vital records

Louis Schillinger Marries Louisa Bauer

Louis and Louisa Schillinger

Louis and Louisa Schillinger

Louis Schillinger and Louisa Bauer were married on 21 September 1885 in East New York. I recently acquired their marriage record from the New York Municipal Archives, and it contains vital clues to further research on the Bauer family. Previously, all I had confirmed was that Louisa Bauer’s mother was also named Louisa, as she shows up in census records as a widow living with her daughter and son-in-law. I did not know the father’s name or the mother’s maiden name. Now I do, thanks to this valuable vital record.

According to the Marriage Record of Town of New Lots, East New York:

  • Louis Schillinger married Louisa Bauer on 21 September 1885.
  • Both were residents of East New York at the time of their marriage.
  • Louis was 22 years old and Louisa was 20 years old (which would make their birth years approximately 1863 and 1865, respectively).
  • Louis was working as an architect.
  • It was the first marriage for both of them.
  • Louis’ parents were listed as Xavier Schillinger and Catherine Autetter. [These names were already known to me, but they are alternate spellings for his first name and her last name.]
  • Here’s the really exciting news! Louisa’s parents are listed as Anton Bauer and Louisa Hoefler.
  • The attestator [witness] was A. Nieman of East New York.
Louis Schillinger-Louisa Bauer Marriage Record

Louis Schillinger-Louisa Bauer Marriage Record

Xaver Schillinger’s Death Certificate

I found a reference to Xaver Schillinger’s death certificate in the New York, New York, Death Index, 1862-1948 on Ancestry.com.  The reference gave me the certificate number, which I then obtained from the NYC Municipal Archives.  It arrived in the mail yesterday!

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate

So let’s take a look at what we can learn from his death certificate.

1.  Xaver Schillinger died at Brooklyn Hospital. (The Brooklyn Hospital is located at 121 DeKalb Avenue in Brooklyn.

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate - Annotation 1

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 1

2. The death certificate confirms, not only the date of death, his sex and race, but it also confirms that his wife Catherine predeceased him.  This allows me to look for her death records sometime between when she last shows up in a census (1900) and his year of death (1923).

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 2

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 2

3.  I have his approximate year of birth as 1836.  His death certificate lists his age as 87.  Since he died in 1923 (1923-87=1836), his death certificate agrees with what I know to be his birth year.  Unfortunately, it does not list the months or day, nor does it list his specific birth date, so I cannot confirm his birth beyond the year.

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 3

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 3

4. The death certificates agrees that he is an immigrant from Germany and it lists his number of years in the United States as 62.  This would place his year of immigration as 1861.  My previous records had his immigration occurring in 1860, with his enlistment in the US Army by March 1861.  So his death certificate is consistent (within 1 year) of the information I already had on record.  Taking in to account that the information on the death certificate is being reported by a 3rd party (his daughter Catherine), who was not alive at the time of his immigration, I am satisfied that the record is consistent with other documentation.

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 4

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 4

5. The death certificated gives me his parents’ names!  This is probably the most exciting piece of information on the document.  I had his parents listed as “Franz Xaver Schillinger” and “Franziska Stockel”.  Now these names are close, but I never had documentation of these names – just information from other people’s family trees.  This is the first official record that I’ve come across with their names on it.  It’s important to note that his father is not listed as Franz, but as Xaver.  The one issue I’ve had is that I have found no documentation for this Xaver to have a first name of Franz either, though that is how I’ve come across him being recorded in others’ trees.  Also, his mother’s last name is spelled with an “a” on the death certificate, not an “o”.  These are great leads for tracking down more information about the family in Germany, as neither of his parents appear to have immigrated to the United States.

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 5

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 5

6. His residence at his time of death was 148 Logan Street.  This is consistent with my other records.  In the 1920 census, he is listed as living with his daughter Catherine Fausner (who is also the reporting party on the death certificate) at the Logan Street address.  This information helps to confirm that I have the death certificate for the correct person.

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 6

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 6

7.  Xaver Schillinger was in the hospital from 2 Oct 1923 until 6 Oct 1923, when he passed away at 12:30pm.  He was attended by Dr. T.M. Dudley.  His cause of death is: “right strangulated femoral hernia.  Left sliding inguinal hernia. Hernioplasty.”  The duration of the condition is listed as “many” years.  A contributing/secondary cause of death is listed as “broncho pneumonia“.  So it would appear that Xaver went to the hospital to have to hernias repaired, one of which, at least, is a very serious condition.  The right strangulated femoral hernia can cause the blood to be cut off to the bowels and result in necrosis – which is life threatening.  His stay in the hospital was complicated by a bout of pneumonia, which was even made more dangerous because of his age.

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 7

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 7

8. He is buried at Holy Trinity Cemetery.  I had found a previous reference to an Xaver Schillinger being buried in Trinity Cemetery, but had no confirmation which Trinity Cemetery or that it was my Xaver Schillinger.  The death certificate is consistent with the burial record I found, which also includes the plot information (Block 5, Row 6).  Most Holy Trinity Cemetery is located next to The Evergreens Cemetery on Central Avenue in Brooklyn.

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 8

Xaver Schillinger Death Certificate Annotation 8

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John Wylie Johns Death Certificate

John Wylie Johns Death Certificate

John Wylie Johns Death Certificate

I talked previously about how I found the death certificate for John Wylie Johns. He is my 2nd Great Grand Uncle and is the younger brother, by one year, of my 2nd Great Grandfather, William Jackson Johns. John was born in 1868 and died in 1927.

According to the death certificate: (more…)

Using FamilySearch to Find Georgia Death Certificates

While trying to find information on my 3rd great grandparents (James Jackson and Ellen Moore Johns), I came across the death certificate of their son, John Wylie Johns. I located this death certificate on FamilySearch.org. From their main page, I selected Search. Instead of entering in search terms, I scrolled to the bottom of the page and elected to search by browsing the records.

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Baldwin Family Mystery Update…. Disappointment

I recently ordered a vital records search from the New York City Vital Records office.  I ask them for several birth, marriage and death records associated with Sadie Donnelly, John Reilly and both Nelson Baldwins.  I just received the first response that is in response to the two marriage records I requested.  The first record I request was a search for Sadie’s marriage to John Reilly on April 30, 1893 in Brooklyn.  They were unable to find the record of the marriage.

I also requested a search for a marriage to Nelson Baldwin in Brooklyn, but I requested a three year search based on the information I found in the 1910 Federal Census.  I requested the search be conducted for 1908, 1909 and 1910.  They were unable to find the record of the marriage.

So my next thought is to look in Queens for vital records and to start tracking down potential Catholic churches for record of a church wedding.  They were living in the Williamsburg area of Brooklyn, so I plan to start there for possible neighborhood churches.  I also plan on contacting the cemetery where Sadie is buried for any potential information that they may have.