Windh/Freise/Maurstad genealogy - Person Sheet
Windh/Freise/Maurstad genealogy - Person Sheet
NameHenrietta Wilhelmine Caroline HOHLT
Death5 Aug 1909, Addieville, IL
Birth2 Feb 1844, Westrob, Germany
BurialZion Cemetery, Addieville, IL
Birth2 Feb 1844, Westrob, Germany
ReligionCLICK HENRIETTA’S NAME TO SEE EXTENSIVE NOTES
Occupationnine children, four lived to adulthood
FatherJohann Frederich HOHLT (1799-1873)
MotherLouisa Wilhelmina MALEC (1815-1873)
Misc. Notes
One source says that Henrietta’s parents came to America around 1840-45 because their second daughter, Caroline, was born March 23, 1846, in Illinois.

However the immigration website www.castlegarden.org contradicts this and is surely more accurate. It shows that Henrietta (or Henriette?) was four years old and Caroline was one when they came to America from Bremen with their parents and older brother Henry and landed (probably in New York) on January 1, 1848.

That first source says Henrietta and Heinrich were married April 10, 1861, probably in Addieville, Illinois.

* * * * *

In February 2016, John Windh writes:

A helpful GAEBE genealogy has just come into my hands but it is contradictory regarding Henrietta’s husband and children.

---It shows HENRIETTA HOHLT (b. Feb. 2, 1844) married to FREDERICK DAVID GAEBE (b. 1838) and mother of two children, Frederick Carl and Louisa.

---But it also shows HENRIETTA HOHLT (b. Feb. 2, 1844) married to HEINRICH FRIEDERICH DAVID GAEBE (b. Feb. 21, 1838) and mother of nine children. It says they were married April 10, 1858, when Henrietta would have been just 14.

Very likely these two men are the same person (FREDERICK DAVID equals HEINRICH FRIEDRICH DAVID) and the 1958 wedding date is wrong. Yet for some reason these two are shown as sons of two different fathers (Johann Friedrich, b. 1809 and Hermann Christian Heinrich, b. 1813), who themselves are brothers.

I haven’t the resources to clarify this but what I’ve entered here seems most reasonable.
Spouses
BurialZion Cemetery, Addieville, IL
Death19 Jul 1917, Addieville, Illinois
Birth21 Feb 1838, Arrenkamp, Nordrhein-Westphalia, Germany
ReligionFORCES THAT PUSHED PEOPLE TO EMIGRATE
EducationCLICK HEINRICH’S NAME TO SEE EXTENSIVE NOTES AND
Occupationnine children, four lived to adulthood
Misc. Notes
One GAEBE source said that Heinrich Friedrich (FRED) David Gaebe came to America via New Orleans in November of 1856 and to Addieville, IL, in 1857. His younger brother WILLIAM came about the same time, probably with him. Two years later their father and two younger siblings, their brother KARL and their sister ENGEL, immigrated also.

* * * * *

Forces That Pushed People To Emigrate

The information presented here comes from old issues of "Heimat-Blaetter fuer die Grafschaft Diepholz “ (Regional Pages for the County Diepholz ) and concerns villages near Bielefeld, Germany. It was compiled by a Wilhelm F. Niermann (address 32351 Stemwede-Wehdem Germany), date unknown. See this website: http://www.stemwedegenealogy.com/StemwedeEmigrantDatabase.pdf

The only reference from the 18th century cites a population of 4701 for Dielingen and Wehdem in 1785. By 1820 the population increased by about 100 individuals to 5801. Over the next 25 years, from 1820 to 1845, the population grew by 2406 individuals. With a population of 8826 the peak was reached in the villages that occupied our present-day area. The increase by 3525 people over 63 years, from 1785 to 1848, is a growth of 75%.

This development was due to a better standard of living brought on by an increased demand for woven linen. About three-quarters of the population were involved in growing flax and in weaving of linen. For most people who farmed for a livelihood the weaving of linen became an additional income. The coming of the weaving machine spelled their doom.

Used first in England and later in Bielefeld, Germany, the cottage industry with its handwoven product no longer could compete with machine-woven linen. Machine-made goods were produced faster, cheaper and their quality was consistent. The demand for hand-woven linen quickly declined. To make matters worse, about the same time cotton products entered the market at a cheaper price as well. The low price offered for hand-woven linen led to poverty and suffering among the people who had depended on this additional income.

