Samuel EMMERT
Characteristics
Type | Value | Date | Place | Sources |
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name | Samuel EMMERT |
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Events
Type | Date | Place | Sources |
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death | 21. November 1885 | ||
residence | 1920 | ||
burial | after 21. November 1885 | Beaver Creek Church of the Brethren Cemetery, Beaver Creek, Washington County, Maryland, USA
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birth | 1807 | Maryland, USA
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marriage |
Parents
Benjamin EMMERT | Anna Mariah HARBAUGH |
??spouses-and-children_en_US??
Marriage | ??spouse_en_US?? | Children |
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Mary NEWCOMER |
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Sources
1 | Find a Grave, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/58549376/samuel-emmert
Publication: MyHeritage
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Samuel Emmert Birth: 1807 - USA Death: 21 Nov 1885 (aged 77–78) - Beaver Creek, Washington County, Maryland, USA Burial: Beaver Creek Church of the Brethren Cemetery, Beaver Creek, Washington County, Maryland, USA Memorial ID: 58549376 Wenn es um die Verwaltung, Erstellung und Wartung der Webseite geht, wird Find A Grave weitgehend von seinem Gründer, Jim Tipton betrieben. Jim schuf die Find A Grave Website im Jahr 1995, weil er keine bestehende Website finden konnte, welche sein Hobby, den Besuch von Gräbern berühmter Persönlichkeiten, ermöglichte. Er fand, dass es viele tausend Leute auf der ganzen Welt geben würde, dieseine Interessen teilten. Was als seltsames Hobby begann, wurde zu einer Lebensaufgabe und Leidenschaft. Aufzubauen und zu sehen, wie Find A Grave über seine kühnsten Erwartungen wuchs, war für Jimungeheuer befriedigend. Jeden Tag gaben Mitwirkende aus der ganzen Welt neue Datensätze ein, tausende verwendeten die Website als Bildungs-Nachschlagewerk, lange verlorengegblaubte Verwandte wurdenwiedergefunden und Millionen von Menschenleben bleiben in guter Erinnerung. In welcher anderen Art von Arbeit hätte Jim einer der letzten lebenden Munchkins getroffen, vort einer Versammlung von Grab-Enthusiasten in einem Hollywood-Mausoleum gesprochen und Schätze erworben, wie seinen antiken Sarg-Schraubendreher (nur zum Einschrauben)? | |
2 | Volkszählung 1860 der Vereinigten Staaten, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10127/volkszahlung-1860-der-vereinigten-staaten?s=138115081&itemId=8869838-&groupId=a6eacf0b5f0cc8c45e447051e2e5d328&action=showRecord&indId=individual-138115081-94032959
Publication: MyHeritage
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<p>Samuel Emmert<br>Geschlecht: männlich<br>Geburt: ca. 1808 - Maryland, United States<br>Wohnsitz: 1860 - Funkstown District, Washington, Maryland, USA<br>Alter: 52<br>Ehefrau (impliziert): Mary Emmert<br>Kinder (impliziert): Elias Emmert, Joseph Emmert, John Emmert, Sarah Emmert, Victor Emmert, Thomas Emmert, Mary Emmert, Amelia Emmert, Ella Emmert, Franklin Emmert<br>Volkszählung: Details anzeigenDetails verbergen</p> Die Bundesvolkszähler wurden gehalten, Informationen jeder Person aufzuzeichnen, welche sich am Zähltag in einem bestimmten Haushalt aufgehalten hat. Der Volkszähler konnte auch an einem späterenZeitpunkt einen Haushalt befragen, aber die gesammelten Informationen mussten sich Personen beschränken, welche sich am Zähltag in diesem Haushalt aufhielten. Die Basiszähleinheit war das County. Jedes County war in Zählbezirke aufgeteilt, einen für jeden Zähler. Die vervollständigten Formulare wurden an das Commerce Department’s Census Office in Washington, D.C. gesendet.Staatliche Volkszählungen sind normalerweise verlässlich, abhängig vom Wissen des Informanten und der Sorgfalt des Volkszählers. Informationen an den Volkszähler konnte durch jedes Familienmitglied oder durch einen Nachbarn abgegeben werden. Einige Informationen waren nicht richtig oder wurden bewusst gefälscht. | |
3 | FamilySearch Stammbaum, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-40001/familysearch-stammbaum?itemId=657536527&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
