Happy Thanksgiving from Karen’s Chatt!
Wishing each one of you a blessed and happy Thanksgiving. May your home be filled with happiness and joy and thankfulness as you gather with family and friends today.
Nov 22
Nov 20
This is the tombstone of Edward Ludwig Schumm located in row 1 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Schumm, Van Wert County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:
Edward
Ludwig
Schumm
Sohnlein von
Heinrich
u. Rosina
Schumm
Died 5 Oct.
1885
Alter
5 Jahre, 8 Mo.
u. 3 Tage.
Edward Ludwig Schumm, little son of Heinrich and Rosina Schumm died 5 October 1885, aged 5 years, 8 months, and 3 days.
Edward Ludwig Schumm was born 2 February 1880 to Henry and Rosina (Schinnerer) Schumm. He was baptized at home on 15 February 1880, with Friedrich Schinnerer and Ludwig Schumm serving as sponsors. Friedrich Schinnerer was most likely the boy’s grandfather and Ludwig Schumm was likely his uncle. His sponsors would have been my great-great-grandfather and my great-grandfather respectively.
Edward Ludwig Schumm was enumerated in one census, the 1880 census, when he was only 4 months old. The Henry Schumm household in 1880: Henry, 35; Rosann A, 26; John C, 6; Clara R E, 4; William M M, 3; Hanah M, 2; and Edward L, 4 months. [1] The father Henry was a farmer.
Little Edward Ludwig Schumm died at 3:00 in the morning of 5 October 1885. He was only 5 years, 8 months, and 3 days old. He was buried on 6 October and his funeral text was Luke 2:49. The literal translation of the Zion Schumm’s records indicate that he died of a sore throat.
The father Henry Schumm was referred to as Heinrich Schumm I in Edward’s church death record, but in the Schumm family he is known as River Henry. There were several Henry Schumms living in the area at that time and to easily differentiate them, this Henry was called River Henry because he lived along the St. Marys River, just east of Willshire.
Henry Schumm and I descend from the same branch of the Schumm family, which is my maternal line. Henry’s parents were immigrants George “Ludwig” and Maris Barbara (Pflueger) Schumm, who were my second and third great-grandparents. And, Henry’s wife Anna “Rosina” Schinnerer was the daughter of my second great-grandfather Friedrich Schinnerer and his first wife Margaretha “Mary” Deier. They were both immigrants, too.
Henry and Rosina Schumm had 10 children before Rosina’s death in 1890. The next year Henry married Lena Geisler and they eventually had 3 children of their own.
In interesting side story about this family is that my paternal great-grandmother Christina (Rueck) Miller stayed with the River Henry Schumm family in the early 1880s. My great-grandmother Christina undoubtedly knew their son Edward Ludwig and probably even took care of him from time to time. In fact, Christina’s daughter Maggie was only about a year older than Edward Ludwig and the two children probably played together.
Christina Rueck had immigrated with her family in about 1880 and her father purchased 80 acres along the St. Marys River, close to where River Henry lived. Christina’s father sold that land and moved to Oregon in about 1882 but Christina stayed behind in Van Wert County, with the Schumms, and eventually married immigrant Jacob Miller, who lived in the Chatt area. During the time Christina stayed with the Schumms, Rosina (Schinnerer) Schumm taught Christina how to quilt, something Christina enjoyed doing the rest of her life. In fact, I have two quilts that Christina and Rosina worked on together, stitched in the early 1880s.
[1] 1880 U.S. Census, Willshire, Van Wert, Ohio, ED 154, p. 443A, dwelling/family 4, Henry Schumm; digital image by subscription, Ancestry.com (https://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?htx=List&dbid=6742&offerid=0%3a7858%3a0 : accessed 19 Nov 2018).
Nov 16
This past week, on 11 November, marked the 100th anniversary of Armistice Day, the official end of WWI.
In last week’s blog post I mentioned Private August Froning, a soldier from Mercer County, Ohio, who was killed in action in the Vosges Mountains, near Linthal, France, during WWI. Froning and Venedocia native Private Glenn Homer Nichols both served in the 54th Army Infantry and were among nearly 50 soldiers killed near Linthal in September 1918. The fallen were buried in their temporary military cemetery of Oberlauchen. [1]
A Centennial Commemoration was held at that temporary military cemetery at Oberlauchen on 29-30 September of this year to honor the American soldiers killed in action near their town and to restore a monument to those soldiers that had been destroyed by the Nazis during WWII. Over a thousand people took part in this year’s memorial events that included the inauguration of a monument, a celebration of peace, an exhibition, a concert, and ceremonies with the schools.
