The Zeisset Family in Germany

Written by Loretta M. Hoerman

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Zeisset beginings

Chapter 2. Zeissets at the beginning
of the 19th Century
Johannes Zeisset (1794-1855)
Jakob Zeisset (1816-1861)
Children of Jakob: Isaak, Johannes, Magdalena
Spouse of Jakob: Johanna Epp (1817-1889)

Chapter 3. Jakob Friedrich
Zeisset and Margaretha Müller

Chapter 4. The Baers

Chapter 6. Other Zeissets

Chapter 2. Zeissets at the Beginning of the 19th Century


Johannes Zeisset (1794-1855)

Johannes Zeisset’s father, Jakob, died at Lautenbach when Johannes was 19 years old in 1813. Johannes married Christina Baer in 1815 at Lautenbach. He continued to farm likely with his brother Abraham until Abraham’s death in 1817 at 30 years of age, and then apparently found another rental agreement, moving to Menzingen around 1825. Johannes’ mother, Magdalena Plätscher Zeisset moved with them and died shortly after the move to Menzingen in February 1826. Johannes and Christina had five children while they were living at Lautenbach, and then had seven more children while living in Menzingen. The entry for the death of Johannes Zeisset states that he was a tenant farmer at Lautenbach, then a land owner at Kochendorf just west of Lautenbach, and then a tenant farmer in Menzingen. Nothing has been found in the Kochendorf church records regarding this Zeisset family. (Of interest in the Kochendorf church records is the birth of a grandchild to Georg Zeiset. George Zeiset emigrated with his family to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania in about 1853.) Sometime between 1851 and 1854, Johannes and Christina Zeisset moved with their son Jakob and his family from Menzingen to Sindolsheim where Johannes died in 1855.

Menzingen Water Castle
Menzingen Water Castle (Wasserschloss) in 1910

On the Zeisset Family Tour to Germany in 2006, we visited the ruins of the Wasserschloss (Water castle). It is our current understanding that the Zeisset family farmed the grounds belonging to the Baron who owned the castle, and lived at the farm immediately in front of the castle.

Johannes and Christina Zeisset had four sons, Jakob, Matthaeus, Johann and Abraham who survived to adulthood. They had two daughters, Magdalena and Barbara. Jakob was the oldest son and married Johanna Epp. They became the parents of Jakob Friedrich Zeisset, whose life is discussed in the another chapter of this narrative. We will spend some time discussing the other children of Johannes and Christina Zeisset in the following paragraphs, and then discuss the first-born, Jakob.

The second son of Johannes and Christina was named Matthaeus (1830-1896). He was born in Menzingen in December1830 and married Friederika Ribstein, also of Menzingen, in 1857. This couple had ten children. Only two of these children survived infancy, a daughter named Friederika (1860-1928) who later married Heinrich Baer (1847-1921), and a son Matthaeus Zeisset (1868-1938). Of special interest regarding the daughter, Friederika (1860-1928), is a letter from her written in 1926 to Anna Baer Bletscher who lived in Leonardville, Kansas, at that time. This letter was discovered in December 2006 among old papers and photographs belonging to Gladys Hoerman Llewelyn. Gladys’ husband, John Llewelyn, was a grandson of Anna Baer Bletscher. The letter tells about some of the history pertaining to this Baer line. Though Friederika and Heinrich Baer never had children of their own, Friederika was a beloved step-mother of the children of Heinrich Baer and his first wife. Matthaeus (son of Matthaeus Zeisset and Friederika Ribstein) married Christina Horsch at Daisbach, Baden, Germany in 1895. This couple is the ancestral line of Raphael Zeisset, our cousin living in Germany today. Friederika Ribstein Zeisset, mother of Matthaeus (1868-1938) and Friederika, died two days after twin sons were born in May 1869. The father, Matthaeus Zeisset (1830-1896), a widower in 1869, married Magdalena Funk in 1870 and this couple had five more children, with three who survived childhood: Heinrich (1873-1903), Jakob (1878-1971) and Barbara (1881-1976, married to Friedrich Duerrstein). Between 1869 and 1871, Matthaeus Zeisset moved with his family to Laudenberg, Germany and then in 1879 moved to Hohenlindenhof. Hohenlindenhof is only a short distance from �berlingen, a town on Lake Constance (Bodensee in German). Evidently Matthaeus’ sister, Friederika Zeisset, moved with the family to Hohenlindenhof as she married Heinrich Baer in 1890 and he had previously lived at Forsterhof near Überlingen. 

