04 November 2009

My Notes and Comments about Nonnie Schaefer’s Letter

As far as I know Carl never received copies of the family papers mentioned in the letter that Nonnie offered to give him (I only assume this because I never found these papers at my grandparent’s house). I would love to have copies of those papers – when I first found this letter I sent a letter to Nonnie’s address, thinking that there might be a slight chance that some of Nonnie’s descendants might still live there, but I never heard back. I haven’t made any contact with any of Nonnie’s descendants yet, so I don’t know if someone out there still has these papers or not.

As far as the information in the letter, it confirms some of what I already knew from handwritten genealogy notes and pedigree charts I’d found at my grandparents’ house.

Although I didn’t know that Ludwig’s and Amalie’s father, Carl Spohr, was a choir master, as was written on the ribbon that Nonnie mentioned in her letter, I knew that Carl’s (I wish all of our ancestors would have been more thoughtful of us descendants who are interested in genealogy when they decided to name all their little boys ‘Carl’ and ‘Louis’ generation after generation and make it nice and confusing for us. Oh wait, my son’s middle name is Carl, after my Grandpa. Great names – just makes it a little harder to keep everyone straight.) father, Franz Spohr, had the same occupation. According to Ludwig Spohr’s birth certificate, it says that Franz Spohr was a “Cantor in Graslitz,” and I’ve had the word ‘cantor’ translated to mean a choir master for the church.

I’m not sure how the man and woman in the photos are related exactly. On the back of the photos the names Gustav Breinl and Lydi Breinl are written. The parents of Ludwig (Louis) Spohr and Amalie Spohr Schaefer were Carl Spohr and Ludmilla Breinl – could Lydi Breinl be Ludmilla Breinl? But who is Gustav? How are they related to Ludmilla Breinl?

I don’t know about the “Seifner Bräuhaus” photograph either – Seifner refers to the Bohemian town of Seifen.  And we do have brewers in the family – according to Ludwig Spohr’s birth certificate, Ludmilla Breinl’s father, Friedrich Breinl, was a “braumeister,” (or a master beer brewer). I don’t know if this photo was of his brewery or that of another relative.

I knew about the “small inheritance” that Nonnie mentioned in her letter. I have copies of estate papers sent to America from Europe that are written in German and name both Ludwig and Amalie.

The statue of L. Spohr that she refers to is Louis Spohr, a composer, who all of the descendants say was a great uncle, but who I have yet to find an exact relationship for between his family and our Spohrs. My grandparents have a painting of a man hanging in their home that they think may have been of this composer. A book has been published about this Louis Spohr, and I have a copy. I will post some selections from that book that are of genealogical interest at a later time.

I don’t know how Josef Diez and his family in Germany are related to us, but would love to find out more about that if anyone knows about him.

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