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Friederich Kubbernuss

Male 1841 - Yes, date unknown


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  • Name  Friederich Kubbernuss 
    Born  1841  Lehnenhof, Dargun Parish, Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Germany) Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Gender  Male 
    Immigration  25 Aug 1868  New York, New York Find all individuals with events at this location  [3, 4
    _UID  1AE44BE62C66824598DB869361393E9480B6 
    Died  Yes, date unknown 
    Person ID  I1053  Page-Dumroese
    Last Modified  21 Sep 2010 

    Father  Christian Christoph Friederich Kubbernuss,   b. Abt 1817, Lehnenhof, Dargun Parish, Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Germany) Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Mother  Sophia Elisabeth Magdalena Burmeister,   b. Abt 1817, Schorrentin, Schorrentin Parish, Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Germany) Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Married  25 Oct 1831  Schorrentin, Schorrentin Parish, Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Germany) Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID  F365  Group Sheet

    Family  Louise Yahn,   b. 1842, Remplin (Hohen Mistorf Parish), Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Germany) Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown  [5
    Married  Y  [1, 2
    Notes 
    • Friederich, Louise, and their two children left Hamburg on 12 August 1868 aboard the Harmonia. They arrived in New York on 25 August 1868, passing through the Castle Garden immigration center at the tip of Manhatten. Castle Garden was the immigration center from 1830 until 1892, the year Ellis Island opened. This was the second of three immigrations of the Christian and Sophia Kubbernuss family to Berrien County, Michigan. Sources: [6]
    Children 
     1. Wilhelmina Kubbernuss,   b. 1865, Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Germany) Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     2. Auguste Kubbernuss,   b. 1867, Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Germany) Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
    Family ID  F384  Group Sheet

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsImmigration - 25 Aug 1868 - New York, New York Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Maps 
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Sources 
    1. [S62] kobernus.com.

    2. [S335] Germany: Mecklenburg Census, 1867 (Ancestry), Search = "Joachim Kubbernuss". The census shows these family members and their ages: Friedrich (26), wife Luise (27), and children Wilhelmina (2) and Auguste (0); Sophie (62) and Christian (63); and Joachim (23). Also listed is Friedrich Tuchen (8) as a schulkind..

    3. [S332] New York Passtenger Lists, 1820-1957 (Ancestry), Search = "Friederick, Louise, Wilhelmine, Auguste KOBBERNUSS". Ancestry says lines 39-42, but actual numbers on sheet are 335-338..

    4. [S278] Castle Garden Immigration Records, Search = "Friedrich, Louise, Wilhelmine, Auguste Kobbernuss" (accessed 10 February 2008).

    5. [S421] Palmer List of Merchant Vessels, (accessed 10 February 2008).
      The steamship HAMMONIA, the second of three steam vessels of this name owned by the Hamburg-America Line, was built by Caird & Co, Greenock, and was launched on 12 August 1866. 3,035 tons; 100,6 x 12,2 x 10 meters (length x breadth); straight bow, 1 funnel, 2 masts; iron construction, screw propulsion, inverted engine, service speed 12 knots; accommodation for 58 passengers in 1st class, 120 in 2nd class, and 500 in steerage. Captains: 1867-1868 - H. Ehlers; 1868-1870 - E. Meier. Voyages: 1867 - Southampton, New York (7 x); 1868 - New York (7 x), Bremerhaven. The Hammonia was the type-ship of the Hamburg-America Line's Hammonia class, although she was not the first of the class to enter service. 2 March 1867, maiden voyage, Hamburg-New York. 25 July 1877, last voyage, Hamburg - Havre - New York. 6 June 1878, purchased by the Russian Volunteer Fleet, and renamed Moskva. 6 June 1882, bound from Hankow to St. Petersburg, wrecked 25 nautical miles off Cape Guardafui, Gulf of Aden, with no loss of life; the crew and 150 passengers saved themselves on the coast of Somalia, where on 24 June they were picked up by the British steamship Bagdad. Sources: Arnold Kludas and Herbert Bischoff, Die Schiffe der HamburgAmerika Linie, Bd. 1: 1847-1906 (Herford: Koehler, 1979), p. 27 (photograph); Noel Reginald Pixell Bonsor, North Atlantic Seaway; An Illustrated History of the Passenger Services Linking the Old World with the New (2nd ed.; Jersey, Channel Islands: Brookside Publications), vol. 1 (1975), p. 389.

    6. [S332] New York Passtenger Lists, 1820-1957 (Ancestry).