Matthaeus Zeisset (the elder) died in Hohenlindenhof in 1896 and his wife, Magdalena, died in 1903.

The third son of Johannes Zeisset and his wife Christina Baer, was Johann (John) (1833-1878), born in Lautenbach. Johann Zeisset emigrated to the United States, arriving on the 9th of August, 1854 on the SS Carolus Magnus from Le Havre to New York City. Johann Zeisset married Jacobina Carolina Frederika Behr of Beilstein, Germany, about 40 miles east of Menzingen. Frederika�s ancestors had lived in Beilstein for several generations. Frederika Behr and John Zeisset were married July 10, 1853 in St. Clair County, Illinois, according to the Illinois marriage index. The original record has not been viewed, so there may be an inaccuracy in the year of the marriage, since John didn�t arrive in the United States until 1854.

The John Zeisset family is listed in the 1860 Federal census in Freeburg, St. Clair County, Illinois. Two sons, William and Frank Ph. are listed on the census. We know that a son, William John Zeisset, was born in Freeburg, St. Clair County, Illinois in February 1857. William John Zeisset married Mary Hoffart in Clinton County, Illinois and this couple had twelve children. Many Zeisset descendants have remained in Clinton County, Illinois. The son listed as Frank was actually Phillip Zeisset married who Caroline Koester, moved into St. Louis and had three children. Phillip and Caroline both died in St. Louis. The 1870 census lists John Zieser living in Freeburg, with his wife Fredricka and their five children: Henry, John, Phillip, George, Helena and William. George was born in 1863, but died in 1873. No further information has been found regarding Henry and William, but one of them was living in 1900. The 1900 census lists the number of children born in each woman and then lists the number of living children. The mother, Fredricka was living with her daughter in St. Louis in 1900 and was reported to have had 7 children, with 4 living in 1900. The four surviving would have been John, Phillip, Lena and one other. There may have been an name change.

The father, John Zeisset, died in Okawville, Washington County, Illinois in 1878. Fredericka remarried, to Jacob Lehr, sometime over the next two years. She survived her second husband and then died in St. Louis, Missouri on the 16th of June, 1901. She was living there with her daughter, Magdalena (not Helena).

Magdalena, daughter of John and Fredericka Zeisset was born in 1865 in Freeburg and married Charles Schmitt in St. Louis in 1884. Charles was born in Erie, Pennsylvania and moved to St. Louis where he first worked for the railroad. He eventually became a factory watchman. The Schmitts lived out their married life in St. Louis where they raised six children: Mae, William, Albert, Charles, Edna and Helen. The father, Charles, died in St. Louis in 1933, while Magdalena lived until 1947, dying in Rockbridge, Illinois where she was living with her older daughter and her husband. The oldest son, William, gained some fame as a piano player in St. Louis. He changed his name to Billy Smythe and married Edith Middleton in 1910. She was also a musician, as was her brother Scott. They moved to Louisville, Kentucky where Billy became a composer and music publisher. He played and wrote ragtime and blues music, the most famous of which was �Hesitation Blues�. Billy moved to San Antonio, Texas around 1934 where he managed a radio station. He died in Corpus Christi, Texas in 1972. It appears that he and his wife were likely divorced.

The fourth son of Johannes Zeisset and Christina Baer was named Abraham, born in Menzingen in 1838 and married in 1868 to Magdalena Schenkel in Durlach, Baden, Germany. Abraham was a citizen of Durlach, which is town just outside of the city of Karlsruhe. He lived in Karlsruhe for the duration of his married life and worked there as a Kutscher, or coachman. Abraham and his wife, Magdalena, had three daughters and one son, all born in Karlsruhe, but only one of these children survived to adulthood. The daughter, Maria, was born in 1870, married in 1894, but died when she was only 32 years of age in Durlach. Abraham also died young, in Karlsruhe in 1881, so that he was only 42 years old at the time of his death. Abraham and his wife were members of the protestant church. Abraham even departed from the naming patterns of the past and named his son, Theodor, but he lived only one and a half years so that the Zeisset name from this line ended with the death of Abraham in 1881.

