Salzman

Mužský tvar příjmení Ženský tvar příjmení
Salzmann Salzmannová
Salzman Salzmanová
Saltsman Saltsmanová

Salzmann je nemecké priezvisko znamenajúce soľný muž (salt man). Je to tiež prezývka Wilhelma Düerkopa - akrobatického pilota.
Známi nositelia:

* Christian Gotthilf Salzmann (1744–1811), priest and educationalist
* Irene Salzmann
* Jeanne de Salzmann


Známi nositelia priezviska Salzman:

* Eric Salzman
* Linda Salzman Sagan
* Louis Francis Salzman, historian
* Lorna Salzman
* Mark Salzman (born 1959), an American writer
* Pnina Salzman, an Israeli prize winning pianist
* P. J. Salzman, hacker, physicist, Quantitative analyst

Známi nositelia priezviska Saltzman:

* Harry Saltzman (1915–1994)
* Herman Saltzman
* Jacqueline Saltzman, see Danjaq
* Jeff Saltzman
* Larry Saltzman, musician
* Marc Saltzman, co-host for the TechTV show
* Paul Saltzman, film director-producer and author
* Percy Saltzman, Canadian TV personality

Známi nositelia priezviska Saltsman:

* Max Saltsman


Priezvisko SALZMAN sa na Slovensku v roku 1995 nachádzalo 5×, celkový počet lokalít: 3, v lokalitách:
NOVÉ ZÁMKY, okr. NOVÉ ZÁMKY – 3×;
DVORNÍKY, okr. TRNAVA (od r. 1996 HLOHOVEC) – 1×;
RIŠŇOVCE, okr. NITRA – 1×;

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zdroje: http://slovnik.juls.savba.sk/?w=Salzman&s=exact&c=Bae9&d=kssj4&d=priezviska&d=obce&d=peciar&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salzman............................,,,,,,,,,,,, Ako napisal moj dedko: Charakteristicke crty rod.Salzmann.,vsetci{asi z nasej rodiny}boli stolari a umelecky maliari:malovamie sakralnych obrazov, stolarstvo umelecke-viedenska skola


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------SALZMANN STORY----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




Aug. 3, 1861 in Hersfeld, Hesse-Kassel, Germany, (now Bad Hersfeld) Adam Salzmann, born April 19, 1836, son of Tuchmachermeister (master weaver or "cloth-maker") Daniel Salzmann and his wife Katharina Ellrich, was married to Katharina Elisabeth Ziegler, born May 22, 1824, daughter of master tailor Anton Ziegler and his wife Anna Gertrud Seelig. They submitted documents, including a master letter of the coopers' guild of Hersfeld (which Adam was a member of), and his certificate of citizenship in Hersfeld. (He had just officially become a citizen (Bürger) in Hersfeld July 23, 1861.) Witnesses to the wedding were Adam's parents. (the document contains the signatures of Adam, Katharina, and both of Adam's parents.) Fourteen months later, the young couple left Hersfeld for America.
Adam's parents had been married in Hersfeld August 5, 1832. 26-year-old Daniel's parents, Ludwig and Jacobina Knauff Salzmann, and 22-year-old Catharina's parents, Heinrich and Anna Margaretha Bötz Ellrich, were present. Ludwig was a Tuchmacher and Heinrich was a cooper. (So when Adam became a cooper, unlike his Tuchmacher father, he was evidently following the trade of his mother's family.)

Daniel Salzmann was born Oct. 22, 1808 in Hersfeld. Catharina Ellerich was born May 11, 1815. They both died in Hersfeld after Adam and his young wife left for America, Daniel December 3, 1863, and Catharina October 4, 1880. Adam was the third of their 9 children:

Heinrich -- born Nov. 2, 1832. MIGHT be the Henry Salzmann who was in Newark in 1870
Daniel -- born Aug. 18, 1834
Adam
Elisabeth -- born Feb. 28, 1838. Probably the sister who married John Toenges in Newark in 1866 (see below)
Georg Hermann -- born Feb. 19, 1840, died at 6 months
Eva Elisabeth -- born July 6, 1841
Johann Georg -- Born Oct. 29, 1844
Bernhard -- born July 4, 1849, died at 18, July 28, 1867
Wilhelm -- born June 29, 1852 -- this is the brother who came to the US in 1880, and became the brewmaster at the Halm Brewery in Bryan, Ohio. (see below)
Adam's grandfather, Ludwig Salzmann, was born Sept. 18, 1766, and died at the age of 71 in Hersfeld, Feb. 27, 1838. His grandmother, Jacobina Knauff, was born April 13, 1771 and died at the age of 64, Jan. 11, 1836, in Hersfeld. Ludwig Salzmann and Jacobina Knauff were married Nov. 16, 1800 in Hersfeld, and Daniel was the fourth of six children, but Daniel and his older brother Adam may have been the only ones to reach adulthood. Adam died at the age of 31 in 1832, a month after Daniel was married. (Perhaps Daniel named his third son four years later for this brother.)

