Family History

The Christian and Joachim

Hünerjäger Families,

From Pomerania to America


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This is a chronicle with historical photos of the Honeyager and Huneryager Families of Waukesha County, Wisconsin and Elkhart County, Indiana.



Our founding father and mother - Christian and Sophia Honeyager
Click for a larger picture.
Please add comments, corrections and additions.

We hope you feel the heart felt gratitude towards the people that spent hours, weeks and months researching our/your background.

You can help - as you read, add your thougths and comments. Of if you would like to help building this history section, send us an email. We can use this presentation and this site to stay together as a family. We started in a very small community in Germany. We can stay together as a large family with the help of this tool.

Teach our children their roots.

"Its roots may grow old in the ground
and its stump die in the soil,

yet at the scent of water it will bud
and put forth shoots like a plant. "


Job 14:8-9






Dedication
Contributors
Written by Many people making this possible   

We all thank

Charles Thiesenhusen M.D., Dale Bauer and Jane (Honeyager) Bauer after completing this work, they  dedicated it to Myrtle O.K. (Honeyager) Thiesenhusen on her 100th Birtday on March 2, 2005.

People that have contributed:

        Barbara and Dale Burnell, Waukesha, Wisconsin,
        Larry Huneryager, Elkhart, Indiana
        Jane Bauer, Golden Valley, Minnesota,
        Ruth Honeyager, Dousman, Wisconsin,
        Irma Stevenson Hey, Waukesha, Wisconsin
        Armin Honeyager, Waukesha, Wisconsin
        Myrtle Honeyager Thiesenhusen, Waukesha, Wisconsin
        Arthur and Bonnie Thiesenhusen, Waukesha, Wisconsin
        Elizabeth Coffman, Temple, Texas
        Earl Charvet, Kansas City, Missouri

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Introduction
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   

This presentation traces the Christian and Joachim Hünerjäger families from Pomerania in the 18th century to Wisconsin and Indiana into the 1930s.


In Germany, the family name spelled their name Hünerjäger or Huhnerjaeger.
It combines the words: Hüner = partridge, and Jäger = hunter.

In the United States, the spelling of the name changed to:
Honeyager (Wisconsin), Hunerjager (Wisconsin), and Huneryager (Indiana).

Barbara and Dale Burnell have an excellent Honeyager/Huhnerjaeger genealogy on www.rootsweb.com . (Go to the Family Tree section.)  They have supplied most of the old family photos used here.

Corrections and additions may be sent to:
Charles L. Thiesenhusen, M.D.
108 NW 44th Street, Kansas City, MO 64116

Or add them as a comment below.

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Family Tree
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   

Descendents of Johann Frederick Ludwig Hünerjäger


Honeyager Family Tree

Click the link below to view a larger version.

Highlights: yellow = Immigrants to America; blue =Born in America.

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Germany Today
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   
By the 10th cent. A.D., when its recorded history began, Pomerania was inhabited by Slavic tribes. It was conquered by Boleslaus I (992–1025) of Poland but became an independent duchy early in the 11th cent. Poland regained control in the 12th cent. and introduced Christianity.
Germany Today
The country was split into two principalities. Pomerelia, as E Pomerania came to be known, became independent in 1227, was annexed to Poland in 1294, and was taken in 1308–9 by the Teutonic Knights, who incorporated it into their domain in East Prussia.

Pomerania was a vast state in Prussian Empire in the 19th century. After World War II, Pomerania was split in two areas separated by the Oder River. The Eastern area (Hinterpomern) became part of modern Poland and Kaliningrad (Russia).

The Western area (Vorpomern) remained under German rule. The northwestern region became part the modern state of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania. - This is where the Hünerjäger family lived before they came to America.


Read more about Pomerania:

Its History
A map from 1897
More History



 


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Pomerania-Mecklenburg
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   

1897 Pomerania-Mecklenburg Map


pomerania-mecklenburg-map





































The former boundary between Mecklenburg and Pomerania ran thru the middle of Kummerower See (Kummerow Lake).

