Sunday, August 26, 2018

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 34 Non-Population


This week's topic is “Non-population Schedules of the U S Census”.  There are several of these available from 1850 through 1880, mortality, agriculture, industry, and slave among them. For my husband’s farming families, the agricultural schedule will reveal a lot of information to fill out the lives of these people who lived in Willow Hill, Jasper County, Illinois. Willow Hill is a very small farming community south and west of Terra Haute, Indiana. It's main claim to fame is as the home of folksinger Burl Ives, the voice of Frosty the Snowman.

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mage:google images
In 1870, Fred Simpsrod (41) and his wife Annie (38) were the parents of seven children from thirteen to one year of age.[i] Fred and Annie were both German immigrants and living in southern Illinois. A look at the non-population agricultural schedule for the 1870 census will give a glimpse into their lives.

In 1870 Fred Sempsrott was the owner, manager, or agent of 85 acres of improved land of which 45 acres was wooded showing a land valued at $1200.00. The family had 3 horses, 3 milk cows and 3 other cattle. The other cattle were not asses, mules, or working oxen as they were listed separately. There were also 13 sheep on the farm. Including 5 swine, the value of all livestock was listed as $520.00.

Fred’s land produced 158 bushels of winter wheat, 400 bushels of Indian corn and 45 bushels of barley. Although called Indian Corn, it was just corn. Other crops that were itemized on the 1870 Agricultural Schedule were spring wheat, oats, buckwheat, rice and tobacco. These were all known as cash crops as they were grown to be sold. Fred also grew 12 bushels of Irish potatoes and 60 bushels of grass in 1870. 

The last entry on the census relates to the “Estimated Value of all farm production including betterments and additions to stock” Fred’s estimated value was $600.00 which is $11,227.00 today, not a lot to support a family of nine.

By the time of the 1880 Census, F A Simpsrott and Anna Sampsrott were still in Willow Hill, Jasper County, Illinois with six children living on the farm. On the 1880 Agricultural Schedule Fred recorded as F A Simpson and is the owner of 63 acres of fallow and grass in rotation, whether pasture or meadow, 17 acres of meadows. pastures, orchards, vineyards, and 40 acres of woodland and forest. The value of the farm, including land, fences, and buildings was $1500.00 with a total of $135.00 in implements and machinery and $350.00 invested in livestock. Fred had paid $49.00 in building and repair costs in 1879. The estimated value of all farm production (sold, consumed, or on hand) was $400.00. 

The farm encompassed 17 acres of mown grasslands and 16 tons of hay had been harvested to help feed the four horses. There were three milk cows and four animals on the farm that were classified as other than working oxen or milk cows. Fred had two calves born and sold three living cattle.

The farm made 150 pounds of butter in 1879, one lamb was born, and one fleece weighing 20 pounds was clipped or shorn in the spring of 1880. There were 35 swine on hand June 1, 1880 and 24 poultry on hand in the barn yard which had produced $50.00 worth of eggs in 1879.
Under the heading of Cereals, the farm produced 11 acres of Indian corn equaling 30 bushels, 28 acres of land had produced 317 bushels of wheat, and 4 bushels of dry beans were produced in 1879. Four acres produced 30 bushels of Irish potatoes, and Fred also grew 30 pounds of tobacco. In the orchard there were 25 fruit bearing apple trees and 12 bearing peach trees. The bee hives yielded 50 pounds of honey and Fred cut 15 cords of wood in 1879. The value of all forest products sold or consumed in 1879 was $30.00.[ii]

It is interesting to observe the changes in both the questions asked and the answers to the Agricultural Schedule and the changes in farming in ten years. It is impossible to guess whether the family’s fortunes improved with the passing of time but, since the farm remained in the family into the 20th century I would guess that Frederick Albert Sempsrott and his family prospered no matter how their last name was spelled! (Did you find all five versions of their last name?)



[i] 1870 US Federal Census, database on line Ancestry.com; Willow Hill, Jasper, Illinois; Roll M593_232; page 3866A; Family History Library Film 545731
[ii] 1880 U S Federal Census; database online, Ancestry.com; Willow Hill, Jasper County, Illinois; Archive Collection Number: T1133; Roll: 41; Page: 13; Line: 8; Schedule Type: Agriculture; NARA microfilm publication T1133, rolls 1-11, 13-56

Friday, August 24, 2018

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 33 Family Legends





The legend in my husband’s family was that his great-great-grandfather Friedrich Albert Sempsrott and brother Johann Heinrich were stowaways on a ship from Germany. According to family lore Friederich had been apprenticed as a cigar maker, when their mother, fearful of conscription into the Hanovarian army, put Friederich and Johann on a ship bound for New York.