These Salzmanns in Hersfeld descended from a family of millers, beginning with a Klaus Salzmann who became a citizen of Hersfeld in 1666. He and his son Jost Salzmann, who became a citizen in 1676, were millers at the "Grimm-Mühle" in the rolling hills north of Hersfeld on the Geis, a tributary of the Fulda (now at Hombergerstraße 28). The family had come to Hersfeld from another mill, the "Küpfer-Mühle," (now Homberger Str. 140) in Kalkobes, the next village along the Geis beyond the Grimm-Mühle. Jost and Catharina Will (1650-1716) were married May 6, 1673, and four of their five sons were also millers:
Jost Heinrich (1674-1743), also the miller at the Grimm-Mühle
Johann Heinrich (1679-1720), who became the miller at the Mauermühle, closer to the city wall on a mill run diverted to run through the town before rejoining the Geis and then the Fulda, south of town (now Dippelstraße 2). His son became a kind of weaver (Zeugmacher).
Johann Georg (1682-1732), who was also at the Mauermühle, but then returned to the Grimm-Mühle after Jost Heinrich died. Two of his sons seem to have continued at this mill, while another became a butcher.
Johannes (1685-1742), a linen weaver
Johann Conrad (1689-1741), miller at the Malzmüle (on the Knottengasse, later the Gerberei [tannery] Seelig.) His sons included two bakers and a weaver (Zeugmacher).
When Jost Heinrich was 10, his grandfather Klaus died. At 22 (March 5, 1696) he married 17-year-old Anna Catharina Almrot. When he died 12 years later at the age of 34, he left his young wife with an 11-year old son and a 7-year-old daughter. His widow remarried four years later, three years before her son Johann Heinrich (1696-1743) married Anna Catharina Glebe (July 19, 1715) and one year later became a citizen as the miller at the Knottenmühle, on the mill run a little north of the Mauermühle (now Wehneberger Straße 8.) One of Johann Heinrich and Anna Catharina's children was Johann Ludwig Salzmann, born in 1719, who became another kind of cloth-maker (a Zeug- and Raschmacher master). He and his wife, Catharina Agnes Körschner (1730-1799), who were married December 5, 1748, in Hersfeld, were the parents of Ludwig Salzmann (Adam's grandfather), mentioned above.
I'm not sure where Johann Ludwig lived (although he was presumably born at the Knottenmühle), but his son Ludwig seems to have lived at 299 Untere Frauenstraße, (now #34) just north of the church square, and Daniel and Catharina may have lived in the same house for the early part of their marriage. (Adam was born there in 1836 two months after his 64-year-old grandmother, Jacobina, died there, and Ludwig died there in 1838 .at the age of 71.) However at least one of Adam's younger siblings (Wilhelm, born when Adam was 16) was born at Kirchhoff 362 .. right on the church square, and Daniel died (at 55 in 1863 after Adam was in America) at Johannesstraße No. 106 (now Neumarkt 1). When 65-year-old Catharina died 17 years later, her address was Johannesstraße 119 (now #19). (Her parents had lived at Johannesstraße 127 -- now #5.)


Hersfeld, 1895
(from Wiegand, Landkreis Hersfeld-Rotenburg III: Stadt Bad Hersfeld.)


CITIZENS ("BÜRGERS") OF HERSFELD:

Hersfeld Bürgerbuchs have been published for the years 1627 - 1784. Beginning in 1564, foreigners (people from other cities) arriving in Hersfeld had to apply to become citizens of the town. In order to do so, they had to produce an "irreproachable" birth letter and a departure letter from their former residence to certify that they were born legitimate children and not in bondage, and that they had left their former place of residence properly. They also had to show proof that they had assets of at least 60 Gulden (80 Gulden after 1618). They also had to pay 8 Gulden Bürgergeld, of which 4 Gulden was for the benefit of the two princes (the abbot and the Hessian Landgraf -- landgrave) and 4 Gulden for the city. This sum was raised to 16 Gulden on August 28, 1611. As a registration fee they also had to pay the Schultheiß (mayor) and both Bürgermeisters each a quarter of wine. Their weapons were confiscated (hand guns, heavy muskets resting on forks and light "barrels", also halberds and partisans, both heavy spears with and without hatchets on them, and breastplate and pike joined or hatchets with helmet.) During the 30-Years-War all other weapons disappeared but the "light barrel," the gun. In addition, at least after the 2nd half of the 16th century many of the new citizens had to provide a leather bucket to be used for fire. Finally, they were administered an oath. The Hersfeld citizen's oath demanded from new citizens obedience to the sovereign and to the Bürgermeister and council, obedience also to the city laws, "to promote their honor... and to warn against their harm;" ... They promised to seek no other protector, house no foreign, suspicious persons and pay a fee for permission to depart before leaving the city, "and do everything else that oath and duty enable true citizens to do for their authorities , and also befits custom and legality, and they are responsible to do all faithfully and without danger."

