Jacob, Bettie, Henry, Elizabeth, Bertha, and Louise

2019 Zeisset Family Reunion
Leonardville and Clay Center, KS
August 2-4, 2019

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Participants

Handouts

50th Anniversary Reunion Cake

Ninety people participated in all or part of the 50th Anniversary Zeisset Family Reunion, August 2 to 4, 2019, in Leonardville and Clay Center, Kansas.  

 

Most attendees were descendants of Jakob Friedrich Zeisset and Margarethe Mueller Zeisset.  Their six orphaned children immigrated to the Leonardville area from Germany between 1884 and 1893.

 

The 2019 Zeisset Reunion began with an informal gathering at the Nelson's Landing Restaurant in Leonardville Friday evening. The venue for Saturday’s activities was Life’s Finer Moments Lodge, southwest of Clay Center.  

 

Saturday’s reunion program included a series of presentations tracing the history of the 24 Zeisset reunions held across the 50 years starting in 1969.  Follow the link under each title to see the slides presented.

 

Reunion Years

Title and Link to Slides

Presenter

1969 to 1992

The Early Years

Ray Zeisset

1994 to 1998

Expanding the Scope

Paul Zeisset

2000 to 2002

Researching German Ancestors

Loretta Hoerman

2004 & 2008

Touring the Farms of the Immigrants

Paul Zeisset

2006

Zeisset History Tour in Germany

Paul Zeisset

2010 to 2016

Part 1: Zeisset Descendants in America

Loretta Hoerman

2010 to 2016

Part 2:  Photos

Paul Zeisset

 

Our Illinois Cousins

Loretta Hoerman

 

50th Anniversary T-shirt

Richard Zeisset, from Granite City, Illinois, described the branch of the family that descended from Johann Zeisset, an uncle of Jakob Friedrich Zeisset, the ancestor of most of the rest of the group.


Many reunion attendees wore commemorative T-shirts featuring a design created by Stephen Gilpin of Iola, KS.  The design was adapted from an old photograph of the six immigrants, and was also featured on an anniversary cake served Saturday afternoon.

 

Saturday evening, Mary Ann Fowles and Stephanie Wolf, both of Clay Center, presented a "Name that Tune" contest of music from the 1940's.  Loretta Hoerman and Gay Stewart presented flute duets.  Reunions:  Why They Matter is the title of the video played that evening,  authored by Sherry Nanninga Walker of Colorado Springs, CO, describing the impact family reunions have played in her life.

 

Family members gathered around new cemetery stoneSunday’s events began at the Leonardville United Methodist Cemetery, where five of the six immigrant siblings and many of their descendants are buried.  A brief memorial meditation was presented by Ray and Carolyn Zeisset of Lincoln, NE, concluding with an instrumental duet by Alex and Conrad Hoffman of Omaha, NE.   Most in the group were seeing for the first time a new stone cemetery marker, manufactured and installed with funds raised by family members after the 2016 reunion.  Family member Roger Potts, trustee of the cemetery, coordinated the sign project.

 

The group gathered at the Leonardville United Methodist Church for visiting, attending the morning service, and sharing a catered and potluck dinner.  The Sunday afternoon program included a presentation on the Protestant Reformation and Zeisset History by Ray and Carolyn Zeisset, focusing on Mennonites and Huguenots and their relationship to Zeisset ancestors. The program was organized and emceed by Paul Zeisset of Alexandria, VA.

The oldest family member at the reunion was Merlin Potts of Leonardville.  While more than half of attendees came from Kansas, other family members came from fourteen other states and from as far away as Alabama, Nevada, North Carolina, Virginia, and Washington state.  Ethel and Sam Smoots of Gig Harbor, WA, came the farthest distance.

 

The largest group in attendance was 21 descendants of Bettie Zeisset Hoerman. Other families included 18 from the Henry Zeisset family, 17 from the Louise Zeisset Swart family, 15 from the Jacob Zeisset family, 9 from the Elizabeth Zeisset Weller family, 4 from the Bertha Zeisset Nanninga family, and 4 from the more distantly related Johann Zeisset family of Illinois.

 

The program concluded with the singing of Blest Be the Tie That Binds, a tradition across the reunions.



Paul Zeisset, Coordinator









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Updated 8/22/2019