I want to thank all those that planned and participated in this Centennial Commemoration, and a special thanks to Hubert Martin, of Linthal, France, for honoring our two local servicemen and the other American soldiers killed near his home town. This past week Martin sent me 2 newspaper clippings about the event. You can see the nice monument they dedicated. I used Google Translate to translate the news articles since I do not know any French. Although it is a literal translation, you still get a very good idea of what took place at the memorial event.
[Note: a “stele” is an upright stone slab or column decorated with figures or inscriptions.]
Source: Linthal,France, Thursday 4 Oct 2018:
Photo caption: The president of the Guebwilleroise Section of the French Souvenir, Gilbert Meyer, and the students of Haut-Florival laid a wreath in memory of American fighters who had fallen on the Vosges mountains.
Linthal Great War
A stele for American soldiers
A stele recalling the sacrifice of American soldiers on the Vosgean peaks in 1918 was inaugurated last weekend at the Oberlauchen pass.
It was a small injustice that was repaired: in June 1940, during the invasion of Florival by the troops of Nazi Germany, the various memorial sites erected after the First World War had systematically been destroyed. Most of the monuments had subsequently been replaced. Only the ephemeral Franco-American cemetery in Oberlauchen (near the Breitfirst, about 1200 m away) was still deprived of a visible place of remembrance.
Various memory associations have seized the file, commemorations of the centenary of the Great War being an ideal pretext to repair this oversight. At the origin of this collective project, the Guebwilleroise section of the French Souvenir, the memorandum association Amitie Florival – Magnoac – Tregor and Alsace – United States-Haut-Rhin.
We wanted to pay tribute to the 113 American soldiers who died on the peaks during the fighting from July to October 1918, detailed the associative leaders. We found some of their family members across the United States. Texas, New Jersey, Florida.
Saturday morning, the stele was inaugurated in the presence of many elected, military, members of associations and schoolchildren associated with the event. A major American delegation was attending the event, led by Kara McDonald, US Consul General in Strasbourg: relatives of fallen soldiers on the site, including former Texas senator Jerry Patterson but also the military. Dean Patterson, one of the parents of soldiers, spoke on behalf of the family and elect of Count Blunt in Alabama and Clifton Truman Daniel, grandson of President Harry Truman, who fought on the ridges.
Several sheaves were then deposited at the foot of the monument and the assembly was collected while two clarions of the Soultz firefighters battery played the ringtones to the American and French dead. End of first articl
Source: Linthal, France, Wednesday 3 October 2018:
Photo caption: Recollection at the end of the ceremony.
Linthal Commemoration at the Oberlauchen
The stele in memory of the Americans inaugurated
The sacrifice of the American soldiers who fell on the Vosges crest during the First World War was recalled on Saturday at the Oberlauchen pass. A stele was inaugurated in the same time fighters.
The Clarion Resonne on the clearing and remembered the sacrifice of the American soldiers fallen far from home. This ceremony which took place in the pure military tradition has unveiled the stele installed on the spot by the Guebwiller section of the French Souvenir. The engagement of the American soldiers during the war of 1914-1918 was recalled.
A large American delegation took part in the event: descendants of fallen soldiers on the site, but also a military delegation of the country and Kara McDonald, consul general of the United States in Strasbourg. The latter were surrounded by a large French delegation: sub-prefect, deputy, mayors and deputies, representatives of patriotic associations, soldiers of Colmar 15/2, schoolchildren Lautenbach-Zell and Linthal – put in contribution for the deposits of sheaves.
The counsel and the sub-prefect brought down the veil which covered the monument. This solemn moment was followed by speeches including the reading of a message from Dean Patterson speaking on behalf of the families and elders of Count Blunt in Alabama and that of Clifton Truman Daniel, grandson of President Harry Truman fighting on the ridges.
Several wreaths were placed at the foot of the monument, and the assembly gathered for two clarions from the Soultz firefighters’ drumming drums playing the American and French death ringtones.
Thank you Hubert Martin and to all who took part in this memorial event to honor our fallen soldiers.
We must never forget.
