|
|
You must have accidentally
stumbled onto this site since we are not officially open for
viewing yet. We hope to have the entire site tested and fully functional by
March 1, 2025 when all
pages and links will be available.
None of the hyperlinks that will appear on this page are active now. In the meantime, here is a
summary of the contents of the website.
[Note: Facts, dates and data are only included for NON-LIVING family
members as is the custom for online family histories.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Welcome to the online version
of The Heiden Family
book which was distributed in 1995. We started the research
on this family in 1973 and it has been 30 years since the
completion of the book. Over the past three decades, we have
been working on and off on the family history and recently
decided that a website would do a great job of sharing the
huge amount of information to family members everywhere.
The printed edition could only contain a few family photos
while this 2024 website includes over 1,000 plus new facts
and many added features. The website is structured to follow
the Heiden and related families from their homes in Europe
to Monroe County in southeastern Michigan. |
|
This
particular Heiden Family originated in the Mecklenburg
region of northern Germany. August and Rika Heiden emigrated
in 1873 and made their way to Monroe County, Michigan. They
were the parents of 8 children and had 35 grandchildren and
105 great grandchildren. |
|
Although
we include information on all of August's children, emphasis
is given to his son William Carl and his wife, Mary. They
raised 13 children and had 38 grandchildren, (including the
author of this website) followed by 90 great grandchildren. The number of people genetically
related to August and William Carl is in the hundreds and
counting. |
|
The
eighth child of William Carl and Mary was Arthur Heiden, the
father of the author. He was married to Mildred Roggerman
and they had seven children. Like all of his siblings except
sister, Hilda Fuller, Art spent his entire life in Monroe
County. |
|
Heiden is the paternal branch
of my family but the maternal sides are also covered on this
website. Rika's maiden name was Knaack and her mother was a
Dreier. Mary's parents were named Rambow and her maternal
grandparents were the Milhans. Mildred's parents were
Roggermans and Gettys and her maternal grandparents were
named Oliver. |
|
If you are a member of this
large family, please share a link to this website with your
relatives. If you have comments, family stories or photos
you would like to share, please send an
EMAIL.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Heiden
is not a very common surname in Germany or the U.S.
In our research which started in 1971, we have
traced our branch back to the Mecklenburg-Schwerin
(now Mecklenburg-Vorpommern) region in northern
Germany. August and Fredericka "Rika" Heiden were rural
folks who lived in the tiny villages in that area
before emigrating to America in 1873.
Included in this
section are descriptions of many of
the villages, maps of the area and examples of the type of
life people led there in the late 19th century. We
visited the region by car in 1996 and have included
pictures and details we found.
Other members of the
extended family of August and his son, Wm Carl
Heiden are also documented. The Rambow and Milhan
families lived in the same villages with August and
they emigrated in 1874 to the same area of Monroe
County, Michigan. The Knaack, Kanseyer and Dreier
relatives stayed in Germany.
The author's maternal
ancestors, the Roggermans, Gettys and Olivers are also
included. Charles Roggerman lived on Rugen Island,
Germany before coming to America in 1882. The Getty
family made the journey from what is now Northern
Ireland in 1852. We are still working on finding the
European home of the Olivers. |
|
|
|
|
|
This unit covers
the Heidens and other relatives who did not leave Germany. These are
the close ancestors of August Heiden as well as
other relatives in the Knaack, Kanseyer,
Rambow, Dreier, Milhan and Roggerman branches.
|
|
|
Included are maps
and descriptions of the regions of origin
for the ancestors of the families covered by
this website. At the time they lived there,
Germany was a collection of dukedoms and
principalities. They lived in the duchy of
Mecklenburg-Schwerin which is now called
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. In 1871, Germany was
consolidated into the country we know today.
|
|
|
The Heidens,
Rambows, Knaacks and Milhans all came from very
small rural villages in northern Germany.
Included here is a description of their home villages and
which family members originated in each or what
events such as marriages took place in them.
|
|
|
We have pulled
together some basic historical perspective for
the conditions in which our families lived in the
"old country". At that time, they were
part of a dukedom ruled by the man pictured to
the right (Duke Frederick Wilhelm). Knowing the economic, political and societal
circumstances can help to understand what
motivated them to take such a drastic move in
order to
better their lives.
|
|
|
In 1996, we visited the area of northern Germany
where August and Rika Heiden lived before coming
to the U.S. in 1873. Starting from the port city
of Rostock, we drove the 30 miles or so to the
area where the Heidens and Rambows once called
home.
|
|
|
Although the surname Heiden
is not extremely common, there are others by
that name found in various parts of Germany and
the U.S. Over the years, we have accumulated
names of notable people named Heiden who are
not, to our current understanding anyway,
related to the Heidens of Monroe County.