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Samuel Emmert Geburtsname: Samuel Emmert Geschlecht: männlich Geburt: 1807 - Maryland, United States Wohnsitz: 1920 - Chambersburg Ward 2, Franklin, Pennsylvania, United States Tod: 21. Nov. 1885 - Beaver Creek, Washington, Maryland, United States Erdbestattung: Nov. 1885 - Beaver Creek Cem, Washington, Maryland Eltern: Benjamin Emmert, Anna Mariah Emmert (geb. Harbaugh) Ehefrau: Mary Emmert (geb. Newcomer) Kinder: Amelia L Emmert, Ella Victus Snodgrass (geb. Emmert), Joseph S Emmert, Elias Emmert, Frank Scott Emmert, Victor Emmert, Sarah Emmert, Thomas Jefferson Emmert, Elias Emmert Geschwister: Joseph D. Emmert, Mary Williams (geb. Emmert), Susan Price (geb. Emmeret), John Emmert, Magdalena Schindel (geb. Emmert), Nancy Rowland (geb. Emmert), Catherine Miles (geb. Emmert), Elizabeth Newcomer (geb. Emmert) Diese Person hat scheinbar doppelte Verwandte. Sehen Sie auf FamilySearch nach, um die ganze Information anzuzeigen. Der FamilySearch Stammbaum wird duch MyHeritage unter Lizenz von FamilySearch International, der weltgrössten Genealogie Organisation, veröffentlicht. FamilySearch ist eine nonprofit Organisation gesponsert von der Kirche Jesu Christi der Heiligen der Letzten Tage (Mormonen Kirche). | |
4 | Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1836-1922, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10449/chronicling-america-historic-american-newspapers-1836-1922?itemId=11964284&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
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<p>Alexandria Gazette<br />Veröffentlichung: Alexandria, District of Columbia, USA<br />Datum: 23. Nov. 1885<br />Text: ".... The total subscription for the sufferers by the great firo amounts to$104,700. Mr. <span style="background-color: yellow; font-weight: bold; padding: 2px;">Samuel</span> <span style="background-color: yellow; font-weight: bold; padding: 2px;">Emmert</span>, father ofMrs. 0. F. Flippo, died at his residence near Hagerstown on Saturday Inst. Mrs. Flippo received ... in the new year in Washington, after which the young couplo will rcMde in Norfolk. Senator and Mrs.Gibson and Mr. and Mrs. Linden Kent were calhd to New York tin* early part of last week by the sudden death ... ." Bl'RlKD.?The body of Hoskins Blair, tho little colored child who wandered away from his bome in this city on Friday night last with his simple-minded aunt, and who died from exposure iu Washington ... on Saturday last, as mentioned in tho GAZETTE of that day, was brought to this cityby his parents yesterday and buried. In conversation "with a reporter..."<br />Über diese QuelleEstablished in 1834 as a successor to several papers dating back as early as 1800, the Gazette began as a voice of the Whig Party but eventually turned to a Democratic view. For the time, that was hardly an unusual political evolution for a Virginia paper. What did, however, make the paper somewhatunique in nineteenth-century Virginia was its forceful and effective support of industrialization throughout the South. Situated across the Potomac from the Washington Navy Yard, Alexandria was a growing riverfront community that could boast of considerable industry for its size--including brickworks; shoe, furniture, and machinery factories; breweries; ship chandleries and boat yards; and rail lines for both the Baltimore & Ohio and Chesapeake & Ohio Railroads. By 1900, the city had a population of 6,430 and was increasingly affected by--and prospered from--the growth of the federalgovernment and its payroll. Its perspective, then, was unlike most Virginia papers.Too, the Gazette by 1900 was the dominant daily newspaper and an influential voice in the community. Since 1865, at least 23 papers had begun publication in Alexandria but then disappeared. In the 1890s alone, six shut down. By 1900, then, the Gazette competition was reduced primarily to the Alexandria Times, but even that paper would barely survive the decade. Particularly noteworthy is how fertile the Alexandria region had been for the African- American press. But the Clipper had ceased business in 1894, and its successor the Leader and Clipper ended in 1898; the Home News, established in 1902, and the Industrial Advocate, opened circa 1900, disappeared within several years as well. The point, though, is that the papers reflected a perceived need within a substantial enough minority community that any major paper--whatever its politics, whatever its bias--would be compelled to take its existence into account in reporting on local government and the economy.Thus, at the beginning of the twentieth century, the Alexandria Gazette could legitimately comment on its considerable significance to the growing northern Virginia community and region. The files of the paper,the editor wrote, are the official and unabridged history of Alexandria, and while numbers of other papers have appeared and disappeared during all the years of its existence, it has weathered all the storms of time. . .</p> Zeitungen sind hervorragende Quellen für genealogische und Familienforschungs-Informationen. Geburts-, Heirats- und Todesbekanntmachungen und -anzeigen sind übliche Teile der Genealogie. Aber auch in Artikeln über lokale Nachrichten und Ereignisse können Vorfahren auftauchen (z.B. Soziales, Gemeinschaft, Schule, Sport oder geschäftsbezogene Ereignisse). | |