The Hünerjäger family villages were in Kreis Demmin (Demmin County), immediately northeast of the lake. (Circled)



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Demmin-Grammentin
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   
Demmin-Grammentin German Map origin of the Honeyager FamilyThe Johann Frederick Ludwig Hünerjäger family lived in Lindenhof, formerly known as Käsecke (or Käseke). The church they attended was in Schönfeld, in Verchen Parish, west of their home in Lindenhof.

Previous generations of the Hünerjäger family lived in Grammentin, about seven miles south of Lindenhof. There are still Hünerjäger families there today, mostly on the south end Kummerow Lake.

The family of Sophia Timm, Christian Hünerjäger’s wife, was from Trittelwitz, about two miles north of Schönfeld.

The Ernest Hünerjäger family, a distant relation that lived in Cleveland, Ohio in 1900, immigrated in 1891 from Alt Kenzlin just east of Grammentin.



See today's Google map of:

Grammentin



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German Baptism Record
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   

German Baptism Record Just after our nation was createdJabel, 1797

Most church records from Pomerania are not available on microfilm. They are only available to researchers at local German parishes with the consent of the minister.

This is an example of a church record for a distant cousin from nearby Jabel, Mecklenburg. It states that:
Christian Carl Frederick, son of Christian Hünerjäger and Catharina Dorothia Springenfeld, was born
27 January and baptized 29 February 1797, followed by the sponsor’s names.

(Note: “Huenerjäger” is highlighted in yellow.)

Click the image for a larger view...

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1849 Demmin, Germany - Baptism Record
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   

1849-demmin-germany-baptism-record-honeyager-590x111.jpg









This is an example of a parish record of another distant Honeyager cousin 50 years later.
It is from the same county in Pomerania where our family originated.

The baptism record is from Demmin County in 1849: Column 1: (entry number) 249.
Column 2: (father)  Karl Gustav Frederick Virgils; Tagelöhner (day laborer); A.L. Nr.64 (family number) Column 3: (mother) Hanna Catharina Hünerjäger
Column 4: (daughter) Johanna Maria Caroline
Column 5: born 17 October (1849) at 10 o’clock.

Note: Another member of the Virgils family lived in the same village as our ancestors,
and sailed to America on the same ship with the Martin Christian Hünerjäger family.

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1871 German Census, Kasecke Village
Germany
Written by Many people making this possible   
1871-german-census-kasecke-village-honeyager-425x609.jpg

Christian and Joachim Hünerjäger,
our ancestors, were from Käsecke,
Demmin County. Pomerania. 
(Today, the village is known as Lindenhof.)

The census shows that in 1871,
the village had 24 households with
140 residents. Four years earlier, the
village had 149 residents.








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Kummerow Lake
Germany
Written by Written by Many people making this possible   
Kummerow Lake Today

























This is a contemporary photo of Kummerow Lake (» Kummerower See «)
near Lindenhof (Käsecke) and Grammentin.

Other links about the area:

 


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Church Grammentin, Germany
Germany
Written by Written by Many people making this possible   
Where early Honeyager families worshipedJohann Friederick Hünerjäger, Christian and Joachim’s father was from Grammentin, which is a few miles south of Lindenhof (Käsecke).



This is a photo of Grammetin Church where earlier Hünerjäger families worshiped.

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Progess Note
Final Thoughts
Written by Jeff Honeyager   

This is as far as I've gotten.


Please come back soon to see more.  I am trying to add a few of the PowerPoint slides every week - or so. 

During the conversion process, I try to find interesting things on the internet that relates to each slide.  Sometimes I may add to the content - please excuse my indulgence - but - this is a growing / living document - please contribute!

Wanna help?  Contact me.

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Please Contribute

If you can add to this history with your own, please do.  There are many ways you can help:
  • comment on these pages
  • register on the site
  • create a honeyager blog
  • create your own myname.honeyager.com site


Download the PowerPoint

You can download the original PowerPoint by clicking on the link below:




zip Click to Download the powerpoint file - it is large so it may take a while. (140.17 Mb)


Steps to run it on your computer:
  1. Download the file to a new folder
  2. extract the zip file into that new folder
  3. in MS Explorer, click on the file named: pptview
  4. Select the Honeyager PowerPoint file
You must have PowerPoint or the PowerPoint viewer installed on your computer to see it.

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