Teicher-Ochs-Kehl Family History
By
Mike and Robbin Teicher
Kehl Ochs Teicher Family History
Since the
writing of her Family Memoirs in January, 1995,
Elizabeth Ochs Teicher, b.1914 Hrastovac, Austro-Hungary; the
editors have discovered that the story of the movement of ethnic
German people east is more complex than we ever imagined. The
following includes a brief summary of what is known about the
origins of mother’s paternal (Ochs) and maternal (Kehl) ancestors
as of this date.
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Elizabeth Ochs-Teicher
1914-2006
Sketch by Pam Teicher |
The
Ochs Clan were the first to travel east
from Swabia and Franconia (now both a part of Southern Germany)
and might have done so shortly after Charlemagne, King of the
Franks, defeated the Avars and became a Roman Emperor in 800 A.D.
To secure the
eastern front, he built fortresses in the area that would become
Austria and eastern Hungary. Many people over the centuries had
passed through this area, but these early settlers from Swabia
and/or Franconia were there to stay, as were others who followed
them during the next several centuries.
They were known
as the Heidebauren, and where they lived was called the
Heideboden. They established flourishing agricultural
communities, usually having arrived with nobles, knights, and
monastic orders who had received land grants in the Heideboden.
Our Ochses were indentured servants and feudal serfs.
The Heideboden
was about 25 miles southeast of Vienna and included the area north
and east of the Neusiedler See. Today the Heideboden would
include the village of Winden am See, which is in Austria and only
20 miles east the villages of Heggeshalom and Levél, which are in
Hungary.
The earliest
Ochses in our line that we have been able to trace is Mother’s 5X
great grandfather, Johann Heinrich Ochs born in ca.
1695, and later lived in Kalazno, Tolna County, Hungary, which is
about 150 miles east from the aforementioned villages. The family
arrived in Kalazno in April 1723 and their descendents ultimately
ended up in Keszo Hidegkut, which is only about 10 miles north of
Kalazno. It was from here that Mother’s paternal grandfather,
Peter Ochs 1849-1918 and his wife, Maria Schneider, and family
emigrated to Hrastovac in about 1868, shortly after our Civil War
ended.
_small.jpg) |
Peter (1847-1918) and Maria Schneider (Abt.1854- ? ) Ochs. Peter was
one of the first settlers in Hrastovac and owned the store and flour
mill.- Photo ca. 1911
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It is important
to note that our ancestors who left their Germanic villages so
many hundreds of years ago spent most of their time in what is now
Hungary before ending up in Hrastovac which was about 110 miles SW
from where they lived in Hungary (our research also indicates that
the Ochses and Kehls were never more than 20 miles from the Danube
except when they lived in Hrastovac!). Transport would have been
by boat or wagon. I bet families walked beside the wagon at times
or just WALKED, like our American settlers did when they went west
at about the same time.
Peter and his
wife, Maria, and family, as well as our Kehls, were some of the
first settlers in Hrastovac (c pronounced like tz), which was then
the independent country of Slavonia and is now in Croatia.
This time they
purchased land that was part of a large estate. The land was
swampy and was heavily forested just a year prior to their arrival. It had to be drained and the
huge tree stumps cleared to make it tillable. This was difficult work, but
our ancestors, and others, who came with them, prevailed.
However, building their homes, fighting malaria, and clearing and
tilling the land took its toll causing exhaustion and in many
cases death!
Like their
ancestors’ villages, Hrastovac became an agricultural community
populated primarily by Danube Swabians (“Die Donauschwaben”
as opposed to Germans in Germany proper or other ethnic Germans
outside of the German Reich), who proudly called themselves this
and whose dialect changed little since their departure from
southern Germany hundreds of years before. Remember what is now
Germany was made up of many principalities and it was only combined in
a state of Germany in 1871.
The people
surrounding Hrastovac spoke their own Slavic dialect, which was
mainly Croatian or Serbian (there were Serbs in the area as well as
Croatians). Actually, when Mother was born (1914) in Hrastovac,
it was in the county of Slavonska Poschega in Slavonia. Slavonia shared
the Parliament with Hungary!
The
Kehls arrived in Hungary during the
1720s from the German state of Hesse, or possibly Baden
Württemberg and settled near Kéty. They were among the tens of
thousands of settlers during the 18th century who traveled from
Ulm or Kelheim on box boats called “Ulmer Schachtel” and
“Kelheimer Plätten” down the Danube River with the promise of
being able to lease land acquired by royalty for farming. The
first of the Kehls in our line who we have been able to trace was
Mother’s 4X great grandfather, Jakob Kehl, born in Kéty (Tolna
County) in the 1720s.
