A
“Reader’s Digest Version” . . . .
In
my second and final edition of the Flaum family history I decided to continue
the format of telling each individual or family’s story as completely as I
could, based upon the facts as I had been able to discover them. I also wanted to try and tie things together a
bit – in the form of some sort of chronological narrative.
What follows is an attempt to do just that; in
putting together this family tale, I tried to stick to the facts as I know them
to be and include as few logical suppositions or educated guesses as
possible. The biographical stories of
each family or individual that come later in this book will tell each person’s story
in greater detail.
For
some readers this may be more information about their family history than they
care to know; for me, it is the fulfillment of a personal commitment to honor
my family, and pass their stories along to future generations.
The Story:
The
Flaum family in America can trace its beginnings back to the day that Karl
Wilhem Flaum and his family arrived in Baltimore, Maryland from Germany. It was Thursday, October 17, 1888 to be
exact, when the family landed at the immigration dock at Locust Point in
Baltimore harbor on board a decidedly old steamer, the S.S. Donau after a 10
day transatlantic crossing that began in Bremerhaven, Germany.
Karl
Flaum was a 47 year old ironworker, who came to America in the hope of a better
life for himself and his family: wife Henrietta, a 37 year old mother of three
and 8 months pregnant, daughter, Wilhemina, 18, and two young sons, Wilhelm, 4,
and little Herman, just three. A second
Flaum family traveled with them: Karl’s brother, Frederich, his wife, and four
children.
Karl’s
family traveled light – only two suitcases – but could not afford to travel in
style: their shipboard accommodations in steerage were long on discomfort and
short on privacy and cleanliness, but it was the cheapest and fastest way to
come to America. One thing the family did not bring with them were the stories
of their past; the events and facts concerning Karl’s illegitimate birth to
Friedrich Schoen and his mother, and the entire family history were left
behind.
The
two Flaum families were actually the last in a four family migration that had
begun 7 years earlier, and followed a common pattern of families emigrating
from Germany during the 19th century: one
family member would be sent to America, get a decent paying job to earn the
money to send back to Germany to bring another over, and little by little the
entire family would be brought to America.
The
Flaum family’s first steps on American soil were taken in a long line of
immigrants going through customs and medical inspections in the Baltimore immigration
center. By the time Karl and his family passed their inspections and were
officially allowed to enter the country, they were saddened by the news that
someone in Friedrich’s family had failed the medical exam and was denied entry;
his entire family had decided to return to Germany rather than be split
apart. For one branch of the Flaum
family their opportunity to begin a new life in America was over before it had
begun. They re-boarded the “Donau” and
sailed back to Germany ,
never to return.
For
Karl and his family It was but a short walk from the immigration center to one
of the B&O trains waiting on the tracks next door; their new life in
America began with a 24 hour journey north to what would become their new home
in America: Cleveland, Ohio.
There
were hugs, tears, and cries of “Willkommen
zu Amerika!” that greeted Karl
and his family as they stepped off the train.
Brief bits of family news were quickly shared, to be discussed in more
detail over the next few hours: “Where are Friedrich and his family?” “Sailing back to Germany , because they
did not pass the medical inspections”, came the reply. The disappointment over Friedrich’s family
was accepted, and the relief of having Karl and his family safely in America
became the focus of conversation as the families walked the few blocks between
the train station and Fourth Street, where the Flaums would live, on the same
block as their relatives.
Karl
could not read the advertising signs along Canal Road as the families walked to
their new home, but his eyes, nose and ears told him much about the area of
Cleveland they were in. The tall brick smokestacks
and chimneys in every direction belched a sooty black smoke that clouded the
air and hung heavy with the smells of iron, coal, paint varnish, beer and
animal slaughterhouses. Their first home in America – in Cleveland’s most
polluted industrial area - was all that any of the families could afford, even
after 7 years of toil.
It
was pitch dark by the time that the families turned onto Fourth Street, and little
could be seen under the flickering lights of the gas street lamps, whose feeble
flames could not penetrate the heavy shroud of night. Near the end of their street, at a small
wooden frame house that could not hide its need of paint or repair even in the
dark, it was barely possible to see a small group of people gathered on the
front porch, dimly illuminated by a single gas lamp.
