ROMANESCO, Joseph

ROMANESCO, Joseph

Male 1799 - 1862  (63 years)    Has 10 ancestors and more than 100 descendants in this family tree.

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  • Name ROMANESCO, Joseph 
    Born 19 Jan 1799  Best, , Noord-Brabant, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Baptism 19 Jan 1799 
    Immigration 21 Aug 1854 
    1860 Census 1860  Fredonia, Ozaukee, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Book
    • This unrelated book was created as a marketing tool
    Occupation Bef 19 Mar 1862 
    Death Record - Church 19 Mar 1862 
    Family History Researcher
    • Some early research done by Melissa Link Grider

      SPECULATIONS ABOUT FAMILIAL RELATIONSHIPS FIRST WRITTEN ABOUT YR 1999- 2000 (disclaimer: I wrote this years ago--some dates in the online genealogy may vary a little now--have to fix it all)

      It is quite common for all of us to make mistakes in genealogy when written records are scarce--I'm sure my own volumes contain more than a few. What's important to remember is that usually SOME of the family folklore is correct, but that often over the course of 150 years, it becomes a game of "Post Office"---like a long line of children telling a secret, with the secret changing dramatically by the end of the line of children when the last child has to repeat the story out loud. I, myself, have had to change my files no less than 5 times due to mistakes, and I'm sure there will be more than 5 more to come as data is uncovered throughout the years. In fact, I think I changed this file 5 times just today.

      Such is the case with the Gruns/Grengs/Griens/Groens/Greens (several iterations of this name) and their relationships with the Binats/Binathes/Binnets/Binnards/Binards/Binas/Brenards (just a few iterations of this name!) and the Romeneskos/Romaneskos/Romanskes/Romanescos/Romenescos/Romonescos(several iterations of this name) and the J.P. Mueller family of Fredonia.

      There were stories handed down to Tom Green (deceased fellow researcher) of Newburg, and Isabelle Flierl (deceased fellow researcher) of Port Washington (Isabelle's were told to me in July, 2000, by relative, M.S-F). There's no doubt as to THEM telling the story accurately as to what they were told---but what they had been told was most assuredly embellished and in error on some points, and I made make numerous mistakes as well.

      We also need to look at the following: N.E. Becker's Lexicon book; St. Nicholas Church--Dacada records and tombstones; Holy Cross Church; St. Mary's Church of Lake Church; and all available legal records and certificates and plat maps. Researchers need to know how and why children were named their given names, middle names, nicknames, etc. Finally, we need to look at UWM Professor John Boatman's book about Saukville, WI, entitled 'At the Crossroads of a Rural Ethnic Community...Saukville, WI". All of these sources will reveal more accurate relationships, etc.

      Now let's talk about N. E. Becker. He settled in the Town of Fredonia near Highway 57 on the northern end of the township. He knew a Nicolaus Grun/GREEN and his sons: a Peter and a John Peter.

      Nicolaus Grun/Green was either the son or nephew of Anton Greng/Grun/Green (whose own father was named Nikolas/Nicholas, by the way) and brother or cousin to Peter H. Green (Peter H. was married first to Mary McConville and second to Mary Romanesko) and brother or cousin to Johann/John Green (married to Anna-Margaretha Binat, Peter the 2nd Binat's daughter who was known just as Anna in America), and brother or cousin of Maria Grun/Green who married Nic Kiefer/Kieffer.

      KEEP IN MIND: there were, in fact, two Nic Greens: Nic Green, a farmer in Fredonia, and we find a Nicholas Frank Grun standing up for his sister/relative's, Maria's, wedding to Nic Keifer--this Nicholas was another son of Anton's, then.

      However, we could not rule out that this Nicolaus Frank Grun/Green may have been the father of Anton. Elderly to be sure, but possible. Both of these Nicolaus Grun/Greens showed up on the 1860 census: one as Nic Green and one as Nic Grun--but the Nic Green also had documents showing that his surname was originally Grun, too.

