For privacy reasons, Date of Birth and Date of Marriage for persons believed to still be living are not shown.
Althaus Elisabeth Florentine [Female] b. 7 DEC 1767 Wunderthausen - d. 20 JAN 1817
Was alive in 1697 when she served as a godparent.
The two names were interchangeable at the time.
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Reported as gone to America.
Source
Author: Ancestry.com
Title: Baltimore, Passenger Lists, 1820-1964
Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Source
Author: Ancestry.com
Title: Baltimore, Passenger Lists, 1820-1964
Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;
Source
Author: Ancestry.com
Title: Baltimore, Passenger Lists, 1820-1964
Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;
Born in Haase Haus in Wunderthausen. He is almost certainly the "Ludwig Alhaus" who came to Baltimore on the ship "James" on September 30, 1833 in the company of his sister Maria Elisabeth. Family recollections years later say that he remained in Baltimore and was known as Ludwig.
Born in Beitzels Haus in Wunderthausen. He died from a fall from a wagon either in or on the way to Bremen from whence much of the family intended to travel to America.
He died in a military hospital in Stettin, a once German city now "Szczecin" in Poland. He was a conscript in the army with which Napoleon fatally invaded Russia. The French had taken over Wittgenstein years before so the peasants were subject to both heavy taxes and conscription.
Born in Bormanns house, Wunderthausen.
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Applied to emigrate to America in 1796.
He was a baker. For a short period around 1887 he operated a bakery out of a rebuilt Bormanns house in Wunderthausen.
Possibly born Margaret, of which Gretchen is nickname.
Source
Author: Ancestry.com
Title: U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Source
Author: Georg Lauber
Title: Wunderthausen: Geschichte der Häuser und Familie
Publication: Name: Self-published; Location: Wunderthausen, Bad Berleburg, Germany; Date: No Date;
Source
Author: Ancestry.com
Title: U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;
Lived in Brückeschneiders house.
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