|
| |
1822
| November 11 |
Theresa's mother, Susanna Meyer born in Baden, daughter of Richard and
Susanna. This information was gathered from Susanna's death certificate. |
1825
| October 31 |
Leopold Leicht, Theresa's father, born in Baden, son of Fidel.
this information was gathered from Leopold's death certificate. |
 |
Theresa kept family records in a
Pictorial Bible. To see more pictures of this bible and for more information
about the records inside go to "Library" on the index line for this
website and open "Theresa Leicht Sommer's Pictorial Bible" According to Theresa's Bible, her parents
were married in New York but no records could be found . According to her
mother's death certificate Susanna came to American in 1845. |
1847
| |
Carl Leicht, Theresa's brother is born in New York. |
1852
| June 4 |
Theresa born in NYC |
1854
| |
Leopold Leicht, another brother of Theresa's
is born in New York |
1855
| |
According to New York City Directory" Leicht, Leopold,
furniture, 530 Eighth Ave." |
1856
| |
According to New York City Directory" Leicht, Leopold,
furniture, 530 Eighth Ave." |
1857
| |
Brother Johann born in New York |
|
Just a short nine years before
the 1860 census, the New York City Guide describes one of the main
streets in Theresa's neighborhood (the 20th Ward) as “ a winding
road through pleasant countryside (NYCG p146)”. However with the coming of
the Hudson River Railroad in 1851 and the building of a station at Thirtieth
Street and Eleventh Ave the area changed dramatically. At approximately the
same time another Railroad commenced building a line between Chambers Street
and Fifty First Street. These railroads helped lay the groundwork for the
northward march of the city in the years before the Civil War. It seems that
Susanna, Leopold and their young family were living in the midst of rapid development.
|
1860
| March 9 |
Theresa's father purchased 529 Ninth Avenue (Lot 34)
on block 737, between 39th and 40th Street. |
| June 8 |
Theresa's father purchased 531
Ninth Ave (lot 35) on block 737, between 39th and 49th Street. |
| June 21 |
New York Census, Fifth District of the 20th Ward, New
York City
Leopold Leicht 34, Susanna 37, Carl 13,
Theresa 8, Leopold 6, Johann 3. Servant Catherine Schafer 23 from
Bavaria
Furniture maker from Baden, real estate 11,000. personal property 2,000 |
1863
| |
According to the New York City directory for
1863-63: Leicht, Leopold, furniture, 530 Eighth ave. |
| July 11 |
draft riots broke out in New York City. These
riots were the worst civil disorder the United States had ever seen….and
many of the riots occurred in the same neighborhood in which the Leicht
family lived. On Monday, the first day of the riots, thousands of workers
marched down 11th Ave in the 20th ward. |
| July 11-15 |
In the days that followed a barricade was set
up by the rioters on 9th Ave from 36th to around 42th
Street. “ Telegraph poles were cut down and laid across the avenue, and
carts, wagons, lumber, boxes. bricks, rubbish healed on top (Armies of
the Streets, Cook p. 126)” The path of this barricade lay right in
front of the property owned by Leopold Leicht. Although his business was
located at the time one block east at 530 Eight Ave, the riots must have
effected the young family deeply. |
1864
| |
According to the New York City directory for
1864-65: Leicht, Leopold, upholsterer, 530 Eight av. h. 481 Ninth ave. |
| March 3 |
Leopold purchased 527 Ninth
Avenue. (Lot 33) on block 737 |
1865
| April 25 |
Tuesday, the Funeral Obsequies of the Late
Abraham Lincoln President of the United States. "the procession will move
from the City Hall on Tuesday the 25th inst., at 1 o'clock P.M., precisely,
and will proceed up Broadway to Fourteenth-street; through Fourteenth-street
to Fifth-avenue; up Fifth-avenue to Thirty-fourth-street through
Thirty-fourth-street to Ninth-avenue to The Hudson River Railroad Depot. (NYT)