Konrad
Heiden (right) was one of the first authors to
write a negative book about Adolph Hitler. No
relation to us, as far as we know.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
August
Heiden and Fredericka "Rika" Knaack were born
and raised in rural northern Germany.
They were married on February 21, 1868
and continued their life together in the
small village of Gross Wokern. August
became a brick mason by trade.
Their
first three children were born in Gross
Wokern. Heinrich was born in 1866
followed by Ernst in 1868 and Meta in
1870.
In 1873,
they made the overland trip to the port city of
Hamburg and boarded a ship for New York
City. Shortly after arrival for some long
lost reason, they travelled west and
settled in the City of Monroe,
Michigan. Meta died just a few weeks
after their arrival and is buried in the
Zion Lutheran Church cemetery.
The 1880
census shows them living in Monroe with
additional sons, "Willie" (1874) and
Herman (1876). Herman's fraternal twin
sister, Bertha, had died as an infant in 1877. They had another daughter, Lena
(Koster) in 1881 and their final child, John,
was born in 1884.
By the
late 1890s, August and his sons owned farms
in Raisinville Township a few miles west
of Monroe where they remained
for the rest of their lives. For a
while in their later years, August and Rika lived with their
son, Heinrich, at his farm at 8420 Dixon
Road. After Heinrich died suddenly on
April 20, 1922 of a heart attack at the
age of 52, his
parents moved in with his brother, John on
South Custer Road.
August
died on September 5, 1922 at the age of
84 and Rika was also 84 when she passed
away on January 14, 1926.
|
|
Included are sections on the Kanseyer family
which, according to the German church records, was "alleged to be" the parental ancestors of August Heiden.
The Knaack, Dreier, Laas and Regelin families are
relatives of Rika Heiden. Some of them also came to America and lived in or near Monroe County and attended Heiden Reunions in the early to mid-1900s.
|
|
|
|
|
August Heiden
lived in rural Germany from his birth in 1838 to
1873 when he and his family left for the U.S. This section gives a
glimpse into what life there might have been
like for the Heidens and the Rambows.
|
|
|
This describes
the situation and details of the emigration of
August and Rika with their first three children,
Heinrich, Ernst and Meta in 1873. They arrived
in New York and were processed through Castle
Island, a predecessor of Ellis Island. |
|
|
|
|
When the August Heiden family arrived in the
U.S. they quickly made their way from New York to Monroe
County, Michigan. In the 1880 census, they are
listed as living in the City of Monroe.
Their
young daughter, Meta, died there only a few
weeks after their arrival. After a decade or so,
August purchased a farm and a separate piece of
property in Raisinville Township just west of
Monroe.
|
|
|
August and Rika had eight children including
Heinrich, Ernst, Meta, William Carl, Herman,
Bertha, Lena (Koster) and John. Meta and Bertha
both died in childhood. All the others with the
exception of Herman spent the rest of their
lives in Monroe County.
|
|
|
According to the
German church records, August Heiden's father
was "alleged to be" a man named Johann Canseir. As
we followed that person back in history, it
appears that the actual name was probably Kanseyer.
This is most likely due to the general illiteracy
in those times when various record keepers had to figure
out spelling based on the spoken word alone.
|
|
|
The maiden name
of August's wife, Rika, was Knaack. Again, this
is a name that had a variety of spellings in the
old records.
|
|
|
The
maiden name of Rika Heiden's mother was Dreier. This branch
of the family leads to the relationship with the Laas and Regelin families who settled in Toledo,
Ohio and Monroe County respectively.
|
|
|
In the early to
later 1900s, members of the Laas and Burmeister families were
regular attendees at the annual Heiden Family
Reunions. They were related to the family
through the Dreier connection to Rika Heiden.
|
|
|
A family by this name lived in Monroe County
near the homes of many of the Heidens. They were
related through the same branch as the Laas
Family.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William
Carl Heiden was the fourth child of
August and Rika Heiden. and the first
one born in the U.S. He was born in the City of
Monroe on April 1, 1874 about one
year after his parents arrived in
America. He is the grandfather of the
website's author, Ralph Heiden.
In his
youth, William lived on a farm on South
Custer Road in Raisinville Township. A
couple of miles east on that same road
lived Heinrich Rambow and his family.
