Bierbaum, Heinrich Hermann

Male 1848 - 1930  (82 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Bierbaum, Heinrich Hermann was born 14 Aug 1848, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA (son of Bierbaum, Johann Heinrich Wilhelm and Fiegenbaum, Anna Christine Elsabein); died 10 Nov 1930, Camp Branch Township, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried 12 Nov 1930, Truxton, Lincoln County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Baptism: 18 Sep 1848, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA
    • Confirmation: 5 Apr 1863, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:
    In the published baptismal records of the German Evangelical Immanuels Church in Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ), Heinrich Hermann's birth date was recorded as 14 August 1848.
         The church records indicate that of the six children born to Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Bierbaum and Anna Christine Elsabein Fiegenbaum, there were two sons, one named Hermann Heinrich and the other named Heinrich Hermann. As seems to have been common with many members of the Fiegenbaum and associated families who had ties to northwestern Germany, the order of their given names was quite fluid over the course of their lives through the 19th and early 20th centuries. A Hermann Heinrich who was also known in the records as Heinrich Herman can cause some problems. If you add brother who uses the same given names in the same mixed order, a genealogical researcher quickly becomes very flustered. I have done my best to reduce the confusion, but a full resolution awaits more scrupulous research. In the meantime, don't bet the farm on what you read here.

    Baptism:
    Heinrich's baptism is recorded in the archives of the German Evangelical Church on Charrette in Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ). According to the published church records, Herman [sic] Fiegenbaum was his sponsor.

    Confirmation:
    Heinrich's confirmation is recorded in the archives of the German Evangelical Church on Charrette in Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ).

    Buried:
    According to information on his death certificate, "Herman Bierbaum" was to be buried at the German [Lutheran?] Evangelical Church at Truxton, Missouri.

    Died:
    According to information on his death certificate, "Herman Bierbaum" died at 11:00 a.m. The cause of death was cerebral hemorrhage and apoplexy.

    Heinrich married Edler, Henriette Wilhelmina Friedericke 8 Mar 1867, Warren County, Missouri, USA. Henriette (daughter of Edler, Heinrich and Grotegut, Maria Louise) was born 14 Feb 1849, Germany; died 20 Nov 1927, Charrette Township, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA. [Group Sheet]

    Notes:

    Married:
    The marriage of "Heinrich Bierbaum" and "Henriette Wilhelmina Friedrike Edler" was recorded in the register of the German Evangelical Church on Charrette, at Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ). "Elisabethe Juliane Riefs" was the witness.
         Some researchers state that on 8 March 1867, Heinrich Bierbaum married a woman by the name of Anna Marie Friedericke Edler. The published records of the German Evangelical Church on Charrette in Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ) list on this date the marriage of Heinrich Bierbaum and Henriette Wilhelmina Friedrike Edler, as noted above. Upon the baptism of her children, her name is recorded as Friederike Edler. The record of her death in the same source shows the name as "Friederika Wilhelmina Bierbaum nee Elder."

    Children:
    1. Bierbaum, Anna Louise was born 26 May 1868, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    2. Bierbaum, Wilhelmine Christine was born 10 Nov 1870, Charrette Township, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    3. Bierbaum, Emma Magdalena was born 17 Jan 1875, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. Bierbaum, Julius Heinrich was born 16 Aug 1877, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    5. Bierbaum, Martha Wilhelmine was born 23 Apr 1881, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died 30 Nov 1950; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    6. Bierbaum, Heinrich Wilhelm was born 31 Jul 1883, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    7. Bierbaum, Friedrich Hermann was born 26 Dec 1885, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    8. Bierbaum, Ernst Heinrich was born 26 Oct 1889, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died 22 Oct 1972, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    9. Bierbaum, Minna C. was born 25 Apr 1895, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Bierbaum, Johann Heinrich Wilhelm was born 16 Oct 1812, Ladbergen, First French Empire (son of Bierbaum, Johann and Wibbeler, Anna); died 21 Nov 1872, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Immigration: 1841, Warren County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:

         Johann's family was living in Overbeck at the time of his birth. Overbeck was one of the three 'Bauernshaften' in the village of Ladbergen.
         A 'Bauerschaft' is an ancient grouping of farms that emerged from the earliest agricultural settlements, and comprised the earliest administrative units of a community. Until the early 1960s, Ladbergen had three Bauernshaften: Hölter, Overbeck and Wester. These settlement areas are still recognized in present day Ladbergen. Recently, the residential sections of the village center have become known by street names and a fourth section of Ladbergen, called 'Dorf' [village] has been created.
         During the Napoleonic era, from about 1808 to 1810, Ladbergen, as part of the County of Tecklenburg (Grafschaft Tecklenburg), came under the sovereignty of the Grand Duchy of Berg (French: Grand-duché de Berg; German: Großherzogtum Berg), a client state of the First French Empire.
         In 1811 borders were redrawn again and Grafschaft Tecklenburg was incorporated directly into the First French Empire as part of the Département Ems-Supérieur (German: Departement der Oberen Ems).
         After Napoleon's defeat, Ladbergen found itself part of the Province of Westphalia in the Kingdom of Prussia (German: Provinz Westfalen, Königreich Preußen).

    Immigration:

         Johann (about age 29), his wife, Anna Christine Elsabein Fiegenbaum (about age 26), and their only child at the time, Heinrich Wilhelm Bierbaum (less than 1 year old), emigrated from Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, the Kingdom of Prussia. Accompanying them was Johann's sister, Catharina Sophia Wilhelmine Bierbaum.
         This family group was joined by his wife's married sister, her husband and their three children, and also by his wife's parents and their two unmarried children.
         In all, at least 13 members of this extended family left Ladbergen together in 1841. They departed Germany from the port of Bremen on the bark Leontine. Of the 102 persons on board, 56 were identified on the passenger list as former residents of Ladbergen. Four other persons were from the nearby towns of Brochterbeck and Lengerich. The Leontine arrived at Baltimore, Maryland on 28 June 1841.
         The Fiegenbaums, Aufderhaars and Bierbaums traveled further west until reaching and settling in Warren County, Missouri.

    Buried:
    "Hermann Wilhelm Bierbaum" was buried in the cemetery across the street from the brick church dedicated in 1884 as the German Evangelical Immanuels Church of Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ). The cemetery is next to and south of the parsonage and on the site of the first church built at Holstein, Missouri, known as the German Lutheran Church on Charrette (1839-1848).

    Died:
    The death of "Hermann Wilhelm Bierbaum," as he appears to have been known at the time, was recorded in the register of the German Evangelical Church on Charrette, at Holstein, Missouri.

    Johann married Fiegenbaum, Anna Christine Elsabein 13 Dec 1839, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia. Anna (daughter of Fiegenbaum, Johann Heinrich and Hagen, Catherina Elsabein) was born 7 Jan 1815, Ladbergen, Kingdom of Prussia; died 14 Aug 1894, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Fiegenbaum, Anna Christine Elsabein was born 7 Jan 1815, Ladbergen, Kingdom of Prussia (daughter of Fiegenbaum, Johann Heinrich and Hagen, Catherina Elsabein); died 14 Aug 1894, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Immigration: 1841, Warren County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:

         Anna's family was living at Overbeck 16 at the time of her birth. Overbeck is one of the three 'Bauernshaften' in the village of Ladbergen.
         A 'Bauerschaft' is an ancient grouping of farms that emerged from the earliest agricultural settlements, and comprised the earliest administrative units of a community. Until the early 1960s, Ladbergen had three Bauernshaften: Hölter, Overbeck and Wester. These settlement areas are still recognized in present day Ladbergen. Recently, the residential sections of the village center have become known by street names and a fourth section of Ladbergen, called 'Dorf' [village] has been created. The number 16 would indicate that this was the 16th farm established in this Bauerschaft.
         During the Napoleonic era, from about 1808 to 1810, Ladbergen, as part of the County of Tecklenburg (Grafschaft Tecklenburg), came under the sovereignty of the Grand Duchy of Berg (French: Grand-duché de Berg; German: Großherzogtum Berg), a client state of the First French Empire.
         In 1811 borders were redrawn again and Grafschaft Tecklenburg was incorporated directly into the First French Empire as part of the Département Ems-Supérieur (German: Departement der Oberen Ems).
         After Napoleon's defeat, Ladbergen was liberated from French occupation and was at first governed provisionally and then formally by the Kingdom of Prussia (German: Königreich Preußen).