At
the approach of the walkers, a cry from the porch called out: “Karl, Henrietta, seid ihr hier”? “Ja, wir sind hier” came the
reply, and for the next two hours the little house at #35 Fourth Street was
alive with the heavy familiar accents of their old homeland, as stories,
anecdotes and heartfelt reminisces were shared among young and old.
Soon
there was beer in buckets, carried fresh and frothy from a saloon just down
Canal Street, shared with toasts offered
to “Gott im Himmel” for the safe voyage, and for the chance to start life anew
in Amerika. There was a hearty, melancholy toast to old Friedrich Schoen, Karl’s
father, who had helped earn the passage fare for those that emigrated, but died
before he could join them. When the hour
grew late and the conversation wearied, it was time for bed. Tomorrow would be the Flaum family’s first
day in their new life.
Ludwig
Haske was Karl Flaum’s brother-in-law by marriage to Karl’s half-sister,
Augusta Schoen. At 5:30 am on Saturday,
October 19th, Ludwig knocked softly on the front door of #35 Fourth
Street. A moment later Karl stepped
outside onto the wooden porch, carrying his lunch and a small leather bag which
held the tools of his trade. He had been
an ironworker back in Germany ,
and would be one in America
as well; by his hammer he would forge a better life for his family. Ludwig found Karl his first job in America at
the foundry where he also worked; for the next 40 years their friendship would
remain as strong as the iron and steel they hammered.
Exactly
one month after the Flaum family arrived in America, Karl’s third son,
Ferdinand was born at home on Saturday, the 17th of November,
1888. He was named in honor of Karl’s
half brother, Ferdinand Schoen, who had come to America with his family only five
months earlier. Little Ferdinand was
baptized on December 9th at Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church on
Bolivar Street, just up the hill in downtown Cleveland, where many German
immigrants living in the Flats attended church.
The witnesses were the baby’s uncle Ferdinand Schoen, aunts Auguste
Haske & Louise Dunkel, and his sister, Wilhemina Flaum.
Life
soon settled into predictable routines for each member of the families living on
Fourth Street; for the men, it was work - six days a week, 12 hours a day: Karl
& Ludwig Haske at a foundry, Ferdinand Schoen as a carpenter, and Herman
Dunkel as a bricklayer.
Their
wives were kept busy raising their children:
Henrietta Flaum now had three young sons, Carrie Schoen had three
children before 1890, then four more between 1892 and 1899. Her last child was a son, born on November 5, 1899 ; he was
named Carl Wilhelm in honor of his uncle.
Augusta Haske had a daughter, with only Louise Dunkel a childless, but a
helpful aunt. If taking care of children
was all they did, they would have been busy enough, but the daily duties,
necessities and chores of that era demanded nearly every moment of time in a
day. Life was hard, and hardest of all
on the women.
By
the spring of 1891 little had changed for the four families, except for the
fact that Henrietta Flaum was expecting another child, and her daughter,
Wilhemina – “Mina”, had met a young man, Otto Hallig, who was a bartender at a
saloon nearby on Water Street. Mina was
not yet twenty, but marriage to Otto was very much in her plans.
Monday,
April 20th marked the start of another work week for Karl; he left
home early, knowing that his wife’s baby was due at any time, but that his daughter
and step sisters were there to watch over Henrietta and the children. By late morning Henrietta was in
labor, and a mid-wife was sent
for; when there were signs that her delivery would be especially difficult, a
doctor was summoned, and word was sent to the foundry for Karl to hurry home.
Whether
Karl got home before the doctor is unknown, but by the time 20 year old Dr.
Gustav Feil arrived, Henrietta was dead of a heart attack suffered during her
delivery. Her unborn child lay forever
still within her womb; the family’s expected joy had become great sorrow. A simple funeral at the home for family and
friends was followed by Henrietta’s burial in the Erie Street
Cemetery , just around the
corner from Zion Church .
The family could not afford even the simplest of gravestones; her grave
remains unmarked to this day.
