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aka Charles Franklin Rutz December 7, 1820 - January 30, 1912 |
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updates: August 10, 2009 - replaced the page about the 1848 German Revolution with a page on German Immigration. August 07, 2009 - added link to US citizenship application August 06, 2009 - added Caroline Rutz 1827 - 1854 page with death info from Gasconade County Historical Society August 06, 2009 - added line on main page for Caroline Rutz 1827-1854 3rd child who died at approximately age 2 weeks August 06, 2009 - updated the family tree to version 4 with latest updates (Infant Rutz 1854-1854) July 17, 2009 - added 1860 US Census for Auguste Rutz, adoptive mother's name July 17, 2009 - added birth dates for Auguste's children from 1910 US Census and 7th child July 16, 2009 - updated the family tree to version 3 with latest updates (Carl Friedrich Kielmann, Maria Martha Malvina Kielmann, etc.) July 16, 2009 - added a page for Maria Martha Malvina Kielmann July 15, 2009 - put Augusta's place of birth (Pomeron) on the main page July 15, 2009 - added a page for Carl Friedrich Kielmann (because his birth certificate lists Augusta's place of birth as Pomeron) July 11, 2009 - new Civil War info added to main page July 11, 2009 - added John's email on how to pronounce Rutz to the "name analysis" page July 10, 2009 - added John's email to the "name analysis" page July 09, 2009 - rephrased language about the incorrect ages given on the 1860 US census July 09, 2009 - more ramblings on the names-analysis page. July 08, 2009 - formatted first page into centered table July 07, 2009 - added Civil War information and corrected family tree data July 06, 2009 - added family tree data July 05, 2009 - corrected William Rutz's wife's and children's names July 04, 2009 - added Augusta Rutz web page July 03, 2009 - updated the Charles Rutz Farm page June 07, 2009 - website created |
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The Charles Rutz Family Tree |
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Carl Ruthz is the name that was written on the passenger list of the Aeolus in 1854. (the "h" in Ruthz is probably an imbelishment by the writer using an old "th" spelling for the more modern "t" sound) After he immigrated to the United States, he used the name Charles Franklin Rutz. Born: December 7, 1820, in German Bohemia (per the 1910 US census). Last place of residence in Europe: Charbrow, Pomeron Died: January 30, 1912, Crawford County, Missouri Buried: Oak Hill, Missouri Last Residence: On his farm located between Owensville, Missouri and Cuba, Missouri Here are some thoughts about the names: Analyzing the names |
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Father: unknown Mother: unknown |
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Wife #1: Caroline born: 1827 (per Aeolus passenger list) in Germany? died: December 3, 1854 (after they had arrived at New Orleans on November 14, 1854). married: to Carl Rutz around 1846-1847 (assuming Wilhelm was born about a year after they were married). Chidren: Son: Wilhelm (aka William) Rutz born: January 15, 1848, in German Bohemia (per the 1910 US Census) died: January 30, 1920 Married June 7, 1874 to Caroline E. Baumbach (b: March 21, 1853 or 1854) 5 sons and 1 daughter Charles F. b: abt.1875 Elizabeth b: abt.1877 John W. b: Jan 1883 Henry E. b: Jun 1884 Lewis (Louie) F. b: Mar 1890 Walter L. b: Jul 1894 Daughter: Augusta (Auguste?) Hermine Rutz Sengenberger Kielmann Born: June 11, 1850 in Pomeron Died: May 23, 1915 Married: October 7, 1872 in Gasconade Co., Missouri to Friedrick Louis Kielmann (b: June 10, 1845 in St. Louis, Missouri) Children: John William F. Louis Augusta D., b. July 1878 L. Amelia, b. September 1879 Julia, b. July 182 Maria Martha Malvina Kielmann b. May 26, 1886, Gasconade County George, b. July 1882 Carl Friedrick b. March 11, 1891, Gasconade County Infant: born: unknown died: December 17, 1854 (2 weeks after its mother Caroline had died). |
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Sailed from Bremen Germany on an unknown date to New Orleans, Louisiana on the ship Bremen bark AEOLUS Arrived in New Orleans on November 14, 1854. The November 14, 1854 Aeolus Passenger List See lines 162 through 165 on Page 5 Carl Ruthz lists Charbrow as their origin before they emigrated.