    Immigration:

         Anna Christine Elsabein (about age 26), her husband Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Bierbaum (about age 29), and their only child at the time, Heinrich Wilhelm Bierbaum (less than 1 year old), emigrated from Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, the Kingdom of Prussia. Accompanying them was Johann's sister, Catharina Sophia Wilhelmine Bierbaum.
         This family group was joined by her married sister, her husband and their three children, and also by her parents and their two unmarried children.
         In all, at least 13 members of this extended family left Ladbergen together in 1841. They departed Germany from the port of Bremen on the bark Leontine. Of the 102 persons on board, 56 were identified on the passenger list as former residents of Ladbergen. Four other persons were from the nearby towns of Brochterbeck and Lengerich. The Leontine arrived at Baltimore, Maryland on 28 June 1841.
         The Fiegenbaums, Aufderhaars and Bierbaums traveled further west until reaching and settling in Warren County, Missouri.

    Buried:
    Christine was buried in the cemetery located south of and next to the brick church dedicated in 1884 as the German Evangelical Immanuels Church of Holstein and know since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ.

    Died:
    Anna Christine's death was recorded in the register of the German Evangelical Immanuels Church, at Holstein, Missouri.

    Children:
    1. Bierbaum, Heinrich Wilhelm was born 27 May 1840, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia; died Yes, date unknown.
    2. Bierbaum, Hermann Heinrich was born 30 Apr 1843, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died 31 Oct 1924, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    3. Bierbaum, Maria Elisabeth was born 31 Jan 1846, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. 1. Bierbaum, Heinrich Hermann was born 14 Aug 1848, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died 10 Nov 1930, Camp Branch Township, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried 12 Nov 1930, Truxton, Lincoln County, Missouri, USA.
    5. Bierbaum, Ernst Heinrich was born 23 Feb 1852, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died Yes, date unknown.
    6. Bierbaum, Friedrich Wilhelm was born 8 Apr 1855, Warren County, Missouri, USA; died 16 Feb 1861, Warren County, Missouri, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Bierbaum, Johann died Yes, date unknown.

    Johann married Wibbeler, Anna Westphalia, Germany. Anna died Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Wibbeler, Anna died Yes, date unknown.
    Children:
    1. 2. Bierbaum, Johann Heinrich Wilhelm was born 16 Oct 1812, Ladbergen, First French Empire; died 21 Nov 1872, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    2. Bierbaum, Catharina Sophia Wilhelmine was born 15 Apr 1832, Tecklenburg, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia; died 29 Aug 1909, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.

  3. 6.  Fiegenbaum, Johann Heinrich was born 12 May 1788, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg (son of Fiegenbaum, Hermann Heinrich and Horstmeier, Anna Christine Katharina); died 12 Mar 1861, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Immigration: 1841, Warren County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: Sep 1850, District 99, Warren County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: Aug 1860, Charrette Township, Warren County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:
    In various civil and church records through the course of his life, this person is identified as either Johann Heinrich or Hermann Heinrich. There is also some confusion concerning the date of birth as reported by various researchers: either 12 May 1788 or 6 July 1787. Some say that the Johann Heinrich Fiegenbaum born in 1788 married Anna Catherine Lagemann and that the Johann Heinrich born in 1787 married Catherine Elsabein Hagen.
         A satisfactory resolution of this matter may require a rigorous inspection of records in Germany. In the meantime, I have chosen to follow the lead provided by the published emigration record and the records of the church in Holstein, Missouri.


    Immigration:

         The Fiegenbaums were from a class known as Heuerleute or tenant farmers. "They owned no land, and they lived in rented houses on larger farms. Every large or middle-sized farm in Ladbergen had one or more tenant houses (in German: Heuerhäuser) scattered over the farm. The highest number on any farm in Ladbergen was seven; two or three was common. Each tenant farm house had its own plot of 7 to 12 acres. The tenants rented the houses and plots for life. The tenant farmers were not the same as sharecroppers or rental farmers in the American sense. They had only a small plot to themselves, and they did not need to give any of the yield to the landowner. They were essentially renters of houses who paid for their dwellings with a small amount of cash and a specified number of days of labor. In the 19th century the tenants were typically relatives of the landowners, but this was decreasingly the case after the turn of the century."
         In addition to farming, Johann Heinrich also worked as a carpenter, a trade which his father also followed.
         Hermanda Fiegenbaum, of Münster, reports: "Die ganze Familie, Eltern mit den verheirateten und ledigen Kindern und den Enkelkindern, wanderte 1841 nach USA. aus." ["The whole family, parents with married and single children and the grandchildren, emigrated in 1841 to the USA."].
         A total of at least 13 people from this extended family emigrated from Ladbergen. Johann Heinrich (at age 53), his wife Catharina Elisabeth (born Hagen; at age 54), and their two youngest children, Christina Elisabeth (she turned 22 near the end of the voyage) and Hermann Heinrich (at age 18) comprised one family unit. The two eldest daughters were already married by the day of departure. Anna Elisabeth Aufderhaar (b. 1811) and Anna Christine Bierbaum (b. 1815) both emigrated with their husbands and those of their children who had been born before 1841. Sophia Bierbaum, Anna Christine's sister-in-law (age 18) also left Ladbergen at this time.
         This group departed Germany from the port of Bremen on the bark Leontine. Of the 102 persons on board, 56 were identified on the passenger list as former residents of Ladbergen. Four other persons were from the nearby towns of Brochterbeck and Lengerich. The Leontine arrived at Baltimore, Maryland on 28 June 1841. The Fiegenbaums, Aufderhaars and Bierbaums traveled further west and settled in Warren County, Missouri.
         It would appear that the eldest Fiegenbaum son, Heinrich Adolf (b. 1814), emigrated alone in 1843.


    Census:
    Johann Heinrich, listed in the 1860 U.S. Census as Herman, was living in the home of his youngest child, Hermann Heinrich Fiegenbaum, and his family.

    Buried:
    Johann Heinrich was buried in the cemetery across the street from the brick church dedicated in 1884 as the German Evangelical Immanuels Church of Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ). The cemetery is next to and south of the parsonage and on the site of the first church built in Holstein, known as the German Lutheran Church on Charrette (1839-1848). The German inscription on his gravestone reads:

         Joh. Hein. Fiegenbaum
         geb.
         Mäi 12. 1788.
         in Ladbergen,
         Kreis Teklenburg [sic]
         Regierungsbezirk
         Münster
         Könichreich [sic]
         Preussen,
         gest.
         Mär. 12, 1861.

         Joh. Hein. Fiegenbaum
         born
         May 12th 1788
         in Ladbergen,
         County of Teklenburg [sic]
         Administrative District of
         Münster
         Kingdom of
         Prussia,
         died
         Mar. 12th, 1861.



    Died:
    Johann's death is recorded in the archives of the German Evangelical Church on Charrette in Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ). In the published record of those archives, his name is given as "Hermann Heinrich Fiegenbaum" and his age at death is listed at 72 years and 10 months (which yields a calculated date of birth as 12 May 1788).

    Johann married Hagen, Catherina Elsabein 13 Jul 1810, Ladbergen, Grand Duchy of Berg. Catherina (daughter of Hagen, Johann Heinrich and Holtkamp, Anna Elisabeth) was born 26 Sep 1786, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 16 Sep 1853, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Hagen, Catherina Elsabein was born 26 Sep 1786, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg (daughter of Hagen, Johann Heinrich and Holtkamp, Anna Elisabeth); died 16 Sep 1853, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Immigration: 1841, Warren County, Missouri, USA
    • Census: Sep 1850, District 99, Warren County, Missouri, USA

    Notes:

    Birth:
    In existing records, this woman's name appears as either Catharine Elisabeth or Catherine Elsabein. Occasionally, Anna is placed before either of these combinations.
         Catherine Elsabein's family was living in Ladbergen at Overbeck 16 at the time of her birth. Overbeck is one of the three 'Bauernshaften' in the village of Ladbergen. A 'Bauerschaft' is an ancient grouping of farms that emerged from the earliest agricultural settlements, and comprised the earliest administrative units of a community. Until the early 1960s, Ladbergen had three Bauernshaften: Hölter, Overbeck and Wester. These settlement areas are still recognized in present day Ladbergen. Recently, the residential sections of the village center have become known by street names and a fourth section of Ladbergen, called 'Dorf' [village] has been created. The number 16 would indicate that this was the 16th farm established in this Bauerschaft.


