Laur Family and others

Genealogy of the Laur, Lauer, Soos families together with information on cities in Germany including Laichingen, Feldstetten and Machtolsheim.

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VOIGHT, Natalie S

Female


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  VOIGHT, Natalie S (daughter of VOIGHT, Rev Paul Gerhardt and WILLIAMS, Elizabeth Natalie).

    Family/Spouse: WILLIAMS. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  VOIGHT, Rev Paul Gerhardt was born on 25 May 1908 in New York; died on 29 Sep 1997 in Holley, Orleans County, NY.

    Paul married WILLIAMS, Elizabeth Natalie on 10 Nov 1937 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY. Elizabeth (daughter of WILLIAMS, Hugo Johannes Friedrich and WEBBER, Martha Friedricke Auguste) was born on 8 Mar 1910 in New York; died in Jul 1986 in Holley, Orleans County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  WILLIAMS, Elizabeth Natalie was born on 8 Mar 1910 in New York (daughter of WILLIAMS, Hugo Johannes Friedrich and WEBBER, Martha Friedricke Auguste); died in Jul 1986 in Holley, Orleans County, NY.
    Children:
    1. VOIGHT, Elisabeth Martha
    2. 1. VOIGHT, Natalie S
    3. VOIGHT, Bruce John
    4. VOIGHT, Judith Ann


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  WILLIAMS, Hugo Johannes Friedrich was born on 4 Jan 1881 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY (son of WILLIAMS, Gustave Hermann and WALK, Christine); died on 6 Jan 1971 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY.

    Notes:

    Niagara Gazette
    Hugo F. Williams
    Gazette Lockport Bureau
    LOCKPORT - Hugo F. 90, of 238 Windermere Road, retired partner and former vice president of the Williams Brothers Department Store here, died at Lockport Memorial Hospital Wednesday (Jan. 6, 1971) after a brief illness. A native of Sanborn, he was born Jan. 4, 1881, the son of Gustave and Christine Walck Williams. He was a partner and officer of the Williams Brothers Co. for 48 years and retired as vice president 15 years ago. He was a former member of the Lockport Kiwanis Club and was active in church work at Mount Olive and formerly of Trinity Lutheran Church. He is survived by his widow Martha A Williams; a daughter, Mrs. Paul (Elizabeth) Voigt of Brockport; a son., Dr. Frederick W. Williams of New York City; a brother, Robert A. Williams of this city; four grandchildren, six great - grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. Friends may call at the Lange Funeral Home where the family will be present from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Services will be held at Mount Olive Lutheran Church at 1 p.m. Saturday by Rev. David Albertine. Burial will be in Cold Spring Cemetery. Contributions to the Lutheran Hour or to the building improvement fund will be acceptable as tribute, the family said.

    Hugo married WEBBER, Martha Friedricke Auguste on 6 Jun 1906 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY. Martha (daughter of WEBBER, August F and DOEBLER, Wilhelmina) was born on 11 Jan 1886 in Germany; died on 3 Sep 1971 in Town of Newfane, Niagara County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  WEBBER, Martha Friedricke Auguste was born on 11 Jan 1886 in Germany (daughter of WEBBER, August F and DOEBLER, Wilhelmina); died on 3 Sep 1971 in Town of Newfane, Niagara County, NY.

    Notes:

    Niagara Falls Gazette
    MRS. MARTHA WILLIAMS
    LOCKPORT - The widow of one of the partners of the Williams Brothers Department Store here, Mrs. Martha A. Williams, 85, died Friday (Sept. 3, 1971) at Newfane Nursing Home. Mrs. Williams, who formerly lived at 2348 Windemere Road, was married to Hugo F. Williams, who died in January. Her home made the outstanding Lockport Garden in the early 1940s. Born in Germany to August and Wilhelmine Doebler Webber, she carne to Wolcottsburg when she was nine months old. She had been a resident of this city for nearly 60 years. She was a member of Trinity Lutheran Church for 60 years, a charter member of Mt. Olivet Lutheran Church, and a member of the Lockport Garden Club. She was also known for her needlework. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Paul (Elizabeth) Boigt of Brockport; a son, Frederick W. William of New York City; a brother, John F. Webber of Buffalo; a sister, Mrs. Louis Dornfield of North Tonawanda, four grandchildren and six great grandchildren. Friends may call at the Lane Funeral Home Monday. Services will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at Mt. Olivet Lutheran Church. with the Rev. David Albertin officiating. Burial will be in Cold Spring Cemetery. Memorials may be made to Mt. Olivet Church.