I assume Charbrow is Charbrow, Pomerania . German Immigration to the U.S. The definitive history of Hermann Missouri |
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Wife #2: Mary Ann Reed b: 1835 in Morgan Co., Indiana |
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In 1979 Kay Busch (a descendant of Samuel Rutz) traveled to the last farm
that Carl Ruthz had lived on. It was currently owned by Lewis F Rutz, a son of
William Rutz (Carl Ruthz's first son). She met with Lewis along with several
other grandchildren of "Charley". The following is Kay's notes from
that meeting. Kay Busch 1979 Interview |
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In July of 2009 Owen Rutz contacted a professional genealogist to assess the historical records available in Charbrow, Pomerania. Keith Spillar's research |
| Charles Rutz applied for US citizenship in Hermann, Missouri on May 17,1855 |
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U.S. Census Data 1860 - 1910 |
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In the 1860 US Census, Charles "Roots" listed his birth country as Germany. His age is listed as 37 instead of 39 Mary Ann's age is listed as 35 instead of 25 The story is that Charles wanted to disguise his identity because he skipped-out of the Prussian military. US Census 1860 Charles Roots |
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This is a page from the 1870 US Census. This is NOT Charles F. Rutz of Brush Creek. This Illinois Charles Rutz is the same age as the Missiouri Charles Rutz. They are not the same person. US Census 1870 NOT Charles F Rutz of Missouri |
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This is a page from the 1870 US Census. It lists Charles and his family with the last name of Root. Charles is 49 yeaers old and Mary Ann is 34 (their correct ages). It lists Prussia as the "country of foreign birth" for Charles and William. US Census 1870 Charles Root of Missouri |
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This is a page from the 1880 US Census. It lists Charles and his 7 children, but Mary Ann is not listed. The place of birth is listed as Germany. William is listed as living at a different location with Caroline, their 2 children and 2 servants. US Census 1880 Charles Rutz of Missouri |
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The 1890 US Census was destroyed by a fire. |
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The 1900 US Census, Oak Hill township, Missouri: Charles F. Rutz. The census lists the birth place for Charles, his father and mother as Germany. He was born in 1820 and that he came to the US in 1855. It lists 1855 as the year he immigrated to the United States. What strikes me as a little bizarre is that Williams wife, Caroline E. has the same first name as William's mother and came from Germany the same year as William and his family. US Census 1900 |
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The 1910 US Census, Oak Hill township, Missouri: Charley F. Rutz Birth Place: German Bohemia. Father's Birth Place: Germany Mother's Birth Place: German Germany (not Prussia?) It lists 1855 as the year he immigrated to the United States. Note that this census shows Lewis and his wife Ruth living at William\Wilhelm's home. US Census 1910 German Bohemia is the most specific location ever given for where Charles (and William) were born. |
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The Heritage Quest database. My source for US Census records: Heritage Quest web Site |
German Bohemia (German: Deutschböhmen; Czech: Nemecké Cechy)
was a region in Czech Republic established, for a short period of time, after the World War I.
It included parts of northern and western Bohemia once largely populated by ethnic Germans.
Important population centers were Liberec (Reichenberg), Ústí nad Labem (Aussig), Teplice (Teplitz-Schönau),
Duchcov (Dux), Cheb (Eger), Mariánské Lázne (Marienbad), Karlovy Vary (Karlsbad),
Jablonec nad Nisou (Gablonz an der Neiße), Litomerice (Leitmeritz), Most (Brüx) and, Žatec (Saaz).