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Jakob (1863-1946) and
Elizabeth Messner Kehl
Photo 1911.
|
I wonder if the
Ochses and Kehls at that time knew each other since Kéty is only
about six miles south of Kalazno, where the Ochses lived...small
world, isn’t it? Ultimately our Kehls settled in nearby
Mekényes
near the villages of Kötcse, Bonnya, Bikal, and Gerényes.
Mother’s
maternal great grandfather, Michael Kehl 1822-1871 and his wife,
Anna Maria Elisabetha “Ami” Jung 1829-1895 (who was born in
Gerényes) traveled from Gerényes to Hrastovac in 1870 with their
three sons, Johann, Michael, and Jakob (Mother’s maternal
grandfather). Michael, Sr. died in 1871, and Michael, Jr. the
oldest of the sons took over the farm at #28 in Hrastovac. Four
years later “Ami” married Martin Wagner, and Johann and Jakob
moved with them to the village of Franjevac, a short distance from
Hrastovac.
The movement of
ethnic German settlers, our ancestors, is a dynamic story which
took place during the rise and fall of empires, and religious and
political persecution. Hundreds of thousands of people were
killed and many thousands were tortured, raped, or sold into
slavery. Many of them died in Austria, Hungary, and Turkey.
However, there
were periods of tolerance, and our ancestors flourished as farmers
and merchants and were devoted Evangelical Lutherans of the
Augsburg Confession. Maybe some of them knew Martin Luther, and
if they didn’t, their pastors certainly did because they went to
school with him in Wittenberg during the early 1500s.
However, at the
end of WWII (1944) our cousins were forced to evacuate their beloved
Hrastovac and flee to western Germany. Many did not make it and
ended up in the Russian salt mines (few survived) as slave
labourers or were murdered by the partisans of Tito. Mother’s
family was lucky. They left Hrastovac in June 1921 for
Milwaukee. Their sponsor was my grandfather, Johann (John) Ochs,
Sr.’s older brother, Peter.
The descendants of our ancestors
who migrated east to Hungary and beyond, so many years ago live
now throughout the world. Today many of our cousins live in
Austria, Hungary, Germany, Brazil, Canada, the United States, and
maybe a few in Croatia.
For those who
are interested in finding out more information about the migration
of Germans of the 17th, 18th and 19th
centuries are encouraged to read Henry A. Fischer’s book
Children of the Danube, published in 2004 by AuthorHouse,
www.authorhouse.com or Hrastovac-Eichendorf eine deutsche
Siedlung in Slavonien by Erwin Englert, the teacher in the
school in Hrastovac between 1913 and 1925 (our Aunt Mary’s
teacher!), available from Hrastovac researcher, Eva Mueller. You
can also type in Hrastovac on Google to see what happens—you may
be surprised!
Also, if you
are interested in finding the locations of the aforementioned
villages on a map (including Hrastovac): Freytag and Berndt have
published an excellent map of Hungary, which can be purchased at
Barnes and Noble Booksellers. You can also try your luck on the
Internet, as well as here on the
Hrastovac pages.
Many thanks to
our friends, Tony Hamilton of Milwaukee, WI, an Ochs, and also a
descendent of Peter Ochs 1849-1918 and his wife, Maria Schneider;
Ron Berg-Iverson of Surrey, British Columbia, who married a Kehl
who is a descendent of Michael Kehl 1822-1871 and his wife, Anna
Maria Elisabetha “Ami” Jung 1829-1895; and the Rev. Henry Fischer
of Oshawa, Ontario, an ELCA minister, (Henry’s kin lived in
Hrastovac and Hungary) all who made the tracing of our Ochs and
Kehl roots possible.
The above
information about our ancestors is documented, primarily by using
church records. The documentation was a long and tedious job for
everyone, especially for those who transcribed the records and
often had difficulty reading the script. The churches, both
Catholic and Lutheran, kept birth, baptismal, confirmation,
wedding, and burial records, including the names of witnesses,
sponsors, and clergy.
| The S.S. Samand The ship that the Ochs family took when they immigrated to Milwaukee, WI in 1921.
Sketch by Pam Teicher. |
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Mike and
Robbin Teicher Brookfield, Wisconsin August 19, 2006