So, I started writing this almost 3 years ago exactly. Ugh, better
late than never! Back to 2014…
Sophia Müller Steinmetz Frey |
Sophia Müller Steinmetz Frey is one of my
great-great-great-grandmothers. Her son
Albert Frey was my grandmother’s grandfather.
Sophia’s eighth of my grandmother’s ancestry had been blank for a long
time. The other sides of Granny’s tree
were finally filled in thanks to the Třeboň archives online, and many trips to
my local Family History Center renting microfilms from Kanton Zürich. So I finally decided to focus on Sophia, no
easy task with a name as common as Müller/Miller.
Her life after arrival in the US is well accounted for with many
records, except her first marriage to Joseph Steinmetz and her exact date of
arrival. I still haven’t found those
records, but I figured they probably wouldn’t shed any light on the exact
location of her birth anyways.
-Many records agree she was from Württemberg, born in October
1838.
-She was married twice. Her
first marriage was to Joseph Steinmetz from Alsace and her second to Ulrich
Frey from Zürich.
-Joseph Steinmetz purchased land in Sumner Township (part of Calmar Township at that point) on May 1, 1855.
-In the 1925 Iowa census, it states for each person the location of their parents' marriage. The only one of the Steinmetz children living at that time is Joseph Jr, and it says that Joseph Steinmetz Sr and Sophia Müller were married in Illinois.
-One family legend states Joseph was living in California during the gold rush and had written somewhere (back home to Alsace?) asking for a woman to be sent to marry. When he went to meet/pick up his new bride, he saw Sophia and decided he'd rather marry her. Sophia had immigrated to the US as an escort for her sister's child, her sister having immigrated earlier and the child couldn't travel with his/her mother b/c he/she was ill at the time. So they got married and returned to Iowa. The timeline seems to match, but it seems unlikely Sophia would have been taking a child to California during the gold rush, when there were very few women heading out there with the men. Not impossible but it doesn't seem likely.
-The county record of her death states Sophia’s parents were Carl Müller and Friederike Windmüller. The informant was her daughter Regina Steinmetz Herold.
I thought if I waited long enough the Württemberg immigration index would be updated, maybe some German parish records would be indexed and imaged on Ancestry but neither happened. Maybe the next best thing would be Iowa parish records. Maybe when joining the church or her burial record would have something. Maybe a baptismal sponsor for one of the kids would lead to locating relatives of hers who immigrated here as well?
From family stories we knew she and Joseph went to the catholic St. Clement's Church outside of Spillville. She did not convert to Catholicism, and after marrying Ulrich Frey they attended the German Congregational Church in Fort Atkinson. Both churches closed long ago. Luckily a copy of the St. Clement's records are held by the Decorah Genealogy Association.
The St. Clement's records did not have any info, other than confirming that she did not convert (the word "protestant" appears after her name on daughter Regina's baptism). Baptismal sponsors were neighbors who weren't related to either parent.
Baptism of Regina Steinmetz Herold from St. Clement's Church, Spillville |
Tracking down the congregational records proved more difficult. I had consulted distant relatives from the area and some other acquaintances but nothing turned up. I think I ended up googling or digging through some random family tree from the area and noticed someone had listed the church records as a source on their information. Luckily I found an email address and he responded! He gave me copies of a baptism index (not many) and told me to contact a man in Fort Atkinson who had originally given these baptisms to his mother. I met with this man and he gave me the contact information for the Congregational archives in Boston, where the original church records were kept.
After getting a few copies of sections from the book from the archives, I hired a genealogist in Boston to go look through the book for mentions of my relatives.
Lo and behold, the record of Sophia's burial had the information I was looking for:
Sophia's burial record from the German Congregational Church, Fort Atkinson |
Transcription:
Am 18ten April 1914 verstarb bei ihrer Tochter Frau Regina Herold in Cresco Iowa eins der ersten Glieder unserer Kirchgemeinschaft die Wittwe Sophia Frei, geborene Müller. Sie war am 28sten October 1838 in Unterroth, Oberamt Gailsdorf, Württemberg geboren und war also im Alter war 75 Jahren, 5 Monaten und 20 Tagen. Am 21sten April wurde sie auf dem Friedhofs in Fort Atkinson beigesetzt. Pastor Hein hielt die Begräbnis gnedigt in der Methodisten Kirche in Fort Atkinson in englisch.
Translation:
On the 18th April 1914 one of the first members of our church-community, the widow Sophia Frey, born Müller, passed away at (the home of) her daughter Mrs. Regina Herold in Cresco Iowa. She was born on the 28th October 1838 in Unterrot, Oberamt Gailsdorf, Württemberg and so was aged 75 years, 5 months and 20 days. On the 21st of April she was buried in the cemetery in Fort Atkinson, Pastor Hein held the funeral of honorable interment at the Methodist Church in Fort Atkinson in English.
So now to order the microfilms! I was so excited I ordered the wrong films and had to cancel the order the next day. Then I thought I found the right films and ordered those.