Magdalena and Barbara were the two daughters of Johannes Zeisset and Christina Baer. Barbara (1828-1884) married Jakob Schmutz at Streichenberg, a castle south of Sinsheim. They settled in Obersteinach, very near Barbara’s older sister Magdalena. Of the nine children born to Barbara and Jakob Schmutz, four survived to adulthood. The son, John Schmutz, emigrated to Kansas in 1883. He settled in Dickinson County, later moving to Junction City, where he died in 1924. John Schmutz married a widow named Sophia in 1884, shortly after his arrival in Junction City. This couple did not have children of their own. The oldest daughter, Christina Schmutz, married Heinrich Kaufmann and remained in Germany as did her younger sister, Anna, who married Christian Landes. This couple lived, at least for a short time, at Niedersteinach. The parents of these children, Barbara Zeisset and Jakob Schmutz lived the rest of their lives in Obersteinach. Barbara died in 1884 and her husband, Jakob in 1885.

Magdalena Zeisset (1819-1884) is frequently mentioned in our history as the mother of the Baers in Niedersteinach, some of whom came to America and the aunt of Jakob Friedrich Zeisset. Magdalena was born in Lautenbach in 1819 and moved with her parents and brother to Menzingen around 1825. She married Matthaeus Baer of Dammhof in 1839. They were married in Menzingen and immediately made their home in Niedersteinach. Matthaeus Baer was born at Dammhof, an estate only nine miles east of Menzingen. Niedersteinach was quite a bit farther away from Menzingen, 63 miles east. Magdalena Zeisset Baer’s mother, Christina Baer, was also born at Dammhof, in 1798. She was a half first cousin of Matthaeus Baer, who would become her son-in-law when he married her daughter, Magdalena. Magdalena and Matthaeus lived at Niedersteinach the rest of their lives. This family is discussed in a separate chapter.


Map of Menzingen and Dammhof

 Jakob Zeisset (1816-1861)

Jakob Zeisset was born in Lautenbach to Johannes Zeisset and Christina Baer in 1816. He moved with them to Menzingen around 1825. In 1837, the church record at Menzingen tells of the birth of Jakob Friedrich Epp in 1837 to an unmarried Johanna Epp. Nearly a year later, the church record tells us of the adoption of Jakob Friedrich Epp by his father, Jakob Zeisset. This must certainly have been a scandalous thing for a Mennonite family in particular. Illegitimate births occurred with some frequency, but it is somewhat unusual to see the formal adoption of the child by the father. The parish pastor would usually make an additional notation marking the birth and this pastor simply wrote “uneheliches” or illegitimate. Sometimes the pastor would declare the mother “deflorata” directly translated as de-flowered and sometimes the adjective was not as kind. In other cases, the pastor would make the entry of the birth upside-down in the church record. The following year, a month before his marriage to Johanna Epp, Jakob Zeisset voluntarily declared that he was the father of Jakob Friedrich, with confirmation of his paternity by Johanna Epp. Jakob Friedrich’s last name was thereby changed to Zeisset on September 13, 1838. Jakob and Johanna were married then in Menzingen on October 16, 1838. Of note regarding the marriage is that it is the first “mixed marriage” encountered in the Zeisset line. Jakob was a Mennonite, but Johanna was a member of the evangelical church. She was born in Menzingen where the Epp family had lived since at least the mid 17th century, and they had always been of the evangelical or Lutheran church. Johanna Epp was the first-born of Bernhard and Catharine Grudina Epp. According to church records, Johanna’s father was an Accisor, apparently one who collected taxes. Johanna’s death certificate states that he was a merchant. Her mother, who was born in Michelfeld, Baden, died when Johanna was only 9 years old, leaving her father with 3 young children. He remarried within nine months and had seven more children with his new wife and died in 1840, almost two years after Johanna’s marriage to Jakob Zeisset.