With the demand gone the "Legge" ( linen market ) closed in Dielingen in 1840. Its importance was gone. At markets like this the quality and size of the product was checked for certification by the state. Though the linen market continued in Wehdem a few more years, the statement appears in 1847 that the "Legge" there no longer attracted as many people as before. (Source : Karl Hamer, " Evidence of population movement in the Districts of Dielingen and Wehdem", in Diepholzer Heimat-Blaetter).

The distressing conditions in the area are revealed in a few numbers for the year 1847: [In Wehdem 67 poor children and two old widows received free lunch for five months. Many children were boarded. To feed the needy in Westrup 7 Reichstaler, 17 Silbergroschen and 9 Pfennig were raised monthly for six months. In Oppendorf 25 children were fed for four months and in Oppenwehe 34 children for six months. The Prussian government contributed 580 Reichstaler toward the support. 1 T(h)aler = 30 Silbergroschen = 360 Pfennig. See: Fritz Verdenhalven : Alte Masse, Muenzen und Gewichte aus dem deutschen Sprachgebiet. Neustadt an der Aisch, Germany, Verlag Degener & Co. 1968 ].

An area with thriving cottage industry of flax cultivation, spinning and weaving had become a poorhouse!!!

When crops also failed in these already hard times, it only added to the discontent of the people. Many began to leave the area, and emigration to America increased in the 1850's.
The individual states of the US in promotional literature described their states in glowing terms and promised land to those willing to immigrate. Emigration offices opened which offered help with the required paperwork and the purchase of tickets for the passage. They were not allowed to recruit but could be of assistance if asked !!!

A few examples of the emigration from the former district of Wehdem:
1841 : 23 individuals
1842 : 33 individuals
1847 : 3 families and 17 single individuals
1848 : 3 families and 45 single individuals
1856 : 44 individuals
1859 : 96 individuals
1860 : 6 families and 40 single individuals
1861 : 41 individuals

In the 1880's emigration picked up again!

In the 19th century the Stemwede area, governed by the Kingdom of Prussia, bordered the Kingdom of Hannover. This geographic proximity allowed many people to leave without official permission. A short walk took them to the Kingdom of Hannover where, without further difficulties, they continued to the emigration ports of Bremen and Bremerhaven. Since mandatory military service was lengthy in Prussia, men of military age had another reason to leave.

The number of emigrants who left without official permission was as high if not higher than the number of those who left with official sanction. Today the lists found in the archives give mostly names of those who emigrated with permission. The names of young men obligated to military service are found in the old military records with the names of those who left illegally and who were sentenced in absentia. The total population loss from 1845 to 1864 was about 500 individuals and from 1865 to 1885 about 1100.


* * * * * * * *

In February 2016, John Windh writes:

An extensive GAEBE genealogy has just come into my hands. It is extremely helpful but in at least one instance contradictory.

---It shows HENRIETTA HOHLT (b. Feb. 2, 1844) married to FREDERICK DAVID GAEBE (b. 1838) and mother of two children, Frederick Carl and Louisa.
---But it also shows HENRIETTA HOHLT (b. Feb. 2, 1844) married to HEINRICH FRIEDRICH DAVID GAEBE (b. Feb. 21, 1838) and mother of nine other children. It says they were married April 10, 1858, when Henrietta would have been just 14.

Very likely these two men are the same person and the wedding date is wrong. The first name, FREDERICK DAVID, seems a shortened and Anglicized version of the second, HEIINRICH FRIEDRICH DAVID. These two are shown as sons of two different fathers (Johann Friedrich, b. 1809 and Hermann Christian Heinrich, b. 1813), who themselves are brothers.

I haven’t the resources to clarify this so I have entered the information given me this month, hoping someone somewhere can clarify this.
Marriage10 Apr 1861, probably Addieville, IL
ChildrenAnna Wilhelmina LOUISA (1863-1934)
 Johann Heinrich Carl (1869-1872)
 Anna Katherine Engel (1872-1896)
 Unnamed (1887-1887)
Last Modified 27 Aug 2024Created 1 Dec 2024 using Reunion for Macintosh