    Immigration:

         Catherine (Hagen) Fiegenbaum emigrated from Ladbergen with her extended family, a total of at least 13 people. She (at age 54), her husband (at age 53) and her two youngest children (at ages 21 and 18) are identified as one group. Her two older daughters were already married by 1841. Anna Elisabeth (Fiegenbaum) Aufderhaar (b. 1811) and Anna Christine (Fiegenbaum) Bierbaum (b. 1815), along with their husbands and the children born prior to the departure from Germany, are identified as traveling under their husbands' names. Also included in the group was Sophia Bierbaum (age 18), sister of Anna Christine's husband. Catherine Fiegenbaum's other son, Heinrich Adolf (b. 1814), immigrated to the USA in 1843.
         The entire extended family departed Germany from the port of Bremen on the bark Leontine. Of the 102 persons on board, 56 were identified on the passenger list as former residents of Ladbergen. Four other persons were from the nearby towns of Brochterbeck and Lengerich. The Leontine arrived at Baltimore, Maryland on 28 June 1841. The Fiegenbaums, Aufderhaars and Bierbaums traveled further west and settled in Warren County, Missouri.

    Buried:
    Catherina was buried in the cemetery across the street from the brick church dedicated in 1884 as the German Evangelical Immanuels Church of Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ). The cemetery is next to and south of the parsonage and on the site of the first church built in Holstein, known as the German Lutheran Church on Charrette (1839-1848). The German inscription (and a translation) on her grave stone reads:

         Cath. Elsabein
         Fiegenbaum
         geb: Hagen von Ladbergen
         geb: den 26 ten Sept. 1786
         gest: den 16 ten Sept 1853

         Cath. Elsabein
         Fiegenbaum
         nee Hagen from Ladbergen
         born the 26th of Sept. 1786
         died the 16th of Sept. 1853


    Died:
    Catherina's death is recorded in the archives of the German Evangelical Church on Charrette in Holstein, Missouri (known since 1957 as Immanuels United Church of Christ).

    Notes:

    Married:

         The couple began their married life living in the Heuerhaus of the Hagen farm at Ladbergen-Overbeck 16. Sometime between 1815 and 1819, the family moved to Ladbergen-Wester 21.
         From 1808 to 1810, the village of Ladbergen found itself located in the département Ems of the Grand Duchy of Berg (French: Grand-duché de Berg; German: Großherzogtum Berg), a client state of the First French Empire.
         In 1811 borders were redrawn again and Ladbergen was incorporated into the First French Empire as part of the Département Ems-Supérieur (German: Departement der Oberen Ems, or, Ober-Ems).

    Children:
    1. Fiegenbaum, Anna Elisabeth was born 22 Oct 1811, Ladbergen, First French Empire; died 6 Oct 1884, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    2. 3. Fiegenbaum, Anna Christine Elsabein was born 7 Jan 1815, Ladbergen, Kingdom of Prussia; died 14 Aug 1894, Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    3. Fiegenbaum, Christine Elisabeth was born 18 Jun 1819, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia; died 22 Aug 1897, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Marthasville, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    4. Fiegenbaum, Hermann Heinrich was born 15 Apr 1823, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia; died 20 Jul 1898, Mayview, Lafayette County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Mayview, Lafayette County, Missouri, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Fiegenbaum, Hermann Heinrich was born 2 Sep 1764, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg (son of Fiegenbaum, Johann Hermann and Grotholtmann, Catharina Elisabeth); died 11 Mar 1829, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    This man's second given name is reported variously as Hendrik, Hedrich, Henrich and Heinrich. Alternative dates of birth are sometimes given as 9 February or 17 March 1764.

    Died:
    According to the church records in Ladbergen, Hermann died of water dropsy and was in need of a doctor.

    Hermann married Horstmeier, Anna Christine Katharina 20 Nov 1785, Lienen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg. Anna was born 21 Oct 1759, Lienen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 9 Jan 1830, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia. [Group Sheet]


  2. 13.  Horstmeier, Anna Christine Katharina was born 21 Oct 1759, Lienen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 9 Jan 1830, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Anna was born in Lienen (in the township of Holperdorp), a neighboring village to the east to Ladbergen.

    Died:
    Anna was 70 years, 2 months and 19 days old when she died.