A foreigner who married a citizen's daughter or widow had the same obligations, but the Bürgergeld was reduced to 6 Gulden (after 1611 to 12 Gulden).

Sons of citizens were administered the oath, put under arms, and paid instead of 9 units of wine, only 4; they didn't have to pay any Bürgergeld or fulfill any other requirements for citizenship

Citizens moving away from the city could, in case they wanted to return, keep their rights of citizenship open for 6 years. Anyone who returned within this period only paid 2 Gulden Bürgergeld and half the wine fees. If someone wanted to return after the period had elapsed, he was treated as a foreigner. Frequent use was made of this priviledge. The entries in the city book show that the period of 6 years could be applied for repeatedly.

With his inscription in the Bürgerbuch, the new citizen earned the right of citizenship, could enjoy the advantages that it offered, but on the other hand also the duties that were placed on the citizens. A difference was made between a citizen and foreigner.


SALZMANNS in the US:
October 14, 1862, during the American Civil War, Adam Salzmann, identified as a 26-year-old farmer from Hesse, Germany, and 36-year-old Catharina Salzmann arrived in New York on the ship, the Tuisko, from Bremen, listing Newark as their destination. Four months later, February 24/28, 1863, Catharina had twin sons in Newark, and she and the children all died. Four months after that, Adam was a 27-year-old widowed cooper, residing in New York. On June 7, 1863, he and 19-year-old Carolina Rubenkönig of Newark, NJ, daughter of Johannes and Levina (Lesina?) Goebel Rübenkönig, were married in Newark by Frederic A. Lehlbach, minister of the German Evangelical Reformed Church on Mulberry Street.

Carolina had arrived in New York 2 years before Adam and Catharina, on July 16, 1860, on the Johanna Elise from Bremen as a 16-year-old "servant" from Hesse, the only Rübenkönig on the ship.) She was also from Hersfeld! She was born there Aug. 17, 1844, where her father and his father were also Tuchmachers. Her grandparents were Daniel Rübenkönig (1788-?) and Catharina Elisabeth Schenkbar and Christian Goebel and Eva Elisabeth Siemon. Danile Rübenkönig and Catharina Schenkbar were married Jan. 12, 1812, and had at least two younger sons besides Johannes. Levina's father was a tailor; she had at least two younger sisters. Johannes and Levine were married March 19, 1843. Carolina probably had at least one brother, Johannes, father of at least two children. (Johannes, interestingly, died in Hersfeld in 1879, just 6 weeks after his sister Caroline died in New Jersey.)

I don't know, of course, if Adam and Carolina (or their families) knew each other in Hersfeld. But somehow they got together in Newark after Adam's wife Catharina died. Their marriage lasted almost 16 years and produced 12 children, 7 of whom lived to adulthood.

ADAM SALZMANN'S BROTHER(S?) AND SISTER in the US:

According to the 1870 Newark census, as well as the Newark Directories around that time, there were three Salzmann families living in Newark then: Adam, Henry, and William. According to family memory, they were all brothers, and Henry and William had not liked city life and moved to Ohio. The last mention of either of them in Newark is in 1871. According to Hersfeld church records, Adam did have brothers Heinrich and Wilhelm, but their ages don't quite match this theory.

A Henry Salzmann declared his intent to become a citizen on March 29, 1869, in Newark. He listed his home as Hesse-Cassel (the same as Adam Salzmann). In the Newark Directories of 1869, 70, and 71, Henry Salzmann is listed as a gardener, living at 32 Barbara in Newark. In the 1870 census, Henry is a 40-year-old farmer with a 40-year-old wife Catherine, living in the 12th Ward of Newark. Then they disappear. If this is Adam's oldest brother, born in 1832, he would have been 37 in 1870, not 40. But census records are not always totally accurate, of course. So this may, indeed, have been his brother. Where did he go?!