All business was suspended. Thirteen year old, Theresa and her brothers
surely went to this procession. |
1866
| July 9 |
613 Ninth Ave. Lot 32 purchased
on Block 1953 (section 4) |
1867
| Jan 13 |
The East River running between Manhattan and
Brooklyn froze. For a short while it was possible to walk from New York to
Brooklyn. Theresa's grandson, my uncle Fred talked about this. His
grandmother must have told him the stories about the event from her
childhood. She was 15 years old at the time. Or perhaps, he heard the story
from his father's mother, Rosa Behman Schnaupauff who was a young girl
living in Brooklyn at the same time. |
1870
| April 12 |
Nos. 409 & 407,
2 properties on West 39th Avenue, closest to ninth Avenue ( Lots 28 & 29)
|
| June 27 |
404 West 40th Street (Lot 41)
purchased. This is the address where Theresa lived when she married two
years later. the property was still owned by the family in 1920 when Charles
Theresa's oldest brother died there. The building still exists today (2004). |
1871
| |
In 1871 the Ninth-avenue el extended as far
north as 30th Street. |
| |
Work on the Brooklyn Bridge began |
| |
sweltering summer. 50 people killed in a
street riot on the border between Chelsea and Hell's Kitchen |
1872
| June 15 |
German reform party elected Wm. Havemeyer mayor of NYC |
| November 21,
Thursday |
Theresa married to William
Sommer, son of Philip and Regina Winklein Sommer
Witnesses to the Marriage :Lewis Sommer, Charles Leicht, George Siemer,
Lewis Rust, Carry Flammer, Anna Siemer, Carry Meyer, Mary Schweigert
St. Paul’s Lutheran Church cr 6th Ave.
and 15th
F.W. Geissenhainer, D.D. attested.
Dr. Geissenhainer had been the pastor of St. Mathews Church where services
were conducted in English. When his church was taken over by Christ Church,
"Dr. Geissenhainer then determined to found a new organization and
established the church now known as St. Paul's. ..The First preaching was in
a hall on 8th Ave. A church was erected in 1842 on the corner of
Fifth-avenue and Fourteenth-street mainly through the liberality of Dr.
Geissenhainer himself. It was a large and fine stone structure, and the
whole property was valued not long ago at $100,000. " NYT June 3, 1879
Rev. Geissenhainer married in 1824 the daughter of a wealthy merchant named
Moore.
He was the first to purchase land south of Metroplitan Avenue for several
Manhattan churches. This land became Lutheran Cemetery in 1852.(Newsday.com) |
| |
About the attendants at the
wedding: Carry Meyer was probably her cousin on her mother’s side. Charles
Leicht was Theresa's older brother. Carry Flammer would soon marry William's
brother, Louie. Did Louis and Carrie meet at this wedding? William and Louie
soon opened Sommer Bros Grocery. |
1873
| |
Theresa and William lived at 467 Ninth-avenue
from 1872 until 1879. This was also listed as a meat business in the NYCD. |
| |
From 1873 till 1875 construction was going on
for the Ninth-avenue elevated railroad between West 34th Street and West
42nd Street. Its construction was happening right outside their windows. It
must have been noisy and dirty. |
| March 26, Wednesday |
Lewis Sommer and Caroline W. Flammer are married
at the same church as Theresa and William. Edward Flammer and Henrietta
Flammer were the only witnesses. They were the only siblings of Caroline who
never married.
Caroline (Carrie) Flammer's siblings are William G. Charles A, Henrietta,
Edward, Fred, George and Theodore.
Carrie's oldest brother William married Louise Holzderber an aunt of
Charlotte Holzderber. Charlotte who later married Carrie's younger brother George.
In 1860 John Holzderber and his brother Philip were "Provision Merchants".
Carrie Flammer's father was in the meat business. The Holzderber and Flammer
families were very successful in the meat and provisons business in New
York. Both Louis and William Sommer both worked in this business but they
were later comers compared to the Flammer and Holzderber families.
