Born This Day in 1886 ~ Addney S. GODDARD

Name: Addney S. GODDARD
Birth: 20 February 1886, Salineville, Ohio
Parents: John E. GODDARD and Martha Jane EARL
Spouse: Leah Catherine BEADNELL
Death: 16 August 1969, Columbiana County, Ohio,
Relationship to Hollie: 1st cousin 5x removed & husband of 1st cousin 3x removed

Born This Day in 1897 ~ Nettie Irene MOORE

Name: Nettie Irene MOORE
Birth: 19 February 1897, Toronto, Jefferson, Ohio
Parents: William Grant MOORE and Nancy Jane HALE
Spouse: Emmet Ambrose SMITH
Death: 16 May 1976, Salem, Columbiana, Ohio
Relationship to Hollie: great aunt

Born This Day in 1818 ~ John WYCOFF

John Wycoff
John Wycoff

 

Name: John WYCKOFF
Birth: 18 February 1818, Brooke County, Virginia
Parents: James WYCOFF and Maria PETERSON
Spouse: Never Married
Death: 5 April 1893, St. Louis City, St. Louis, Missouri
Relationship to Hollie: 1st cousin 5x removed
John Wycoff
John Wycoff

Born This Day in 1776 ~ Bethenia TRUAX

Name: Bethenia TRUAX
Birth: 17 February 1776, Bedford County, Pennsylvania
Parents: John TRUAX and Jane PITTMAN
Spouse: John TRUAX
Death: 12 March 1851, Morrow County, Ohio,
Relationship to Hollie: wife of 5th great uncle & granddaughter of 6th great grandfather

Born This Day in 1927 ~ Wayne SCHRADER

Wayne and Dolores Schrader
Wayne and Dolores Schrader

 

Name: Wayne SCHRADER
Birth: 16 February 1927, Louisville, Stark, Ohio
Parents: Lloyd Albert SCHRADER and Mary Bruce GISINGER
Spouse: Dolores Mae SOLENTHALER
Death: 05 February 2011, Canton, Stark, Ohio
Relationship to Hollie: paternal half uncle

Born This Day in 1931 ~ Clement Dean MOORE

Dean and Bill Moore
Dean and Bill Moore

Happy Birthday, Uncle Dean!

 

Name: Clement Dean Moore
Birth: 15 February 1931, Bergholz, Ohio
Parents: David MOORE and Elsie Marcella HACKATHORN
Spouse: Nancy REEDER, Carol Coleman BLACKLEDGE
Relationship to Hollie: maternal uncle

52 Ancestors: #7 Johann Nickel MEY ~ Bye-Bye, Love

Léon Perrault [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Léon Perrault [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

I’d like to imagine that there are some truly romantic love stories out there among my ancestors, especially since today is Valentine’s Day, but there really are none that I am privy to.  Not that we observe this particular “holiday” here in this house… It was kind of fun when my kids were very young, or when I was much younger than I am now, but these days it is mostly a non-event. We are spending this windy, snowy, wintery day by laying around and reading and then ordering in pizza for dinner. That’s pretty much a perfect day! Perhaps I’ll bake some heart-shaped cookies later to warm up the kitchen. Anyway, as usual, I digress.

After looking over those distant relatives with surnames of Love, and Valentine, and Hart in an attempt to find something that would resonate with Amy Johnson Crow’s suggested optional theme for the 52 Ancestors 52 Weeks Challenge for this week and not feeling inspired, I started searching for a couple who might have been married around the 14th of February. I found that I have exactly one.

Admittedly, I have not spent as much time on my dad’s ancestral line because gathering the information has been such a chore. My dad’s father died when he was three years old and no one really knows too much about that family and then, add to that, the fact that my dad’s father was born with the surname Otto, but for some unknown reason started going by the name of Schrader as a young adult. I know! Like I said, it’s mostly a chore. No one seems to have much information on my grandmother’s family either, so it has been like starting with a blank piece of paper…literally.

There is an interesting branch of my father’s line, though, the Mey family (and if I could figure out how to type an umlaut on this laptop, I would do so). Johann Nickel Mey is my paternal 7th great grandfather. He was born on 29 May 1673 in Alsenz, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany to Johannes Mey, a judge from Callbach and Margaretha Lauers from Niedermoschel. Johann Nickel was a shoemaker and married Anna Catharina Beyer on 18 April 1699 in Niederhausen. Two sons were born to the couple over the next few years and it appears that Anna Catharina died in childbirth in 1707 at the young age of 26. Both sons died in infancy.

Evangelische Kirche Niederhausen By Nahefoto 19:03, 30 December 2007 (UTC) (Own work) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Evangelische Kirche Niederhausen By Nahefoto 19:03, 30 December 2007 (UTC) (Own work) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

On 14 February 1708, Johann Nickel married again. This time to Maria Catharina Graeff, the daughter of Anna Margaretha and Johann Nicolas Graeff in the Niederhausen Reformed Church. According to essays written by Fred T. Mays on the mayhouse.org website, this day was also a special day in the village because St. Valentine was the protecting saint of the congregation. This marriage then, is my romantic story for today.

