Ferdinand Braun

Male


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Ferdinand Braun (son of Joseph Braun and Katharina Helbling).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Joseph Braun was born on 26 Jul 1857 in Odessa, Ukrayina (son of Joseph Braun and Katharina Friedt); died on 3 Oct 1921 in North Dakota, USA.

    Joseph married Katharina Helbling. Katharina (daughter of Michael Helbling and Elisabetha Geiss) was born on 15 Feb 1859 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 6 Dec 1947 in North Dakota, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Katharina Helbling was born on 15 Feb 1859 in Odessa, Ukrayina (daughter of Michael Helbling and Elisabetha Geiss); died on 6 Dec 1947 in North Dakota, USA.
    Children:
    1. Friedrich Braun was born on 3 Oct 1879 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 25 Mar 1954 in North Dakota, USA.
    2. Jakob Braun was born on 9 Mar 1881 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 20 Jul 1944 in Rockvale, Carbon County, Montana, USA; was buried in Rockvale Cemetery, Rockvale, Carbon County, Montana, USA.
    3. Magdalena Braun was born in 0Jan 1884 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 30 Mar 1923 in North Dakota, USA.
    4. Heinrich Braun
    5. Christina Braun
    6. 1. Ferdinand Braun
    7. Elizabeth Braun was born on 16 Jan 1894; died on 22 Sep 1992 in Dickinson, Stark County, North Dakota, USA; was buried in Saint Joseph Cemetery, Dickinson, Stark County, North Dakota, USA.
    8. Carl Braun Brown was born on 22 Feb 1896 in Richardton, Stark County, North Dakota, USA; died on 4 Feb 1977 in Missoula, Missoula County, Montana, USA.
    9. Marianna Braun
    10. Philip Braun was born in Mar 1900.
    11. Ambrose Braun was born in 1902.
    12. Cecilia Braun


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Joseph Braun was born in 1814; died in 1885.

    Joseph married Katharina Friedt. Katharina (daughter of Jakob Friedt and Maria Elisabetha Hoffmann) was born in 1818 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina; died in 1918. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Katharina Friedt was born in 1818 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina (daughter of Jakob Friedt and Maria Elisabetha Hoffmann); died in 1918.
    Children:
    1. Margaretha Katharina Braun
    2. Apollonia Braun
    3. 2. Joseph Braun was born on 26 Jul 1857 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 3 Oct 1921 in North Dakota, USA.

  3. 6.  Michael Helbling was born in 1826 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina (son of Johannes Michael Helbling and Maria Eva Fried).

    Michael married Elisabetha Geiss. Elisabetha was born in 1830 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Elisabetha Geiss was born in 1830 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    Children:
    1. Franz Helbling was born in 1850.
    2. Ludwig Helbling was born in 1852.
    3. Marianna Helbling was born in 1855.
    4. Franziska Helbling was born in 1858.
    5. 3. Katharina Helbling was born on 15 Feb 1859 in Odessa, Ukrayina; died on 6 Dec 1947 in North Dakota, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Jakob Friedt was born on 27 Oct 1788 in Berg, Pfalz (son of Johannes Jakob Friedt and Margaretha Sörbel); died in 1853 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina.

    Jakob married Maria Elisabetha Hoffmann in 1812 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina. Maria was born in 1792 in Mörlheim, Pfalz; died on 6 Sep 1841 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Maria Elisabetha Hoffmann was born in 1792 in Mörlheim, Pfalz; died on 6 Sep 1841 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    Children:
    1. Maria Eva Friedt was born in 1814 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    2. Heinrich Friedt was born in 1816 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina; died in 1890 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    3. 5. Katharina Friedt was born in 1818 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina; died in 1918.
    4. Elisabetha Friedt was born in 1819 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    5. Peter Friedt was born in 1823.
    6. Franz Friedt was born in 1826 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    7. Ludwig Friedt was born in 1829 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina; died in 1905 in Karlsruhe, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    8. Anna Maria Friedt was born in 1830 in Odessa, Ukrayina.

  3. 12.  Johannes Michael Helbling was born on 3 Jul 1785 in Wingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France (son of Jean Baptiste Helbling and Maria Barbara Walther); died in in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.

    Notes:

    https://library.ndsu.edu/grhc/history_culture/history/german_american_journal1.html

    The Germans in Russia

    Hundley, Elaine Helbling. "The Germans in Russia." German-American Journal 54, no. 4: (2005), 13.

    Ask anyone what comes to mind when asked to describe the Irish and the answer will be shamrocks, St. Patrick, green beer, and leprechauns. For the Polish it will be polkas, for German it will be hard workers, stubbornness, cleanliness, punctuality, reliability, and kuchen. What about the Germans from Russia? The Germans from where? Who are they? Where are they?
    I am a first generation German from Russia and was born in North Dakota but have lived in Illinois for the past 37 years. My mother was born of a German family in South Russia in 1903 and my father’s family was also German from Russia. How did they get there and why? How did they get to America and why?

