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Now that I’ve been at this blogging business for (gasp) a whole week, I’ve decided that my weekends are a great time for the “and so much more” part of “genealogy, the law and so much more.” There are things I want to say about my own family research and about, well, just things.

Hermann baptism

Ossig 1855

So … At the top of my personal “how COULD you” list right now are the pastor at the Evangelische Kirche (Lutheran Church) in Ossig, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany,and one very particular member of his congregation in the year 1855.

My father’s side of the family is solidly German. My father was born in Bremen and emigrated to the United States with his parents, Hugo Ernst and Marie (Nuckel) Geissler, arriving in New York on 6 February 1925.1 Marie’s family was in Bremen as far back as I’ve been able to trace it so far, and I’ve been able to trace it back quite a ways. There’s a fabulous set of records of births, marriages and deaths called the Zivilstandsregister (civil registration in English) that’s readily available on microfilm for Bremen,2 not to mention the wonderful online offerings of the Bremen genealogical society, Die Maus. From those records, so far, I’ve identified all 16 of my third great grandparents on Marie’s side and 11 of my fourth great grandparents on that side.3

Hugo Ernst, however, was born in Bad Köstritz,4 in what is now the modern German state of Thüringen (Thuringia in English).5 I wish I had a nickel for every time a German researcher has told me that having ancestors from Thüringen is a good thing and a bad thing. It’s a good thing, they say, because Thüringen wasn’t much affected in the Second World War and any records that ever did exist should still exist. But it’s a bad thing because the vast majority of records from Thüringen ain’t gonna be microfilmed in MY lifetime. Certainly, nothing has been microfilmed from Bad Köstritz. Heck, Bad Köstritz wasn’t even in Thüringen when he was born, but rather in the Fürstentum Reuß jüngerer Linie (principality of Reuss younger line, in English) from 1806 to 1918.6 It was then in the Republik Reuss (Republic of Reuss) from 1918-1920 and Thüringen only after 19207 (with a 38-year side trip into being part of a district of East Germany when East Germany abolished states in favor of districts8).

Hiring a local researcher produced a wonderful German marriage record for his parents in the Evangelische Kirche of Bad Köstritz. It listed his mother by her full maiden name Emma Louisa Graumüller, the name of her father, Johann Christoph Gustav Graumüller (and the fact that he was a deacon of the church) and the maiden name of her mother Auguste Wilhelmina Zimmermann. And it listed his father Hermann Eduard Geissler, a bricklayer in town.9 Not one single word about his parents. Nichts. The local researcher also found Emma’s baptismal record, the record of her parents’ marriage and more.10 As to Hermann… you got it. Nichts.

I knew the Geisslers had moved to Gera, a city in eastern Thüringen, by 1901.11 And I knew that Emma was still alive in 1925.12 Combining what I knew with what I could find in the city directories there, I found that Hermann lived at one address from 1924 to 1931, was listed at another address with his daughter Agnes in 1934, and wasn’t listed at all after 1935.13 I figured that Hermann probably moved in with Agnes when Emma died and that he probably died around the last year he was listed in the directory. With the help of a good friend who is far more fluent in German than I am, I wrote to the Gera Standesamt (the functional equivalent of the clerk’s office) and asked for Emma’s and Hermann’s death records.

And I got ’em. Hermann’s death record was a bit of a disappointment. It didn’t list his parents. But it did give the exact date and place of his birth: 21 April 1855 in Ossig bei Zeitz.14 And Ossig bei Zeitz is NOT in Thüringen. It’s just to the north in Sachsen-Anhalt. With trembling fingers (okay, okay, mostly with a mouse), I did a quick search in the Family History Library microfilm. O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay! There are three — count’em, three — rolls of microfilm of church records from the Evangelische Kirche Ossig.15

I ordered all three, waited impatiently for them to arrive, finally got word they were in, broke land speed records getting to the Family History Center, loaded the microfilm with the 1812-1857 records, scrolled carefully to 1855, located the records of taufen (baptisms), ran my finger down the page to April… and there he was.

Hermann Eduard Geisler (only one S and no ß, that goofy German letter that’s usually translated as SS). Born 20 April 1855. Baptized 21 April 1855. Four separate godparents. And in the columns for parents… You know what I’m gonna say already, don’t you? Yup. Hermann Eduard Geissler was the first-born uneheliches kind (illegitimate child) of Friedrike Geisler.16

So… to Friedrike. My dear second great grandmother. How COULD you? I don’t care that you fooled around, dear lady. That’s happened in every one of my family lines right down to the 21st century. But how COULD you be so callous as not to think of your distant descendants? Would it have hurt you to give us the name of the father? And to you, pastor whoever you were (“the local pastor” in the records), would it have hurt you to ASK?

I mean, really.

How rude.


SOURCES

  1. Manifest, SS George Washington, Jan-Feb 1925, p. 59 (stamped, line 6, Hugo Geissler, 4; “New York Passenger Lists, 1820-1957,” digital images, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 6 Jan 2012); citing National Archive microfilm publication T715, roll 3605.
  2. Zivilstandsregister, 1811-1875, Bremen Standesamt; FHL microfilm INTL 1,344,137-1,344,240),
  3. See Marie Nuckel and her pedigree in my (as-yet unsourced) family history site.
  4. Evangelische Kirche Bad Köstritz, Kirchenbuch, Taufregister Seite 69 Nr. 21 aus 1891, Baptismal Record of Hugo Ernst Geissler (digital image of record in possession of JG Russell).
  5. Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.com), “Bad Köstritz.” rev. 12 Apr 2011; see also ibid., “Thuringia”, rev. 22 Dec 2011.
  6. Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.com), “Reuss Younger Line,” rev. 1 Jan 2012.
  7. Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.com), “Republic of Reuss,” rev. 17 Dec 2011.
  8. Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.com), “Thuringia, History.” rev. 22 Dec 2011.
  9. Evangelische Kirche Bad Köstritz, Kirchenbuch, Trauregister Seite 11 Nr. 11 aus 1879, Marriage Record of Hermann Edward Geissler and Emma Louisa Graumüller (digital image of record in possession of JG Russell).
  10. See for example her baptismal record, Evangelische Kirche Bad Köstritz, Kirchenbuch, Taufregister Seite 110 Nr. 52 aus 1855 (digital image of entry in the possession of JG Russell). Also her parents’ marriage record, ibid., Trauregister Seite 434 Nr. 11 aus 1852, Marriage Record of Johann Christoph Graumüller and Auguste Wilhemina Zimmermann (digital image of record in possession of JG Russell).
  11. Gera City Directory (Adreßbuch der Haupt- und Residenzstadt Gera), 1901, p. 29, entry for Geissler, Hermann, ausseher, Moltkestrasse 42 (FHL microfilm INTL 2158071)
  12. Photographic post card, Herman and Emma Geissler to Hugo Ernst, postmarked 10 Dec 1925; original in possession of JG Russell.
  13. Gera City Directories, 1917, 1920, 1922, 1925, 1927, 1929, 1931, 1934, 1936, FHL microfilm INTL 2,158,076-2,158,081.
  14. Sterbeurkunde (death certificate), Nr. 645 (1933), Eduard Hermann Geisler; Standesamt Gera, 31 July 1933 (photocopy provided by Stadtarchiv Gera, 2011).
  15. Evangelische Kirche Ossig (Kr. Zeitz), Kirchenbuchduplikat, 1799-1874 (Staatarchiv Magdeburg); FHL microfilm INTL 1,335,487-1,335,489.
  16. Ossig Taufregister 1855 nr. 4, Hermann Eduard Geisler; FHL microfilm 1,335,488.