At the time of her marriage Carrie lived at
901 Eighth Ave.
In June of 1874 their first child, a daughter, was still
born at this address. Several other children of Carrie and Lewis were born
here and Lewis died here in 1895. |
| September 19 |
Economic Panic begins. Carrie Flammer's
father lost his money.
Johann Gottlieb Flammer was a butcher for 30 years before he retired. |
| October 7 |
Susan Regina Sommer, first child of William
and Theresa born. Theresa enters her name and birthday in the family
Pictorial Bible. The infant is named after her mother's mother Susanna and
her father's mother, Regina. |
| October 27 |
crash and great depression starts lasts for 5
years |
1874
| January 13 |
Tompkins Square riot (because of Depression) |
| |
Louis and Philip Sommer run a
small eating house at No.390 Eight-avenue |
| |
|
| June 20 |
Still born infant girl born to Carrie and
Lewis Sommer at 901 Eight-avenue.
|
| |
'"We can recall no one event since the murder
of Lincoln what has so moved the people as this question whether Henry Ward
Beecher is the basest of men" declared the (New York) Herald. During the
"scandal summer" of 1874, The New York Times alone ran 105
stories and thirty-seven editorials about the uproar in Brooklyn - and that
was one of the more circumspect papers. Pamphlets, broadsides, cartoons and
doggerel-ranging from serious to satirical to pronographi- poured off the
presses, as well as cheap books with title like The Beecher-Tilton War
and The Romance of Plymouth Church.
'It is the topic of the breakfast table, on the cars and on the Exchange"
marveled the Boston Post.'
( D. Applegate, The Most Famous Man in America",
2006)p.436
|
| July 23 |
In the summer, an investigating committee was
convened composed of Beecher's staunchest supporters. (ibid p. 433)
|
| August 10 |
Ten month old baby Susan died. Theresa
recorded her death in the Pictorial Bible. Theresa is five months pregnant
at the time of her baby's death. Its hadt to imagine how this "summer of
scandal" affected Theresa and William who were no doubt so involved with the
death of their tiny daughter.
|
| August 13 |
Henry Ward Beecher appeared before the
committee. He denied his affair. His defense was this...."Beecher was the
victim of a treacherous former friend, his conniving henchman, his
weak-willed wife, and Beecher's own trustfulness." (ibid. p 439)
|
| August 28 |
The committee's final report was read at
Plymouth Church, "declaring that there was ' nothing whatever in the
evidence that should impart the perfect confidence of Plymoht church or the
world in the Christian charcter of intergrity of Henry WArd Beecher.' (ibid.
p. 442)
|
| September 16 |
Theresa's brother Charles and Elise Ellinger
are married. Looks like they were not married in a church. No Leicht family
members were witnesses. At the time Charles was living at his parents home,
404 West 40th Street. At the time of the marriage Theresa was very pregnant
and still no doubt in mourning over the death of Susan
|
| November 18 |
Philip Sommer died (William’s Father).
Theresa recorded her father in laws death in the Pictorial Bible
|
| December 21, Monday |
Theresa and William's second child is born,
Philip Leopold Sommer. He is named after both of his grandfathers.
Theresa records his birth in the Pictorial Bible |
1875
| January 11 |
Theodore Tilton v.. Henry Ward Beecher,
Action for Criminal Conversation was set to begin.
|
| |
|
| |
Ninth-avenue elevated railroad station
completed to 42nd Street. "By 1875, trestles, girders and black smoke all
contributed to a fall in property values along the el routes." The
Historical Atlas of New York City, 1994
|
| April 17 |
A second child, Louis, is born to Louis
and Carrie Sommer. Father's occupation is "Manufacturer of furniture".
Perhaps, he is working with his mother's father and brothers.
