Dietrich, also born in Hitzerode but in 1827, settled in Clarion Co. PA (date unknown to us) as did our John Frederick in 1852. Our John Frederick is thought to have made his initial trip to Pennsylvania alone, perhaps to purchase land before returning to England for the 2nd voyage with his wife in 1852. It is possible he met with John Frederick Dietrich or brother William to confer about available land; John Frederick Dietrich, and possibly brother William, having arrived in 1840 would have been well settled by then. Eventually two children of Johan Frederick would marry children of John Frederick Dietrich.
(Emlenton, Pennsylvania)

Date Location Notes Sources
Birth 17 Aug 1822 Hitzerode,Landgraviate of Hesse Cassel [7][15]
Marriage 12 Oct 1850;
20 Oct 1851
Hitzerode or Frankershausen, Landgraviate of Hesse Kassel (See Source notes) To Anna Catherine Kenemuth [7][15]
Emigration from Germany March 1852 Hitzelrode, Werra-Meissner-Kreis, Hessen destination America [17]
Death 12 Apr 1912[8]
expect 1926 or later[12]
See source notes
Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA [8][12]
Burial Lieberum "Deutsch/> Dutch" Cemetery [8][13][14]


[edit] Ancestry chart segment

 Generation 4           Generation 5          Generation 6
 
                                                     +-- Johannes Friedrich
                                                     |   (~1784-1831)
                            +-- John Frederick ------+
                            |   (1822-1912)          |
 Elizabeth Anna Frederick --+                        +-- Anna Margarethe Speck
 (1865-1921)                |                            (1785->1851)
                            +-- Anna Catherine Kenemuth
                                (1827-1889)
Source: [12][15]

[edit] Children

(all children with Anna Catherine Kenemuth

Name Gender Date of Birth Birthplace Spouse Notes Sources
Mary Frederick F 13 Aug 1852 William "Will" Dietrich [2][3][12]
Jacob C. Frederick M 31 Oct 1854 died 1875, age 20 [2][3][12]
Frank J. Frederick M 6 Nov 1856 Louisa Dietrich [2][3][4][12]
Emma B. Frederick F 1858 1) William Lintz
2) John Henry Jury
[2[3][4][12]
John Valentine Frederick M 14 Feb 1862 Dena C. Lieberum [3][4][5][6][12]
Elizabeth "Ella" Anna Frederick F 13 Feb 1865 John Abram Kline Direct line [3][4][12]
Josephine Frederick F (died young)

[edit] Places of Residence

Location Dates Notes Sources
Hitzerode, Germany b. 1822 [7][15]
possibly Frankserhausen, Ger by ( married)1851-1852
Fern, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA 1852-d. 1912

[edit] Photo Gallery

The church at Hitzerode, Germany
Church at Hitzerode
Aerial view Hitzerode, Germany 2008

John Frederick and wife Anna Catherine Kenemuth
Frederick Bible, birth & death records
Frederick Bible, marriage record


Photo of John Frederick & wife Anna Catherine, and access to Frederick family Bible provided Sept.1991 by Della Frederick Francisco, now deceased.

Calling Card John Frederick 4.jpg
Calling Card John Frederick.jpg
Calling Card John Frederick 2.jpg


From Complete Calling Card Book of Ella A. Frederick

Gravestone of John Frederick & wife Anna Catherine Kennemuth, Lieberum Cemetery, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA
Inscription for Anna C. followed by a long poetry or scripture, overlaid by the later inscription for John Frederick
Inscription close-up, John Frederick
Gravestone of Jacob C. Frederick, Lieberum Cemetery
Lieberum Cemetery, transcriptions by E. W. Williams



John Frederick at doorway.jpg
John Frederick in yard.jpg

These photos of John Frederick appear to be at the home of John Abram Kline and Elizabeth Frederick Kline. The photo at left shows him by the side porch before it was converted to a closed-in porch. Some of the stone steps used at this house were found down nearer the woods, the remains of the first house built on the property. The woman in the doorway could be his granddaughter Annie Kline. The center photo shows the front yard and a bit of the front vegetable garden, then plum trees to the left.