            “The Family of SEMPSROTT
1.     FREDERICK ALBERT SEMPSROTT (1829-1907) was born near Berlin, Germany in 1829. He completed his apprenticeship in the cigar-making trade in 1844. His father was dead and his mother cared for him and his brother, John. As he approached the age when he must be inducted into the Army for military service, his mother decided to send him to America because she did not wish to see him sent to the Army for military training.

She watched for an opportunity to place him upon a boat coming to America. Finally she learned of a boat and she stowed these two boys away with a family who were coming to America. The boys worked on the boat for their passage and after they landed in America, they went to Cincinnati, Ohio. There Frederick obtained work in a butcher shop.”[i]

The following spelling variants of the name have made record finding challenging: Semporste, Semporstt, Sempscote, Semmsrote, Semfarote, Simprod, Semporatt, Semport, Seniprot, Semparote, Sempsrote, Sempirote, Simpsrott, Sempscott, Senpscott, Sampsroth. I am sure that there are others that I have either forgotten or not found yet! As far back as 1698 the church books in Martfeld, Germany reveal the spellings: Semsrott, Sempsrott, and Semsroth.[ii]

After searching the records at Castle Garden and checking both Ancestry.com and FamilySearch.org without success, I turned to the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Lists and found a record of the D H Watjen, arriving in New York on 26 June 1855 from Bremen, one Johann Heinrich Sempsroth was listed as passenger number 397 in “popdeck” and steerage travelers. Johann was a 21-year-old laborer from Hanover.[iii] These details fit with previously known information about Friedrich’s brother Johann. He was known to have been born in 1833 in Hanover as reported on several US censuses.

At present the earliest record I have found of Frederich Albert Sempsrott is the 1870 census of Jasper County, Illinois. At that point he was married to Anna Margaret Steinfort, who had immigrated with her parents in 1845.[iv]
The 1870 census for Willow Hill, Jasper County, Illinois shows Fred Simporod and his wife Annie to be the parents of seven children with the oldest three born in Indiana, Charles, Henry, and Caroline. Charles’s Family Register indicates that he was born on 7 Jan 1859 in Ripley County, Indiana and a self-reported account in “The Counties of Cumberland, Jasper and Richland, Illinois”, says that Frederick settled in Indiana for several years before moving to Jasper County, Illinois in 1862. This article also gives the marriage of Frederick and Anna Steinforth as taking place in 1842.”[v]

I haven’t yet found all the the facts about the immigration of Frederick Albert Sempsrott but I haven’t quit looking either. Writing this article has actually given me several ideas for places to look for additional information. I tend to believe the ship’s record of Johann Heinrich Sempsroth’s immigration since it is possible that the two boys sailed under a single ticket, underscoring the “stowaway” part of the story. 

Anna’s parents appear in Ripley County in the 1860 census but Frederick and Anna are not there. If Anna and Frederick married in 1842, why was their first child not born until 1859? So many riddles! I am not finished with you yet Frederick Albert!



[i] From a typed manuscript of the family history of the Sempsrott Family of Jasper County, Illinois. 1829-1952; author unknown. Manuscript in the possession of Donna Hansen Peterson
[ii] Email dated 27 Jan 2001 from Johann Semsrott of Germany to Donald Sempsrott (ddescendant of Johann Heinrich Sempsrott) . Copy of email in possession of Donna Hanen Peterson
[iii] Immigrant Ships Transcribers Lists: search on “Sempsroth”; Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild
Passengers and Captains Including Names -Referenced in Correspondence Sci-Sha; https://www.immigrantships.net/v7/surnamesv7/splsci_v7.htm
[iv] National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) ; Washington, ADC; Records of the US Customs Service; Series: M255; Roll 5 accessed through Ancestory.com .
[v] Counties of Cumberland, Jasper and Richland, Illinois. Historical and biographical; publisher F. A. Battey & Co., Chicago, IL;  publ:1884; pages 521-522; digitized 2008; digitizing sponsor: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Sunday, August 12, 2018

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 32 "Youngest"


This week’s prompt is “youngest” and once again I will turn to the Burbach family as the source of my family’s youngest immigrant.

Logo of current Burbach's Meat Market from their facebook page.
My great-uncle Johan Burbach was two years old when he migrated with his parents and older brother Hermann to the United States. They left Villmar, a small village in the Duchy of Nassau and province of Hesse in 1856[i] and began their journey to Milwaukee, Wisconsin. They didn’t choose Milwaukee arbitrarily since Catharina Caspari Burbach (mother of Johan and Hermann) already had an aunt and uncle who were farming in the area. Both of Johan’s parents had already lost their parents, so they were ready to brave the voyage to provide a better life for their children.