Isaak Zeisset was born to Jakob and Johanna in Menzingen in March 1839. Johannes was born two years later in December 1841. A daughter was born in 1844 and another son in 1846, but neither survived more than a few weeks.

Daniel Zeisset was born November 27, 1848, eleven years younger than his oldest brother, Jakob Friedrich. He was a baptismal sponsor for Louise Zeisset Swart, Lizzie Zeisset Weller and Jake Zeisset, children of Jakob Friedrich. According to the baptismal records of these three children, Daniel was possibly living at Menzingen from 1870-1873. He was a farmer, never married and later died in Eichenau where he was living with his older brother, Isaak and his family. The Izaak Zeisset family had only recently moved to Eichenau, renting the farm there from Lichtmess (February 2nd) 1876. Daniel died on the 13th of November 1876, just 2 weeks before his 28th birthday. He died of tuberculosis and was buried at Lensiedel where the Zeisset family attended church. A note in the Lensiedel church book tells of the specific wishes of the deceased for his burial to include a message and prayer from a Mennonite Elder at the graveside, after the service at the church led by the local Pastor von Jan. He is listed as a Mennonite, so presumably wanted the Elder in addition to the evangelical pastor. [insert Photo of Lensiedel cemetery]

One more child, the only daughter if Jakob and Johanna Epp Zeisset, Magdalena was born in Hohenstadt, Germany in 1854. Records from Menzingen indicate that Jakob Zeisset rented an estate at Menzingen from Candlemas 1833 to Candlemas 1851. Candlemas, also called Lichtmess, is a religious observation which occurs on February 2, forty days after the birth of Jesus, recognizing the ritual purification of Mary and the presentation of Jesus in the Temple of Jerusalem. There is an old German proverb “The badger peeps out of his hole on Candlemas Day, and when he finds snow walks abroad; but if he sees the sun shining, he draws back into his hole.” In America, this day is recognized more commonly as Groundhog Day. Jakob Zeisset then rented the one estate at Menzingen for fourteen years, from 1833 to 1851. We assume that he left in 1851 for Hohenstadt or Sindolsheim.

Magdalena Zeisset, daughter of Jakob and Johanna Epp Zeisset was born in 1854 at the Helmstheimer Hof according to several different records. The Wuerttemberg State Archives at Wertheim have the records pertaining to the Helmstheimer Hof, and describe the sale of a portion of that baronial property in 1855. The Pächters (tenants) of the Helmstheimer Hof are listed, but there are no Zeissets among the tenants. The Hofmann family who currently lives at the Helmstheimer hof (in 2008) also had no knowledge of the Zeissets living at the estate. It was suggested that perhaps the Zeissets were employed there as workers by the tenants at that time. The Helmstheimer Hof, owned by the Barons of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rosenberg, was a sizable estate and among the buildings in 1854, were the house, barns, stalls, blacksmith shop, distillery and a pub, the Wirtshaus zum Golden Pflug. [INSERT PHOTO OF 1854 HOF PLAN] The Zeisset family was probably living on this estate for at least a short period of time. When the family moved from Sindolsheim to Kreuzfeld, the records at the Neuenstein Archive indicate that the family lived at the Schlossgut Sindolsheim. This is a large, long building just at the bottom of the street which leads to the church. After a devastating fire in 1801, the “castle” was rebuilt and stands today with four different living quarters, so that four families can occupy the building. [INSERT PHOTO OF SINDOLSHEIMER SCHLOSS].


Map of Sindolsheim, Hohenstadt, Helmstein, Bödigheim, and Adelsheim

Jakob’s parents, Johannes and Christina Baer Zeisset moved with the family to Sindolsheim. The death of Johannes Zeisset is recorded on April 30, 1855 at Sindolsheim, and he was buried there. Jakob, the son of Johannes Zeisset, died only six years after his father, also at Sindolsheim where he too was buried. The records at the Neuenstein Archive give further information that after the death of her husband, Johanna Zeisset and her five children moved to Rosenberg where the records state that she purchased a house. The family lived at Rosenberg until February 1864. The widow of Johannes Zeisset, Christina Baer Zeisset, went to live with her daughter, Magdalena Zeisset Baer as previously discussed, and died at Niedersteinach in 1866.

