Family of Johann Hartwig Friedrich JENS and Magdalena Dorothea SCHRALL

Husband: Johann Hartwig Friedrich JENS

  • Name:

  • Johann Hartwig Friedrich JENS

  • Sex:

  • Male

  • Father:

  • -

  • Mother:

  • -

Wife: Magdalena Dorothea SCHRALL

  • Name:

  • Magdalena Dorothea SCHRALL

  • Sex:

  • Female

  • Father:

  • -

  • Mother:

  • -

Child 1: Christoph Wilhelm Heinrich JENS

  • Name:

  • Christoph Wilhelm Heinrich JENS1

  • Sex:

  • Male

  • Nickname:

  • William

  • Spouse (1):

  • Christina Carolina Maria DIBBERT (1848-bef1900)

  • Spouse (2):

  • Wilhelmine ZEIGLER (c. 1833-c. 1874)

  • Birth:

  • Jan 20, 1832

  • Mecklenburg, Germany1,2,3,4

  •  

  • The August 1860 census shows he is 27 years old which would put his calculated birth year between August 1832 and August 1833 and it notes his birthplace as Mecklenburg. The June 1870 census notes his age as 38, with his calculated birth year of June 1831 to June 1832 and his birthplace as Mecklenburg. The June 1880 census shows he is 47 years old placing his calculated birth year between June of 1832 and June of 1833. The June 1900 census lists his birth on January of 1832.

  • Immigration:

  • 1858 (age 25-26)

  •  

  •  

  • On the 1900 census he is listed as having been in the U.S. for 42 years and a naturalized citizen immigrating in 1858.

  • Occupation:

  • 1860 (age 27-28)

  • laborer1

  •  

  • He had worked enough or saved enough to have a personal wealth of $50. No other members of the family had an occupation in 1860.

  • Residence:

  • 1860 (age 27-28)

  • Ward 9 Milwaukee, Wisconsin1

  •  

  • The 9th Ward in 1870 includes all that part of the city lying west of Seventh and north of Vliet Street. The household consisted of a 26 year old female, Wilhelmina likely his wife and four minor children.

  • Residence:

  • 1870 (age 37-38)

  • Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin2

  •  

  • The household consists of eight persons including Wilhelmine and six children. Two children were noted on the 1860 census including Frederick and Frederika. August who is not listed may have died in the interim. Four new children are noted on this census. A pair of twins Charles and Henry age 9, Elizabeth age 4, and Albert age 4 months.

  • Occupation:

  • 1870 (age 37-38)

  • laborer2

  •  

  • Working as a laborer he had managed to increase his personal wealth to $200 and had real estate valued at $1200. It is noted that the census enumerator lists that he could not write.

  • Marriage Contract:

  • Mar 14, 1875 (age 43)

  • Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin5

  • Residence:

  • 1880 (age 47-48)

  • Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin3

  •  

  • This household had two adults and five minor children living. The two adults are listed as being married, William and a new person Christiane who is a 32 year old female. This is probably the same household as the 1870 census because the head of the household is the same name and age and he is a farmer, three of the minor children are also listed on the 1870 census. William has a new wife with three new children under the age of four leading to conclude that his first wife likely died between 1870 and 1880 and he remarried.

  • Occupation:

  • 1880 (age 47-48)

  • farmer; Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin3

  •  

  • He is listed as a "Farmer" with no months unemployed. On this census it is noted that he can both read and write.

  • Residence:

  • 1900 (age 67-68)

  • Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin4

  •  

  • In 1900 he is listed as widower and living with his four sons William Jr., Herman, Adolph and Ernst. Adolph and Ernst have been born since the last available census between 1880 and 1900. Their ages reflect this.

    There is also a servant living in this home named Steffin Lina, aged 64 and a widower. She is listed as having one child still living.

  • Occupation:

  • 1900 (age 67-68)

  • Capitalitst4

  •  

  • William listing his occupation as "Capitalist" is interesting because it connotes his rise over time and increase in wealth. He owned his home free of mortgage and listed no months of unemployment. He also has a servant named Lina Steffin (age 64) living in the same household.

