Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts

Monday, March 3, 2014

Document Chronicles: Christian & Henriette Jaekel, Part Two


As I discussed in my previous Document Chronicles post, the young Jaekel family immigrated to America from their small manorial villages in West Prussia. They arrived in the United States on August 1, 1863. Many relatives traveled with Christian and Henriette Jaekel and their two children including Henriette’s parents, uncle and his family, and brother and his family. The Boettcher research team could not determine which port city these immigrants entered the U.S. from or how they traversed the land to reach Minnesota. However, the main points for Germans in this period were New York, Baltimore, and New Orleans. This ocean journey usually took four to six weeks unless the immigrants travelled by steamship, which cut the entire trip in half. Oftentimes, immigrants then worked their way up the Mississippi River by steamboats. We believe the families then came up the Minnesota River to Carver, Minnesota, where the other leg of their journey began through the forest to reach Waconia.

A bit about the Waconia Township, as researched by the Boettchers:

The first settlers called this lake Clear Water Lake, which remains its official name today. The Sioux Indians used the name “Meyday Wa Koni Ya”, meaning “Lake of the Spring." The Dakot aSiux spelling later became “Waconia” which translates “out of water comes life." Most of the land that bordered the lake was claimed by 1858. Settlers soon realized the value of the lake and also were drawn by the beauty of the lake.

I already consider the Jaekels and other pioneers some kind of hopeless romantics. They journeyed so far to come to a new land and language to find what was called for a long time "The Great American Desert." The Great Plains were sculpted by glaciers, giving the land its characteristic rolling hills and innumerable lakes. Once covered in a shallow sea, the prairie was made up of layers of sediments that later allowed certain crops to thrive. However, while government propaganda spread the word of the gratifying pioneers, they neglected to mention the droughts, tornadoes, fierce blizzards and subzero temperatures, among other things, that these same pioneers had been experiencing. But still the new waves of immigrant pioneers were determined and hopeful that they could make a happy life here.


Carver County Minnesota. The Waconia Township is highlighted in yellow. Carver, MN is highlighted pink right along the Minnesota River.

By the time the Jaekels arrived, Minnesota was celebrating its fifth year as a state. But much of its land was yet unclaimed. Farther out from the lakes lay the treeless prairie, like the southern area just outside the township where the Jaekels’ land lay. Though it had its share of flaws, the Waconia area and surrounding Carver County was, indeed, in a valuable position with great farming potential. Carver, Minnesota, the major town on the Minnesota River was only 13 miles from Waconia.  From there, steamboats that travelled up and down the river, connecting with the Mississippi could easily get building materials, household goods, equipment, etc. to the nearby towns. The rivers and lakes provided plenty of fish and the prairie grasslands were full of wild game to supplement what farming put on the table.

The Patent-Deeds in the Jaekel Family Booklet supply an interesting story about the history and possession of Carver County lands. The experience of reading and decoding them has ultimately been a simultaneous refresher and giver of life to all the American history I have ever learned. Who would have ever thought that territory prairie would pass through several very different hands to become farmland typical of Middle America?

In return for his service in the Mexican-American War, the U.S. government under Abraham Lincoln deeded a Private Matias De Lion of the Captain Lakewood Company of the New Mexico Volunteers land in Minnesota. Privates serving for one year or more received 160 acres of land if they applied for reimbursement through the War Bounty-Land Warrants. The government had been giving away territory lands instead of cash rewards since the end of The Revolutionary War. Land Warrant Acts granted around 60 million acres to veterans or their heirs between 1847 and 1855, when the government stopped the program. Most veterans eventually decided not to patent the land warranted to them. Many even sold their warrants to third parties. Private De Lion seems to have either surrendered his patent back to the General Land Office or allowed a transfer to a Michael Beck. There is no indication, so far as can be read, that Beck was a veteran or veteran’s heir who also would have been deeded acreage through the War Bounty-Land Warrants Act.

Patent Deed enacting the transfer to Michael Beck

The transfer from Michael Beck to Christian Jaekel.