The little family settled on Walnut Street in Milwaukee, where they became involved in the local German community. Both the boys had been baptized in the Catholic faith in Villmar at Saints Peter and Paul Church[ii] and so they continued their faith education at St Joseph Church in Milwaukee. They attended the German schools, which were very available in Milwaukee at the time, while their father worked to provide food and housing. Since they came from an area of Germany where farming and raising cattle were common occupations, Georg pursued the cattle industry, becoming first a cattle drover before advancing to cattle broker. His sons, Hermann and Johan watched and learned from their father.

On 17 Sep 1875, John Burback married Steffonia Grumber in Brooklyn, New York.[iii] By 1880, John and Stefanie were the parents of daughters Catherine and Eva living with John’s parents on Walnut Street while John and his brother Hermann ran the Burbach Brothers Butcher shop which they had opened about 1876.

According to the 1900 census, John and Stefanie were living at 2327 Lisbon Street in Milwaukee with their six surviving children. John’s brother Hermann had died, and John was the sole proprietor of the butcher shop.

John died on 31 May 1929 at his home at 519 4th Ave in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. “John Burbach was one of the oldest and best-known butchers of the city and one of the founders of the Milwaukee Mens Market Association. Until a few years ago when he retired, the deceased had a butcher shop at 2327 Lisbon Ave. for many years and previously, for 17 years at the corner of 16th and Walnut. On the whole he was in [iv]the business for 46 years.”

John’s funeral was on Monday 3 June 1929 from J H Becker and Sons funeral parlor to St Michael’s Church, where he was a member.[v] He is buried in Calvary Cemetery in Milwaukee next to his beloved wife Stephanie who died in 1922.



[i] "Passenger and Immigration Lists (PILI)," database on line, Gale Research Company, ancestry.com (http://search.ancestry.com : online 2004), Immigration of Georg Burbach and family; Edited by William Filby, with Mary K Meyer.
[ii] Villmar Catholic Church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Villmar), Kirchenbuch 1632 - 1884, 16 Apr 1854, Birth and Baptism of Johan Burbach; FHL microfilm 1272247.
[iii]  Marriage, (17 September 1875), "New York, New York City Marriage Records 1829-1940: FHL film 1543916; New York City Municipal Archives, New York, New York.
[iv] Milwaukee Herold, 01 June 1929, pg 2 col 7
[v] ibid

Sunday, August 5, 2018

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 31 "Oldest"


The prompt for this week is “oldest”, so I am writing about the oldest documented ancestor I have my fifth great-grandfather Johann Jacob Burbach.

Johan Jacob Burbach was born about 1732 in Oberselters, Hesse-Nassau, Germany. Oberselters is now a suburb of Camberg, a metropolis about 40 kilometers northwest of Frankfurt, Germany. Currently Oberselters is known for its mineral waters, although in the 18th and 19th centuries it was primarily a farming and mining community.[i] As part of Germany’s “Golden Triangle”,  it is valued for the fertile land and favorable weather for crops.


St Anthony Catholic Church in Oberselters is where the births, marriages, and deaths of Johann Jacob Burbach and his descendants would be recorded for the next century and a half.

On 23 November 1756, Johann married Helena Müller, the daughter of Johann Müller and Anna Bauer in Kamberg, Hesse-Nassau.[ii] They would make their home in Oberselters until 1782 when Johann died, Helena having preceded him in 1775.

Johann and Helena had six children Anna Maria, born 5Feb, 1758;[iii]Maria Elisabetha born 7 Dec 1759[iv]; Wilhelm, my fourth great-grandfather, born 29 Oct 1764, married first Catherine Gross (1763-1800) they had eleven children. He married second Helena Michels (1770-1817) they had five additional children before died 30 May 1819[v]; Maria Elisabetha born 11 Aug 1767, married Phillip Görz13 May 1783 in Kamberg, Hesse-Nassau[vi]; Johann Burbach, born 13 Sep 1770[vii]; Anton Burbach born 2 Dec 1773, died 25 Aug 1795 in Oberselters.[viii]

Given the location of the family, I believe the family was engaged in agriculture of some kind. Occupational records of the time were scarce but I will go back and review the church Baptismal records since I recently learned that the father’s occupation was noted there.

The Burbach saga has just begun!


[i] Wikipedia
[ii] Katholische Kirche, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Kamberg, Hesse-Nassau), Kirchenbuch, 1598-1900, , marriage of Johann J Burbach and Helena Müller; FHL microfilm 1200886.
[iii] Kirchenbuchduplikat 1818 - 1874, Dupilcate Church Book 1818-1874: 8 May 1819, St Anthony Catholic Church, Oberselters, Hessen-Nassau, Germany.
[iv] ibid
[v] ibid
[vi] ibid
[vii] ibid
[viii] ibid