  • Death:

  • Aug 3, 1900 (age 68)

  • Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin6

  • Will:

  • Aug 9, 1900 (age 68)

  • Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin7

  • Residence:

  •  

  •  

  •  

  • <b>Williamsburg Heights

     

    </b>Williamsburg Heights is bounded by Capitol Drive to the north, Holton Street to the east, Keefe Avenue to the south and I-43 to the west. Some consider Williamsburg as a section of the newer Harambee neighborhood to the south.

    In the 1800s, when memories of the frontier were still fresh in Milwaukee, the area that became Williamsburg (named for William Bogk) was a farming district. Scores of farmers, most of them German immigrants, settled in the area. Comfortably beyond the city limits, (North Avenue), they patronized their own trading center that they referred to as Williamsburg. The Green Bay road, between Burleigh Street and Keefe Avenue, was the spine of the little settlement. At its peak, Williamsburg boasted a flour mill, greenhouses, feed stores, harness shops, blacksmiths, bakeries, and its own post office.

    At Port Washington Rd there were a growing cluster of businesses on Green Bay Avenue – the heart of old Williamsburg. The residential sections were dotted with German saloons, German stores, and dozens of German churches. Most of the area's breadwinners were skilled artisans and tradesmen.

    In 1891, Williamsburg, by then a suburban community of blue-collar workers, became part of Milwaukee. In the same decade, the Pabst Brewery purchased Schuetzen Park (now Clinton Rose Park) and developed it as an amusement park. The beer garden remained, but the rifle range was replaced by a roller coaster, a miniature railroad, a carousel, and a fun house called Katzenjammer Castle. The area continued to grow after 1900. The tide of home-seekers washed down the ridge to Keefe Avenue before 1910 and finally reached Capitol Drive in the 1920s. Old Williamsburg became an island of older homes and shops in the heart of the neighborhood.

    The homes here are dominantly bungalows, the nearly universal favorite of the 1920s, with 2- and 3-story Milwaukee duplexes scattered among them. Williamsburg Heights and Williamsburg Triangle also form the primary borders and constituents of the 5 Points Neighborhood Association, Inc. (5PNA). Expanded borders are described on the 5pna website.

    By the late 1960s African Americans began moving in. Relations were more peaceful with the newer group and their older ethnic European neighbors when compared to other parts for the city. The neighborhood was quite stable through this period of change. The former Oak Club was adapted as the Shiloh Tabernacle.

     

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neighborhoods_of_Milwaukee

  • Probate:

  •  

  •  

  •  

  • 85 pages of probate records to review.

     

    Probate and Will Records found for William Jens valued his estate at $40,000 in 1900. (Worth about $1,000,000 in 2016.

Sources

1.

1860 Federal Census (U. S.), Milwaukee, Wisconsin, population, Milwaukee, Ward 9, p. 212, 1854, Wilhelm Jens; digital, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com); citing 1860 U.S. census, population schedule. NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration.

2.

1870 United States Federal Census, Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, population, Town of Milwaukee, p.152A, 431, William Jens; National Archives and Records Adminstration Film T132.

3.

1880 United States Federal Census, Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, population, Town of Milwaukee, p.132D, 72, William Jens; National Archives and Records Adminstration Film T9.

4.

1900 United States Federal Census, Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, population, Milwaukee Town Precinct 2, p.22, 468, William Jens; FHL microfilm: 1241807.

5.

Wisconsin, Milwaukee County, Milwaukee. Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services Vital Records Division, marriage 01790 (March 31, 1879), Christoph Wilhem Jens and Christina Carolina Maria Dibbert; State Historical Society of Wisconsin.

6.

Wisconsin Wills and Estates, 1838-1933. William Jens. Ancestry.com.

7.

Wisconsin, U.S., Wills and Probate Records, 1800-1987 , digital image, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com: accessed December 6, 2021), William Jens; Wisconsin. County Court (Milwaukee County); Probate Place: Milwaukee, Wisconsin.