Anna Gesina Thevis

Female 1917 - 2011  (93 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Anna Gesina Thevis was born on 2 Jun 1917 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA (daughter of Peter Joseph Thevis and Anna Maria Cramer); died on 4 Jan 2011 in Lake Charles, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, USA.

    Family/Spouse: John Conrad Hensgens. John was born on 12 Jan 1919 in Louisiana, USA; died on 3 Aug 1992 in Lake Charles, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Peter Joseph Thevis was born on 20 Oct 1889 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA (son of Johannes Gerhard Thevis and Anna Maria Klein); died on 20 Apr 1969 in Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.

    Notes:

    Frances Thevis Melancon


    ADVERTISEMENT
    RAYNE - Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday, March 3, 2005, at a Mass of Christian Burial in St. Leo Catholic Church for Frances Thevis Melancon, 85, who died Monday Feb. 28, 2005, in the Rayne Guest Home.
    Interment will be in St. Leo Cemetery.
    Mrs. Melancon was a member of St. Leo Catholic Church, Catholic Daughters and St. Leo Ladies Altar Society.
    Survivors include one daughter, Mary M. Raine and husband, Jack, of Houston, Texas; one son, Russell Melancon and wife, Mary, of Roberts Cove; and seven grandchildren, Sara Melancon, of Roberts Cove, Aaron Melancon and wife, Erin, of Roberts Cove, Reed Melancon, of Roberts Cove, Ethan Melancon, of Roberts Cove, Wes Raine, of Nashville, Tenn., Garrett Raine, of Lafayette, and Travis Raine, of College Station, Texas.
    She was preceded in death by her husband, Alphonse Melancon; parents, Peter Joseph Thevis and Mary Magdeline Theunissen Thevis; two sisters, Mary Thevis and Gertrude Habetz; and eight brothers, Joe Thevis, Gerard Thevis, Daniel Thevis, LeonardThevis, Martin Thevis, William Thevis, Peter Thevis and Theodore Thevis.
    The family would like memorial donations be made to Hospice of Acadiana, 2600 Johnston St., Suite 200, Lafayette, LA 70503-3240.
    A rosary will be recited at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. today and 10 a.m. Thursday.
    Visitation will be observed from 10 a.m. until 9 p.m. today and will continue from 9 a.m. Thursday until service time.
    Pallbearers will be her six grandsons, Wes Raine, Garrett Raine, Aaron Melancon, Travis Raine, Reed Melancon and Ethan Melancon.
    Honorary pallbearers will be Sara Melancon, Erin Melancon, JoAnn Thevis, Geraldine Dilly and Debbie Robinson.
    Arrangements have been entrusted to Gossen Funeral Home Inc. of Rayne, (337) 334-3141.
    Originally published March 2, 2005

    Peter married Anna Maria Cramer about 1913 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA. Anna was born on 22 Sep 1892 in Louisiana, USA; died on 2 Mar 1980 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Anna Maria Cramer was born on 22 Sep 1892 in Louisiana, USA; died on 2 Mar 1980 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    Children:
    1. John Gerhard Thevis was born on 28 Jul 1914 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died on 6 Jun 1983 in Eunice, Saint Landry Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    2. 1. Anna Gesina Thevis was born on 2 Jun 1917 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died on 4 Jan 2011 in Lake Charles, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    3. Joseph Herman Thevis was born on 4 May 1919 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died on 20 Dec 2003 in Eunice, Saint Landry Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried on 22 Dec 2003 in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    4. Mary Agnes Thevis


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Johannes Gerhard Thevis was born on 9 Dec 1857 in Langbroich, Nordrhein-Westfalen (son of Jakob Thevis and Maria Gertrude Mertens); died on 12 Mar 1934 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.

    Notes:

    In 1867 , Rev. Peter Leonard Thevis, a native priest of Langbroich, Germany , was asked to come to New Orleans by Archbishop Jean-Marie Odin, maily because of the large number of German immigrants there.
    It was on January 13 , 1880 that Fr. Thevis, accompanied by his brother Peter Joseph Thevis, his nephew, John Gerhard Thevis and Herman Grein, came on this railway to Rayne, and to the prairie land three miles north of Rayne to look over the area. The site selected for the future colony was known as "Roberts Cove" named for Benjamin Roberts, the original owner of a Spanish land grant.
    Thereafter, thirteen families joined them in 1881 . These German Catholics were fleeing the Gangelt , Geilenkirchen district of Germany to avoid religious persecution and military impressments. Fr. Hennemann, OSB, of the Benedictine order, purchased land that included a house which served as both rectory and chapel and another building which served as a school house in the spring of 1883. The Benedictines helped to established the parish of St. Leo IV in 1885
    Roberts Cove was staunchly German until the World War One era when harsh anti-German wartime legislation initiated a decline of the German language and other cultural elements. Consequently, there are few remaining German speakers and relatively few overt manifestations of German culture yet the community is still viewed as a German ethnic enclave. [3]

