Sunday, November 18, 2012

Lensing-Heim Wedding: A Bright Start in Life



Casper and Anna Lensing, my paternal grandparents, were married September 5,  1911.   Dad always told me that the wedding was a special one, as Anna was the oldest daughter of George and Elizabeth Heim, and very special in their eyes.  She was a very petite young woman with a 21 inch waist, which is easy to see in the accompanying photo.  This photo always hung in my grandmother's home above the photos of each of her nine children.  It was in a large glassed-in shadow box with a beautiful carved wooden frame.  Her original wedding veil was inside the box too, wrapped around the photograph, and I remember how I would stand and stare at that picture whenever I was there - there was a magical quality to it, it was beautiful.   

From what Dad told me, Great Grampa Heim built a huge platform stage for dancing and the wedding party lasted three days.  It was documented on the front page of the the local newspaper, The Scranton Independent.


Here is the article dated September 15, 1911:

The Scranton Independent
OUR MOTTO:  To Boost Scranton, Logan County, and Old Arkansaw, First, Last, and Then Some More." (I just love that!) 

Lensing-Heim

"On Tuesday, September 5th, at 9 o'clock a.m., during High Mass at the Catholic church at Morrison Bluff, Ark., Casper Lensing and Miss Annie Heim were united in marriage according to the rules and usages of the church by Rev. Martin Fleig.

After the ceremony, the bridal party were escorted by the Morrison Bluff Silver Cornet Band to the hospitable home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Heim, where they were joyously welcomed by a large concourse of relatives and friends.

A long table that would probably seat 30 or 40 people was loaded down with every description of eatables, as fast as one crowd satisfied the wants of the inner man another took their places, and this was kept up all day and far into the night.  Several beeves, hogs, etc., were slaughtered to take care of the big crowd.  No one went hungry or dry.

Dancing was one of the pleasant features, and the splendid music, handsome men and lovely maids and matrons, all combined with glorious weather and beautiful surroundings, reminded one of some of the famous Aladdan Lamp fairy scenes.

The happy couple were the recipients of many beautiful and costly presents, and their start in life seems indeed bright.

Among those in attendance from out of town were:  Herman Lensing of Little Rock; Mrs. Threasia Lyons of St. Louis; Mr. and Mrs. Pete Schmitz and family, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Heim, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Heim, with their families, Mrs. M. A. Heim and Miss Barbara Heim, all of Ft. Smith; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lensing and family of Shoal Creek.  It is a conservative estimate in giving the number in attendance at 400.

Casper Lensing is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lensing of Shoal Creek, and secretary of the Scranton Mercantile Co.; a young man that makes and holds your friendship and respect by his sincerity, truthfulness and utter abhorence of anything underhanded.

Miss Annie is the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Heim, and by her ladylike manner, sweet disposition and charming personality, has won the respect and esteem of all who have been fortunate enough to meet her.

The Independent, with hosts of others, wish Mr. and Mrs. Lensing all that life holds dear to the young, and that their old age may be tempered and shorn from the winds of adversity."



Saturday, November 3, 2012

Lensing - German Beginnings



The photo you see here is from May 1984.  The occasion of the get-together was my  Grandmother's funeral.  Anna Heim Lensing died that year and the family was gathered in Scranton, Arkansas, to pay our respects and say goodbye to "Gram" as we grandchildren called her.  At 92 years of age when she died, Gram was the Matriarch of a large and mighty family, as she became head-of-household - though not of her own choosing - in 1936 when my Grandpa Casper Lensing died of pneumonia. 

Some of us grandchildren are in this photo (front row, left, George Michael Lensing, ??, back row left - right Ray Buss, Barbara Lensing, Cyd Lensing, David Lensing, Mary Lensing Poirier, Eric Lensing, Cathy Lensing, Mary Ann Owens holding ???, Gene Buss. We are standing on the front porch of the old Lensing homestead - home of Henry and Christine Lensing, my great grandparents.   During this trip I remember as we were walking around inside the old, empty, house, I ran into an angry wasp that gave me a sting on the neck I'll never forget.  Also I remember seeing some pieces of the original wallpaper still hanging on a few of the walls.  It was a pretty floral design with a dusty rose background.  Perhaps one of the girls bedrooms?   I peeled a piece off and took it with me and still have it to this day - it was in surprisingly good shape.  

On the back of the picture was written the following:


"Home of Henry and Christine Lensing in Dublin, Arkansas, May 1984, on occasion of funeral of Anna Lensing."


