Eleanor NONWEILER
Characteristics
Type | Value | Date | Place | Sources |
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name | Eleanor NONWEILER |
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Events
Type | Date | Place | Sources |
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death | |||
birth | 1891 | Cincinnati, Ohio
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Marriage | 21. August 1912 | Hamilton, Ohio, United States
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Marriage | 22. December 1922 | Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, United States
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marriage | 21. August 1912 | Hamilton, Ohio, United States
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marriage | 22. December 1922 | Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, United States
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Parents
Henry NONWEILER | Anna SCHILDMANN |
??spouses-and-children_en_US??
Marriage | ??spouse_en_US?? | Children |
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21. August 1912
Hamilton, Ohio, United States |
William C. LANG |
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22. December 1922
Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, United States |
Arther G. HERMANN |
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Sources
1 | FamilySearch Stammbaum, https://www.myheritage.de/research/collection-40001/familysearch-stammbaum?itemId=1000581661&action=showRecord
Publication: MyHeritage
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Durch einen Record Match hinzugefügt 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). | |
2 | FamilySearch Stammbaum
Publication: MyHeritage
|
Eleanor Nonweiler<br>Geburtsname: Eleanor Nonweiler<br>Geschlecht: weiblich<br>Geburt: 1891 - Cincinnati, Ohio<br>Heirat: 21. Aug. 1912 - Hamilton, Ohio, United States<br>Heirat: 22. Dez. 1922 - Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, United States<br>Eltern: Henry Nonweiler, Anna Schildmann<br>Ehepartner: William C Lang, Arther G Hermann<br>Geschwister: Edna Krohme (geb. Nonweiler), Ida Ellermann 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). | |
3 | Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, 1836-1922
Publication: MyHeritage
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<p>Tägliches Cincinnatier Volksblatt<br />Veröffentlichung: Cincinnati, Hamilton, Ohio, USA<br />Datum: 22. Aug. 1912<br />Text: "...TuDertureNew iira" Z ü. Heed Licht ^setzen, oerdanken wir einen mm. C. L'.ng, 24,3243 Bilbop. /Eleanor Nonweiler, 21. 2331 QW n. Konzert i« H«»»a P«t. Hanna Park, an derMcMirfm ^Deniu*. findet beute Abend..."<br />Über diese QuelleIn the early 1800s, Cincinnati, the seat of Hamilton County in southwest Ohio, was home to a vast population of German-speaking immigrants. The Tägliches Cincinnati Volksblatt (People’s Daily Journal) was one of the nearly 200 German-American publications available during this time. Establishedin 1836 as Das Volksblatt, the paper became one of the most popular German-American newspapers in the Midwest and was the only daily German-language newspaper for almost a decade. When the paper started, the Volksblatt openly supported the Democratic ideology. Andrew Jackson’s political party made this decision easy because some of his policies were geared towards the immigrantcommunity. The paper would eventually shun political favoritism and become Independent in 1872 to remain neutral to an ever-growing reader base. Serving as the mouthpiece for the German community, the Volksblatt informed its readers on local and national news, as well as offering a healthy dose of European news, as many people still had family overseas, keeping them apprised of the happenings in the homeland. The paper was published entirely in German, with the exception of some advertisements and the occasional article. By 1910, Cincinnati’s two leading German-languagenewspapers, the Volksblatt and the Cincinnatier Freie Presse, had a combined circulation of 110,000. This is attributed to the fact that more than half of the city’s population at this time was of German heritage.The Volksblatt fell on hard times, like all German-language newspapers, during World War I. Anti-German sentiment was running rampant through the country, and newsstandsboycotted German newspapers by refusing to sell them. On October 6, 1917, federal employees looking for anything that would label the newspaper as enemy “sympathizers,” raided the Volksblatt's headquarters. Advertising money, which newspapers relied on to pay their expenses, dried up and the paper began to wither. The Volksblatt also suffered from the effects of the Prohibition movement sweeping the nation. No longer able to advertise the brewery industry, a large part of the German culture, German-language newspapers lost a precious source of revenue. Editor Charles Krippendorf decided that it no longer made financial sense to continue publication and sold the paper to its rival the Cincinnatier Freie Presse for $7,500. The Volksblatt published its last issue on December 5, 1919</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). |
Unique identifier(s)
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files
Title | Hahnefamilie |
Description | Mein Stammbaum ist, wie soll es auch sonst sein, in Bearbeitung. Es sind auch Fehler, die ich momentan vorrangig bearbeite. Gerne könnt ihr meine Daten verwenden, aber sie sind nicht fehlerfrei. |
Id | 66297 |
Upload date | 2024-05-04 17:58:57.0 |
Submitter |
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martin@hahn-online.de | |
??show-persons-in-database_en_US?? |