Saturday, June 30, 2018

Emma's father: Friedrich J. "Fritz" Flueckinger


     Friedrich ("Fritz") Flueckinger—an intense looking chap—was Emma Flueckinger's father. (Emma was Fred Jenni's wife who died, at age 33, in 1906.)
     We'll start with this item from Ancestry.com:


     We learn:
     Fritz was born in, and later married in, Hutwyl, Switzerland, which is near Bern.
     Fritz marries Anna Maria Scheidegger (Schreidregger?) in 1869—then the kids come along, quickly.
     Emma is born in 1873—still in Hutwyl.
     The family leaves Switzerland, arrives in Missouri in 1883. But where exactly? Probably, in Andrew County.
     Two years later, "Charlie" is born. He is born in Andrew County—which includes Amazonia (just north of St. Joe). (P 457 of the Heritage book asserts that the Flueckingers settled specifically in Amazonia, Andrew Co. If so, and given that the Jennis were there, it is highly unlikely that the two families were not known to each other. Amazonia was/is a very small town.)
     Did they know the Jennis? (The Jennis settle in Amazonia in 1869. They were still there in 1883. Both families are from Bern, Switzerland.)
     I believe that Anna Maria (S) dies in about 1886. Soon (1890), Fritz is married to Rosina Heck, a German. By 1890, they seem to have gone south to Vernon County, MO. Perhaps that's where Rosina resides. (She's a widow with a son.)

The Flueckingers in Cleveland, Ohio (1893?)
By this time, Emma was in Montana, married to Fred.
Frieda (at right) marries Mr. White in Montana in 1898.
     By 1893, son Walter was born—in Cleveland, Ohio. Presumably, that's where Fritz and Rosina's family had settled. (There's a family photo [above] indicating it was taken in Cleveland, Ohio.) 
     Ohio is three states to the east! What's with all this resettling?
     Relative to Cleveland: there are Flueckingers in "nearby" East Liverpool, Ohio, and Pittsburgh, PA. 
     (Note: Cleveland is only 40 or 50 miles from Sandusky. There are Flueckingers, owners of a grocery store, in Sandusky.)
     By 1900, The Fritz Flueckingers were in Sheridan County, Nebraska. Sheridan is a county that includes the town/village of Rushville. 

Amazonia, MO. Mighty sleepy.
     Fritz was a farmer.
     Emma dies in 1906. Does Fritz travel to Montana for that? Frieda, too, is already there, having married Mr. White (in Fergus Co.) in 1898. She divorces him by about 1906. (Abandonment and cruelty; he was insane.)
     1910: it says above that Fritz was naturalized in, of all places, Rockville, Connecticut! What in hell is he doing way east? Maybe this is just a mistake.
     It also says that, in 1910, he resided, still, in Sheridan County, Nebraska. In Minnetonka precinct.
     By 1920, he was living in Rushville, Sheridan, Nebraska. He died there in 1923.
     So both the (Samuel) Jennis and the (Fritz) Flueckingers were living in Amazonia in the 1880s; then at least two of the Flueckingers (Emma, then Frieda) travel to, of all places, Fergus County, Montana and get hitched. These were, more or less, arranged marriages, I think, arranged by the heads of these two families, based in Amazonia, Missouri.

Stray "Jennis" (relations?)


1. The case of the drowned cousins
     Frederick Jenni's wife was Emma Flueckinger (other spellings can be found, e.g., Flueckeger, Flueckiger). So this concerns, not a Jenni, but a couple of Flueckingers:


The Evening Review (East Liverpool, Ohio), July 7, 1898

     We learn more from the Pittsburgh papers:

Pittsburgh Daily Post, July 7, 1898

Pittsburgh Post Gazette, July 7, 1898
     Also, the Democratic Herald reported the deaths of these two young women on the 15th of July.
     The Post-Gazette is, of course, the most informative of the clips I've got. From their article, we learn that
  • Marie and Bertha were cousins
  • They had relatives in Economy, PA
  • They were from Switzerland and had been in the U.S. for about six years (arriving c. 1892)
  • They were en route to St. Jenier in Berne, Switzerland, to visit relatives
  • One of them intended to pick up inherited money
     We know that the Flueckingers (Emma's family) were from Berne and, when they immigrated, the settled in Andrew County, Missouri. (See Ancestry.com) Note: Amazonia is in Andrew Co. Also, Andrew County abuts against St. Joseph, MO.
     East Liverpool, Ohio, is just 40 miles down the Ohio river from Pittsburgh, PA. I do believe that these cousins were from East Liverpool.
     ...to be continued...

Here's a record of a marriage of an Emma Flueckiger in Pittsburgh in 1892

2. The case of the broken-hearted Jenni
     It is perhaps less-than-probable that this Belthaser Jenni is related to "our" Jennis, but who knows:

St. Joseph Herald, July 31, 1889

     Note the newspaper: the St. Joseph Herald. Amazonia, the first American home of the JENNIS (Samuel's family; Samuel was Frederick's father), is, I believe, a satellite town of St. Joseph, MO. 
     For what that's worth.

3. The Sandusky (Ohio) grocer
     Yet another Fleuckinger. John of Sandusky:




4. Who was Peter Jenni?

3-20-1874 - The State Journal (Jefferson City, MO)
6-11-1880 - Hermanner Volksblatt (Herman MO)
6-4-1893 - St. Louis Post-Dispatch

8-12-1897 - Dayton Herald

Monday, June 25, 2018

Freezing to death


     Montana isn't the coldest state. Still, brrr-wise, it's pretty chill.
     The names people choose to use about things and places tell us much about them and about their relationship to those things. 
     Montanans have a sky and timber they call big and falls they call great. 
     Yes, but especially, they also have creeks named "Starve to Death" and "Froze to Death."

Fergus Co Argus, October 2, 1884

Fergus Co Argus, January 28, 1886

     Gruwell was quite the contrarian. I wonder what happened to him? [He seemed to be flourishing, in Miles City, seven years later.]
     A century or so ago, in Montana, there were plenty of tales of freezing cattle and other livestock, but stories about people's freezing legs and hands and faces were also common.
     And, of course, people often froze to death.

Fergus Co Argus, April 2, 1885

Unfortunate popsiclization
Fergus Co Argus, January 27, 1887

Fergus Co Argus, February 16, 1893
     —In the rabbit's bed, I assume.

Fergus Co Argus, March 2, 1893
Fergus Co Argus, January 31, 1895
     We'll hear more about the unfortunate Mr. Van Dorn in a moment.


Fergus Co Argus, February 21, 1895


Fergus Co Argus, September 19, 1895
     Poor old Van Dorn's troubles deepened. At least the asylum was clean and well kept!

Fergus County, Argus, September 19, 1895

Fergus Co Argus, February 6, 1896

Fergus Co Argus, December 8, 1897

Fergus Co Argus, March 9, 1898


Fergus Co Argus, March 23, 1898

Fergus Co Argus, March 1, 1899

Fergus Co Argus, November 21, 1900


Fergus Co Argus, March 26, 1902

Fergus County Argus, February 15, 1905


Fergus Co Argus, December 1, 1905

Fergus Co Argus, December 8, 1905
Fergus Co Argus, December 12, 1905

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

A hanging in Lewistown, part 5: the "awful crime"


(Part 1 is here.)

March 21, 1900; the Fergus County Argus
I guess the line between a tabloid and a newspaper was foggier a century ago:
   


March 21, 1900; the Fergus County Argus:
This seems to be the conservative Argus' "post-mortem" of the whole sorry affair.










The Musselshell

Montana homestead, 1901

Scene of crime (see middle)




THE END

Maps and such

Reflects 1870s (not 1880s): "Camp Lewis was a temporary camp established 10 May 1874 in present day Lewistown, Montana, by elements of ...