Jakob Zeisset family in Sindolsheim Jakob Zeisset family in Sindolsheim c 1859-1860. Back row: Johannes, Jakob Friedrich, Isaak. Front row: Daniel, Jakob, Magdalena, Johanna.

A photograph exists of the Zeisset family in Sindolsheim. Looking at the photograph, the age of the daughter Magdalena is the easiest to guess. She looks to be about 5 years of age and not too happy about having to sit still for the photograph. If she is 5 in this picture, being born in 1854, the year of the photograph is 1859-1860. Her brother Daniel would then have been 10 or 11 years old. The placement of the hands is interesting. Father Jakob is holding his hat with his right hand, with his left hand in his lap. Mother Johanna has her hands folded together. Daniel’s left hand is on his father’s shoulder, while Magdalena’s left hand is on her mother’s shoulder. In the back row, Johannes has his left hand on Jakob Friedrich’s shoulder and he in turn has his left hand on Isaak’s shoulder. Isaak has his left hand on his mother’s shoulder. Certainly, Johannes, Jakob and Isaak do not appear to be dressed in Mennonite fashion. While there was no regulation regarding dress in the Mennonite society of southern Germany, simplicity was emphasized. The three sons appear to be almost flamboyant with their striped vests, which one might imagine are brightly colored, and their pocket watches and chains.


Isaak Zeisset (1839-1897)

Isaak Zeisset was the first of the Zeisset sons to marry. He married a non-Mennonite woman, Bertha Hettinger, from nearby Eberstadt, where they were married in 1863. They lived for a time at Sindolsheim as their first daughter, Emma, was born there in 1863. Isaak and Bertha then moved to Kreuzfeld in February 1864 where their next two children were born in 1865 and 1866. Then the couple moved with their three children to the Rosshof estate near Bödigheim, only 4 miles from Eberstadt, Bertha’s birthplace. They rented this estate for a period of ten years.

Photo of Eichenau with descendants, 2006
Eichenau

Isaak Zeisset moved his family to Eichenau where he rented a farm there from Lichtmess (February) 1876. Eichenau is a hamlet 17 miles nearly straight south of Kreuzfeld where Isaak’s older brother, Jakob Friedrich had been living with his family since 1864. Certainly these brothers were close friends and likely consulted each other regarding farm management as well. All of the information regarding the rental of the property at Eichenau is held at the State Archive in Neuenstein. The contract for the rental covers the period from Lichtmess 1876 to Lichtmess 1888 and is between the Prince Hugo of Hohenlohe and Isak Zeisset of Rosshof. There are letters of reference from Isaak’s previous landlord. INSERT COVER PAGE OF THE CONTRACT Of note is the responsibility of the tenant to obtain fire and hail insurance. Other documents concerning the Eichenau estate describe the property. The house is 16.62 meters long and 11.60 meters wide, or 54 1/2 feet by 38 feet. The ground level and second floor were made from stone and the third floor was of fachwerk, or half-timbered, with a gable roof covered with tile. The doors were made from oak. The farm was about 225 acres. The primary crop appeared to be fruit, with 163 apple trees, 86 pear trees, 194 plum trees and 20 cherry trees.

While living at Eichenau, the Zeisset family attended church at Lendsiedel, about a mile away. The church records list Bertha Zeisset, the wife of Isaak, as communing there in April 1876. She was evangelical or Lutheran, while Isaak was still considered to be a Mennonite. Isaak and his family lived at Eichenau until February 1888 when their church membership was transferred to Winterhausen. Darstadt is primarily a Catholic town and lies in the Franconian area of Bavaria. The church records for the family were transferred to the evangelical church at near-by Winterhausen. Isaak Zeisset moved his family to Darstadt which is just south of the large city of Würzburg in Bavaria. Darstadt is nearly 60 miles directly north of Eichenau. Stories of this move, occurring in the winter time, were passed on from George Weller who was working for the Zeisset family at that time. George Weller later married Elisabeth Zeisset, Isaak’s niece and daughter of Jakob Friedrich Zeisset. Elisabeth Zeisset and her brother, Jacob, would have been living with the Isaak Zeisset family when they moved from Eichenau to Darstadt.

