AN ANCESTRAL HOME STILL STANDING:
Charles Ernst Wellhausen was my 2nd great-grandfather. While I did not know him, he was the impetus for my beginning genealogy research in the mid-1970's.
At that time my paternal grandmother was still living. She came to visit one day and the conversation turned to HER ancestors. I had known her mother (my great-grandmother Wellhausen) who passed away when I was 15 and I had many photos and memories of "great-grandma". In the course of that conversation with my grandmother she talked about HER grandparents and it piqued my interest. I was living in the same area of Michigan as her grandparents had and I decided to do some research on her grandfather.
Charles Ernst Wellhausen was born on July 24, 1833 in Alt Kentzlin, Demmin, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany. He was married on March 23, 1860 in Hohenbollentin, Demmin, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany to Christina Graumann. They later immigrated to the US and settled in Mt. Clemens, Michigan in Macomb County. He passed away there in Mt. Clemens on April 13, 1909.
At the outset of my research, of course, I did not know all the above information. I did visit the cemetery where he and his wife are buried and was able to learn some basic dates. It was, though, during a visit to a local library that I uncovered an extraordinary book that referred to Charles Ernst Wellhausen.
In the St. Clair Shores library in Macomb County there was an 11" x 14" hard cover book that was for sale. It had been advertised in the local newspaper and I went there on a whim to see the book. The book was entitled "1859 Wall Map, 1875 Atlas Map, 1895 Atlas of Macomb County, Michigan". In looking through the 1895 Atlas section I found something that excited me. This section included a page by page listing of 15 local residents' farms or businesses with small pictures of the husband and wife on the top of each page. In that section I found a page titled "Residence of Charles Wellhausen, Section 20, Clinton Township".
The Charles Wellhausen home and farm, 1895 in Clinton Township, Michigan:
2 comments:
Fun to read about this particular slide down the slope that is genealogy research! Good one, Cheryl!
It's amazing to me that a house that is well over 100 years old is still standing and looking pretty darn good.
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