Friday, October 27, 2023

My Stolper Roots: Jeremias Schröder, the Rabbit Hunter - My 7X Great Grandfather, Part 1

 

I have been working on my family history for over two decades. This is going to sound a bit odd, but there are some ancestors who do not want to be found. They want to hide away with their assorted secrets, content to leave their descendants perpetually in the dark. From them, you must wrestle every scrap of information. There are also the ancestors who, if you prod them, whispering that if they want to be known, they need to give you a helping hand. I am always astonished (and sometimes, frankly a little spooked) when a brick wall will suddenly crumble after a “heart to heart” with these ancestors. Then there are the ancestors, who you are not looking for, have no knowledge of, and suddenly, there they are. Plop. Falling into your lap like ripened fruit tumbling down from a tree. That is exactly what happened in the case of my 7X Great Grandfather, Jeremias Schröder.

Each of us have 512  7X  great grandparents. There may be some family historians who know the names of all 512 of their ancestors, but I would guess, if they exist, there are not many of them. Jeremias takes two spots of the 512, as I descend from two of his great grandsons, Christian and Gottfried.

My Stolper family were, to be blunt, peasants. Hardy peasants, as my existence will attest, but peasants, nonetheless. Some of them may have been tied to the local landowners as serfs. As such, the records of their existence are minimal, confined to tax and church records.

The earliest surviving German church records are from St. Sebald in Nuremberg dating back to the year 1524. Lutheran churches began requiring the records of baptisms, marriages and deaths be documented in about the year 1540. The Catholic church started requiring the same record keeping in 1563 and by the year 1650, most Reformed Churches required the same.

For my family, most of whom belonged to the church in the village of Budow, the records appear to have been kept beginning in the year 1643. Until the very end of World War II, those records were intact. They encompassed three hundred years of the lives of my family and their neighbors.

In many areas of Germany, the records, or sometimes their duplicates, managed to survive the war. In the district of Stolp, however, it has been reported that two-thirds of all records (not just church records) were lost.

A series of maps will give you an idea of where the Stolp region and the village of Budow were located.

Below is a German map of the Weimar Republic which represented Germany from 1919 to 1937. The Baltic Sea (Ostee) is located along the coast of Pomerania, and in fact, is located directly below where the Baltic Sea is labeled.














A closer look at the area of Pomerania as of 1939 shows you the exact location of the District of Stolp. Stolp is the second furthest Eastern Kreis. There is an area in the southcentral portion of Stolp, that dips a finger down along both the borders of Rummelsburg and Bütow. It is within this area that some of the villages of the Budow Parish sit, with Budow located Northeast of the area.












Here is a map of Stolp Kreis. The blue area marks the location of Budow.

















In 2010, during my long-extended blogging hiatus, a genuinely nice German woman reached out to me. When I say reached out, I mean she did a very credible search to track me down. Can I just say that my experience has taught me that either a Schröder gene or a Quetschke gene must be where we get our research chops from, because invariably, these are the people who are particularly good at finding people and places.  

It turned out that she and I were third cousins. She descended from Great Grandfather Leo’s eldest sister, Bertha. We exchanged pictures and information, and she sent me two genealogies. One represented the line of Bertha’s father, Wilhelm Heinrich Schröder and the other was of Bertha’s mother, Caroline Wilhelmine Quetschke.

I, of course, was overjoyed. I marveled that there had been a genealogical interest in the family in earlier generations. It was at this point my cousin told me that genealogy was required by the government. The government in question was The National Socialist German Workers’ Party or more commonly known as the Nazi Party. She told me that the genealogy was completed in 1933, the year the Nazi Party came to power. My cousin told me everyone needed a completed genealogy. I don’t think that was strictly true in the beginning. However, a genealogy was, in fact, required of all Party members, and for all public officials, which included teachers.