    Notes:

    Married:

         The newly married couple lived in the Horstmeier Heuerhaus located in Bauerschaft Holperdorp, a section of the town of Lienen. Their first child was born there. It would appear that within a few years the family had moved. The couple's second child was born in the nearby village of Ladbergen. By 1800, the family had built a house at Ladbergen-Wester 21, located in the section of the village know as "In der Laake." Hermann died in this home in 1829 and Anna passed a year later. In 1840, the house was sold. It may be that some of the proceeds from this sale helped finance Johann Heinrich Fiegenbaum's family emigration to the USA in 1841.
         In addition to being a carpenter or house builder, Hermann Heinrich Fiegenbaum was a Heuerling or tenant farmer. Tenant farmers were low on the social scale in Ladbergen at the time. "They owned no land, and they lived in rented houses on larger farms. Every large or middle-sized farm in Ladbergen had one or more tenant houses (in German: Heuerhäuser) scattered over the farm. The highest number on any farm in Ladbergen was seven; two or three was common. Each tenant farm house had its own plot of 7 to 12 acres. The tenants rented the houses and plots for life. The tenant farmers were not the same as sharecroppers or rental farmers in the American sense. They had only a small plot to themselves, and they did not need to give any of the yield to the landowner. They were essentially renters of houses who paid for their dwellings with a small amount of cash and a specified number of days of labor. In the 19th century the tenants were typically relatives of the landowners, but this was decreasingly the case after the turn of the century."

    Children:
    1. Fiegenbaum, Everd Jacob Wilhelm was born 2 Jun 1786, Lienen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia; died 8 May 1870, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia.
    2. 6. Fiegenbaum, Johann Heinrich was born 12 May 1788, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 12 Mar 1861, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.
    3. Fiegenbaum, Johann Heinrich was born 24 Mar 1791, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 3 Jul 1847, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia.
    4. Fiegenbaum, Adolph Heinrich was born 19 Dec 1793, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 11 Jan 1877, Garner, Hancock County, Iowa, USA; was buried , Garner, Hancock County, Iowa, USA.
    5. Fiegenbaum, Johann Hermann Adolph was born 6 Feb 1797, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 4 Jan 1798, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg.
    6. Fiegenbaum, Anna Katharina Elisabeth was born 1 Feb 1799, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died Yes, date unknown.
    7. Fiegenbaum, Anna Christine was born 22 Dec 1802, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 14 Jan 1871, Ladbergen, Province of Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia.

  3. 14.  Hagen, Johann Heinrich was born 28 May 1752, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died Yes, date unknown.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Johann's family was living in Overbeck at the time of his birth. Overbeck is one of the three 'Bauernshaften' in the village of Ladbergen. A 'Bauerschaft' is an ancient grouping of farms that emerged from the earliest agricultural settlements, and comprised the earliest administrative units of a community. Until the early 1960s, Ladbergen had three Bauernshaften: Hölter, Overbeck and Wester. These settlement areas are still recognized in present day Ladbergen. Recently, the residential sections of the village center have become known by street names and a fourth section of Ladbergen, called 'Dorf' [village] has been created.

    Johann married Holtkamp, Anna Elisabeth 17 Mar 1784, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg. Anna was born 2 Nov 1755, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet]


  4. 15.  Holtkamp, Anna Elisabeth was born 2 Nov 1755, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died Yes, date unknown.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Anna's family was living at Hölter 11 at the time of her birth. Hölter is one of the three 'Bauernshaften' in the village of Ladbergen. A 'Bauerschaft' is an ancient grouping of farms that emerged from the earliest agricultural settlements, and comprised the earliest administrative units of a community. Until the early 1960s, Ladbergen had three Bauernshaften: Hölter, Overbeck and Wester. These settlement areas are still recognized in present day Ladbergen. Recently, the residential sections of the village center have become known by street names and a fourth section of Ladbergen, called 'Dorf' [village] has been created. The number 11 would indicate that this was the 11th farm established in this Bauerschaft. In 1980, Hölter 11 was renamed Ostbeverner Damm 40 and is the home of Lieselotte Fiegenbaum.

    Children:
    1. 7. Hagen, Catherina Elsabein was born 26 Sep 1786, Ladbergen, Grafschaft Tecklenburg; died 16 Sep 1853, Warren County, Missouri, USA; was buried , Holstein, Warren County, Missouri, USA.