William: A William Salzmann arrived in NYC Sept. 20, 1859 on the Coriolan -- a 17-year-old weaver from Hesse. He listed Ohio as his destination. There was a 36-year-old William Salzmann in Newark in 1870 (a machinist from Prussia) , with a wife Wilhelmina and an 8-year-old daughter Elizabeth. William Salzmann declared his intention to become a citizen in Newark in July 1871. In the 70/71 Newark Directory he was living at 7 Springfield Avenue. Then they all disappear. I don't know if these are all the same person, or two or three different people. All of them, however, would have been much too old to be Adam's younger brother Wilhelm, born in 1852. Possibly a cousin or other relative?

Adam's sister, Elisa Salzmann (26) was married to John Toenjes (26 3/4) in Newark Oct. 28, 1866, by Rev. Lehlbach. John's parents were John and Anna M. Backer Toenjes, from Germany. Elisa may have come to the US as a 19-year-old servant from Hesse, arriving in NY July 15, 1865, on the "Emilie". The Toenges' had a grocery store near Third and Harrison Avenue in Harrison, NJ from about 1872 on. They had children Henry (born in March 1867), John (Feb 1869), twins Elizabeth and Charles (born April 20, 1872, in Harrison -- Charles died July 4) , William (Sept. 9, 1874 in Harrison, who also must have died before the 1880 census) and Emma born Aug. 9, 1879, also in Harrison, who died July 28, 1882 of scarlatina. Aunt Lizzie Toenges took care of Fred Salzmann after his mother died in 1890, and continued to run the store after the death of her husband.

Adam's youngest brother, Wilhelm Salzmann (born June 29, 1852), arrived in Bryan, Ohio, from Hersfeld in 1882. Members of this family and Adam's family visited and corresponded with each other in the 1920's - 1940's. William applied for citizenship in Ohio in 1884. He and Amalia (Emma) Engle were married in Bryan Feb. 4, 1885. (She was born in 1866, came to the US in 1871, and died in 1937). They are buried in the Fountain Grove Cemetery in Bryan. William was the brewmaster at the Halm Brewery in Bryan, and died Jan. 7, 1904, while inspecting the huge vats (from gas which forms in the process .. he had underestimated the time needed to clear the vats.) He and Emma lived in a fine old Victorian home in Bryan, and had six children: Eva Louise (Aug. 14, 1890 - 1982) Fred (Dec. 1894 - 1943), Millie C. (Amelia?) (Feb. 1897 - ) Theodore (Sept. 1892; electrical contractor in Bryan, married with two sons), Florence (Dec. 1899, married with three children), and Arthur (1899 - 1965)

NEWARK:

Adam and Carolina may have lived initially in New York. That was given as Adam's place of residence at the time of their marriage, and New York is given as the birthplace of their first child, Adam, born May 23, 1864. Adam was baptized in Newark, though, (by Rev. Lehlbach) in July 1864.

On Nov. 8, 1865, Adam declared his intent to become a citizen, in Newark. In 1867, Adam and Carolina lived in Newark, where Adam had a bakery at Pike Road in East Newark, and then from 1868-71, (and possibly until 1872) at 49 Bowery, in Newark. Carolina had had two children after Adam, Carolina and Carl, who did not survive, born Aug. 17, 1865 and Oct. 13, 1866 -- in Newark. Little Carolina died Jan. 4, 1866 of croup, and Karl May 10, 1867, of consumption.




Then Wilhelm (Bill), Elizabeth (Lizzie), and Heinrich (Henry) were born in Newark - (Dec. 21, 1867, July 27, 1869, and Dec. 23, 1870). The 1870 census lists the family as residents of the 12th Ward in Newark, as follows (Henry was born several months after the census was taken, baptized at 49 Bowery St. the following spring):


Salzmann, Adam
Carolina
Adam
Wm.
Liza 30
25
6
2
1 M
F
M
M
F Baker
Housekeeping



Hessen
"
New Jersey
"
" Germany
"



(personal estate=$500




US cit.






In 1870, Newark was a city of 105,000, and was the 8th largest manufacturing center in the country. Despite something of a recession from 1872 - 1878, Newark continued to grow, and by 1880, the population had reached 136,000. There were 84 bakers in the city, employing 301 people. There were 5 steam railroads between Newark and New York. The city was described as having 'broad streets, with numerous roomy parks in the heart of the city, -- three parks handsomely decorated with majestic and graceful trees, -- which make the city picturesque, healthy and attractive.'