Note
change of spelling of father from his wedding "Lewis".
|
| June 14 |
Leopold Leicht, Theresa's father,
purchased a family burial plot at the Lutheran Cemetery on Metropolitan Ave.
in Middle Village. The property for this cemetery was first purchased by the
Rev. Dr. F.W. Geissenhainer. Leopold's two oldest children were married
by Dr. Geissenhainer. |
| |
|
1876
| July 27 |
a male child born to Louis and Caroline
Sommer, 188222 . This must be William. |
| August 18 |
Theresa and William's third child, Theresa is
born. Her mother notes the date of her birth in the Pictorial Bible but does
not list the infant's name. it is the last entry that Theresa makes in the
Pictorial Bible. |
| September 24 |
The baby Theresa, a five week old infant,
dies at 467 Ninth-avenue. She is the first member of the family to be
buried in the plot purchased the preceding June by Theresa's father. |
1877
| August 5 |
Johanna Knoop age 25 dies at 333 West 39th
Street. She is the second person to be buried
in the family plot |
| September 6, Tuesday |
Theresa's younger brother Leopold married
Caroline Finck. they are married by a clergy man. He is living at 129 14th
Street at the time. Leopold's brother John is a witness but no other family
member. Leopold's occupation is "Furniture Dealer" |
| September 12 |
Theresa and William's fourth child William is
born, 467 9th Ave. (near 37th street). Theresa does not enter
this birth in the Pictorial Bible. |
| |
NYCD lists William Sommer, meats, 467 9th
Ave, h 400 West 36th Street. |
1878
| June 11 |
a boy child born to brother Leoplold and Carrie Leicht #224384 |
| June 15 |
a boy child born to brother Charles and Elise
Leicht
#234849 |
1879
| |
In this year, the Ninth-avenue railroad was
extended above West 30th Street. Its construction must have changed the
whole feel of the neighborhood. It was very noisy and dirty on Ninth-avenue
where Theresa lived. By June and the birth of her fifth child, the family
had moved to Sixth-avenue. |
| |
According to the New York City Directory,
John Leicht, Meat located at 467 Ninth Ave, home 404 West 40th .
William and Theresa Sommer lived here from 1874-1879. Perhaps, William and
John were in the meat business together. |
| June 2 |
William and Theresa's fifth child, Louie is
born at 926 Sixth-avenue. Just the year before in 1878, the elevated train
was completed on Sixth Avenue. |
1880
| |
Theresa and her family have moved to a much
nicer location. The neighborhood is more residential and there is no
elevated train. The Rockefellers are also buying property nearby and
building homes. |
| February 19 |
Jacob, third child of Eliza and Charles
Leicht is born at 404 West 40th St. Father's occupation furniture store. |
| June 4 |
According to the 1880 census, Louis and
Carrie Flammer Sommer were living at 901 Eighth ave.
Louis worked for a "Fish and Meat Market". They had two sons, Louis F ( 5)
and William F (4).
They are living with Carrie's parents, John G.(73) and Augusta (63). George
age 23 is a lawyer and Theodore age 20, a clerk in a bank also live there.
Soon, George will marry Charlotte Herzderber.
There are several boarders also living at this address. |
| June 7 |
According to the 1880 census,
taken on June 7, 1880, the Sommer family consisted of William age 33,
working in a butcher Shop, Theresa, age 28, his wife,
Philip age 5, William age 3 and Louis age 1, and Margaret Ginety (sp?)
age 25 a servant, from Ireland in their household. |
| December 16 |
William and Theresa's sixth child, Charlotte
Susan Sommer was born at 112 West 53rd Street.