    Children:
    1. 3. WILLIAMS, Elizabeth Natalie was born on 8 Mar 1910 in New York; died in Jul 1986 in Holley, Orleans County, NY.
    2. WILLIAMS, Frederick W was born on 19 Aug 1911 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY; died on 21 Jul 1999 in Trenton, Mercer County, NJ.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  WILLIAMS, Gustave Hermann was born on 14 Dec 1841 in Stettin, Prussia (son of WILLIAM, Jean and SCHULTZ, Friedericke Wilhelmine); died on 1 Jan 1940 in Town of Lewiston, Niagara County, NY.

    Notes:

    Buffalo Courier Express

    FUNERAL TODAY FOR PIONEER, G. H. WILLIAMS
    Sanborn man long had been associated with development of his (sic) area
    Courier-Express Niagara Falls Bureau.
    Sanborn, Jan. 2 - For the last Civil War soldier of this area, Gustave Herman Williams, 98, funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Williams, formerly an active farmer on the Lockport Road in the Walmore area, lived here in retirement several years. An immigrant from Stettin, Germany, Mr. Williams was active in work of the old Buffalo Synod, now a part of the American Lutheran Church. He came to Walmore in 1857, following the second migration from Prussia of a large number of dissenters from the religious program of King Frederick Wilhelm III. Mr. Williams' parents belonged to a group led by J. A. A. Grabau, militant pastor, who defied the king's attempt to consolidate two religious groups in the Prussian kingdom. He was the last of the immigrant group.
    Niagara County was a comparative wilderness when he came to the Walmore-Bergholtz area, he was wont to recall. Two-wheeled carts, oxen, Indian trail roads were some of the factors he spoke of to his grandchildren, numbering eighteen, and to his 24 great-grandchildren. Pioneers made their livelihood by cutting cord wood piled in huge stacks along the rail way, which is now the Falls road of the New York Central. Joined Sixth Cavalry
    Hardly had the newcomer cut himself a farm out of the hardwood district, when he was to heed the call of Lincoln for troops. Having fled religious persecution in which hordes of their kin were cast into dungeons. the German pioneers felt keen sympathy for the oppressed in the South. Mr. Williams entered Company K, Sixth Cavalry, early in the Civil War and was mustered out honorably in 1865. .He was the last of the Boys in Blue from this area.
    The year afterward, he married Christine Walck. To them were born William F., Albert P., Hugo F., Robert G. Williams, proprietors of Williams Brothers' Lockport department store, all of the Lock City, Edward H., of the Ward, Road, and two daughters, both deceased, Emma A., and Mrs. Edward L. Haseley. Susan Elizabeth Milleville, arrived to become his 24th great grandchild on December 30th. Fond of children, the nonagenarian kept his interest in them despite loss of sight. Recollections of hardships in Niagara County always impressed his visitors. He was renowned for a remarkable memory, being able to describe scenes and locations in his native Prussia more accurately than recently returned travelers.
    He was an elder of St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church in Walmore for eighteen years.
    The Rev. Edward A. Grabau, pastor of St. Peter's, will preside at last rites in the family home in Franklin Street at 1 o'clock, and at St. Peter's at 2. Burial will be in the Walmore Cemetery.
    -
    Niagara Falls Gazette

