_____________________
|
_Humphrey DE BOHUN __|
| (1220 - ....) |
| |_Maud DE LUSIGNAN ___+
| (1208 - ....)
|
|--Eleanor BOHUN
| (1240 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|_____________________
[10958]
Civil War Co B 16th Regiment Infantry
MIA 6 Apr 1862, Shiloh, TN
1830-1840 residence Hebron, Washington, NY
JESSE HILL / HILLS (1807 – 1862) 1830-40 residence: Hebron, Washington, NY
Civil War: Co. B 16th Regt Inf., residence Concord, enl. 24 Oct 1861
Remarks: MIA, 6 Apr 1862, Shiloh, TN
m. (1) Pamelia Gould (1807 NY-05 Dec 1847 WI) parents: John Burr & Mary (Moore) Gould
5-children:
1. John (1829)
2. William, Sr. (22 Mar 1831 NY – 21 Apr 1920 WI)
m. (1) 1857 Phoebe Sitts (dau. of George Sitts), (1833 - 3 Nov 1868)
Clarissa Elizabeth (1859-d. age 9 mos),
Frances Luella (1862-1936), m. (1) Eli Mack (2) Ralph Clemetson
George (1868), m. Hattie Schaffer
m. (2) 1869 Delana Fuller, d. 1885 (m. 25 Apr 1869, Clark Co., WI)
William Jr. (1870-1916, m. 1895 Bertha Lenling), Ray (1875-1942)
m. (3) 1886 Tammie J. (Fuller) Meacham Nichols (1832-1906)
Nichols children: William, Lester, Myron, Frank/George, Jennie, Fannie
Meacham children: George, Charles
3. Calvin (1834 NY-1870 MI)
4. Roxy Jane (1838 NY-1890), m. Abram J. Smith (Clark Co., WI)
5. Oliver Hagard (1842 NY-1917 OK), m. Huldah Elvira Graves (Clark Co., WI)
[9849] Robert was an electrical engineer with the F. A. A.
__
|
_Living_______|
| |
| |__
|
|
|--Barney Ellis STACK
| (1952 - 1970)
| __
| |
|_Living_______|
|
|__
_Georg Jakob WINTERMANTEL _
| (1746 - 1795)
_Johann Jakob WINTERMANTEL _|
| (1773 - 1805) m 1795 |
| |_Barbara JACOB ____________
| (1753 - 1786)
|
|--John Jacob WINTERMANTEL
| (1799 - 1879)
| _Johann Jakob MUELLER _____
| | (1743 - 1782)
|_Cathrina MULLER ___________|
(1778 - 1854) m 1795 |
|_Anna Rosina HOERNER ______
(1746 - 1778)
[1323]
Immigrated May 1854 ship Bremen
Per L. Brown, 25 Apr 2010, " (Her mothr) She didn't remember much more than that, other than my grandmother (Amelia Ella Wintermantel) had said that her grandfather was a Burgermeister of Berlin."
I (DZS) believe this refers to John Jacob Wintermantel. The traditional story I got from my grandmother is that he was the Burgermeister of a small town in Germany, probably Ihringen, not Berlin.
line 30 dwelling 1206 household #1187
Wintermantel, Jacob age 61 farmer value RE $400 born Baden
Salome 60 Baden
John Jacob 32 butcher Baden
Mary 28 "
William 22 "
Rosa 18 in school "
Christian 16 in school "
Line 25 Dwelling # 144 Household #134
Smitty, Matthew age 49 Farm Laborer value PE $400 born: Bavaria
Sarah 48 "
Mathew 18 Farm Laborer "
Christian 11 WI
Catherine 4 WI
line 30 Household # 135
Wintermantle, Jacob 70 Farmer Value RE $600 PE $150 Bavaria
Sally 70 "
line 32 Dwelling # 145 Household # 136
Wintermantle, Jacob Jr. 38 Farmer Value RE $1200 PE $500 Bavaria
Agnes 33 Switzerland
Jacob 10 WI
Sally 8 WI
William 6 WI
John 4 WI
Sarah 2 WI
The Wintermantel Family
The Wintermantel family originated in Switzerland from around the late 1300's and were of the Aristocracy. Those we have record of were from the Freiburg area of Germany in the province of Baden Wurtemberg.