Was Charlotte perhaps named after Charlotte Holzderber Flammer who was
married to Carrie Flammer Sommer's brother John George Flammer? In fact
Carrie's oldest brother William had married Louisa Holzderber possibly an
aunt of Charlotte Holzderber/ There was a
close connection between the Sommer, Holzderber and Flammer families. |
1881
| January 22 |
Charles Flammer Sommer born. Son of Louie Sommer and Carrie
Flammer |
| Aug. 11 |
Bella , fourth child of Eliza and Charles
Leicht is born at 529 9th Ave. Unlike Theresa and her husband, Charles and
Bella were not able to escape the Ninth-avenue neighborhood. |
| Dec 3 |
Four month old Bella dies. She is buried with
her tiny cousin, Theresa Sommer and Johanna Knoop. |
1882
| |
George Sommer born to Louie and Carrie Sommer. |
1883
|
March 27
|
Theresa's son Charles born, seventh child |
| December 1 |
Eliza Leicht dies at her Ninth-avneue home of
Tuberculosis. She is laid to rest with her daughter Bella, her niece Theresa
and Johanna Knoop. |
1884
| Dec 16 |
Theresa's mother in law,Regina Winklein Sommer dies.
At the time of her death, she was living with her youngest daughter Anna at
1658 Lexington Ave. |
1885
| March 12 |
Arthur Theodore Sommer born to Louis
Sommer and Carrie Flammer |
| |
|
1887
| December 17 |
Theresa's father, Leo Leicht died. |
1888
| |
Blizzard of 1888 |
| November 22 |
Property on West 39th Street, Lots 28 & 29
are sold to John and Charles Leicht from the estate of Leopold. Theresa
Sommer came into some money. |
1889
|
John eighth child of Theresa born , 112 W 53rd Street #36990
|
1891
| |
Theresa's mother starts lowly dying from cancer
|
1892
| |
Augusta Sommer Born. Daughter of Louie Sommer and Carrie
Flammer |
| |
|
1893
| September 14 |
Theresa's mother, Susanna Meyer Leicht dies
at 404 West 40th Street. |
| November 2 |
More property is sold from the estate of
Susanna Mayer Leicht. Two lots on Ninth-avenue are sold to Leopold and John.
The house on West 40th Street is sold to Charles Leicht. Again Theresa would
come into some money. |
1895
| February 18 |
Theresa's nephew George Moeller dies. He was
35 years old. His mother is the sister of William Sommer. |
1895
| May 19
|
Louis Sommer, brother of William Sommer dies.
No death certificate can be found. Perhaps, Louie didn't die in Brooklyn as
the cemetery records indicate. He is buried at the Lutheran Cemetery in
Queens in a plot purchased by his wife, Carrie Flammer Sommer, a few days
after the burial. This suggests to me that he died suddenly.
Caroline had several very successful and prosperous brothers. No doubt they
helped her in the care of her children.
Louie's brother and business partner William Sommer would have also helped
in taking responsibly for Louie's grown and growing
children. Also, he would have taken charge of the grocery and butcher
business which the brothers shared on Sixth Avenue. In a similar way 50
years later, William and Theresa's grandson Fred was left as guardian of his
brother's children when Bill died of cancer in 1948. Fred also assumed
responsibility of the music business which the brothers had previously
shared leadership of.
The role of the woman is here unclear. How did Carrie fare after the early
death of her husband? How did Theresa respond to the added responsibilities
of her husband.
|
 |
This picture gives some
clues. Dated "1995", it shows a close knit family of cousins, aunts and
uncles and grandparents. Louie is not in the picture. There are several
members of the Flammer family present and identified. A younger brother of
Caroline Flammer Sommer, J. George Flammer, married Charlotte Holzderber in
1880. Pictured here are several older women named Holzderber. years later,
when Leo Sommer (the small boy in the lower right hand corner) was married in
1914, William Flammer was one of his ushers. William
Flammer was the son of J. George Flammer and Charlotte Holzderber. |
| December 4 |
William Sommer purchases a family plot in the
Lutheran Cemetery. |
1896

Click on this image to see an enlargement |
Theresa and William Sommer and their children
around 1896.
Back row: Louis and Charlotte
Center row: Philip, Theresa, William
Bottom row: Charles, John and LeoNB.
This picture is taken outside which is unusual for the time.
This virtual picture was given to Gretchen Elsner-Sommer
in May of 2005 by Barbara Sommer Shea.