    Gustave Williams' Death Recalls
    Pioneer Days in Niagara County
    His life Closely Associated with Walmore and Bergholtz Districts.
    Tales that Father Gustave H. Williams, Sanborn nonagenarian, who died at his home in that village last week, told of early rural life in Niagara County were being pieced together in many a Walmore-Bergholtz home this week. Though a veil came over the eyes of the old resident, blotting the sight of several modern inventions from his eyes, nevertheless his kin and acquaintances found the pioneer farmer the source of many an engaging narrative on the development of the Niagara region.
    The death on New Year's Day, 1940, of Mr. Williams, 98, reunited a pioneer couple who had seen and told of the changes in Niagara, county in the course of nearly a century. Born in Prussia on December 14. 1841, Mr. Williams came to the Walmore-Bergholtz district, near the Municipal airport, from Bergholtz, Germany, in June, 1857. He married Christine Walck on November 8, 1866, and together the pair saw the present suburban area emerge from a hardwood forest sparsely populated.
    Lewiston Busy Place
    When Father Williams first came to Niagara county in June, 1857, Lewiston, not Lockport, and Suspension Bridge, Manchester, or Niagara Falls, was the seat of activity - despite the earlier opening of the
    Erie canal The river village with its wide streets was the main seat of learning. The famous old Union school in Lockport was yet to become famous as a Niagara Academy. Wind blown vessels still came to the docks at Lewiston, and Father Williams came thence from Bergholtz, Prussia, to locate on a farm near the Ward and Niagara road. Later he shifted his farming operations to what is now known as the old Williams farm on the Lockport road, near the Tuscarora road in the Walmore district. Walmore and Bergholtz in America shared with Milwaukee, Wis., the distinction of being a haven for two major migrations from Germany, the Germany of earldoms, dukedoms, and duchys (sic), the first in 1839, the second in 1845.
    Comes to U. S.
    King Frederick Wilhelm III of Prussia attempted to force the Reformed and the Lutheran churches into one body, but a militant body of the latter, led by the Rev. J. A. A. Grabau assisted by Pastor Van Rohr of the Bergholz-Walmow region in Prussia, stubbornly resisted. Pastor Grabau and many of his fellow leaders were imprisoned. This early Prussian treatment failed to quench the spirit of the dissenters, so the Rev. Grabau finally obtained permission for his people to emigrate to America.
    For the fugitives, the trip across the Atlantic had its share of terrors and thrills. Lightning hit the main mast of one of the first barks loaded with Germans en route to the United Sates, and at times it seemed that the band would never see land again. It took the William family more than six weeks to cross.
    What is now Suspension Bridge, Father Williams recalled, held only a handful of homes, modest Irish dwellings. At what is now the site of the Zion Lutheran church, at Tenth street and Michigan avenue, was a huge grove of hickory nut trees which provided quite a feast for the strangers.
    Built Crude Homes
    The homes on the Indian reservation were located more to the north of the present settlement, many being without stairs and some with only high slit open windows. The farm of Chief John Mt. Pleasant was one of the attractions of the Niagara area, being a huge affair where he grew corn in abundance. Numerous Indian workers and travelers-the stages stopped at the place, as one of the sights of Niagara-had their quarters there.
    The Tuscarora road, winding trail from La Salle, was but on oxen trail leading from the Indian fishing grounds along Cayuga creek through a thick swamp to the reservation. Not far away, near the municipal airport, was an Indian pit-fall which early German settlers continued to use for bear while breaking home lands out of the woods.
    News Spreads
    Even in Prussia, word of Niagara County's famous hardwoods, hickory, oaks and elms, had spread. An old Prussian belief was that wheat would thrive in grounds where hard wood abounded.
    The first plantings grew rapidly in what is now the Town of Wheatfield where Father Williams and his bride, Christine Walck, first made their home. The Williams family saw the Civil War break out right on the heels of their arrival. From that period till his retirement, decades ago, Father William noted the rural happenings and progress of Niagara county. His death last week removed a living encyclopedia (sic) of Niagara history from the local scene.