Bertha Schröder had two sons who were teachers. They would have been required to prove their Aryan status by genealogical means. There was a booming business for genealogical work while the Nazi’s were in power. Carrying around a sheaf of genealogical papers that had to be produced on any kind of a regular basis turned out to be a bit unwieldy. The Ahnenpaß came into being. It was a small book, like a passport with all the relevant genealogical information, the entries on each page stamped and signed by the appropriate entity.

Eventually, more people were required to have an Ahnenpaß. I don’t know what percentage of the population carried genealogical passports, and I don’t know how many survived the war, but for those of us whose ancestors’ records were wiped out during and in the aftermath of war, they provide information that is no longer available.

In the information that I was given, Jeremias was not listed. The genealogy only went back as far as Anthonius Schröder, whom I now know was the son of Jeremias. There were no dates given for Anthonius, but his son, Johann Schröder, had a birthdate of 5 March 1725 and his place of birth was listed as Budow. This let me know that my family had been part of the Parish in Budow since at least the early part of the 18th century. In a place where the surviving birth records do not start until 1838, this was information I never expected to receive.

Not quite a year ago, a friend on a German Forum that I belong to, published a page of genealogy from a periodical that published family genealogies. It was in German and I used a program to translate it into English. Jeremias was in this genealogy, but for some reason I missed that Anthonius was also there. I remarked that it was interesting, thinking that it was not my family line. I have no explanation for why I didn’t realize the significance of what I was reading, but let’s just be blunt. I blew it. If Jeremias was doing any orchestrating of events, he was shaking his head at what a slow witted descendent he had.

Then, about a month ago, I noticed a DNA match. It was only a twenty centimorgan match. Usually, a match that small I don’t spend much time on, but I did notice that the match was on my father’s maternal side, my German side. I cannot pinpoint the moment I decided to reach out with a message, or any real logic behind my reaching out, but I wrote a brief note. To my surprise, a truly kind man answered me back. It was his father that I matched. 

We exchanged family trees, and while we had similar family names, neither of our trees went back far enough to figure out our common ancestor. However, on exchanging our information, he realized in the process of his research, he had found a genealogy that didn’t belong to his family line, but that a handful of the earliest ancestors on that tree were also My Ancestors.

That is when the pieces started to fall into place, and I realized what a wonderful gift I had received – from my distant cousin, my forum friend, and the son of a DNA match. I received the gift of my family - German ancestors that I might never had known except for the generosity of others.

In my next post, I will take a closer look at the information on Jeremias, delve into the history of the time, and draw conclusions about my rabbit hunting ancestor.

Until Next Time . . .

 

© 27 October 2023, Desktop Genealogist Unplugged, Teresa L. Snyder

  

Map Attributions:

Weimar Map Attribution: By kgberger - own drawing/Source of Information: Putzger – Historischer Weltatlas, 89. Auflage, 1965, CC BY 2.5, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3414361

Von Hellerick - Eigenes Werk, based on a map from [1], CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=65077963

Hardow, Rudolf, Karte de Kreises Stolp mit Bildern aus der Erdgeschichte, Urgeschichte, Kulturgeschichte, Volkskunde, Naturkunde, der Industrie, des Erwerbs u. des Sports. 1932, https://bibliotekacyfrowa.eu/dlibra/publication/3530/edition/3717#description, Public Domain, accessed 16 Sept 2023.

Sources:

Pommerscher Verein Freistadt, Stadtkreis Stolp / Kreis Stolp, https://www.pommerscher.org/cpage.php?pt=71.  Accessed on 2 Sept. 2023.

Germany Church Records, https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/Germany_Church_Records#Overview. Accessed 5 Oct 2023.

Stolper Heimatkreise e.V,  Kirchspiele – Budow, https://www.stolp.de/kirchspiele/articles/kirchspiel_budow.html, Accessed on 2 Sept. 2023.

Genealogy created in 1933 for descendant of Bertha Tuschy née Schroeder received by Terry Snyder, 2010.

Archiv ostdeutscher Familienforscher, “Schroeder,” 1998 5/6, P 175.

© 27 October 2023, Desktop Genealogist Unplugged, Teresa L. Snyder


 


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