John Frederick & George M. Sheffer with grandchildren (possibly Hazel or Ailene Sheffer), Branfield & Dorothy Sheffer.
Family of John A. Kline, with John Frederick at far right

The family of John Abram Kline poses with John Frederick in front of the Kline farmhouse. From l.to rt. Beulah Gladys Kline, James Elgie Beals, Winnifred May Kline, J. Austin Sheffer, Anna Catherine Kline, Frederick Edwin Kline, John Abram Kline, Mary Philistia Kline, Elizabeth Anna Frederick, Sarah Elenore Myers Sheffer (Mrs. George M. Sheffer) in white blouse, and John Frederick.

[edit] Sources

Ref. Num. Description Image of original
1 1850 census. None of the Fredericks listed were a particularly good match. John was not naturalized at this point (see 1910 census).
2 1860 United States federal Census, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA, pg 11. Census dated 4 July, 1860. Lines 22-27 list: John Fredrick, head, age 40, farmer, $600 real, $150 personal prop. born Hesse, Ger.; Catherine, age 35, born Hesse; children: Mary, 8; Jacob, 6; Franklin, 4; Emma, 1. Children all born PA.
1860 census pa clarion ashland pg 11.jpg


3 1870 United States federal Census, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA, pg 18. Census dated 8 July, 1870. Lines 15-22 list: John Fredrick, head, age 47, farmer; Catherine, age 43, keeping house. Both born Hesse, all parents foriegn born. Children: Mary, 17; Jacob, 15, in school; Frank J., age 13, in school; Emma, 11, in school; John, 8; Alice, 5. Children all born PA.
1870 census pa clarion ashland pg 18.jpg
4 1880 United States federal Census, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA Dist 63, pg 9. Census dated 9 June 1880. Lines 43-49 list: John Frederick, head, age 56, farmer, $1500 real, $829 personal property; Anna C., wife, age 53, keeping home. Both (and all parents) born Kuhrhessen. Children: Frank J., age 23, farmer; Emma, 21, divorced, at home; John V., 18, in school, Anna Alice, 15 in school. Children all born PA (parents b. Kuhrhessen), all read, write, speak English; Anna Bertha L., granddau., 3, born PA, parents born PA.
1880 census pa clarion ashland dist 63 pg 9.jpg
5 1900 United States Federal Census,Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA District 1 pg 5, ln. 84-89. Date of census: 11 June 1900.
John Frederick born Aug 1822, age 77,married, (length of marriage not recorded; was actually widowered), born Germany, both parents born Germany, year of immigration 1837,number of years in the US 63, naturalized, farmer, owns farm free of mortgage.
John V. Frederick, son, born Feb 1863, age 37, married 6 yrs, born PA, parents born Ger.
Denie Frederick, daughter-in-law, born Dec. 1875, age 24, married 6 yrs, mother of 3 children, all 3 living.
Dellie Frederick, g-dau. born Oct 1894, age 5, she & parents born PA
William Frederick, g-son, born Oct 1895, age 4, all born PA
Harvey Frederick, g-son, born May 1898, age 2, all born PA.
1900 census pa clarion ashland dist 1 pg 5.jpg
6 1910 United States federal Census, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co., PA Dist 1. Pg 7A. Dated 5-6 May 1910. Lines 3-8 list: John V. Frederick, head, age 47, mar. 16 yrs, b. PA, father and mother born Germany, General farming, owns farm, no mortgage; Dena, wife, age 34, mar. 16 yrs, 3 children, all alive, b. PA, father and mother born Germany; Della, age 15; William W., age 14; Harvey, age 11. Children all bo. PA (along with parents), all read, write, speak English; John, father, age 87, widow, born Germany, naturalized in 1852.

Also on page are two families of Kennemuths.