They ended up being backordered (up to a month before they'd arrive) but I couldn't wait. So I contacted a historian who lives near Unterrot and has published volumes about different families from the area. He looked through his records compiled on Unterrot parish and found that there's no record of Sophia born at that time in Unterrot village or parish, nor any families with the combination of names Müller-Windmüller there, despite there being several Müller and Windmüller families. He suggested perhaps she was from a close by village Oberrot, and someone along the way had mistaken the two.
This seemed like a set back, I wasn't sure what to do with the potential wrong microfilms (again) waiting to be shipped to me. I then found someone in Michigan who has ancestors from this
region as well, and she has a large number of the church records from parishes
in this region on permanent loan at her family history center. She offered to
look in the Oberrot records and the other parishes in the area to see if she
could find Sophia. She wasn't in the Oberrot or Gaildorf records (I ended up
checking Unterrot/Münster and Gschwend parishes myself when the microfilms arrived and also found nothing at
all), but she found a family that matched in the Fichtenberg parish records.
The image she sent me (translated here at the end) is from the
Fichtenberg Familienbuch. In Germany and related countries, churches sometimes
arranged all their current member information like a census, listing families
with complete vital information sometimes including notes on immigration.
Sophia was from the village of Honkling (previously spelled Hohenkling
and Hohnkling), which belonged to Fichtenberg parish but administratively
belonged to Unterrot. It’s the only village in the Unterrot “county” that
wasn’t also part of Unterrot parish, which accounted for all the confusion.
Her parents names were Leonhart and Dorothea. She did have
siblings named Carl and Friederika, so perhaps her daughter Regina knew those names but didn’t realize they were an aunt and
uncle, and not her grandparents’ names when acting as the informant on Sophia's death record.
Also, I returned to the emigration application records for Württemberg and found that
Sophia’s siblings Carolina and Jacob got permission to emigrate on 11/3/1855
and they were taking with them their sister’s child! So perhaps Sophia ended up
tagging a long with them or decided to join them after the paperwork was
completed, assuming the oral history of the family was correct in that regard.
Despite the number of them immigrating, I haven’t found any of them in ship
manifests or in any record in the US yet.
I ordered the Fichtenberg church records, which of course were
also backordered and also put in an order
for Kirchenkirnberg books, where Leonhart Müller is from.
Here is a tranlation of the image she sent me:
Johann Leonhart Müller, a weaver born 4/7/1793 son of Johann
Melchior Müller of Horlachen who was also a weaver. Married on 9/14/1816 to Eva
Dorothea Windmüller born 3/15/1794 daughter of Johann Adam Windmüller, a farmer
and Anna Margaretha Deininger of Honkling.
Children:
Christina Jacobina born 10/29/1816 died 12/30/1817
Katharina Maria born 9/11/1818
Christina Susanna* born 10/9/1819 died 11/11/1854
Susanna Barbara born 2/7/1821 immigrated 1867
Friederika^ born 8/15/1823 married 5/5/1868 to Matthias Bäßler
Jacob Michael born 9/14/1825
Eva Maria born 3/7/1828 died 11/9/1848
Eva Dorothea~ born 5/26/1830 emigrated 1855
Christina Carolina born 10/12/1833 emigrated 1855
Johann Jacob born 7/14/1836 emigrated 1855
Christina Sophia born 10/28/1838 emigrated 1855
Christian Carl born 2/3/1843 died 9/13/1865
Illegitimate (Grand)Children
* Eva Friederika born 11/22/1838 died 3/27/1839
^ Eva Susanna Catharina born 5/3/1850
^ Johanna Carolina born 1/28/1856
~ Johann Jacob (Wörner) born 4/4/1853, emigrated
As of 2017 I still haven't found Joseph and Sophia's marriage record, nor their names in ship manifests (that can be proven to be them), nor any records of Sophia's siblings in the US. The search continues!
As of 2017 I still haven't found Joseph and Sophia's marriage record, nor their names in ship manifests (that can be proven to be them), nor any records of Sophia's siblings in the US. The search continues!
Sophia with sons Will and Philip Frey |
Child Birth Death
Mary A Steinmetz 10 Dec 1856 21
Mar 1908
Regina C Steinmetz 5 May 1858 9
Aug 1917
Sophia Steinmetz 8 Jan 1860 6
Sep 1924
Joseph T Steinmetz 3 Aug 1861 11
Mar 1938
Margaret Steinmetz 1862-1864 Aft 8/2/1865,Bef 1870
Bernard Steinmetz 2 Feb 1865 21
Oct 1902
Albert Frey 6 Nov 1866 27
Jul 1929
Charles Frey 9 Aug 1868 12
Aug 1943
Louisa D Frey 6 Jan 1871 2 Jul 1944
Katharina Frey 6 Jan 1871 8 May 1875
Anna Dorothea Frey 29 Apr 1873 12 Feb 1955
Katharina Susanna Frey 7 Nov 1875 Dec 1878
William Henry Frey 1 Nov 1877 15 Feb 1952
Bertha Frey 10 Apr 1880 30
Nov 1883
Philip George Frey 10 Apr 1880 12
Feb 1940