For
the Flaum family, the loss of a mother with three young sons meant that Mina
and her aunts would take on the responsibilities of raising seven year old
Wilhelm, six year old Herman, and two year old Ferdinand. Mina’s plans to marry Otto Hallig would not
be delayed for long, however.
Karl
Flaum wasted little time in providing a new mother for his young sons, and
freeing his daughter to pursue her own dreams.
On December 31st Karl married Carrie Preuss, a widow who
lived just a few houses down the same street as Karl.
Their
marriage was followed by the wedding of Wilhemina and Otto Hallig on Dec. 4, 1892 , at the Flaum
family home. It was the first real Flaum
wedding in America ,
as far as a family celebration was concerned.
All the Flaums, Schoens, Haskes and Dunkels were at the party that Karl
gave for his only daughter and her husband.
In
the pursuit of their own dreams, Otto and Mina moved up and out of the Flats.
The young couple headed to the eastern most part of what was a rapidly growing
city, where Cleveland
city ordinances were less restrictive on the sale of beer on Sunday. They soon were operating two saloons located
just north and east of the city limits at Wilson Avenue . Business was good in an area where many
German immigrants were settling.
It
did not take long for the newest branch of the Flaum family tree to bear fruit;
in December of 1893, Mina and Otto had a son, and named him Henry Carl
Hallig. Perhaps it was the desire to be
near his first grandson, or maybe it was because he was earning just enough
money to afford something better – or
both – but by the Spring of 1894 Karl had moved his family to the east side
of Cleveland into a rented house on Gallup Street, not far from the Hallig family. Although Karl was now 53 years old, he also
took a job at Hydraulic Pressed Steel, where he would work for another 23
years!
In
the spring of 1895, a daughter, Lillian was born to Mina and Otto. As their families grew, the desire to improve
their living conditions led each family to move to a series of residences. By 1902 all four families had vacated the
Flats. The Flaum, Haske and Dunkel
families had moved east, and all three lived in homes on Amelia Street [later
re-named East 67th Street], while the Ferdinand Schoen family moved
west into the Tremont district, which overlooked the Flats. Karl’s other half-brother, Carl August
Schoen, had left Cleveland 5 years earlier, and moved his family to Detroit in
search of a better job; family ties forged in the old country were no longer as
strong.
There
might have been several reasons behind this separation between the Schoens and
the other three families, but the most obvious might have been economic. Ferdinand Schoen was a carpenter, and eventually
became a construction foreman, which suggests that his job was too good to
leave the area around the Flats, where he was likely employed. Karl Flaum and Ludwig Haske found employment
together as ironworkers in one of several foundries on the east side of town,
while Herman Dunkel was a bricklayer, and could find work most anywhere in the
city.
The
turn of a new century brought changes to the Flaum family. Karl’s two oldest sons, Wilhelm and Herman, ended
their public school education after their 8th grade year. By the year 1899 both found employment in
metal foundries, where 16 year old Wilhelm was a mould maker, and 15 year old
Herman was a stovemounter.
In
late March of 1902, Karl’s son-law, Otto Hallig was stricken with a severe case
of erysipelas, a highly lethal streptococcus infection; after three days of
intense suffering, he died only a week after his 40th birthday. Otto & Mina had done very well in the
saloon business during their all too brief life together, operating two saloons
and saving a sizeable amount of money for a future that never came. Otto’s death placed a great burden on Mina’s
shoulders, and her family helped as best they could. Her brother, Wilhelm worked as a bartender in
the Hallig saloon on Quincy Street .
Young
widow Hallig did her best for her children and family; she sold one saloon, and
in 1903 purchased a small home for her father on Amelia Street, where the Haske
and Dunkel families also lived.
In
the early spring of 1905, love blossomed for 20 year old Herman Flaum; in March
he married 18 year old Minnie Krajewski, just arrived from Finckenstein, Poland.
Their wedded union came none too soon, as a son was born on August 23rd
of that same year. While the little boy
was named in honor of his grandfather, a page had been turned in the family
history; old German names had been Americanized: their son was named Charles
William instead of Karl Wilhelm.