1910 census pa clarion ashland dist 1 pg 7a.jpg
7 Frederick Bible, published in Philadelphia 1882.
Marriage record: "12 October 1850 in Hitzerode John Friederich Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth Franckersausen
Birth records: "Johannes Friederich geboren 17 August 1822 fon Hitzerode. Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth 27 February 1827 in Franckersausen. Sie is gestorben 1889 Junie 26. John Friederich Efrau. Sie war alt 62 yer 4 monat 7 day. Tauf (wahr) irh." John Friederich born 17 Aug. 1822 in Hitzerode. Anna Catharina Kuhnemuth 27 Feb. 1827 in Franckersausen. She died 26 June 1889. Wife of John Friederich. She was 62 years 4 months & 7 days old. She was baptized.
Re. place of marriage, see (Frederick Bible Translation Notes).
8 Gravestone transcriptionLieberum Cemetery, Ashland Twp., Clarion Co. PA, 1991 by Elizabeth Wilson Williams:
  • "Mrs. Anna C. Wife of John Frederick Born Feb. 27 1827 Died June 24 1889 Age 62 yrs 4m 24d". (There appears to be poetry, small & illegible, beneath her inscription, with John Frederick's inscription engraved over part of it.) "John Frederick B. Aug 17, 1822 D. Apr. 12 1912"


Lieberum Cemetery transcriptions June 2007 by E W Williams:

  • Jacob C, son of J. & A. C.Frederick, Apr ___ 1875 aged 20 yrs & 1 d.
9 Letter from Emma Jury , Fertigs, PA, Jan. 7, 1912, apparently to her sister Mary Dietrich. Names Estella, Papa/Father, Charley, Anna, John, Willie, Coates, Mabel, Edna, Dena, Ella. Signed Emma Jury. A note in German added and signed by John Friederich. A quarter of one page missing.
Emma Jury letter p 1.jpg
Emma Jury letter p 2.jpg

(See transcript)

10 Personal correspondence from Elna Frederick Whitling, granddaughter of John V. Frederick.
11 Interview with Della Frederick Francisco, 1991, granddaughter of John V. Frederick. Examined the Frederick Bible, various photographs, handwritten pages of notes from Jane Frederick.
12 Research Manuscript of Ella May Beals (Wilson) researched 1975-1985, including personal knowledge and interviews of her siblings Robert Beals and Bertha Beals (Chambers), and of her aunt Mary P. Kline (Fillgrove).
  • Her notes say he spoke almost no English. He would offer the children hard candy from his pocket and say "Bissel candy, huh?". Sometimes, clinging to the candy, would be bits of loose tobacco also in his pocket. He smoked a pipe. He said he was from Hesse Kassel, Germany (which is the nearest large city in the area). She noted that he enjoyed getting presents and "having a fuss made over him" at Christmas. She noted the history of his having to leave Germany quickly for undisclosed reasons (see biography above).
  • Ella Beals (Wilson) left the impression with her daughter that she had known her great-grandfather when she was a young child. However, according to his gravestone inscription, John Frederick died 5 years before Ella Beals (Wilson) was born. She includes the 1812 death date in her research notes, source not specified, so either overlooked its error, or concurred. See source notes: Sheffer children born 1918 & 1921 in photo with John Frederick.
13 Research of Nancy Elizabeth Beals (Walls), 1975-ongoing, in the Venango/Clarion Counties border area, including cemetery inventories, obituary collections, church records and library research, and interviews of community members.
14 Bertha I. Beals (Chambers) personal knowledge give through oral interviews and accompanying on farm and cemetery visits in Venango & Clarion Counties, PA.
15 Research of Dr. Kurt Guenther, parish at Albungen where the registers (after 1804) of Hitzerode are preserved. (Older registers, since 1626, preserved at Frankershausen).
  • Johannes Friedrich, occupation carrier, born 4.3.1784; 16./20. 11 1831 (died 16th buried 20th Nov. 1831), at Hitzerode; married 23.7.1804 at (Hitzerode), to Anna Margarethe Speck (alive in 1851).
  • Their son, Johannes Friedrich, farmer, was born at Hitzerode 17th Aug. 1822, christened 25th Aug 1822. His godfather was Jacob Speck, musician. Johannes Friedrich married 20 Oct 1851, at (Hitzerode)/Frankershausen (See source notes), to Anna Catharine Kuehnemuth. She was born in Frankershausen 27 Feb 1827; daughter of the shopkeeper Jacob Kuenemuth and Dorothea Schindewolf. She was age 23 when married.
See full text of report, Kurt Guenther Research, Church Records of Frankershausen & Hitzerode, Germany
16 Research & personal correspondence of Wilda Dietrich Dehart, 1992-1997.
  • Emma B. Frederick's first daughter, Bertha Frederick, was raised by her grandparents John & Catherine Frederick. Bertha did housekeeping for John Frederick after Catherine died, so possibly knew more of their history. Bertha's daughter Alvida Coates related the following:
    When John (Johannes) Frederick left Germany, he escaped through "the dung hole", an opening for removing manure from the animal quarters section of the 3-part house/barn. So, apparently someone was at the door waiting to either arrest or conscript him.
    After Catherine Kennemuth (Frederick) died in 1889, John made several trips to Pittsburgh to visit daughter Mary Frederick (Dietrich). John remarried, and the 2nd wife committed suicide.
17 Records of the Hessian Institute for Regional History, research of EWW. Johannes Frederich departed Hitzelrode-Meissner-Kreis, Hesse, Germany in March of 1852; destination United