They had immigrated from Gross Wokern in
1874, one year after August Heiden who
was also from that tiny town.
William
courted one of Heinrich's daughters,
Mary, and they were married on February
17, 1897. William's brother, Herman,
married Mary's sister, Fredareka Rambow,
on February 22, 1900.
William
Carl and Mary lived on a couple of
different farms in Raisinville Township
after their marriage and had their first
seven children. On William's 35th
birthday in 1909, he purchased the 141
acre farm at 8861 Dixon Road where they
would have six more children and live
for the rest of their lives.
Mary
passed away on June 11, 1963 at the age
of 85 and William Carl Heiden died on
January 31, 1967 just two months short
of his 93rd birthday.
|
|
Mary
Heiden's ancestors included the Rambow
and Milhan families who also lived
nearby in Raisinville Township, Monroe
County, Michigan. They have their own
units on the website.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Wm Carl Heiden married Mary Rambow
in 1897 and they spent the next 66 years
together raising their 13 children on a few farms in
Monroe County.
|
|
|
|
|
From 1898 to 1927, they welcomed 13 children
into the world. Mary was 20 when she had the
first child, Edna and 49 at the time of the birth of
their last child, Norma. All of their children lived to adulthood
and they produced 38 grandchildren. With the
exception of one daughter, Hilda Fuller, all of
the children spent their lives in Monroe County. |
|
|
|
|
On April 1, 1909 on his 35th
birthday, William Carl Heiden purchased what became to be known as the
home farm at 8861 Dixon Road in Raisinville
Township.
Seven of their 13 children were born
while the family lived on this farm. Over the
years, at different times, over 35 people lived
in the house with William Carl and Mary. Some of their children and their
families came back to live with Ma and Pa for short periods during the Great Depression. Wm Frank, his
wife and seven children shared the house after he
purchased the farm from his parents in 1960. |
|
|
|
|
As
part of the 1995 Heiden Family book, many people
submitted written anecdotes about William Carl
and Mary Heiden. These are reproduced here to
help us understand our ancestors better. If
you have stories or memories you would like to
share, please send them in an EMAIL.
|
|
|
Also
while working on the 1995 book, I met with two
groups of aunts, uncles and cousins to talk
about Heiden family topics. I brought along a
tape recorder and transcripts of these
discussions are included in this section.
We are
also working on getting the tapes digitized so
that you can hear the voices of these relatives
on your computer or other device.
|
|
|
Included as a
sub-topic is the history of Heinrich and
Wilhelmina (Milhan) Rambow who were the parents of Mary Heiden. The Rambows lived in the same village in
Germany as August Heiden and they all settled
within a few miles of each other in Monroe County.
|
|
|
This is the family of Mary's mother, Wilhelmina
"Minnie" (Milhan) Rambow. Her brother, Fred
Milhan, came to Monroe County at the same time and built a log
cabin a mile or so from the Rambow farm. He
lived to be over 100 years old. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Arthur Henry Carl Heiden is the father of the author
of this website, Ralph Heiden. He was the eighth child of Wm
Carl and Mary (Rambow) Heiden and was born in
1912 at the family farm on Dixon Road.
Art married Mildred Mae Roggerman on March 3,
1934 and they had seven children over the following
24 years. Six of them lived to adulthood and one, a
boy, died at birth in 1951.
The
family moved a lot and no two of their children were
born while living in the same house. The author, for
instance lived in four different houses (one of them
twice) during the first 20 years of his life. All
four houses were on Dixon Road.
Art farmed on rented land all of his adult life
while working full-time jobs in factories in Monroe
and Dundee, Michigan.
On June 18, 1985, Arthur Heiden passed away at the
age of 72. Mildred died on July 3, 2012 just about
two months shy of her 98th birthday.
|
|
Also included in the website are the ancestors of
Mildred Heiden. Her maiden name was Roggerman and
her maternal grandfather was Ervin Getty and her
grandmother was Lena Belle Oliver. The Roggermans came from Germany and the Gettys from
what is now Northern Ireland. We are still in the
process discovering the native land of the Olivers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Several family traditions and activities have
been repeated throughout the
history of the Heiden Family in Monroe County. Chief
among these were the Annual Heiden Family Reunion,
the Lutheran Church and the historic Bridge School
which those in the early generations attended
through the 8th grade.
Many of the earlier
generations were farmers or worked for local
businesses. We have included a sampling of
occupations for some of the people in those
ancestors.
|
|
|
|
|
A
large number of the early generations of the
Heidens and Rambows attended the Bridge School
which was the oldest public school in Michigan.