Mina
Hallig was but 30 years old; as a widow with two young children, and a business
to run, she kept an eye open for a chance to better herself. In 1905, she married 34 year old Andrew
Weber. Their union may have been as much
a business merger as a marriage: he was a successful manager of a bottling
plant for the Beltz Brewery – Mina likely sold the beer he bottled in her
saloon.
Andrew
Weber was a man on the upward move; he earned good money, dabbled in real
estate, and had good connections in the city’s thriving brewery industry. Andrew Weber was also two things that all of
the men in the Flaum, Schoen, Haske, and Dunkel families were not: he was a
naturalized U.S. citizen, and a Roman Catholic.
Mina’s
brother, Wilhem tried to follow Andrew Weber’s path to success in America by
becoming a naturalized citizen on October 24th of 1905; from that
day forward, Wilhem became “Bill” to all but the older members of his
family. About that same year, Karl
retired from working at the Hydraulic Pressed Steel factory; he was 64, and had
worked in foundries for 50 years.
The
marriage of Mina Hallig to Andrew Weber soon added two new children to Karl’s
rapidly growing brood of grandchildren; Rose Margaretha was born in 1907,
followed by Helene Henrietta in 1908.
Bill Flaum married Elsie Schoenfeld in 1907, and a son, Harry was born
later that same summer. Herman & Minnie Flaum also had a daughter,
Lillian that year. For Karl, it was
three new grandchildren in one year!
Both
of Karl’s oldest sons struggled to provide for their young growing families;
each family had to live with Karl in the little house on East 67th
to help make ends meet for a year or so.
In
1908 the new Zion
Evangelical Lutheran
Church building opened
its doors at the corner of Sterling
[30th] and Prospect streets on Cleveland ’s
eastern border. The altar piece from the
old church on Bolivar Street had been moved into the new sanctuary, but the
rest of the church was largely the product of the skills of its German congregation:
carpenter Ferdinand Schoen, iron workers, Karl Flaum & Ludwig Haske, and
bricklayer Herman Dunkel helped create a suitable place of worship for the
church’s nearly 4,000 members.
In
the fall of 1910 the hard reality of life in the early 20th century
hit home once more. Mina Weber was
rushed to the Womens’ Surgery Center at Canfield White Hospital for an
operation on her uterus; four days after her operation, she was dead of a
massive hemorrhage. Her loss was felt
the most by her children. Her oldest,
Henry and Lillian, were now without either of their birth parents, while little
Rose & Helene had lost a mother they would remember only in a picture or
two. Henry Hallig chafed under the stern
hand of his catholic step-father, and at 16, he left home for good.
At
age 70, Karl went back to work with Ludwig Haske at the foundry, while his
younger half-brother, 40 year old Ferdinand Schoen, was now a carpenters’
foreman, working and still living in the Tremont district of the city. The Schoen family no longer saw as much of
the Flaum, Haske and Dunkel families; when Zion church had re-located to the eastern
part of the city, the Schoen family had joined Immanuel Lutheran church, just a
few blocks from their home.
Many families
have one particular month in their family history in which an inordinate number
of events – births, marriages, deaths, etc seem to have occurred. For the Flaum family, that month was easily
the month of April; in the year 1913, it was an especially bad month.
On
Tuesday, April 12th, Herman Dunkel fell from a ladder at work,
suffering a broken neck and paralysis.
Five days later he was dead. If
the death of his good friend and brother-in-law was not enough, Karl’s wife,
Carrie, suffering from kidney disease, took a turn for the worst, and died in
the little house on East 67th Street, just two days after Herman
Dunkel was laid to rest in Lutheran Cemetery.
The
rest of 1913 ended the way the year began; in November a tremendous, deadly
blizzard buried the city for days. The
news outside Cleveland was not much better, as the gathering storm clouds of
events in Europe made war seem a certainty.
By
1914 Europe was in a war that for many Americans brought mixed emotions. German-American families like the Flaums struggled
over the question of loyalty to “the Fatherland” or to America; it pulled each
generation in different directions.