[1] Private August Froning and Venedocia native Private Glenn Homer Nichols were killed in action near the village of Linthal, in the Vosges Mountains of France. Both were members of the Army’s 54th Infantry. Froning was killed on 29 September 1918 and Nichols on 21 September 1918. Both were buried nearby, in the temporary military cemetery of Oberlauchen. Today a tombstone monument to August Froning stands in Saint Sebastian Cemetery, Mercer County. August Froning was born in Mercer County on 30 January 1892, the son of Herman and Catherine (Pickenbrook) Froning. He was a resident of rural Chickasaw before the war.
Nov 13
This is the tombstone of Iris Blanch Schumm, located in row 1 of Zion Lutheran Cemetery, Schumm, Van Wert County, Ohio. The marker is inscribed:
Iris Blanch
Dau of
G. & S.
SCHUMM
Died
24 Aug. 1884
Aged
1 Y, 4 M, 22 D
Suffer the little children to come unto
me, and forbid them not for of such is
the Kingdom of God. Mark 10:14
According to Zion Schumm’s records, Iris Blanch Schumm was born 2 April 1883, the daughter of George and Sadie (McLellan) Schumm. Iris Blanch was baptized 27 May 1883 at the home of Friedrich Schumm Sr, with Heinrich Schumm III and Barbara Schumm serving as her sponsors.
Iris Blanch Schumm died 24 August 1884 in Portland, Indiana. [1] She was 1 year, 4 months, and 22 days old. She was buried on the 26th. Zion Schumm’s records also mention that her father was living in Portland, Indiana, at the time of her death.
Iris Blanch’s father, George Friedrich Schumm (1856-1927), was the son of Johann Friedrich and Magdalena (Meyer) Schumm. Her mother was Sadie McClellan (1866-1947). The parents are buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Saginaw, Michigan. The couple had another daughter, Olga Magdeline (1904-1988), who married Otto Carl Stroebel.
[1] “Indiana Death Index, 1882-1920,” database, FamilySearch.org, Iris B. Schrum, 24 Aug 1884, Portland, Ind.
Nov 09
This coming Sunday, 11 November, we commemorate Veterans Day. Originally called Armistice Day, Veterans Day was created to recognize of the end of World War I. Fighting between the Allied nations and Germany ceased on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month in 1918. That date is generally regarded as the end of “the war to end all wars.”
One hundred years ago this Sunday!
Veterans Day was made a legal holiday in 1938.
Because this year is the 100th anniversary of the end of WWI, Hubert Martin, of Linthal, Alsace, France, last year brought to my attention that a young man from Mercer County, Ohio, was killed in action near Linthal during WWI.
Martin is the president of the Historical Memorial Society in Linthal, in the Vosges Mountains, and was planning a special ceremony to be held in September 2018 to honor 49 U.S. soldiers who were killed in those mountains during the war. Martin was also preparing a book in honor of those fallen soldiers, with two pages devoted to each soldier, to include information about each soldier, their military life, their family, and their hometown.
August Froning was the Mercer County soldier killed in action in those French mountains, near the village of Linthal, on 29 September 1918, while serving in Company L of the 54th Infantry, U.S. Army. He was buried in their temporary military cemetery of Oberlauchen. Today a tombstone monument to August Froning stands in Saint Sebastian Cemetery, Mercer County. [1]
August Froning was born 30 January 1892 in Mercer County. He was a resident of rural Chickasaw and was the son of Herman and Catherine (Pickenbrook) Froning. From my research I learned that he has a nephew living in the area and possibly even more relatives.
Froning’s name is listed on Mercer County’s WWI Honor Roll plaque, located in front of the Celina American Legion Post 210, on State Route 703.
Martin also told me that another area soldier, Glenn Homer Nichols, from the Venedocia area, was killed in the Vosges Mountains of France on 21 September 1918. Nichols was also from the 54th Infantry.
Their ceremony is a wonderful tribute to honor those United States soldiers who were killed near their town.
My dad and his two brothers all served in the U.S. Army at different times.
We owe all of our veterans a big Thank You for their service to our country.
Let us never forget their service.
Remember to thank a veteran on Veterans Day, or better yet, thank them every day. And remember those veterans who are no longer with us, who sacrificed so much for us.
[1] Find a Grave memorial no. 25501993, August H. Froning, Saint Sebastian Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio.
You're welcome, Karen. I'm still working on this also. Thank you so much for all of your wonderful Mercer County…
Very interesting and great picture (I had neersee before) of the church! Thanks for sharing this, Karen.
Ha! I see why you say that. Your original surname was probably something similar to Schmitt.
Thank you for letting me know.
I guess he could have picked a worse name lol, Thanks Karen