Until it closed in the late 1940s, it only took
students through the 8th grad. Later generations attended high school in Dundee
or Ida, Michigan. A few were graduates of
schools in
Deerfield, Britton, Milan, Battle Creek and
other places. |
|
|
|
|
The
Lutheran Church was a central element in the
lives of the Heiden
families in Raisinville Township. St Matthew
Lutheran Church and later, Prince of Peace
Lutheran Church played major roles in the lives
of our ancestors.
|
|
|
For
over 80 years starting in the 1920s, the Heiden
family held an annual or periodic reunion on or around the
Fourth of July. The Herman Heiden family in
Isabella County also held annual reunions.
|
|
|
In
the early generations of the Heiden Family, a
large percentage of people worked as farmers or
as hired labor on farms. We have included lists
of some of the occupations held by those in the
first 3 American generations of Heidens.
|
|
|
This
section includes all the family stories that we
have collected over the decades. They are
divided by the person being remembered so that
you can see what people related about say, Helma
Nickel, for example or about life on the home
farm or memories of Bridge School. If you have stories you would like to
share, please send them to us in an
EMAIL. |
|
|
|
|
Many
of the later generations of the Heiden Family were involved with a wide
variety of high school activities. We have been
able to find dozens of images of over 50 of our
family members showing their involvement in the National Honor
Society, Top Ten, Sports, Plays, FFA and other
activities during their high school years. The
oldest pictures are from a 1928 yearbook and
there are many from the 1950s and 60s. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A
large percentage of the people of
the first two or three generations
of this group of Heidens in America
lived in Monroe County. One of
August's sons, Herman, moved his
family north to Isabella County in
1915 and one of Wm Carl's daughters,
Hilda Fuller, lived in Battle Creek,
Michigan. The rest made their homes
in Monroe County.
The center of the vast majority of
family activities and residences
from 1873 into the 1970s revolved
around a relatively small area in Raisinville,
Ida and Dundee Townships. We have
documented over 80 homes, farms,
churches, schools, reunion sites and
other places in the county which
played a role in at least one family
member's life.
|
|
|
|
|
Under Topic 1, we cover the small villages and
locations where our ancestors resided in Germany.
Most of the people lived in small houses in tiny
villages a few miles from the farms where they
worked during the day. They would often walk out to
their jobs in
the morning and walk back home each night.
|
|
|
In the early American generations, almost all of
the people in the Heiden and Rambow families
lived at least part of their lives in Monroe
County. We have information on over 80 places
including farms, homes, churches, schools and
reunion sites associated with Heiden Family members. |
|
|
|
|
One of August and Rika Heiden's children,
Herman, moved to Isabella County in central
Michigan in 1915. They raised their four
children on a farm in that county and many of
their grandchildren still reside in the
mid-Michigan area.
|
|
|
This website concentrates on a group of Heidens
in Monroe County, Michigan. However, there are
people with this surname in other parts of
Michigan and even in the Petersburg and Dundee
areas of Monroe County who are from other
branches of the family. They may or may not be
blood relatives and only further research will
make that determination.
|
|
|
Through random sources, we have found maps and
information that tell where people with the
surname, Heiden, live in the U.S. Of course, we
have no evidence that any of these are of direct
relationship to the Monroe County Heidens.
Further research may make connections with some
of them...or not.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
One of
the fun parts of creating this website
was the opportunity to finally share the
hundreds of family pictures accumulated
over the past 30 years. The printed
version of
The
Heiden Family 1995 was only able to
display a few dozen images but the
website can handle them all. The
pictures above are of my grandfather,
William Carl Heiden and is part of
the
Through the Years photo section.
We have
photos for a wide variety of people,
events and occasions. Where possible, we
have captioned the pictures to the best
of our ability but would always be
interested in your comments, corrections
or stories. Please send an
email if
you have pictures you would like to
contribute and have displayed on this
website.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Documents
and photos are the basis of most genealogical
research.
We have included census forms, church records from Germany,
letters from German relatives from the 1920s,
military records, newspaper articles, obituaries,
ship passenger lists and wedding anniversary
announcements.
Also included are
contributions from others such as the 1985 book on
the Getty family and notes on the Rambow family
written by Caroline Rambow in 1925.
As part of this
section, we also show several versions of family trees
and charts that can be generated for various
branches of the families. These can be further
individualized for smaller family units.
|
|
|
|
|
In
1971 for some reason, I decided I wanted to know
more about the history of my family. I was 23
years old and my mother, Mildred, and I went to
see the oldest living person from the first
generation of Heidens born in the U.S. That was
my great Aunt Agnes, widow of John Heiden, son
of August.