HARRISON

However, Adam Salzmann was not one of these 84 bakers in Newark in 1880. Some time in or before 1872, Adam moved his family and bakery business to a building at 9 South Fourth Street in "East Newark," or Harrison, just across the Passaic from Newark, and still part of the larger Newark area. It eventually grew to be a large business, supplying many hotels and restaurants in Newark and Jersey City. The brick ovens in the basement extended under Fourth Street, and melted snow on the street in front of the bakery. Behind the building were stables for the horses and wagons used to deliver baked goods.

Harrison also had many industries along the Passaic, including, in 1884: J. Lagowits & Co. trunk-factory, J.J. Spuirr stoneworks, the Hahn and Stumpf tanning establishment, the Thomas A. Edison Lamp Company, the Woodward Steam-Pump and Steam-Heating Company, Reilly stone-yard, Stannier and Laffey's brass and wire factory, Stewart Hartshorn's shade-roller manufactory, John D. King's dye esablishment, the Peter Hauck and Co. brewery, Kerr and Co.s' spool-cotton factory, and the Greenfield Steam-Engine Works. Thomas Edison began manufacturing "his newly-invented electric lamps" in Harrison in 1880, employing over 200 people by 1884. According to an 1884 history, "Mr. Edison is yet a young man, and may startle the world once more with some other discovery or invention of his fertile brain. ... The Edison Company ... promises to become a permanent industry of the growing city" (of Harrison.) The gas house was situated on Passaic Avenue, and the "streets (were) well lighted and also the public buildings, and gas (was) to be found in all the stores and most of the private residences." Horsecars ran regularly, and "the company (have) laid excellent tracks and built spacious stables in Harrison. The people (found) this a great accommodation which (gave) a healthy impetus to the prosperity of the town." In 1879 the city purchased a steam-engine and organized a Fire-Engine Company; however, a series of suspicious fires ended with the destruction by fire of the engine house itself!

The Salzmann children all went to school in Harrison, but it is not known which school they attended (Fred attended Washington School, according to his daughter). There were several schools in Harrison in 1884, including a large public school on Washington Street with an enrollment of 681 (although the average daily attendance was 366!), St. Pius' Roman Catholic School, roughly the same size, a German-English school on Hebden Street "supported by the German citizens," and two smaller private "academies". The German-English school was "an old and respected educational institution of Harrison, and (was) at present (in 1884) very largely attended, as it (was) superintended by Professor Lorenzen, a highly cultured gentleman of large experience in teaching." The leaders of Harrison were very proud of the fact that Harrison had "none within its limits between the ages of 11 and 18 unable to read and write, and for this reason (was) not entitled to one cent of national money for educational purposes." There were three important churches in Harrison in 1884: St. Pius' Catholic Church, built in 1872 at Jersey and Third Streets (although plans were being made for a new building on Harrison Avenue, close to the Salzmanns'), Christ's Episcopal Church on Fourth Street, and a Methodist Church built in 1876 across the street from the Salzmanns', at Fourth and Harrison Avenue. The spire from this church was said to be one of the means of recognizing Harrison from boats in Newark Bay. (This is presumably Davis Memorial Methodist Church.)

In January 1872, another son, Daniel, was born to the Salzmanns', but died as an infant. Agnes, John, and Frank were also born in Harrison, on Jan. 13, 1874, March 10, 1877, and Sept 15, 1878, respectively.

Carolina died at the age of 34, May 22, 1879, in Harrison of "phthisis pulmonalis" (tuberculosis) . She had been ill for about 8 months, which would be since Frank's birth. She was buried in Woodland Cemetery May 24. (She was buried in a single plot, but on June 6, 1887, Adam bought a larger family lot -- block 47, section T -- and had her body moved there.) Woodland Cemetery was located at Springfield Avenue and 10th Street in Newark, established in the 1860's. In 1884 it was described as "quite largely German, as the names and language of the inscriptions denote. The situation is a commanding one, and the grounds have been very tastefully laid out, and are kept in excellent condition." Eventually, Adam and many other family members were buried there.

And Adam remarried once again. His third wife, Anna Maria Ulm, from Alsace (probably Oberlauterbach, not far from the Rhine and Karlsruhe, Germany), became the instant mother to 7 children, ages approximately 15 - 1! It is possible that this is the marriage described to Al Clarkson by older members of the family (although Anna would not have been exactly young at this time -- and she had been in the US for over 5 years.) According to the story, as Adam was sitting on some outside steps with the neighborhood priest, who was consoling him over the loss of his wife, a German family they knew passed by and stopped to offer their condolences as well. With this family was a young German girl who had just come to the US and was staying with this family until she could find a place to live. After the family had walked on, Adam reportedly told the priest that if they brought the girl around the next day, he would marry her. And he did.