    Culture
    Roberts Cove is known for its annual GermanFest in October . The event is held the first weekend in October at St. Leo's Catholic Church. [4] Visitors are treated to local German food, heritage and genealogy. German singing and German Folk dancing performed by descendants from 8 to 80 years old are special attractions. [5] The Roberts Cove German Heritage Museum is open for visitors. [6]

    Johannes married Anna Maria Klein on 17 Nov 1884 in Louisiana, USA. Anna (daughter of Peter Klein and Ottilia Wegmann) was born in 1865 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; died in 0Oct 1895 in Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Anna Maria Klein was born in 1865 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern (daughter of Peter Klein and Ottilia Wegmann); died in 0Oct 1895 in Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    Children:
    1. Maria Odelia Thevis was born on 15 May 1886 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died on 3 Jan 1984 in Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    2. Peter Reinhard Thevis was born in 0Dec 1888 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died in 1904 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    3. 2. Peter Joseph Thevis was born on 20 Oct 1889 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died on 20 Apr 1969 in Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    4. Peter Leonard Thevis was born on 8 Aug 1891 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died in 0Feb 1987 in Crowley, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Mowata Cemetery and Mausoleum, Mowata, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    5. Maria Walburga Thevis was born on 20 Dec 1893 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died on 20 Oct 1994 in Rayne, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Jakob Thevis was born on 7 Apr 1830 in Langbroich, Gangelt, Westfalen (son of Johann Daniel Thevis and Maria Barbara Janssen); died in in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.

    Notes:

    afayette (LA) Daily Advertiser, August 26, 1997
    Germans among early settlers
    By Jim Bradshaw
    German people were among the first permanent settlers to come to colonial Louisiana, most of them coming during the 1720's to establish themselves at Cote des Allemands, the German Coast, in what is today St. James and St. Charles parishes. The sons and daughters of some of these early families would one day come to Acadiana, but these are not the families that make up the substantial Germans community in Acadia parish.

    New waves of German immigration came to Louisiana in the 19th century. These were quite different from the 18th century German settlers who had settled on the Mississippi River. The later immigrants were, for the most part, middle class, and often left Germany because of repressive political conditions, or because they believed they would find better economic opportunities in Louisiana.

    The advent of the industrial Revolution, particularly in the northern and western German states, cause the lower middle class to seek a new area to continue their traditional ways of work and of life. By 1839 a German-language newspaper had been established in New Orleans and it was followed by numerous others. The Deutsche Zeitung was founded in 1847, and continued publication until well into the 20th century. A German Protestant Church was built in 1830, to be followed by a German Catholic Church, and in 1840 both Lutheran and Methodist congregations built churches in New Orleans. By 1860 over half the total population of New Orleans was made up of Germans. Many of them retained their language and culture into the 20th century.

    The settlement of a German community at Robert's Cove developed indirectly out of the German community in New Orleans. Father Peter Leonhard Thevis, pastor of Holy Trinity German Catholic Church in New Orleans, convinced relatives and friends from his native land to emigrate to Louisiana. The advance guard of the immigrants consisted of Father Thevis' brother Peter Joseph Thevis, his nephew John Gerhard Thevis (son of Jacob Thevis), and a friend, Hermann Joseph Grein. They met Father Thevis in New Orleans, who arranged for them to meet with Anton Frey, a real estate developer with investments at Robert s Cove, near Rayne.

    On Jan. 13, 1880, Father Thevis, John Gerhard Thevis and Hermann Grein visited the Robert's Cove site. It wasn't easy to get to. The rail line wasn't finished and the roads were still mostly headland paths. The party of Germans went from New Orleans by steamboat to Washington, then by cart to Opelousas and from there to Prudhomme City, then by foot from there to Robert's Cove.

    After looking over the land, the two Thevis relatives returned with the priest to New Orleans and spent the rest of 1880 and early 1881 working in a brewery. In early 1881, Grein returned to Germany to bring over the first settlers: the fiancee of Peter Joseph Thevis and, he hoped, a bride for himself. He returned in March 1881 with nine immigrants: Joseph and Josepha Vondenstein and their five children; Johanna Piepers (Thevis fiancee); August Leonards; but unfortunately no bride for himself. He would remain a bachelor until he died.

    The first families emigrated to Robert Cove in 1881 from the westernmost part of Germany, an area bordered on three sides by the Netherlands, near the German city of Geilenkirchen bei Aachen. Fifteen families and seven single men would follow the original vanguard, and, by the end of 1882, there were 79 Germans established at Robert's Cove.

    The Opelousas Courier took note of the arrival of the German settlers, reporting on Jan. 7, 1882:

    "... about 70 Germans, men, women, and children, stopped at Rayne Station about six weeks ago looking for homes. Mr. J. D. Bernard, than whom a more hospitable man does not live in Louisiana, the leading merchant of Rayne, and Mr. Numa Chachere, also a whole-souled young gentleman, took the immigrants in charge and provided for their immediate needs. They soon found land for them, about four miles from Rayne at Robert's Cove, adjacent to Hoffman's Bridge on Bayou Plaquemine. They purchased 600 acres of land, including a large portion of woodland. Chachere reports them as industrious and thrifty farmers with money enough to make themselves comfortable homes after paying for the land. They are setting up a sawmill and will saw all lumber needed for houses and barns. They are pious Catholics and have a German priest to visit the Rayne church every two weeks for their spiritual benefit."