    Niagara Gazette - 12/16/1936

    SANBORN, Dec. 16.-Gust&ve H.
    Williams, of Franklin street, celebrated
    his ninety-fifth birthday at his
    home on Dec. 14. Mr. Williams has
    five'sons, Willam P., Albert P., Hugo
    and Robert Williams, of Lockport,
    and Edward Williams, of Lockport
    road. A daughter, Miss Emma Williams,
    died in 1928. Mrs.' Edward L.
    Haseley, another daughter, died in
    February of this year.-His wife, Christine
    Walck, died in 1920. There are
    also 18 grandchildren and 16 great
    grandchildren. Ferdinand Williams,' a
    brother, lives at Niagara Falls.
    At the age of 15, Mr. Williams came
    with his, parents from Germany and
    lived to the Ward road until his marriage
    when they moved to the present
    homestead where he was a successful
    farmer. Twenty five years ago he
    moved to his present home in franklin
    street, where his granddaughter,
    Miss Martha Williams, cares for him.
    He is in good health, except for
    failing eyesight, and enjoys listening
    to the radio. Mr. William's is'one of
    the two veterans of the Civil War to
    this community. His sons and families
    and many friend's visited him during
    the weekend and on his birthday

    Gustave married WALK, Christine on 8 Nov 1866 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY. Christine (daughter of WALK, Gottfried and SCHULZ, Christine Friedericke Louise) was born on 11 May 1846 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 22 Apr 1920 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  WALK, Christine was born on 11 May 1846 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY (daughter of WALK, Gottfried and SCHULZ, Christine Friedericke Louise); died on 22 Apr 1920 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY.
    Children:
    1. WILLIAMS, Emma Helene Auguste was born on 18 Aug 1867 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 17 Aug 1928 in Niagara County, NY.
    2. WILLIAMS, William Ferdinand Gustav was born on 8 Jan 1869 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 31 Mar 1943 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY.
    3. WILLIAMS, Martha Emilie Rebecka was born on 28 Mar 1871 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 30 Apr 1871 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY.
    4. WILLIAMS, Rudolph Heinrich Edward was born on 2 Mar 1872 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 17 Oct 1945 in Niagara County, NY.
    5. WILLIAMS, Albert Hermann Philipp was born on 31 Aug 1874 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 13 Jul 1962 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY.
    6. WILLIAMS, Ella Cordelia Christina was born on 17 Jun 1878 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 12 Feb 1936 in Town of Lewiston, Niagara County, NY.
    7. 6. WILLIAMS, Hugo Johannes Friedrich was born on 4 Jan 1881 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 6 Jan 1971 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY.
    8. WILLIAMS, Robert Arthur Bernhard was born on 11 Sep 1886 in Town of Wheatfield, Niagara County, NY; died on 23 Jan 1972 in Lockport, Niagara County, NY.

  3. 14.  WEBBER, August F was born in Jan 1860 in Germany; died on 1 May 1937 in North Tonawanda, Niagara County, NY.

    Notes:

    Niagara Gazette - 5/1/1937

    NORTH TONAWANDA. MAY 1-
    August C. Weber, 77 years old, died
    today at the home of his daughter,
    Mrs. Louis A. Dornfeld, 593 Falls
    boulevard. He was born ln Germany
    and came to America 56 years ago
    and lived ln Lockport with the exception
    of the last two years spent here.
    He was a member of St. Paul's
    Lutheran church.
    Surviving are two daughters Mrs.
    Hugh P. Williams, of Lockport and
    Mrs. Dornfeld; one son. John, of
    Lockport; two brothers, Leonard and
    Fred, of Lockport, and five grandchildren.
    Rites will be held Monday at 3:30
    p. m. from the home of Mrs. Williams,
    ln Washburn street, Lockport, with
    Interment in Trinity Lutheran cemetery,
    Lockport.

    August + DOEBLER, Wilhelmina. Wilhelmina was born in Sep 1858 in Germany; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  DOEBLER, Wilhelmina was born in Sep 1858 in Germany; and died.
    Children:
    1. 7. WEBBER, Martha Friedricke Auguste was born on 11 Jan 1886 in Germany; died on 3 Sep 1971 in Town of Newfane, Niagara County, NY.
    2. WEBBER, Elsie H was born on 2 Aug 1888 in Germany; died on 2 Aug 1974 in North Tonawanda, Niagara County, NY.
    3. WEBBER, John F was born in Dec 1889 in New York; and died.



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