Isaak and Bertha Hettinger Zeisset had eight children. The first born, Emma, died when she was only 5 years old while the family was still living at Rosshof. Elise Zeisset Zäther was born in 1865 at Kreuzfeld and died in 1943 in Ludwigsburg. Heinrich Zeisset was born also in Kreuzfeld in 1866 and died in 1917 in Basel, Switzerland. Friedrich Jakob Zeisset was born in 1868 and died in 1942 in Ludwigsburg. He was a teacher and in 1896 married Anna Greiss in Schrozberg. This couple moved to the village of Bartenstein in 1897, near Schrozberg, where he continued to teach. They had two sons, Walter (1898-1978) and Adolf (1906-1962). Both sons died in Berlin. A daughter, Hedwig, was born in 1900, married Hans Schleeh and died in Ludwigsburg in 1980. The third son was named Ludwig and he was born in 1869 at the Rosshof. Very little is known about Ludwig. He did have two children, Rudolf and Else. The fourth son, Daniel, was born in 1870 at the Rosshof and died in Stetten in 1912 with no known children. The fifth son, Karl Gustav Zeisset, was born at Eichenau in 1880. He had two sponsors at his baptism in Lendsiedel: his uncle Gottfred Lauer of Sindolsheim (married to Bertha Hettinger Zeisset’s sister, Elise) and his uncle Jakob Friedrich Zeisset who was living at Kreuzfeld. He lived in Rottenbauer, just south of ü and then lived briefly in ü in 1902-1903. He was an administrator with the railroad. Karl died in 1952 in Munich. Nothing more is known regarding Karl at this writing. The youngest son was Karl Ludwig Wilhelm, born in December 1884 in Eichenau, named after his mother’s brother. Gottfred Lauer of Sindolsheim was also a Baptismal sponsor, along with Wilhelm’s uncle Johannes Zeisset, now living at Niedersteinach. (It is possible that Bettie and her brother Henry Zeisset attended this baptism as they were living with the Johannes Zeisset family at this time.) Wilhelm Zeisset lived in or around Stuttgart from 1923 to 1948, was an engineer, married to Ida and had at least one daughter who was named Irene. Wilhelm died in Pforzheim-Dillstein in 1959. His daughter, Irene had communication with the Kansas Zeissets in the 1960s. She was married to Adolf Bähr and had a son and daughter in the town of Oberkirch. Details are still being discovered regarding the Isaak family after the first reunion between the descendants of the Jakob Friedrich Zeisset family and the descendants of the Isaak Zeisset family.

Isaak and Bertha Zeisset lived at Darstadt, presumably at the Schlosshof, or castle there. It is a large property on the west end of town, near the church. [insert PHOTO OF DARSTADT] Prior to the Zeissets, a Mennonite family lived at the Schlosshof in Darstadt named Muselmann. The property was and is still owned by the Freiherr (Baron) von Zobel. Isaak Zeisset died at Darstadt on the 14th of June in 1897 from liver and heart disease at the age of 58 years. Just four months later, Bertha died in Darstadt of stomach cancer in October. Both Bertha and Isaak were buried in Darstadt.


Johannes Zeisset (1841-1902)

Johannes Zeisset was the third son of Jakob and Johanna. He was born in Menzingen in 1841. His father Jakob died in 1861, his brother Isaak married in 1863 and his oldest brother, Jakob Friedrich married in 1864. In 1864, the widow Johanna Zeisset moved with her sons Jakob Friedrich and Isaak to Kreuzfeld. Johannes was only 22 years old at that time and it is assumed that he moved with the entire family to Kreuzfeld. At some point before 1869, Johannes moved to Wiegelshof which was a farm just 2 miles east of Feuchtwangen. In February 1869, he married his cousin Elisabetha Baer of Niedersteinach. They lived either at Wiegelshof or at Meierhof which was the neighboring farm. Wiegelshof was reportedly at the village of Oberahorn in Bavaria, while the Meierhof was at the village of Unterahorn. The Meierhof farm exists today, but records indicate that it was moved from Unterahorn to a new location just north of Unterahorn in 1881. The records do indicate that Johannes Zeisset was the Gutsbesitzer (landowner) in 1871, but that he sold the property on the 21st of August in 1875. Johannes had an auction a year later. [Insert MAP of MEIERHOF/UNTERAHORN/FEUCHTWANGEN ]