Anna's parents were Johann Adam and Marie A. Ulm. She may have arrived in NY Christmas Eve, 1874, on the Westphalia from Hamburg/Havre, listed as a 27-year-old single woman from France. There were no other Ulms on the ship. She was probably Catholic, and may have been married and had her children baptized in a Catholic church in Harrison.

In the 1880 census, the family is listed as residents of 9 South Fourth Street in Harrison, as follows:


Salzmann, Adam
Anna
Adam
William
Elisabeth
Henry
Agnes
John
Frank
wife
son
son
dau.
son
dau.
son
son M
F
M
M
F
M
F
M
M 44
33
16
13
11
8
6
3
2 Hesse, Cassel (Germany)
Alsace (Germany)
New York
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey
New Jersey

Soon Anna had children of her own: Jacob (born July 13, 1880, died one week later), Anna (born June 5, 1881), Mamie (born March 18, 1883), Charles (born Feb. 5, 1885), and Fred (born Jan. 8, 1888). She died Aug. 28, 1890, of malarial fever and "dementia exhaustion", at the age of 42, leaving Adam a widower for the third time, with children ranging in age from 26 - 2. She was buried at Woodland Cemetery, too, on Aug. 30.

At the time of the 1900 census, Adam was a widower for the third time, still living on Fourth Street, above his bakery and store, with 9 unmarried children ranging in ages from 37 to 12, and a widowed daughter with 2 young children. Only Henry, who was married and living on Hamilton Street in Harrison with his wife and 3 children, had left home. The census gives the following information about the family:

Salzmann, Adam - born April 1836 in Germany - 64 - widower, married 21 years - arrived in US in 1862 - naturalized citizen -baker owned his house free
........ , Adam - son - born May 1863 in New York - 37 - single - baker
........ , William - son - born Dec. 1866 in NJ - 33 - single - baker
...Lutz, Lizzie - daughter - born July 1869 in NJ -30 - widow, married 4 years, 2 children
......... , Carrie - granddaughter - born Sept. 1893 in NJ - 6 - at school
......... , Gustus - grandson - born May 1895 in NJ - 5
Salzmann, Agnes - daughter - born Jan. 1875 in NJ - 25 - single - housework (unemployed 2 months)
........ , John - son - born March 1877 in NJ - 23 - single - ELW
........ , Frank - son - born Sept. 1878 in NJ - 21 - single - butcher (2 months unemployed)
........ , Annie - daughter - born June 1882 in NJ - 18 - single - thread worker
........ , Marie - daughter - born May 1883 in NJ - 17 - single - thread worker
........ , Charles - son - born Jan. 1885 in NJ - 15 - single - grocery clerk
........ , Fred - son born Feb. 1888 in NJ - 12 - single
(all but Carrie and Gus were listed as able to read, write, and speak English)
On January 9, 1907, Adam Salzmann died, and was buried Jan. 12 in Lot 47, block T of Woodland Cemetery. The funeral expenses totaled $177.60, including $85 for a 6-foot black cloth casket, half couch with 6 handles and plate, $55 for a hearse and 9 coaches, as well as door crepe, 6 pairs of gloves, 2 dozen chairs, advertising and cards of thanks in the Newark News and Freie Zeitung, and related services. After the funeral, his sons decided to give up the bakery business and concentrate on their store.

Adam Salzmann's children:
CHILDREN OF CAROLINA RÜBENKÖNIG:

Adam (May 23, 1864, New York) As a child, he was playing near his father's boat on the Passaic and somehow found and drank some green paint. As a result he was nearly blind, but was a good businessman and followed the stock market closely. He worked with his father in the bakery, and then operated a feed and grain business in the same building. He never married. He died Nov. 27, 1943 at the age of 79.
Carolina (Aug. 17, 1865, Newark - Jan. 4, 1866)
Carl (Oct. 13, 1866, Newark - May 10, 1867)
Wilhelm (Bill) (Dec. 21, 1867, Newark) He also never married, and worked in the bakery and then the feed and grain business with his brother Adam. He died March 6, 1958 of heart disease at the age of 90.
Elisabeth (Lizzie) (July 27, 1869, Newark.), married Gustav H. Lutz, Nov. 20, 1892 in Newark. He was a butcher born in Germany. He died of pneumonia in Feb. 1896, leaving Lizzie with two young children, Carrie (not yet 3) and Gus (almost 1). She moved back to South Fourth Street, where her children were raised as part of the large Salzmann family. She later married a Ludwig Fritz, but he proved not to be a good husband or father. Lizzie was despondent, and in July 1905, while the children were still young (12 and 10) committed suicide by taking poison on the back porch of the house.
Carrie (Sept. 1893) married Harry Clarkson, the printing foreman at The Newark News, and they had three children, Harry, Carolyn, and Albert. Their young son Harry died at the age of 5 of scarlet fever, Al never married, and Carolyn and her husband had 3 children. Harry died in 1961, and Carrie in 1979. Gus (March 1895) felt so grateful to the family for providing a home for himself and his sister that he stayed with them as long as they needed him, rather than going to college as had been suggested to him. He never married, and eventually lived with his sister Carrie's son Al Clarkson after the last of his uncles had died. Gus died in 1994 at the age of 99!
Heinrich (Henry or 'Henner') (Dec. 23, 1870, Newark), married Augusta Hielscher Feb. 22, 1891 in Newark, who had come from Germany 4 years earlier, and they lived at 730 Hamilton Street in Harrison, and had eight children. In the 1900 census, they appear as:
Salzmann, Henry - born Dec. 1870 in New Jersey - 29 - married 10 years - teamster - 1 month unemployed - owned a mortgaged home
....... , Augusta - wife - born July 1871 in Germany - 28 - married 10 years, 3 children - came to US in 1886
....... , Emma - daughter - born July 1891 in NJ - 8 - at school
....... , Adam - son - born Feb. 1894 in NJ - 6 - at school
....... , Henry - son - born May 1896 in NJ - 4

The children born after this census were twins Anna and Mamie, born in November 1900, who died of scarlet fever May 15 and 20, 1907, Augusta, born in October 1902, another daughter, Agnes Rose, born in January 1905, died May 13, 1920, and Dorothy, born in October 1908 and buried April 3, 1909. (In 1905 Henry's sister Mame and her new husband Alfred Edmond and his mother and brothers lived in the same building -- at 730 Hamilton Avenue, Harrison.) Augusta died and was buried in the Salzmann plot at Woodland Cemetery July 1, 1910. Henry was later married briefly to Lena Lauterbach. Henry died Feb. 9, 1955.
Emma married Ernest Konshott, had two daughters, Dorothy and Mabel, and died in 1958; Adam married and had 2 or 3 children; Henry married Viola Gertrude Rau in 1919, had 5 children, and died in July 1931 of TB at the age of 35 in Pequannock, NY, (see more about this family here -- photos here); and Augusta (Gussie) married Bill Elmer, had three children, died February 25, 1996 at the age of 93, and is remembered by Walter Salzmann as a good whistler.
Daniel (Dec. 14 - 16, 1871, Newark)
Agnes (Jan. 13, 1874, Harrison), never married, took the place of the mothers after they died, and died May 24, 1946 of prostration.
John (Mar. 10, 1877, Harrison) He and his wife, Ella Downes, lived on Harrison Avenue and had no children. He was a fireman, and was injured in a large fire in Hampton's Hall in Harrison, New Years Eve 1923/4. He fell from the second floor to the cellar while fighting the fire and was found the next morning with his leg frozen in ice. He died in early Febryary 1924, at the age of 46.
Frank (Sept. 15, 1878, Harrison) He was married, but evidently did not live long, if at all, with his wife. When she had a son, Joseph, Frank would not acknowledge him as his son. He continued to live on South Fourth Street with his family, where he died Jan. 18, 1953 of cardiovascular disease. His brother Charlie called Joseph to tell him of his father's death, and Joseph came to the funeral. Although Aunt Annie objected, Charlie felt that Joseph deserved to attend his father's funeral.
CHILDREN OF ANNA MARIA ULM:


Jacob (July 13-22, 1880).
Anna (June 5, 1881). As a young girl, she worked at a thread mill. Her father called her a "walking newspaper" because she always knew the latest gossip. She married John Fasteneau, and they lived with the Salzmann family and operated a pool hall -- eventually in the building next door built by Charlie Salzmann, but possibly first in the original building at 9 South Fourth Street. They had no children. John was from Germany, where his parents had been killed in a fire and he and his brothers and sisters had been separated and sent to various sponsors in the US and elsewhere. John was sponsored by a butcher, Jacob Breitenbucher, in NJ (whose butcher shop was next door to the Toenges store on Harrison Avenue). He was later reunited with a brother and sister. One of them lived in Nebraska, and they made regular trips there in their "flivver" to visit. Uncle John and Aunt Annie were said to be very strict about behavior in their pool hall and seem to have been everyone's favorite Aunt and Uncle. John may have served in the service, and suffered some sort of injury that caused his hand to shake, according to Alberta Salzmann's memories. John died in 1951, and Anna Aug. 25, 1957.
Maria (Mame) (March 18, 1883, Harrison) She also worked at the thread mill as a young girl. She married Alfred Edmond, and they had four children. Their son Alfred died of cancer at the age of 14. One daughter, Mary, born in 1908, never married. Their oldest daughter, Anna, married Walter Veth, and had two sons, Walter and George. Their son Charles and his wife, Mildred Lord, had two daughters, Mary Ann and Carol. Mamie died Aug. 8, 1948.
Charles (Feb. 5, 1885, Harrison). After high school he went to Pittsburgh to study architecture. Once there, he got interested in plumbing. After apprenticing as a plumber, he returned to Harrison and began building a house next door to his father's house, at 11 South Fourth Street, for his home and business. He and Mamie Lauterbach were married secretly at Peddie Memorial Church in Newark on June 2, 1909, hoping to keep their marriage a secret until the house was finished. However, when friends unknowingly told Mamie that Charlie had become ill at his home, she rushed to his side to take care of him, and the secret was out. Charlie's plumbing business flourished, and in the early 1920's he built a new house, very much like the 11 South Fourth Street house, on Kearney Avenue in Kearney. The family lived there until about 1930, when financial conditions necessitated a move to Chestnut Street in Kearny.
Charlie and Mame had four children, two of whom reached adulthood. Their first child, a daughter, died at the age of 1 week. Their second child, Arthur, died of spinal meningitis in 1914 at the age of 2 1/2. Their third child, Alberta, born in 1915, married Maurice Bryceland, an engineer and investor who died in 1985. Their fourth child, Walter, born in 1917, also contracted spinal meningitis, but recovered. He married Eileen Scott, and they had three children, William, Jane, and Walter. Walter and his father operated the plumbing business together until Charlie died Dec. 15, 1954. Charlie had remarried after Mame died in 1944, and was survived by his second wife, Sally.
Fred (Feb. 5, 1888, Harrison), was 2 years old when his mother died. He was raised largely by his aunt Elisa Tonjes, nearby on Harrison Avenue. He married Mary Fredericka Heringer June 28, 1916, and they had two children, Theodore and Flo
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Salzmann Ferdinant
sklomaliarstvo
Remeselná skupina:sklomaliarstvoRegión:Galanta

Okrem niekoľkých pre nás anonymných autorov z druhej polovice 19. storočia, na západnom Slovensku maľbu na skle silne ovplyvnila a v podstate reprezentovala rodina Salzmannovcov z Paty: Ferdinand (1830 – 1913) a Alexander (1870 – 1959). Mnohé ich obrazy sú zastúpené v západoslovenských múzeách a početná kolekcia je v zbierkovom fonde Slovenskej národnej galérie. Svojimi námetmi, ich odlišným spracovaním, rozmermi, kvalitou skla i rámov sa výrazne odlišujú od stredoslovenských a východoslovenských malieb na skle. Líšia sa hlavne bohatou ornamentikou založenou na veľkoplošnom dekóre s motívmi, ktorých pravzory a farebnosť treba hľadať v rakúskom Sandle, ale sčasti aj v juhočeskom Pohoří a v moravsko-sliezskej maľbe. Na moravské maliarstvo nadviazala západoslovenská maľba aj tematicky, najmä barokovými naratívnymi legendami, inšpirovanými Novým Zákonom. Ferdinand Salzmann, ktorého otec prišiel na Slovensko pred polovicou 19. storočia z Bavorska, žil v Pate pri Galante. Bol najväčšou osobnosťou rodiny. Na jeho námety nadviazal syn Alexander. Hnedočervené a hnedé kontúrovanie tvárí Madony, Ježiška a Božského srdca na obrazoch Ferdinanda, modelácia ružovou farbou sa v poslednom období jeho tvorby miešajú aj s raným Alexandrovým rukopisom. Je pravdepodobné, že v určitom období pracovali na obrazoch obaja spoločne. Na obrazoch obidvoch autorov je evidentná svedomito vedená línia kresby a kvetinový vzor, ktorý sa vyznačuje veľkoplošnými rozetami, lupeňovými kvetmi a pukmi s listami v červeno-žlto-zelenom podaní s centrálnym výjavom, evokujúcim barokovú predlohu. Grafická skladba malieb Salzmannovcov na skle v detailoch veľmi často obmieňa drobné i väčšie prvky, ktoré celý výjav prozaizujú, dávajú mu charakter naivnej maľby, vnášajúc do základnej schémy prvok fantastična. Vďaka fantázii zanechali po sebe pôsobivé a objavné ma

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