However, Beck did decide to sell his parcel of land. Christian and Henriette Jaekel purchased the land for a grand sum of $1,100 dollars. While public land at that time was selling for $1.25 an acre, the Jaekels averaged at approximately $7 an acre. Oftentimes, veterans sold their bounty-land to agents for very little money since they were unaware of the true value. It is unclear whether Michael Beck knew the value of his land or was trying to take advantage of the newly immigrated Germans. Either way, the Jaekels followed through their purchase. The “north west quarter of Section 34 of Township 116 of Range 25” was now theirs. The Jaekels now did not need to worry about proving their mettle under the Homestead Act of 1862, wherein a homesteader settles and farms 160 acres of land for five years in order to earn that land for free. Like my parents, I have always lived under the motto of ‘better to be safe than sorry’. Perhaps that is an inherited sensibility that has lasted throughout the generations.


The Jaekels 160 acres in the Waconia Township.

These hardy pioneer farmers cleared and settled the land only to face two seasons of drought as well as a summer of grasshoppers all within the first five years on their homestead. But German-American farmers were known for their fierce determination and survival instincts. The Jaekels worked wholeheartedly to make this country their new home for their growing family. I think Christian and Henriette’s purchase proved a worthy investment. The Boettchers found the following information in the Farm Census of 1870: “21 acres of improved land and 140 acres of woods. The cash value of the farm was $2,000. The value of the implements and machinery was $150. The value of the livestock was $325, consisting of 2 horses, 2 milk cows, 5 other cattle, 5 sheep, 2 swine, and the value of animals slaughtered was $150. The harvest consisted of Spring Wheat—170 bushels; Indian Corn—50 bushels; Oats—100 bushels; Barley—70 bushels; Wool—10; Butter – 100 pounds; Hay – 7 or 8 tons. The estimated value of farm produce was $500.”

Deed transfer between father and son.


The Jaekel land in 1898, now owned by Hermann.

Hermann, their second son and first American-born, purchased the land from his parents for $2,000. The land was officially transferred on June 16, 1890. Christian and Henriette continued to live on the land with their son and later, grandchildren. Though the land is no longer among the Jaekel descendants, it is still farmed in Waconia today. I just think that the story of the connection between the land and my family is incredibly amazing. There is so much history there. Yet, it is still existing and progressing under the watchful eyes and calloused hands of farmers, all started by the hopeless romanticism and hard work of my ancestors.

Map of Waconia today, still surrounded by operating farmland.
Courtesy of Carver County.




Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Document Chronicles: Christian & Henriette Jaekel


I am fortunate to have an incredibly supportive network of relatives, who, upon hearing of my project, have been forwarding memories and whatever familial documents they have in their possession. One such resource is a genealogical booklet of the Christian and Henriette Jaekel Family, which was sent by my grandparents, Larry and Joyce. They are the great grandparents of my grandfather. A team of relatives, the Boettchers, compiled the booklet in 1993 and was able to find many significant historical documents to complement the family tree. I have been absolutely amazed by the document copies. It is one thing to imagine your ancestors emigrating and starting anew in another country but it is certainly another when you can see tangible evidence of their life-changing decision.

My Great-Great-Great-Grandfather, Christian Jaekel, was born in Wentsie, Kries Behrendt Provinz and Koenigreich Preusen, Germany on December 23, 1825. Germany then was not a unified country, but rather a group of independent states, like the Kingdom of Prussia, that were part of a larger area usually referred to as ‘the Germanies’ even during the Holy Roman Empire. According to Meyers Gazetteer of the German Empire from 1912, Wentsie was a noble’s estate of 49 persons in West Prussia. It was 3.5 km from the Berent Railroad Station. I have discovered an old map from 1855 that depicts the Behhrendt Province near the main port of Danzig. 

Behrent is just west of Danzig, which is on the coast of the bay of yellow-outlined West Prussia.
Image courtesy of Reinhold Berg Antique Maps.