    The Germans from Russia are descendents of Germans who settled in Russia in the years about 1763 to 1862. Their story begins with Tsarina Catherine II (Catherine the Great) who was empress of Russia, but a German princess by birth. In July 1763 she issued a manifesto to attract people from Western Europe to settle in Russia. The manifesto promised new settlers freedom of religion, freedom from taxes for a 5-30 year period, freedom from military service, and free land to farmers. By the end of 1767, German settlers from central Germany had established more than 100 colonies along the Volga River, near Saratov, Russia.

    A second settlement in the Black Sea region began in 1803 when Czar Alexander I, a grandson of Catherine II, issued a similar decree enticing foreigners to settle in South Russia. In addition, he promised interest-free loans for purchase of equipment, self-administration of the community and schools, and free land equivalent to 80 to 216 acres. These colonies extended into the Crimea and into the Caucasus. The Black Sea Germans came primarily from southern Germany in the Rhineland Palatinate, Baden, and the Alsace, plus a large number of Mennonite Germans came from the Danzig area in Prussia. In 1812, Germans colonized the Bessarabia area. Two other areas in Russia where large numbers of Germans settled were Volhynia and the Baltic provinces.

    Catherine II’s purpose in investing the Germans was to settle the untilled land, act as a model for Russian peasants, and to act as a buffer between Russia and the Asiatic nomadic tribes which harassed the Volga region. In Russia (the area is now present day Ukraine), the Germans lived in colonies, isolated from their Russian neighbors, and kept their German language, their religion (mostly Lutheran, Catholic, and Mennonite), foods, and culture.

    Leaving their homeland, the Germans traveled by river flatboats, wagon trains and by foot. Those traveling to the Beresan area traveled over 1700 miles in 4 months time arriving in the fall of 1809. The initial villages in this area were Landau, Speier, and Sulz. These villages exist today but have Russian names. My Helbling ancestors were among the first settlers of Speier. The first year in Russia, the immigrants built dugouts with sod. The winter was bitter and the dugouts cold and damp. Many of the settlers became sick and by spring, many had died, including entire families. The next spring homes were built of clay bricks. To this day, many of the original buildings are still in use. Houses, schools, and churches still stand, although in great need of repair. Magnificent churches built by the Germans were taken over by the Soviets during WW II and used to house livestock or turned into meeting places. Interior furnishings and religious pictures were removed. The remnants stand today.

    The colonists grew wheat, corn, and potatoes. Instead of the German pronunciation of potato as Kartoffel, the colonists called them Grundbere. That is the word still used by my relatives today. The food of the colonists was bread, noodles of all kinds, meat dishes prepared with sauerkraut and potatoes, Borscht soup and pumpkin Plachinka. They were learned from the Russians and are still staples in the Germans’ from Russia descendents in America today. Another food from the Russians is Easter Bread called Bosca. It is baked in coffee tins so that the tops rise and look like the domes on Russian churches. The dough is colored yellow and flavored with anise. The "old way" to obtain the color is to raise saffron (suffra as we pronounce it), harvest the dried red flower which is made into a yellow tea which becomes the coloring for the Bosca. Yellow food coloring gives the same result but lacks the continuity of carrying on this tradition. The baked bread is then frosted in various colors and sprinkled with little candies. The word bosca probably came from the word “paska,” meaning Easter.

    In the 1870s, the promises of the Russian government were gradually withdrawn. The colonist had their right to local self-government taken away along with their right to keep their own German-language schools. The military draft was reinstated. The Germans then looked to the New World to once again immigrate. The land where they lived in South Russia was called the Steppes. The lands to which they would move were called the Prairies, in USA to North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, Ohio, and Wisconsin. The Germans who remained in Russia faced terrible times during the Russian Revolution and the World Wars. Letters and retrieved achieves attest to the misery they endured. Because they were German, many were killed outright. Their homes and property were taken over by the Russians. Fathers and sons were taken out at night and shot in view of the families. Many were sent to the Siberian area of Russia where life was exceedingly grim. Present day Germany is gradually resettling the descendents of these Germans by establishing homes for them near Odessa, Ukraine, and in Germany itself. Since these descendents have lived many generations in Russia, they no longer know the German language and culture which presents major challenges for Germany.

    Johannes married Maria Eva Fried in 1815 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina. Maria (daughter of Valentin Fried and Margaretha Sertel) was born on 27 Nov 1787 in Berg, Pfalz; died in in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Maria Eva Fried was born on 27 Nov 1787 in Berg, Pfalz (daughter of Valentin Fried and Margaretha Sertel); died in in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    Children:
    1. Johannes Helbling was born in 1815 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    2. Christian Helbling was born in 1820 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    3. Jakob Helbling was born in 1823 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    4. Valentin Helbling was born in 1824 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina; died in 1898 in Sulz, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    5. 6. Michael Helbling was born in 1826 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    6. Ludwig Helbling was born in 1831 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.
    7. Franz Helbling was born in 1832 in Speyer, Odessa, Ukrayina.