While living there, Johannes and Elisabetha had three children: Jakob Friedrich (1869-after 1904), Magdalena (born 1873) and Johanna who was born in 1875, but lived only 2 years. The family then lived at Eichenau from 1876 to 1877, presumably living with Johannes’ brother Isaak who was living there since February 1876. Johannes and Elisabetha next moved their family to Erlach, a village at the northern end of Schwäbisch Hall. Johannes and Elisabetha had one son, Heinrich born in 1879, while they were living in Erlach. In 1882, the Zeisset family moved to Niedersteinach. This was the home of Johannes Zeisset’s wife, Elisabetha Baer. Elisabetha’s mother was Magdalena Zeisset Baer Buehler and her second husband, Jakob Buehler had died in November 1881. Presumably Johannes and Elisabetha moved their family to Niedersteinach to manage the farm.



Map of Schwabisch Hall, Erlach, and Niedersteinach

Several Zeisset descendants in Kansas have a painting of the home at Niedersteinach. These watercolor paintings were made by Karl Wörner, later the son-in-law of Johannes and Elisabetha Zeisset married to their daughter Lena (Magdalena). Karl Wörner was an architect and artist and the paintings were reportedly sent to the Zeissets in Kansas in exchange for some money during WWI. The title on the painting says that Johannes Zeisset was a Pächter at Niedersteinach from 1882-1893.


Painting of Niedersteinach

Johannes and Elisabetha took in a nephew and niece, Henry and Bettie, after their father Jakob Friedrich Zeisset died in 1884. Bettie lived here until she left for America with her sister Bertha in 1885. Henry lived here until he left for America in 1893. Apparently, Johannes and Elisabetha also left Niedersteinach in that same year. At this writing in 2008, we don’t know where Johannes and Elisabetha Zeisset lived after 1893 until they made their final home in the city of Würzburg in 1895. The city archive in ü has information sheets on each resident of Würzburg. The information provided for Johannes Zeisset says that he and Elisabetha moved to Würzburg on the first of October in 1895. Johannes is listed in the address book, which states the name, occupation and home residence for each person. Johannes was listed first in 1896 as a Privatmann, which means simply a private citizen living at Heidingsfelderstrasse 13. At that time he had a Molkereigeschäft, or dairy business at the address Huttenstrasse 10. From 1896 to 1901, Johannes and Elisabetha also lived at Huttenstrasse 10. Here they ran a business which sold butter, bread, honey, milk, eggs and cheese. In March 1901, Johannes moved to the neighboring street at Wölffelstrasse 4 and lived there until his death on the 4th of November 1902. His wife, Elisabetha, died on the 21st of May in 1899 in Würzburg. [Insert PHOTO OF HUTTENSTRASSE and map] The children of Johannes and Elisabetha also lived for a time in Würzburg. The older son, Jakob Friedrich Zeisset, likely named after his uncle, was born at the Wiegelshof in 1869 and lived with the family at Niedersteinach, then Würzburg where he was a factory worker and for a time worked for the city train. In 1903, he moved to Ludwigshafen am Rhein, returned briefly to Würzburg in October 1903, then moved to Schweinfurt in March of 1904. At this writing, nothing more is known about Jakob, except that he was not yet married in 1904.

Lena Zeisset Wörner Lena Zeisset was the daughter of Johannes and Elisabetha who was married to the architect Karl Wörner. They lived in Karlsruhe and had at least one daughter, Hilde. Letters and photos were received from this family through 1951, and possibly later. A few photos have survived, but contact with the family was lost.. A search at the Evangelical Church Archive in Karlsruhe failed to reveal the deaths of Lena and her husband, Karl W�rner.

Lena died sometime after 1951. [insert PHOTOS of Lena and Hilde]

The youngest child of Johannes and Elisabetha Zeisset, Heinrich, was born in 1879 and lived in Würzburg in 1901, but nothing more is known about him.