During our visit, she
went to her attic and brought down a small
wooden box that contained documents and letters
from Germany and that was the beginning of this
long search.
|
|
|
The U.S. Census is a primary source for
information about individuals and families. It
can show details on where families lived and how many family members resided
together at a point in history. They also give information on the occupations,
level of education, year of immigration and other family background items.
|
|
|
Baptismal records, wedding certificates and
confirmation documents are included here for
many family members.
|
|
|
|
|
We have data on
around 3,000 individuals documented in the RootsMagic genealogy
software on our computer. Included on
the website are monthly lists for birthdays,
weddings and deaths of the non-living people in
the database. |
|
|
|
|
Back in 1971, I contacted what was then East
Germany to get information about our ancestors.
Their responses included some of the earliest
documents relating to August and Rika Heiden in
their native land of Mecklenburg-Schwerin,
Germany.
|
|
|
Using
PhotoShop and the genealogy software, RootsMagic,
we are able to create many different types of
family trees and charts. We can customize these
to your particular family and provide you with a
digital file (at no charge) which you can print.
|
|
|
This
book is available here in digital form. We have
used it extensively on the Getty family which is in
the maternal ancestry of Mildred (Mrs. Arthur) Heiden,
the author's
mother.
|
|
|
In the 1920s, relatives of August and Rika
Heiden sent letters relating the awful economic
conditions in Germany at that time and thanking
their American relatives for the help they were
able to provide. We have had these letters
translated into English and also show copies of
the originals.
|
|
|
Starting with microfilms from the Church of
Latter Day Saints in Salt Lake City, Utah to online sources
such as Ancestry.com, we have been able to search the
handwritten records of small churches in
Germany. We have copies of birth, marriage and
death records for many of our German born ancestors.
|
|
|
When
August and his family left Germany in 1873, they
had to acquire certain documentation from their
local government to allow
them to emigrate. These documents were in a box
that I got from my great aunt Agnes Heiden
in 1971. They have also been translated into
English and the originals are shown too. |
|
|
|
|
Many family members have had interactions with
the military ranging from filling out draft
registrations to serving in peacetime and in wars. Some
served in the Austro-Prussian War to the Civil
War to World War II, Korea, Vietnam and the
Persian Gulf.
|
|
|
|
|
Family members have had their names in the
papers for a wide variety of reasons (always
good). This ranges from sports stories
to school honors to recognition for
contributions to their community or service
organizations.
|
|
(Walter Berns) |
|
|
|
|
We
have accumulated obituaries, death notices,
funeral services and other related items for
over 165 family members. Many of these came from
newspaper clippings while others were available
online.
|
|
|
|
|
This
includes names of famous and a few infamous
people in Germany or the U.S. who have the
surname Heiden. At this time, we do not know if
any of these people are directly related to the
Heidens of Monroe County.
|
|
|
In 1925, Caroline
(Welnau) Rambow, wife of Henry Martin
Rambow, III left some hand written notes on the
history of the Rambow family from Germany to
America.
|
|
|
Here we have included copies of receipts from
the late 1800s into the early twentieth century
for transactions by Heiden family members. Also
represented are mortgage documents that help us
understand their early days in Michigan.
|
|
|
|
|
As part of the research, we have acquired
copies of the individual ship passenger lists that include
the members of our family. We also have pictures
of the actual ships that brought them across
the Atlantic Ocean |
|
|
Several of the surnames
and some given names in the family background
are found in different records with different spellings. Some are just mistakes while others are
the result of living in a largely illiterate
culture 150 to 200 years ago where only the
parish pastor could read and write. He would
only hear the name spoken and did his best
figuring out how it should be spelled.
|
|
|
|
|
This section contains August Heiden's
citizenship application and naturalization
documents. There is also a copy of a land
abstract for 8861 Dixon Road, the home of Wm
Carl and Mary Heiden among other documents.
|
|
|
This includes
newspaper articles, invitations, and announcements about significant wedding
anniversaries of family members.
|
|
|
|
|
These are announcements and news reports about
the weddings of many family members.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If you have any comments,
suggestions, pictures, family
stories or anything that would help
others to know and value this
wonderful family, please send me an
EMAIL.
Also,
please spread the word
about heidensofmonroe.com to other
members of these families. The whole
idea of this website is to help
family members know more about their
roots.
Thank You!
Ralph Heiden |
|
Copyright © 2024 -
|
|
|
|
|