According to Paul Wintermantel, sometime prior to the Thirty Years War, which began in 1618, there were three Wintermantel brothers. One remained in Switzerland while another journeyed to Austria and the third emigrated to the Baden Wurtemberg region of Germany. As far as we are able to determine, all Wintermantels originating out of Germany are descendants of the brother who emigrated to Baden from Switzerland.
John Jacob Wintermantel lived close enough to the Alps that he could see them while herding the sheep and cattle. Like the Alsace region of France, the Baden area is wine growing country. John Jacob was a wine merchant, also. There are still many Wintermantels in the Baden area to this day. Most Wintermantels were peasants or farmers. Many were Lutheran although some were Roman Catholic as documented by old birth records.
Beginning with the Thirty Years War until Bismark consolidated the German states in 1871, there was civil strife and religious fighting between the Lutherans and Catholics throughout Germany. During the 1800's there was a mass migration of people to America, including John Jacob Wintermantel and his family about 1855.
The route followed by the family was by wagon to Chur, Switzerland. From Chur, the family crossed into France traveling northward to the Alsace Lorraine area where they worked in the vineyards for a while. They traveled along the Seine River to the vicinity of Paris and on to England where they boarded a ship to America for the three week crossing. At the time this trip was made, it was more than likely a clipper ship. After reaching New York, John Jacob Wintermantel's family settled in Wisconsin at Prairie du Sac.
Three of John Jacob Wintermantel's sons served in the Civil War. Christian ran away
from home and joined the army when he was 17 years old (1859). He fought in
Company K of the 26th division of the Wisconsin Infantry for three years. He was in
many of the largest battles including Fredericksburg, Chancellorville and Gettysburg.
George Jacob left his wife and small children to serve in the Army at Richmond,
Virginia during the War. He married at the age of 27 in 1859 to Angie Yoos.
Wilhelm (William) served three years in the Third Wisconsin Calvary Regiment. He
fought in Indian Territory as well as Missouri, Kansas and Arkansas.
All three sons returned safely to Wisconsin from the War although all suffered from
arthritis as a result of being in the cold and damp. George Jacob remained in
Wisconsin while his brothers, John Jacob Jr. and William moved to Iowa in 1865.
Christian met and married Matilda Fey in Sauk City, Wisconsin in 1866. They
followed William and John Jacob,Jr. to Iowa in 1868 with their two daughters, Rosina
and Tillie.
Christian moved around in Iowa as the records show his son William born in Hull,
Iowa and Clara born in Blackhawk. Christian brought his family to Oregon on the first
Northern Pacific train, probably to Portland. They washed their clothes on Sunday
when the train did not run. The family moved to Jefferson, Oregon in 1883 and lived
there before moving on to Canby, Oregon. Christian died in 1897 and is buried in the-
Zion cemetery in Canby.
Matilda Fey Wintermantel then married William Druschell. They raised his children
since his wife had died in 1898. Matilda died in July 1922 and is buried with Christian
in the Canby cemetery. Most or all of Christian's sons departed home as carpenters
and eventually went into farming.
[1329]
Some think the description of the view from Ihringen and of the journey out of the country to America, perhaps copied from another Wintermantel source that lived elsewhere. Following is what Julie Edwards had to say about this issue:
'OK, so it looks like a concensus on the Chur journey being incorrect. And
as far as being able to see the Alps from Ihringen, here is a reply from
Werner Schmidlin, a Schmiedlin cousin, who was born and raised in
Bischoffingen (next to Ihringen), and now lives in Australia, so he would
know for sure...
------
"To your question could one see the Alps from Bischoffingen or Ihringen?
The answer is no. If you look behind you in Ihringen or Bischoffingen
you see the hills of the Kaiserstuhl. If you look west, you see the
Vogue Mountains in France. If you go on top of the Hills on the
Kaiserstuhl and look east, you see part of the Black Forrest. If you
look towards Basel, about 50 Km away you do not see the Alps as the
northern part of Switzerland is fairly flat or slightly undulated and the
Alps are a fair way back."
Section C; Row 5