Map of Kreuzfeld and Schrozberg

Magdalena Zeisset (1854-1932)

Magdalena Zeisset is the little girl in the family picture from Sindolsheim. She likely lived with her widowed mother in Schrozberg, only 2 miles from Kreuzfeld, as evidenced by church records and an autograph book owned by Louise Zeisset Swart, the daughter of Jakob Friedrich Zeisset. Magdalena was born in Hohenstadt in 1854, probably left the Zeisset home at Sindolsheim with her mother in 1864 and moved with her older brothers to the area near Kreuzfeld. In 1873, Magdalena was married in Schrozberg to a man from Schrozberg, Johann Belzner. He was a stone cutter and was not a Mennonite. Their only daughter, Luise, was born in Schrozberg the following year in 1874 and was baptized as an infant at Schrozberg. Johann Belzner died in Schrozberg in 1876. Magdalena remarried in 1881 to Georg Sonder, again in Schrozberg. He was a locksmith. On August 26, 1887 the record keeping was transferred to the hamlet of Fasanenmühle by Waldenburg, about 10 miles northwest of Schwäbisch Hall. The Waldenburg church records note the divorce of Magdalena from Georg Sonder as recorded in Schwäbisch Hall in November 1889. Magdalena married her third husband, Johann Andreas Franz, on April 24, 1890 at Waldenburg. On July 15, 1896, the membership of Magdalena Zeisset and her husband Johann Andreas Franz were transferred to Würzburg where they lived the rest of their lives.

The information from the resident sheet and the address book at the Würzburg city archive tells that Andreas Franz and his wife, Magdalena, arrived in Würzburg to live on the 10th of August in 1896, having moved from Fasanenmühle. They lived at several different homes until finally settling at Huttenstrasse 10, where Magdalena’s brother Johannes Zeisset had lived and had his business for several years. Andreas Franz started out with a dairy business, such as the one run by Johannes Zeisset, but in 1902 was also selling spices and by 1904 was handling general groceries. Andreas and Magdalena lived at Huttenstrasse 10 until their deaths. Andreas died on the 4th of May in 1931 and Magdalena (Lena) died on the 29th of March in 1932. [Insert DEATH NOTICE FROM NEWSPAPER]

A letter from Magdalena Zeisset Franz written in December 1923 to her niece Louise Zeisset Swart exists yet today.

Magdalena’s daughter, Luise Belzner, was married at Fasanenmühle in 1894 to Christof Schmidt. The Schmidts had six children, with four daughters and a son surviving. Luise died at Fasanenmühle in September 1904, shortly after the birth and death of her sixth child. Christof Schmidt remarried in 1907 and had four more children. He died in Fasanenmühle in 1948.


Johanna Luise Epp Zeisset (1817-1889)

These are the facts known about the mother of our Zeisset family: Johanna Luise Epp was born in Menzingen in 1817 and belonged to the evangelical or Lutheran church in Menzingen. The church which stands today in Menzingen, was built in 1846-1848, so Johanna would have been baptized and married in the previous church. She married Jakob Zeisset in 1838. She and Jakob were the parents of Jakob Friedrich Zeisset (father of the six immigrant orphans), Isaak Zeisset, Johannes Zeisset, Daniel Zeisset and Magdalena Zeisset. This Zeisset family lived at Menzingen until 1851, when they moved to Sindolsheim where Jakob Zeisset died in 1861. Johanna continued to live for a time at Sindolsheim, moved briefly to nearby Rosenberg before moving with her sons to the Hofgut Kreuzfeld in 1864, where Jakob Friedrich was the tenant. Johanna likely lived in Schrozberg, the largest town near Kreuzfeld, for some time.

At the Zeisset reunion in Weisweil in August 2006, we learned that Johanna Epp Zeisset died at Fasanenmühle on the 27th of January in 1889. Presumably Johanna was living there with her daughter, Magdalena Sonder, and her granddaughter Luise Schmidt, at the time of her death. Today a house stands at Fasanenmühle across the stream from the location of the former house (and presumably the location of a mill, since Fasanenmühle means pheasant mill).


In the next chapter we discuss what is known about the eldest of these siblings, Jakob Friedrich Zeisset, and his wife Margaretha Müller, parents of the six siblings who emigrated to Kansas.


Continue to Chapter 3