A cousin, who I believe took the photo, sent a copy of it to me along with a document with some historical information.   It is as follows:


"SETTLEMENT OF LENSINGS IN LOGAN COUNTY ARKANSAS"


"Information provided to (my cousin) in letter dated March 15, 2007, from Fred C. Forst," (physical address and email address redacted by me)


"During the nineteenth century the U.S. Government granted large tracks of sparsely populated public lands to railroad companies with the requirement that the railroad companies construct a railroad through the area.  The railroad could then sell the land to settlers to pay for the construction and simultaneously gain customers for their service.  Such was the arrangement in the 1870s with the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railroad (LR&FSRR) that ran between these two Arkansas cities through the Arkansas River Valley north of the river through Clarksville.   The LR&FSRR decided to set aside most of their land-grant to Logan County for sale to German Catholic settlers.  They encouraged and aided the Benedictine religious order from St. Meinrad Abbey in Indiana, who founded New Subiaco Abbey in 1878, and the Convent of the Immaculate Conception, also in Indiana, who founded St. Scholastica Convent in the Shoal Creek community in 1879 (St. Scholastica Convent later moved to Fort Smith, AR.)


A man named Anton Hellmich, editor of Amerika, a German-language newspaper in St. Louis, bought some of this land for speculation purposes.  On 5 November 1879, he sold 440 acres to Herman Lensing, a recent immigrant from Prussia (Germany).  For the tract, he received $3000.00.  The deed was recorded on 5 December 1879.  Herman Lensing was the vanguard of the immigrants from Germany that are the concern of this story.  Three of his brothers, Bernard, Henry and Johan, would follow sometime in the next two years.  Joseph Buss also came with three Lensing brothers.  It was Henry Lensing who would make the permanent settlement in Logan County.


Henry Lensing's parents were Johann Heinrich Lensing and Maria Adelheid Dieks of Westphalia, Prussia.  This couple must have initially lived in Borken then moved to the nearby village of Burlo where they are recorded in church records as Henricus Lensing and Aleida Dickes (Dicks or Diks).  Borken is west of Muenster in the modern German state of Nordheim-Westfalen, not far from the Netherlands border.  The death card of Henry Lensing states that he was born in Kloester Burlo, Westphalia.  (Kloester" means monastery) and the monastery in Burlo is called Mariengarden Monestery.     Henry Lensing's birth is recorded in the baptismal register in St. Marien Church in Burlo as 14 February 1836.  According to the Parish Paster as of 2018, Father P. A. Hohn, the church was built around 1300.  Also, there is a WWII memorial outside the church with Bernhard Lensing's name listed on the memorial, having died 5 January 1944. He was a German soldier. In the 1960's, several members of the family, including Fr. Michael Lensing, George "General" Lensing, Cooky Neumeier and Nicky Neumeier visited and found this baptismal register in St. Marien Church in Burlo, (a tiny potato-farming community-with outstanding beer!) In 2018 my sister Catherine Lensing Harper and her family visited St. Marien Church in Burlo and according to Father Hohn, the baptismal record had been moved to the diocese office in Muenster.

 

St. Marien's Church in  Burlo, Germany 

 

 

Inside St. Marien's Church in Burlo Germany

 

 

The Alter at St. Marien's Church in Burlo, Germany

 

 

As best I can determine from existing county records and from those unreliable parish records, three of Herman's brothers, Bernard Joseph, Johann Joseph and Johannes Henricus (Henry), came to America about 1881.  Of the brothers Henry was the only one who was a long-term resident of Logan County.  All who carry the name and trace their ancestry to Logan County are descended from him and his eight children, including Casper Lensing.  Henry immigrated with his wife, Maria Anna Roesing, and at least one daughter.  Maria Anna, his first wife died at Shoal Creek on 31 August 1881.  Later, on 11 November 1884, Henry married Christine Duelmer with whom he had eight children, including Casper Lensing who would marry Anna Heim.  Henry lived until 1924 and is buried in St. Scholastica Cemetery, Shoal Creek, Arkansas, as is his wife Christine.  (We have visited this cemetery in Logan County during past family reunions.  We have also visited the old homestead of Henry and Christine Lensing, an abandoned house, where their family was reared.)


Casper and Anna had nine children:  Helen, George, William (later Fr. Michael), Dorothy, Mary Jane, Leo, James, Casper (Cap) and Thomas, all born in Scranton, Arkansas, in Logan County."


In the passage above, the names in BOLD represent the direct descendents of Johann Heinrich Lensing.    Members of my family tree.  So the "begats" go like this:

 
Johann Heinrich Lensing married Maria Adelheid Dieks, parents of
Johannes Henricus (Henry) Lensing married Christine Duelmer, parents of
Casper Lensing married Anna Crescence Heim, parents of
Thomas Andrew Lensing married Emma Jean Burris, parents of
Barbara Louise Lensing (Me)

Below is a photo of Henry and Christine Lensing and their children (the family of my grandfather Casper Lensing, back row, second from left)  If sources are correct, here are the names:  Back row:  Aloise, Casper, Teresa, Herman, Henry.  Front row:  Joseph, Henry, Anna, Christine, Rosa.  It is very possible that the house in the background is the very one that is in the photograph at the beginning of this entry - the old abandoned house that once belonged to the Henry Lensing family.  (German only spoken here!)