5 | Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1836-1922, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-10449/chronicling-america-historic-american-newspapers-1836-1922?itemId=11964284&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
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&lt;p&gt;Alexandria Gazette&lt;br /&gt;Veröffentlichung: Alexandria, District of Columbia, USA&lt;br /&gt;Datum: 23. Nov. 1885&lt;br /&gt;Text: ".... The total subscription for the sufferers by the great firo amounts to $104,700. Mr. Samuel Emmert, father of Mrs. 0. F. Flippo, died at his residence near Hagerstown on Saturday Inst. Mrs. Flippo received ... in the new year in Washington, after which the young couplo will rcMde in Norfolk. Senator and Mrs. Gibson and Mr. and Mrs. Linden Kent were calhd to New York tin* early part of last week by the sudden death ... ." Bl'RlKD.?The body of Hoskins Blair, tho little colored child who wandered away from his bome in this city on Friday night last with his simple-minded aunt, and who died from exposure iu Washington ... on Saturday last, as mentioned in tho GAZETTE of that day, was brought to this city by his parents yesterday and buried. In conversation "with a reporter..."&lt;br /&gt;Über diese QuelleEstablished in 1834 as a successor to several papers dating back as early as 1800, the Gazette began as a voice of the Whig Party but eventually turned to a Democratic view. For the time, that was hardly an unusual political evolution for a Virginia paper. What did, however, make the paper somewhat unique in nineteenth-century Virginia was its forceful and effective support of industrialization throughout the South. Situated across the Potomac from the Washington Navy Yard, Alexandria was a growing riverfront community that could boast of considerable industry for its size--including brickworks; shoe, furniture, and machinery factories; breweries; ship chandleries and boat yards; and rail lines for both the Baltimore & Ohio and Chesapeake & Ohio Railroads. By 1900, the city had a population of 6,430 and was increasingly affected by--and prospered from--the growth of the federal government and its payroll. Its perspective, then, was unlike most Virginia papers.Too, the Gazette by 1900 was the dominant daily newspaper and an influential voice in the community. Since 1865, at least 23 papers had begun publication in Alexandria but then disappeared. In the 1890s alone, six shut down. By 1900, then, the Gazette competition was reduced primarily to the Alexandria Times, but even that paper would barely survive the decade. Particularly noteworthy is how fertile theAlexandria region had been for the African- American press. But the Clipper had ceased business in 1894, and its successor the Leader and Clipper ended in 1898; the Home News, established in 1902, andthe Industrial Advocate, opened circa 1900, disappeared within several years as well. The point, though, is that the papers reflected a perceived need within a substantial enough minority community that any major paper--whatever its politics, whatever its bias--would be compelled to take its existence into account in reporting on local government and the economy.Thus, at the beginning of the twentieth century, the Alexandria Gazette could legitimately comment on its considerable significance to the growing northern Virginia community and region. The files of the paper,the editor wrote, are the official and unabridged history of Alexandria, and while numbers of other papers have appeared and disappeared during all the years of its existence, it has weathered all the storms of time. . .&lt;/p&gt; Zeitungen sind hervorragende Quellen für genealogische und Familienforschungs-Informationen. Geburts-, Heirats- und Todesbekanntmachungen und -anzeigen sind übliche Teile der Genealogie. Aber auch in Artikeln über lokale Nachrichten und Ereignisse können Vorfahren auftauchen (z.B. Soziales, Gemeinschaft, Schule, Sport oder geschäftsbezogene Ereignisse). |
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Title | Ahnenliste der Familien Gottfried, Reuther & Krämer |
Description | Diese Datenbank enthält auch Personen, die nicht mit mir verwandt sind. Meistens sind das Vorfahren angeheirateter Familienmitglieder. Trotz aller Akribie ist die Datenbank leider nicht fehlerfrei. Sollten ihnen Fehler oder Unstimmigkeiten auffallen, möchte ich sie um Mitteilung bitten. Die Datenbank wird laufend aktualisiert. Stand: 11.02.2025 Genealogie beginnt als Interesse, es wird ein Hobby, dreht sich zu einer Sucht, und im letzten Zustand: unheilbare Krankheit! |
Id | 62566 |
Upload date | 2025-05-11 11:49:12.0 |
Submitter |
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edgar.gottfried@t-online.de | |
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