Welcome to the greatly expanded online version of The Heiden Family book which was distributed to about 125 people in 1995. We launched this website on April 1, 2025 which was the 151st birthday of William Carl Heiden, grandfather of the site's author, Ralph Heiden.

We started the research on this family in 1972 and it has now 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 with family members everywhere.

The printed edition could only contain a few family photos while this website includes several hundred pictures plus new facts and many added features. The site is structured to follow the Heiden and related families from their homes in Europe to Monroe County in southeastern Michigan.

As is customary on this type of family history website, specific dates and other data are only included for Non-Living family members.

This particular Heiden Family originated in the Mecklenburg region of northern Germany. August and Rika Heiden emigrated in 1873 and quickly 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 eight children, emphasis is given to his son William Carl and his wife, Mary Rambow. They raised 13 children and had 38 grandchildren, (including the author of this website) followed by 90 great grandchildren.

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.

Listed below are the earliest members of each family that we have found...so far..

The descendants of Arthur and Mildred (Roggerman) Heiden are directly related to over 3,200 people in these 10 families who make up our direct genetic background. They are all listed by name in the Direct Descendants lists section. Click here for a summary of the totals for each major family.
 

Although we are "open to the public", this website remains a work in progress. As of January 1, 2026, there were over 4,000 html pages which are the result of hundreds and hundreds of hours in front of the computer over many years. I will continue to add new pages, pictures and other items of interest as time goes by.

I will also continue to edit pages, search for typos and misspellings and malfunctioning hyperlinks. Please help by contacting me with anything that needs to be fixed or corrected. There is an email icon on the bottom of every page.

Also, please spread the word about heidensofmonroe.com to other members of these families. The whole idea of this website is to help our relatives know more about our roots. Any of the pictures, charts or other items can be made available and personalized for you...at no charge. Hope you enjoy the site!
 

 

Heiden is not a very common surname in Germany or the U.S. In our research which started in 1972, 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.

Future in-laws, the Rambows also lived in the same town in Germany and they followed the Heidens to Monroe County in 1874.

Included in this section are descriptions of many of the German 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 wife, Fredericka Knaack  are also documented. Rika's relatives, the Knaack, and Dreier families stayed in Germany as far as we know now. The "alleged" paternal family of August Heiden, the Kanseyers, are also included.

We document the relatives of Wm Carl Heiden's wife, Mary Rambow. The Rambow and Milhan families lived in the same villages with August and a Milhan (Fred) emigrated in 1873 and the Rambows in 1874 to the same area of Monroe County, Michigan.

The maternal ancestors of the author's mother, Mildred, include the Roggermans, Gettys, Rehmanns and Olivers. Charles John Roggerman lived on Rügen Island, Germany before coming to America in 1882. The James Getty Sr. family made the journey from what is now Northern Ireland in 1852. Our Oliver ancestors came from England.

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 in June, 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. Our discovery of her grave helped form a theory as to why August and his family came to Monroe.

The 1880 U.S. Census, shows them living in the City of Monroe with additional sons, "Willie" i.e. William Carl who was born in 1874 and Herman born in 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 but we are not certain about where they were born.

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. Their original home was on South Custer Road and their youngest son, John and his wife, Agnes, lived there until her death in 1981.

August died on September 5, 1922 at the age of 84 and Rika was also 84 when she passed away on January 14, 1926.

The maiden name of August Heiden's wife, Friedericka or Rika, was Knaack...at least that is the most common spelling we found. As with many German names from previous centuries, we have found that spelling in church and other records was not always consistent.

This section follows this family back to Johann Jochim Friedrick Knaack (1791-1835) who was born in Serrhan, Germany. He was Rika's grandfather.

Rika Heiden's mother's maiden name was Dreier. We have followed this branch back to Rika's great grandfather, Heinrich C. Dreier who was born around 1750 in Germany.

This section also includes information on the Laas, Burmeister and Regelin families who are cousins of Rika. Many of them settled in the Toledo area and they regularly attended the Heiden Reunions in the 20th century. It appears that Rika's first cousin, Dorothea (Regelin) Laas, was a key factor in the Heidens' decision to settle in Monroe County.

According to the German church records, Johann Cansier was angeblich i.e alleged to be, the person who fathered August Heiden. Following the family back in time, we found the surname spelled several different ways but the dates all matched. So, the earliest representative of this family is Hinrich Burmeister who was born in 1645 and would have been the maternal great grandfather of Johann and great great grandfather of August.

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 emigrated from Gross Wokern in 1874, one year after August Heiden who was also from that same tiny town.

