Sophia Christina Maria Heiden was born in the village of Gross Wokern on  October 23, 1807 to Johann Jochim Diederich Heiden and his wife, the former Ilsabe Catharina Sophia Teschenow.  Maria died November 30, 1887 in Gross Wokern. (German Birth Record)

According to the records, Maria was a madchen which means that she was a house servant or maid of some sort. The details of her life circumstances are long lost but from the church records, it appears that she had two children out of wedlock by two different men.

 In 1832, she had a daughter, Fredericka Sophia Henrietta JoAnna (Knack) Heiden (right), by a man named Wilhelm Ave. Fredericka's daughter, Marie Rudolphine Johanne Auguste (Schmidt, Schafhausen) Dohmstritch and grand-daughter, Emilie (Schafhousen) Dahm sent letters from Rostock, Germany to Rika (Knaack) Heiden (Mrs August) in Michigan during the turbulent times of the 1920's.

Maria's second child, August Friedrich Anton Theodor Heiden (left) was born Saturday, January 27, 1838 in the Village of Gross Wokern in the province of Mecklenburg-Schwerin in Germany. Records show that he was baptized on February 4th of that year.

His father was listed in the church records as "angeblich" which in English means  "alleged to be" Johann Cansier (or Canseyer or Kanseyer or Kansehr  as spelled in other documents. See below for an explanation). As a result, August was given his mother's surname so we are the Heiden Family and not the Cansier Family.

On November 15, 1844, Maria married Friedrich Leonhard Heinrich Stüve. August was six years old at that time that Friedrich became his step-father.

 

The spelling of this family's name seems to have varied over the years. Most of the people were illiterate and relied on the pastor to write their names into the church record books. Often, the pastor simply spelled a name phonetically to the best of his ability or just spelled it without reference to earlier entries by another cleric.

The birth, baptism, confirmation and parent records for what we will call the Kanseyer line all match in terms of dates, locations and relationships. The exact spelling of the surname, however, did not stay consistent over the decades.

The first generation we found listed the father's name as Jacob Canseyer. His first child is named Anna Ilsabe Canseyer but the second child is listed as Hinrich Kanseyer. All of Hinrich's children in the next generation are recorded as Kanseyer.

The children of his son, Christoph Friedrich Wilhelm Kanseyer continued that spelling except for one child whose name was spelled Kanseier and a son, Johann Carl Ernst who was listed as "Kansehr" in his chruch's records.

The next change may have come about because Christoph's church was in the village of Alt Sϋhrkow.  His son, Johann, lived in the village of Thϋrkow and the church records there also even misspelled his village of birth as Alt Sϋrkow.

In the records report we received from East Germany in 1973, the man listed as the "alleged" father of August Friedrich Anton Theodor Heiden was Johann Cansier of Gross Wokern. So, this was yet another clergyman spelling the name of a man who was most likely not personally involved in the process of recording his illegitimate child's birth.

Since that largest number of records spelled the name Kanseyer, that is the one we will use unless or until we find other evidence. Comments? Send an EMAIL.