Death Notice, Julia Emma Kleber, 1899

Title

Death Notice, Julia Emma Kleber, 1899

Description

The Family of Bill Dean collection includes many death notices cut out of mostly German-language newspapers. This obituary tells of Julia Emma Kleber's death at the age of 37 of emaciation. Born in 1862 in Illinois, she married Albert Augutus Kleber in 1880 and had four children with him. She was survived by her husband and children, her mother and siblings. While in earlier obituaries one can see the last exclamations of the diseased made in German, this one is gives the last exclamation in English, showing the gradual Americanization of the German Americans despite all the efforts of sustaining the German-language culture.

Julia might have been a family or church friend of the Schuetz-Sutorius-Harmses, maternal ancestors of Bill Dean. Lydia might have been a family or church friend of the Schuetz-Sutorius-Harmses, maternal ancestors of Bill Dean. She might have been an elder sister of Laura Pauline Richers.

The family began with Gottlieb Schuetz and Anna Parli who came from Canton Berne, Switzerland to Humboldt, Nebraska in 1870. A son of soap manufacturers Hans (John) Schuetz and Magdalena Luthi, Gottlieb was born in 1838 in Canton Berne, Switzerland. He married Anna Parli, also from Canton Berne, in 1863 and immigrated to Humboldt, Nebraska in 1870. Their daughter Maria (Mary) Schuetz, born in 1867 in Switzerland started the Dean family line marrying German-born Dirk Sutorius in 1889. Sutorius' daughter Emma, born in 1890 married a recent emigrant from Germany (1908) Edo F. Harms in 1914. All three generations lived in Humboldt, Nebraska in close proximity with various relatives (Emma Sutorius's uncle John Schuetz lived right next door to her family according to the 1930 census).

First settled in 1855, Humboldt, Nebraska is very close to the Nebraska borders with the three states: Missouri, Iowa, and Kansas. The town was a home to a vibrant immigrant community uniting people from Germany, Switzerland, Bohemia, and later Czechoslovakia, England, and various other places in the United States and beyond. The German-speaking community organized around the German Methodist mission that established a church in Humboldt in 1879, of which Gottlieb Schuetz was a member and maybe even a pastor.

For interviews and oral histories of this and other items please visit the History Harvest YouTube Channel.

Source

Family of Bill Dean, Nebraska City History Harvest, 2010

Date

1899

Rights

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Format

document

Language

German

Type

image

Coverage

Humboldt (Neb.)

Original Format

newspaper

Files

nebc_dean_margaret_0708.jpg

Collection

Citation

“Death Notice, Julia Emma Kleber, 1899,” History Harvest, accessed November 21, 2024, https://historyharvest.unl.edu./items/show/324.

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