William Carl 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.

The picture is of Mary's parents, Heinrich and Wilhelmina Rambow.

There were 3 William Heidens in the early generations. To differentiate among them, we will include their middle names. William Carl Heiden (left) to avoid confusion with his youngest son, William Frank Heiden (right). (They were sometimes mistakenly designated as Sr. and Jr.) William Leo Heiden is their nephew and cousin, respectively. He was a son of William Carl's older brother, Heinrich Heiden.

The Rambows share a long and close relationship to the Heiden family. Heinrich and Wilhelmina (Milhan) Rambow came from the same small German town as August and Rika (Knaack) Heiden. They emigrated to Monroe County one year after the Heidens and both families ended up living in Raisinville Township only a few miles apart.

Later, two of the Rambow's daughters married two of the Heiden's sons.

Wilhelmina Rambow's maiden name was Milhan. Her brother, Fred Milhan (left) came to Monroe County in 1873, one year before the Rambows. He eventually settled on a farm a short distance from where his sister's family bought a farm.

When the Rambows came to America in 1874, they were supposed to bring Fred and Wilhelmina's mother and their siblings, Fredareka, William and Christopher Milhan. Unfortunately, their mother died shortly before the trip but the others continued on their planned journey.

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 at 8861Dixon 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 each child was born while living in a different house. The author, for instance lived in four different houses (one of them twice) during the first 20 years of his life. All four were located on Dixon Road within just a few miles from Arthur's parents' home..

Art farmed on rented land all of his adult life while also 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.

Mildred Heiden's maiden name was Roggerman. She was the daughter of Ralph Raymond and Adeline "Addie" (Getty) Roggerman (left). She had three brothers, Ervin, Bob and Kenneth, Sr and one sister, Bernice Pickens.

This is another case where surnames sometimes appeared in different spellings. We have seen it as Roggerman, Roggeman and Roggermann in various documents.

Ervin Leonidas Getty (left) was Mildred Heiden's grandfather. He was married to Lena Belle Oliver and they had six children. Their oldest daughter, Adeline or Addie was Mildred's mother.

The Getty family originated in a small village in what is now Northern Ireland. We have followed it back to John Getty, Sr who was born in Portglenone in County Antrim in 1788.

Thanks to a family history named "A Bit O' Yesterday" by Monita Fergus, we have accumulated a lot of information on this large gamily.

Ervin Getty's wife and Mildred Heiden's grandmother was Lea Belle Oliver (left). Her family originated in England just south of London. So far, we have followed this family back to Edward Oliver, Sr. who was born in 1738 in Maidstone, Kent, England

Married to Charles John Roggerman, Louisa Rehmann was Mildred Heiden's paternal grandmother. She was born in New Jersey where many people of this family still reside.

We do not know how she and Charles met but they were married in Adrian, Michigan in 1884.

We have a fairly large amount of information on the Rehmans, thanks to a genealogical document prepared by Jacqueline R. Harrington, a fourth great granddaughter of oldest ancestor on record, Wilhelmus Rehmann. The document was provided to my sister, Kay Dushane, by Beverly Tamanini who is also in the Rehmann family.

Several family traditions and activities have been present throughout the history of the Heiden Family in Monroe County. Chief among these were the Annual Heiden Family Reunion, the Lutheran Church, historic Bridge School and local community schools.

Many of the earlier generations were farmers or worked for local businesses. We have included a sampling of occupations for some of those ancestors.

Over the decades, we have collected many anecdotes and family remembrances from dozens of people in the families covered in this website. Some were submitted in writing while others resulted from recorded meetings with groups of relatives.

We are always looking for more stories and memories, send an Email.

A large majority of the people of the first two or three generations of this group of Heidens in America lived in Monroe County, Michigan.

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 geographic center of most family activities and residences from 1873 into the 1970s revolved around a relatively small area in Raisinville, Ida and Dundee Townships. We have identified over 85 homes, farms, churches, schools, reunion sites and other places in the county which played a role in at least one family member's life. Click on the Homes & Places Map link to see them all.

One of the fun parts of creating this website was the opportunity to finally share the hundreds of family pictures accumulated over the past 53 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.

In a section called Family Group Portraits, we have put together a collection of individual pictures of people in the families of the first three American generations. To the right is the page for the Herman Heiden family. Click on it to see a larger version.

We have pictures 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 have displayed on this website.

Documents and photos are always 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 anniversaries and 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 (Weilnau) Rambow in 1925.

As part of this section, we show several versions of family trees and charts that can be generated for various branches of the families. These can be further individualized for a particular group of family members.