Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Flückigerei*

An unidentified farming family
     Central to the Jenni saga—to which this blog is dedicated—are Fred Jenni and Emma Flueckiger, who married and produced many children, including Fred Jenni, Jr.
     The Fred & Emma marriage is somewhat of an enigma, perhaps because Emma died so young (in 1906, age 33).
     Pfft, and she was gone.
     We know a bit about Emma. Her parents were Friedrich J. "Fritz" Flueckiger and Anna Marie Scheidegger, who immigrated to the US, from (the vicinity of) Bern Switzerland, to Amazonia, Missouri in 1883. They sailed on the ship Suevia to New Orleans, "then up the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers" (according to Ancestry.com bio of Anna Scheidegger).

The Suevia. "The Suevia was a passenger steamship built for the Hamburg America Line in 1874. It was assigned to transatlantic crossings between Hamburg, Germany and New York City, USA and played a role in German immigration to the United States." (Wikipedia)
     Emma would have been ten years old at the time.
     Eight years later (in 1891), she traveled to Lewistown, Montana, where she married Fred Jenni, son of Samuel.
     My guess is that the Sam Jennis and the Fritz Flueckigers of Amazonia, Missouri, knew each other; I'm guessing that their relationship had something to do with Emma (and Frieda's) marriages in Lewistown, MT, of all places.
     The Lewistown area was, of course, where the three Jenni sons happened to settle. It was a pretty obscure location.

* * *

     But yet another woman named Flueckiger was married in Lewistown at about that time (1893): Anna Barbara Flueckiger:


According to this Ancestry.com "bio," this Flueckiger married Frederick (or "Ferderand") F. Hoffman on August 15, 1893.
     In tiny Lewistown!
     That's no coincidence.
     According to the bio,

  • Anna Barbara Flueckiger was born in Hutwyl, Bern, Switzerland, in 1858. —Emma Flueckiger and her father were also born in Hutwyl.
  • She arrived in the U.S. in 1883. —That's the same year that Emma's family arrived.
  • Anna gave birth to a son (Fritz), in Lewistown, in 1905.
  • By 1908, Anna and her family seemed to be farming in Salisbury, Maryland (Fred Hoffman perhaps died that year). 
  • Anna eventually died in Salisbury, in 1945

     My hypotheses: (1) Anna Barbara was part of the "Fritz" Flueckiger family group that traveled to Missouri in 1883 (steamin' up the Mississippi, then the Missouri). Further, (2) she settled in Amazonia—or at least in Andrew County, Missouri. (3) Upon learning of Emma's marriage to one of the prosperous "Jenni boys" up in wild Montana, the families made arrangements for Anna Barbara to marry one of Fred and John's German-speaking associates, viz., Mr. Hoffman. ([4] Ditto for Emma's sister, Frieda, who married Mr. White in 1898.)
     The backdrop: (5) things were lousy in Amazonia, Missouri. (I did a little checking; the weather in Missouri was especially cold from 1879-1882.)

* * *

     There's one further alleged factoid mentioned in the bio:
1923: Death of Brother: Her brother Friedrich J. "Fritz" died on April 17, 1923, in Rushville, Nebraska....
     Well, that answers that question, I guess: Emma and Anna were connected all right; Anna Barbara Flueckiger was Emma Flueckiger-Jenni's aunt.
     It was all in the (extended) family.

* * *

     Who was Frederick F. Hoffman?
     He was a German, born in 1864, arriving in the U.S. in 1880.
     Some records indicate that he died in 1908, in Maryland. On the other hand, this 1910 Maryland Census record suggests otherwise:


     This document suggests that Frederick was still alive in 1910. Go figure.
     Incidentally, it also indicates that "Fritz," the son, was adopted (in Montana).
     I'll see what else I can find about Herr Hoffman.

* * *

     —Incidentally, just in case it isn't clear, these early Jennis (and Hoffmans, et al.) primarily spoke German (i.e., the dialect of German spoken in Bern). In their Montana households, I suspect, English was strictly a second language, at least for the first (the foreign-born) generation.
     Many of these pioneers (e.g., Fred and John Jenni) were occasionally local school officials. Imagine: the head of the local school, barely literate, with a heavy German accent. (I recall the slight oddness of my own father, c. 1963, taking over our local Cub Scout Pack (later: Boy Scout Troop)—with his slight German accent [in his case, his odd Germanisms were more noticeable than his accent]. Everyone just accepted it. Only in America!)
     And, unsurprisingly, these German-speaking people tended to associate, to work together, to form mini-communities. Such was the case in Cottonwood (Beaver Creek), in the early years. The likes of Fred Jenni created, I think, small Germanic (or Swiss) colonies. Naturally, that faded since the kids invariably spoke good (American) English, thus pushing German to the periphery.

* * *

     One more thing: I have a hypothesis. It's that, by the early 1880s, things were going badly for the Flueckigers of Amazonia. (That's my hypothesis #5.) We know that young Fred—followed by young John—left Missouri for Montana in 1881 or 1882 (they'd been there since '69). And we know that Samuel, age 53, left Amazonia for New Orleans in 1882, planning to collect his family once established there.
     A search for greener pastures? (An escape from decidedly brown pastures? Both?)
     Who knows. <end>

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