Chas. Rutz Death Certificate
Missouri State Archives - Missouri Death Certificates, 1910 – 1958
The Telephone Newspaper Article
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UNION MISSOURI VOLUNTEERS Gasconade County Battalion, US Reserve Corps, Missouri Home Guard Organized by authority of Gen. Lyon June, 1861. General orders: Guard the Pacific Railroad bridges. Disbanded September, 1861. |
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The 768 soldiers in the Missouri Home Guard are listed at the CWSS database: The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System database |
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In March 1861 the Missouri Constitutional Convention of 1861 voted 98 to 1 to stay in the Union but not supply weapons or men to either side if war broke out. The security of a large munitions depot became an immediate flash point. On April 20, 1861, eight days after the start of the war at Fort Sumter, a pro-Confederate mob at Liberty, Missouri, seized the Liberty Arsenal and made off with about 1,000 rifles and muskets. This set the stage for fears that Confederates would also seize the much larger St. Louis Arsenal, which had nearly 40,000 rifles and muskets—the most of any slave state. Union Captain Nathaniel Lyon hastily raised a militia, gained control of the arsenal (which was under the command of Peter V. Hagner), and started sending all but 10,000 rifles and muskets to Illinois. Lyon's militia had been recruited from German immigrants and members of the Wide Awakes political organization. The Germans in particular were unpopular with many native-born Missourians with Southern backgrounds, who deeply resented their anti-slavery views. On May 10, Lyon forced the surrender of the 669 militia under General Daniel M. Frost. The men refused to take the oath of allegiance to the Federal government. As a result, Lyon decided to march the prisoners to the arsenal through downtown St. Louis before providing them with a parole and ordering them to disperse. This lengthy march was widely viewed as a public humiliation for the state forces, and immediately angered citizens who had gathered to watch the commotion. To add to the insult, Lyon placed the captured militiamen between two lines of armed German Home Guards. Tensions quickly mounted on the streets as civilians hurled rocks, paving stones, and insults at Lyon's troops. The heavily German Home Guard units were particularly targeted by the mob and shouts of "Damn the Dutch" were hurled at them from the crowd.[1] Exactly what provoked the shooting remains unclear, but the most common explanation is that a drunkard stumbled into the path of the marching soldiers, and fired a pistol into their ranks, fatally wounding one German soldier, Captain Blandowski. The volunteers, in retaliation, fired into the crowd, killing some 20 people, some of whom were women and children, and wounding as many as 50 more. The incident sparked several days of rioting and anti-German animosity in St. Louis. On May 11, another incident occurring at the intersection of 5th and Walnut streets saw German Volunteers fired at from windows and once again return fire into the mob. Col. Henry Boernstein, publisher of the Anzeiger Des Westens a prominent German Language newspaper in St. Louis and commander of the 2nd Regiment of Missouri Volunteers, remarked in his memoirs that he gave several of his men leave to visit their families on the morning of May 11 and that, “Most of them did not return…until it grew dark, with clothing torn, faces beaten bloody, and all the signs of having suffered mistreatment…Two of them never returned and they were never heard of again.” Rumors spread throughout the city that the Germans were planning to murder the American population of the city which caused many of the wealthy citizens of St. Louis to flee to either Illinois or the Missouri Interior. Eventually the installation of martial law and the arrival of Federal Regulars to relieve the German volunteers would bring the situation to a conclusion but the impact of the Camp Jackson Affair left its mark on St. Louis permanetly. Nativism, mistrust of the Federal government, slavery, and states rights issues all played roles in provoking the incident. The Affair polarized the state between Union and Confederate supporters. Previously most Missourians had advocated neutrality. However the Camp Jackson Affair forced most Missourians to take a side. Some former Unionists, including former Governor Sterling Price, now advocated secession. But ultimately the actions of Lyon and the St. Louis German community did much to ensure Missouri's continued loyalty to the Union. And in the years following the war, the Germans would gain a reputation as "saviors of Missouri." |
Captain William Rodney Massie:
"The lower Missouri was alive with boats from 1850 to 1865. There were between two and three hundred. As many as fourteen would leave St. Louis in a single day. Pilots were scarce and they didn't average more than a single one to a boat. In traveling between here and Kansas City, you were never out of sight of a boat, and they were loaded with freight and passengers like a bush with blackberries. Indians? Well, I guess so! I knew all the great western chiefs, Sitting Bull, Rain-in-the-Face, and Red Cloud. I knew 'em before Bill Cody did, and I was in that country when he came up there and got to be a scout.
Apparently the Rutz surname may have originated in southwest Germany, Landkreis Sudwestpfalz.
But, it is interesting to note a concentration of Rutz surnames in northeast Germany, Landkreis Uecker-Randow.
The oldest Rutz in the RootsWeb WorldConnect database is Philips Rutzs (the s suffix probably means: son of Rutz), 1530-1592, Asbach, Germany.
Asbach is also in southwest Germany, about 240 km north of Sudwestpfalz.
Another old Rutz in that database is Gorius Rutz, 1553 - ????, Nesslau, St. Gallen, Switzerland (northern Switzerland).
An interesting tree I found ended with Carl Friedrich Rutz's (b.1770) son Johann Friedrich (b.1809). Unfortanately there where no data on Johann's decendents or date of death.
Leave comments at the Owen Rutz blog