Gretchen is the granddaughter of Charlotte Sommer and Barbara is the
daughter of John Sommer. |
1898
| September 30 |
Grand events in NYC around the Spanish
American War and the victory march for Admiral Dewey.
|
| |
Young men going to War. Were her sons
considered. Louie, Philip or her nephews, Carrie’s Children Louie, Philip, ?
This was the beginning of American imperialism. Big doings in the newspapers about this war.
Remember the Maine.
It is around this time Charlotte meets Fred Gretsch |
1899
1900
| |
Elizabeth's (sister of William) husband
Charles Kruger dies. |
1900
| July 20 |
Theresa first grandchild, Charlotte Sommer,
daughter of Philip and Augusta Sommer is born. |
| |
Theresa purchases a plot of land in the 200
block of W. 54th Street. |
1902
| July 27 |
Another granddaughter, Amelia is born to
Philip and Augusta Sommer |
| |
|
1904
|
January 20 |
Theresa's only daughter, Charlotte married Fred Gretsch in
Theresa's and William's home. It contrasts greatly with the large wedding that
Theresa had when she married Charlotte's father in 1872. Is this because
Theresa's parents were much wealthier than Charlotte's parents, Theresa and William were. Both Charlotte and her mother were the only daughters and each had several
brothers. Like Theresa (Carrie Meyer), Charlotte would have her cousin Clara
Schmidt in her wedding party.
|
|
June 15
|
Just months after Charlotte's wedding, tragedy struck New York city.
Disaster aboard the GENERAL SLOCUM. This pleasure boat was hired
by St. Mark's Lutheran church to carry parishioners to a church picnic. Over
1000 people mostly women and children were killed.
Is this perhaps, the event which caused Charlotte and her mother to change
their religion? Before, the disaster records show that both Charlotte and
her mother Theresa were Lutherans. Afterwards both women and after she was Catholic. This was the biggest disaster in NY to date, and it certainly hit
home to all the Germans and Lutherans in the city of which Charlotte and her
family were a part. |
1905
| March 10 |
Theresa's grandson, Fred Gretsch Jr, is born
at 178 Nostrand Avenue in Brooklyn. |
1906
| |
Theresa's granddaughter Clara Marrita
daughter of Louis and Clara is born. Clara Marrita died on August 5, 1923.
|
| December 13 |
William Walter Gretsch is . He is Charlotte's
second son. |
1907
| January 2 |
William Baptized at St. Gregory
the Great Catholic Church in Brooklyn.Theresa Sommer is his Sponsor |
1908
| June 14 |
Richard Gretsch son of Charlotte and
Fred is born
|
| June 28 |
Richard Baptised in St. Gregory the
Great Catholic Church, Teresa Sommer was sponsor |
1912
| Feb.12 |
Theresa's granddaughter, Charlotte Sommer
died of diptheria. She is 11 years old. |
| |
|
1913
| Feb.27 |
Harold Gretsch born, son of Charlotte and
Fred.
Harold Gretsch baptized in St. Gregory the
Great Catholic, Leo L. Sommer Sponsor (why was
Theresa not the sponsor? Was she too ill?)
|
| March 9 |
Harold Gretsch died1460 President Street |
1913 March 10, Fred Jr’s 8th bday, Harold is
buried
1913 April 24, Elizabeth Kruger sister in Law,
sisrwe of William dies
1913 June 16, Theresa Sommer died, Bautis
disease, cirrhosis of the liver, (62 years old) at 243 West
54th Street
Children of
Theresa and William
1)Susan Regina (died at 10 months)
2)Theresa (dies at 6 weeks)
3)Philip 1874, December 21, Philip Leopold Sommer born
(married Augusta)
4)Louie 1877, September 12,
(married Clara Schulthesis)
5)1879 June 2, William &Theresa, #259454, a male born
6)Charlotte (married Fred Gretsch)
7)Charles(married
8)John(married Frances Kleigl)
9)Leo(married Gertrude) died 1917,
|