By
1917, the war clouds had reached America: Karl Flaum was forced to register as
an “enemy alien”, while his sons William, Herman, [a new father to Herman Jr.]
and Ferdinand [now “Fred”] registered for the military draft. When his youngest son, Fred, and his grandson,
Henry Hallig both joined the army and went “over there” to fight the “Huns”
1918, one can only wonder what old Karl had to say.
The
war years were difficult ones for German-Americans in Cleveland. Many things German were considered
unpatriotic: German cultural celebrations were frowned upon, some German street
names were changed, German language newspapers censored, and the Ohio State Legislature
banned the teaching of the German language in all elementary schools.
The
war’s end saw Fred Flaum safely home; Karl’s grandson, Henry Hallig returned
safely from the war as well, but did not come home. He moved to Fargo, North Dakota, became a
butcher, married, and lived the rest of his brief life in that state.
In
1918 prohibition became federal law; the manufacture, distribution and consumption
of beer, wine and booze was banned by Jan. 1, 1920. Like the millions of other Americans who
opposed it, the Flaum, Haske, Schoen and Weber families each found ways to cope
with the new law of the land.
There
had been over 1,200 legal saloons, taverns and biergartens in Cleveland before
1918. During the prohibition years,
Clevelanders illegally toasted their shared reputation as one of the most
law-breaking cities in the U.S. when it came to illegal alcohol manufacture
& consumption. Prohibition agents
estimated that there were 3,000 illegal “speakeasies” in Cleveland, and over
100,000 Clevelanders who made and consumed their own personal beer and wine.
Herman Flaum learned to make wine, beer
bottler Andrew Weber started bottling soda pop, and lifetime beer drinkers like
Karl Flaum and Ludwig Haske were left to find illegal sources of beer and
schnapps, and undoubtedly they did! Karl
Flaum did not live to see the repeal of prohibition, but family stories tell of
his love of schnapps until the end of his days.
The
“Roaring Twenties” had their share of important events in the Flaum
family. The family tree grew even larger
still, as Fred Flaum married Rose Hanzlik in 1920, and had two daughters,
Dorothy, [1923] and Rita [1929] to add to Karl’s list of grandchildren, which
had grown to ten in number. Karl’s first
great-grandchildren were also born just before the “Twenties” began to roar:
his granddaughter, Lillian Hallig’s marriage to Raymond Rosenberry produced two
sons, Raymond [1917] and Robert [1921]. His
grandson, Charles and his wife, Amelia Schmidt, added two more great-grandchildren,
Charles [1927] and Betty [1929] born by the end of the decade.
The
year 1927 was one of great change for the Flaum family, as Karl left the home
on East 67th Street that he had lived in for over twenty years. At the age of 85 his health was failing, so
he moved into the new home that his son, Fred had built on 117th
Street in Garfield Heights. There was also one less member in Karl’s generation
as well; his step sister, Louise Dunkel died of stomach cancer at age 75 in
August of 1927.
In
his little bedroom just off the kitchen, Karl spent his final years, quietly
reading his German language newspaper, the “Waechter Und Anzieger”, smoking cigars, sipping illegal schnapps, and taking
occasional short walks. In April of
1930, less than a week before his 89th birthday, Karl died of kidney
failure and prostate cancer. His old
friend, Ludwig Haske was among those who came to the family home to pay their
respects.
Karl
was in many ways a man of an earlier century, born at a time and in a place so
very different from the world he knew in America.
Like
the steadfast Prussian soldier he once had been, Karl labored a lifetime to
fulfill his duties to his family, remained loyal to his German heritage, and
took the stories of his past to his grave.
My last name is Flaum. My family also landed in the USA at the end of the 19th century from Germany, although I'm told we have Polish lines as well. I'm interested in connecting with other Flaums to see if any piecing together of related family trees is possible. If you would like to connect, please let me know. Either way, all the best:)
ReplyDeleteI know quite a bit about my families history. It's wonderful to read a little bit more information that goes further back. My grandfather was Raymond A. Rosenberry, and my greatgrandmother is Lillian Hallig Rosenberry.
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