Johann Nickel and Maria Catharina would go on to have seven sons and three daughters and although two of the boys would die as infants, the rest all grew to adulthood and married. During this time, Johann Nickel became a judge as well. On 21 February 1743, Johann Nickel succumbed to an illness and passed away. At some point after his death, the family began making plans to move to America.

The years following The Thirty Years War in Germany were followed by many years of religious persecutions and other upheavals. This resulted in more than thirty thousand immigrants flooding into Pennsylvania just prior to the Revolutionary War during the years 1727 through 1776. During the summer of 1748, Maria Catharina said goodbye to her husband, long buried, and two of her children who were staying behind, to travel up the Rhine to Rotterdam on the North Sea. There she boarded the ship Edinburgh along with three sons and two daughters, bound for a new life.  They arrived at the port of Philadelphia on 05 September 1748.

Palatines who were living in Pennsylvania said that they had left the Palatinate because of religious reasons and financial difficulties. Because they were allowed a greater liberty of conscience in Pennsylvania, they left the Rhine valley for the Conestoga Country. And it was here in Conestoga Township in Lancaster County where Maria Catherina died in 1751 barely three years after she had left her homeland. It was also here where one of her sons, Johann Leonhardt May (my 6th great grandfather), became a wagoner – Conestoga style. But then, that’s another story…

http://www.nostorytoosmall.com/posts/category/52-ancestors-challenge/

Lineage Notecard

Name: Johann Nickel Mey

Parents: Johannes Mey and Margaretha Lauers

Spouse: Anna Catharina Beyer, Maria Catharina Graeff

Surnames: MEY, LAUERS, GRAEFF, MAY, SCHRADER

Relationship to Hollie: 7th great grandfather

  1. Johann Nickel Mey
  2. Johann Leonhardt May
  3. Johann Daniel May
  4. Daniel May
  5. John G. May
  6. Joseph C. May
  7. Lydia Pearl May
  8. Lloyd Albert Schrader
  9. George Orren Schrader
  10. Hollie Ann Schrader

SOURCES:

“Deutschland, Heiraten, 1558-1929,” index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/NZ6K-13L : accessed 14 February 2015), Johannes Mey in entry for Johann Nickel Mey and Anna Catharina Beyer, 18 Apr 1699; citing Alsenz, Bayern, Germany; FHL microfilm 193,751.

Egge, Marion F. Pennsylvania German Roots across the Ocean. Philadelphia, PA: Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania, 2000. Print.

Eshleman, H. Frank. Historic Background and Annals of the Swiss and German Pioneer Settlers of Southeastern Pennsylvania, and of Their Remote Ancestors, from the Middle of the Dark Ages, down to the Time of the Revolutionary War; an Authentic History .. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub., 1969. Print.

Jordan, John W. N.p.: n.p., n.d. Print.

Rupp, I. Daniel. General Remarks on the Origin of Surnames Interpretation of Baptismal Names, Which Occur in the Collection of Thirty Thousand Names of German, Swiss and Other Immigrants ; to Which Are Added Other Baptismal Names, Both of Males and Females. Harrisburg: T.F. Scheffer, Printer, 1856. Print.

STRASSBURGER, RALPH BEAVER. Pennsylvania German Pioneers: A Publication of the Original Lists of Arrivals in the Port of Philadelphia from 1727 to 1808. Edited by William John Hinke. Norristown [PA]: Pennsylvania German Society, 1934. 3 vols. Vols. 1 and 3 reprinted by Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, 1964. Repr. 1983. Vol. 1. 1727-1775. 776p.

Yoder, Don, editor.  Pennsylvania German Immigrants 1709-1786, Lists Consolidated from Yearbooks of The Pennsylvania German Folklore Society, Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, 1980

www.bedfordconnection.org

www.mayhouse.org

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3APerrault_Leon_Jean_Basile_Cupids_Arrows.jpg

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AEv._Kirche_Niederhausen.JPG

Born This Day in 1856 ~ Sarah Ann “Sadie” MOORE

Name: Sarah Ann MOORE
Birth: 14 February 1856, Coshocton County, Ohio
Parents: Charles MOORE and Jane JOHNSON
Spouse: John C. DUKE
Death: 12 September 1933, Carrollton, Carroll County, Ohio
Relationship to Hollie: 2nd great aunt

Born This Day in 1888 ~ Jessie L. CAMPBELL

Name: Jessie L. CAMPBELL
Birth: 13 February 1888, Springfield Twp., Jefferson County, Ohio
Parents: Harvey H. CAMPBELL and Mary A. “Mollie” BROWN
Spouse: William Walter HACKATHORN
Death: 18 February 1951, Fulton, Ohio
Relationship to Hollie: wife of 1st cousin 2x removed
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