Christian’s wife, Henriette Kowalke was born in Old Paleschken, West Prussia, Germany on June 12, 1833. Old Paleschken is now known as the small village of Nowe Polaszki, Poland. Its current population is around 460. This is not much of a change since the 521-person population listed in the 1912 Gazeteer. Another Prussian genealogical researcher discovered Alt Paleschken’s village dates back to 1289 during the Northern Crusades against the pagan Prussians. Teutonic Knights later purchased the land in 1359 but by 1456 the village was royal property.

Alt-Paleschken is to the right of Neu-Paleschken in the upper left corner.
Other similarly small manorial villages can be seen.
Image courtesy of Bill Remus.

View of Nowe Polaszki, Poland today (Point A).
Image courtesy of Google Maps.

Though they lived in different villages, both the Jaekels and the Kowalkes would have been peasant farmers with little to no land of their own and even less to pass on to their descendants. It is easy to understand how Christian and Henreitte Jaekel might have felt at the prospect of new unclaimed territories in America. The Jaekels left no evidence as to why exactly they emigrated, but being free to work their own land would be my guess. Other Germans were known to have immigrated to America due to the potato famine in Germany, draft evasion in the Germanic/Russian territories and religious oppression. Once they had decided to make the journey, the Jaekels would have sold off their possessions to pay for passage as well as to downsize their portable property. Then, they would have needed the requisite “Permit to Emigrate” and passports, which were sometimes combined documents. Personal recommendations from local church officials went far in obtaining these permits. So far as we know, neither a passport nor a permit survives.

However, we do have copies of Christian’s, his son’s (Gustave), and his brother-in-law’s (August Kowalke) Certificates of Renunciation of Citizenship to Germany. The forms clearly state that “it is my bona fide intention to become a Citizen of the United States, and to renounce forever all allegiance and fidelity which I in any wise owe…to the Emperor of Germany, Emperor Wilhelm I of whom I have heretofore been a subject.” Gustave’s certificate is below as it is the clearest copy from 1993. Signing and submitting this kind of document must have been an incredible moment for immigrants; it was the final official step from their homeland and embrace of their new life.

Gustave Jaekel's Certificate of Renunciation 1886

Several years later, the Jaekels and the Kowalkes would have been eligible to file their Certificates of Naturalization, a legal affirmation of their new American citizenship. August Kowalke’s (Henriette Jaekel’s brother) copy is dated 1868, just five years after their presumed arrival. Christian Jaekel's is not included in the ancestry booklet. But his son's is. According to the 1790 Naturalization Act, the wife and children of a naturalized citizen are automatically considered naturalized. So, I can only conclude that since Christian's is missing--as is Henriette's--and that his son still went to swear before the Chaska Court over thirty years later in 1897, Christian and Henriette Jaekel never followed through their promise of becoming legal status U.S. citizens. This is definitely an interesting plot-twist, if true.

By 1868, the Jaekels and Kowalkes had been farming on their new homesteads for five years, the requisite time for their land to officially be their own property. Though the certificates would have meant their new legal American nationality, I can only wonder if this paper would have truly felt like an equally large step as the renunciation. Working for five years on American land that I had paid for would certainly have made me feel more American already. Perhaps the reason Christian and Henriette never filed (if our research is correct) is because they did not need to prove they had become Americans. They had cleared and toiled unsettled land for five years. Would a paper have brought them any further validation? Obviously official legal status is extremely important to the foundation of a new settled life, as Gustave and his uncle felt. But I ask myself if this might be where my inherited indifference for any kind of certificate of participation or certain award stems from? While my friends pined over small blue ribbons at Field Day and what have you, I have always been content knowing I had done the best I could and did not feel the need for any kind of recognition. Then again, I have always been very shy and probably never wanted any extra attention. Whatever the case, I happily imagine a large traditional German feast in honor of August Kowalke's (and later Gustave Jaekel's) authenticated naturalization as well as the new life these families had started in Minnesota.
 
August Kowalke's Certificate of Naturalization 1868.



Watch for Part Two of my Document Chronicles series, which covers the Jaekel’s homestead in early Waconia, Carver County, Minnesota.