    Several families purchased land, ranging from 50 to nearly 400 acres each. Some families came to this country with enough money to pay cash for their farms. Others made down payments and expected to earn the balance from the land. The names of these early families, and those who came in the succeeding years were Gossen, Olinger, Habetz, Ohlenforst, Zaunbrecher, Carmer, Thevis, Berken, Heinen, Meyer, Reiners, Spaetgens, Leonards, Theunessen, Schneider, Wirtz, Grein, Hensgens, Schlicher, Scheufens, Gielen, Schoffhausen. Many of their descendants live at Roberts Cove today.

    There was little more immigration from Germany to Louisiana after the first two years of settlement at Robert's Cove, but those who had took care of growth. By 1900 more than 70 children had been born in Robert's Cove.

    Naturally, the Germans wanted to establish their own church and school. Several efforts were made. Father Aegidius Hennemann had been sent from Munich to the United States to locate a new home for a Benedictine monastery which feared that the German government might expel the entire order, as it had done to the Jesuit order earlier. He met Father Thevis in New Orleans, who told him about Robert's Cove. Father Hennemann bought land there in 1883 and established both a church and school. He intended to move the monastery to Robert's Cove, but the Bavarian government had successfully protected the order from expulsion. Neither the church nor the school survived the year.

    In 1885, however, a permanent church was legacy incorporated as St. Leo's Parish, on land donated by Anton Frey. A German-language school was opened during the same year, and continued until the outbreak of World War I, when the state legislature passed several anti-German laws. One, in particular, forbade the teaching of German in public or private schools. German-language instruction resumed after the war but ended finally in 1927.

    This article is copyrighted © by the Lafayette (LA) Daily Advertiser and is used with permission. This web site was originated through a grant awarded to Carencro High School (Joel Hilbun/Bobbi Marino, Grant Administrators) by the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education from the Louisiana Quality Education Support Fund - 8(g).

    Jakob married Maria Gertrude Mertens. Maria was born in 1830; died in in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Maria Gertrude Mertens was born in 1830; died in in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    Children:
    1. 4. Johannes Gerhard Thevis was born on 9 Dec 1857 in Langbroich, Nordrhein-Westfalen; died on 12 Mar 1934 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    2. Cornelia Thevis was born on 12 Sep 1862; died on 17 Sep 1950 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    3. Aloysius Thevis was born on 26 Jan 1866; died on 5 Jul 1937 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    4. Peter Joseph Thevis was born on 21 Sep 1868; died on 7 Jun 1955 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    5. Father John Daniel Thevis was born in 1871; died in 1899.
    6. Anna Maria Thevis was born on 13 Jun 1880; died on 30 Sep 1957 in Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.

  3. 10.  Peter Klein was born on 22 Jul 1831 in Schindhard, Pfalz, Bayern; was christened on 23 Jul 1831 in Schindhard, Pfalz, Bayern (son of Simon Klein and Katharina Köhler); died on 29 Jul 1917 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: Information for Klein Louisiana Families
    Tree Name Klein Louisiana Families
    Tree Description
    Is Tree Public? Yes
    Date Last Modified 4/26/2007
    # of People in Tree 4
    # of Photos Attached to Tree 0
    Wlanthier71

    Peter married Ottilia Wegmann on 30 Jan 1862 in Schindhard, Pfalz, Bayern. Ottilia (daughter of Johannes Georg Wegmann and Elisabetha Fabacher) was born on 19 Jan 1839 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; was christened on 20 Jan 1839 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; died on 19 Nov 1921 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Ottilia Wegmann was born on 19 Jan 1839 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; was christened on 20 Jan 1839 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern (daughter of Johannes Georg Wegmann and Elisabetha Fabacher); died on 19 Nov 1921 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    Children:
    1. Peter Klein was born on 16 Mar 1863 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; was christened on 16 Mar 1863 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; died on 21 Sep 1942 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; was buried in St. Paul's Cemetery, Eunice, Saint Landry Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    2. 5. Anna Maria Klein was born in 1865 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; died in 0Oct 1895 in Louisiana, USA; was buried in Saint Leo's Cemetery, Lafayette, Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    3. Franz Joseph Klein was born on 26 Dec 1867 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; was christened on 28 Dec 1867 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; died on 17 Mar 1922 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    4. Georg Klein was born on 28 Mar 1870 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; was christened on 31 Mar 1870 in Busenberg, Pfalz, Bayern; died on 16 Aug 1892.
    5. Lawrence J. Perkins was born in 0Sep 1882 in Louisiana, USA; died in in Eunice, Saint Landry Parish, Louisiana, USA.
    6. Elizabeth Klein was born on 21 Sep 1881 in Acadia Parish, Louisiana, USA; died in 0Jan 1974 in Welsh, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana, USA.