Karl and Elisabeth Schneider Fritzler and their family are designated in the entry below. At the time of the 1897 census, the couple lived in Karl's parents' household with their two young children and Karl's three younger siblings.
Family #145
1. Fritzler, Karl, head of the household, age 48 married
2. Katharina Elisabetha, wife of #1, age 47, married
3. Karl, son of #1, age 28, married
4. Elisabetha, daughter-in-law of #1, wife of #3, married
5. Katharina, granddaughter of #1, daughter of #3, age 2
6. Anna, granddaughter of #1, daughter of #3, age 8 months
7. Philipp, son of #1, age 21, unmarried
8. Jacob, son of #1, age 18, unmarried
9. Christina, daughter of #1, age 10
Elisabeth, her husband, and their children survived the deportation of Volga Germans to Kazakhstan in 1941. Men were separated from the women and young children and sent to labor camps. Although she and her husband were separated, they both died in 1943. She was 70 years old and her husband was 73.
Sources
↑1897 Grimm (Lesnoi Karamysh), Russia Census List, Translated by Richard Rye, Compiled and Edited by John Groh, Contributor Henry Schmick; American Historical Society of Germans from Russia, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Published 2017; page 84, family #145, line 4, Elisabetha, daughter-in-law of #1, wife of #3, married. [no age listed in this source]
See also:
Records and notes of descendant Alexander Brester, in the files of Julie Mangano, Round Rock, Texas.
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