States.

[edit] Source notes

  • Hitzerode, Germany is about 20 miles SE of Kassel, in Hesse. Frankershausen is several miles from Hitzerode. Both are quite small towns. In 1852 and before, they were part of the Landgraviate of Hesse Cassel, NOT Kurhessen, a Natzi division of the Province of Hesse Nassau, as some researchers have it.
  • Dr. Kurt Guenther, in typing up his notes on the Frederick & Kuhnemuth families, has indicated on the Frederick page that John Frederick & Anna Catherine Kuhnemuth were married in Hitzerode. On the Kuhnemuth page he indicates that they were married in Frankershausen.
  • Lieberum Cemetery (land donated by the Lieberum family), also known as the "Dutch" (ie German) cemetery, is near the old Frederick farm. The cemetery is possibly at the site of the former St. Johns Reform Church.
  • It is still unknown what the date of John Frederick's first trip to America was. It is presumed to have been in 1851 after the wedding, but that is not known for sure. It is doubtful that he went to America at age 15 (1837), as the 1900 census indicates. He was 78 at the time of that census and probably confused the date. Or perhaps the census taker misunderstood his gutteral German accent.
  • The note (see sources, Wilda Dietrich DeHart) by a great-granddaughter (Alvida Coates) of John Frederick that he married a 2nd time, has not been heard by us from any other family source. That the 2nd wife committed suicide may have induced reticence among the older generation; that the marriage was possibly short may have meant that the younger generation of his other great-grandchildren wouldn't remember. The 2nd marriage is conceivable, but presently unconfirmed by primary source data.
  • John Frederick spent Christmas of 1912 at daughter Emma Jury's house; possibly he lived there. Her letter reported his having a bad cold. If his gravestone inscription is accurate, he died 3 months later. This inscription's accuracy is now in question.
  • The 1912 death date is in question; Ella Beals (Wilson), born 1917, said that she had known her great-grandfather as a young child; that she had probably been about age 7 when he died (i.e. ~1924). Her memories were few, but she related how he would offer hard candy ("Bissel candy, huh?") to the grandchildren from his pocket, and strands of loose pipe tobacco would be stuck to it; and that he said he was from what sounded to her like "Hessey Kussel" (Hesse Cassel). There is also a photograph of John Frederick with his great-grandchildren Wm.Otis Branfield Sheffer and his sister Dorothy Sheffer, born in 1918 and 1921 respectively. In the photo Dorothy appears to be 4 or 5 years old, so the year may be 1925 or 1926.

[edit] Conjecture

  • The 1900 census reports John Frederick as immigrating in 1837, when he would have been only 15 years old. This date may be erroneous. It is believed that he did come to America once, before returning and immigrating with his wife in 1852.

[edit] Research

  • The 1880 census of Richland Township, Clarion Co. PA lists August Frederick age 55, shoemaker, b. Hesse Cassel; Elizabeth, age 58, housewife, b. Hesse Cassel; Charles, age 25, shoemaker, b. Hesse Cassel. Note: August Frederick is only 3 years younger than John Frederick. Age-wise they could be cousins, or even siblings. However, "Hesse Cassel" is a political area, and Frederick is a common name. We believe that John Frederick's grand-daughter Mary P. Kline, who was interviewed for this genealogy, would have known if related Fredericks had lived in the neighboring township.

[edit] Research Wishlist

  • Obituaries for John Frederick, Anna C.(Frederick), & possibly unknown 2nd wife of John Frederick, a suicide.
Personal tools