      The Fredonia Nic Green's sons were listed in a 1908 nickname Lexicon book written by N. E. Becker and translated by Jean Claude Muller. In it, Nikolas Grun is named a "Deppegiesser" . This Nicolaus Grun's sons, "Johann" and "Peter" also received this nickname. Supposedly, in these people coming from Mondorf (proof that Nic Grun/Green was from Mondorf, just like his relative, Anton), they were related to: Herkul Grun, the then strongest man in the world via body-building and professional wrestling. Source: Luxembourg Society of Wisconsin, Letzebuerger Sprooch, September, 1984, Vol 6, No. 9, page 4 of 6 pages.

      Also note: I own the book on Herkul aka John Grun--b. 1868--purchased for me by Peter and Ils Romenesko of the Netherlands in 1999 on a trip to Mondorf. This John Grun was a very handsome man! (Note: Peter and Ils stem from the oldest child of Joseph Romanesko/Theodora Philipsen/Phillipen marriage who never immigrated, i.e., Stephan.)

      Becker never clearly distinguished between all of the Peters, Nicolauses and Johns when it came to the Grun/Green men in his German language Lexicon book. In other words, in one section he was talking about Nicolaus Green and HIS sons, and later he was talking about the OTHER sons of Anton Grun who were ALSO named Peter and John, and who had migrated to Outagamie County with the Romeneskos.

      N. E. Becker ALSO added the bit about Herkul Grun as an afterthought. This "Herkul" John Grun wasn't even born until the late 1860's--and he became quite popular, even in America, right around the time Becker wrote his book, so it looks like Becker made the assumption: A Grun/Green from Mondorf was automatically related to this Herkul John Grun--nickname being "Hercules."

      Here's what Tom Green (descendant of the Peter H. Green Sr., born 1823, the son of Anton) did: he assumed the Nic Green whom Becker had labelled a "Deppegiesser" was ANTON GRUN, and he had Bea Krier list this erroneous label in her book, 'Tapestry of Luxembourgers'. N. E. Becker likely was talking about Anton's relative (Son? Nephew? Brother?) Nic Green of Fredonia, who had a large farm just to the west of N. E. Becker's and just to the south of J.P. Mueller's over in the northern sections of the Town of Fredonia. So, this assumption about a trade nickname belonging to Anton Grun is repeated in Beatrice Wester Krier's 'Tapestry of Luxembourgers' book. (Plat source: 1873 and 1892 plat maps of the Town of Fredonia which is "Town 12, Range 21" and Town of Belgium which is "Town 12, Range 22-23.)

      We need to remember also, that in the same general time period or decade, Tom Green of Newburg was doing his research on the Grun/Greens, Jean Claude Muller and Jean Ensch were visiting here and also working on their re-edition of Nicholas Gonner's 'Luxembourgers in the New World' and Bea Krier was working on her Tapestry book. These facts will come into play later because on page 29 or so of the descriptive volume in their reissue of Gonner's work, they tell Anton Grun/Green's story without mentioning his name.

      Okay, now let's talk about the Grun/Greng/Grien/Green family while still in Luxembourg. Tom Green of Newburg supposedly told Jean Claude Muller and Jean Ensch that one reason for Anton immigrating was this: to avoid the police for harboring someone "on the lam"--hiding them behind their large fireplace in the Grun home in Mondorf.

      What Tom Green actually printed in his own book was this: Anton Grun had cut the shackles off of a fugitive, the police were suspicious, and he abruptly took his family to America.

      Well, the closest truth we could find was this: he and the Peter 2nd Binat (born in 1813, son of Peter the 1st Binat's first marriage to Mary "Marie" Bour) likely DID arrive in the same month of the same year in 1847 and come to the same place and before 1855 were living in adjoining sections of the Town of Belgium in one of the far northeastern sections--Section 12 and Section 2 (and we also know there was Christina Grien with land just over the border in Sheboygan County and she sold her land to Nic Plier--I think she was the sister or sister-in-law of Anton? Not sure yet). (It is also interesting to note that as mentioned below, J. P. Mueller of Fredonia immigrated in 1847, too.)

      Anyway, if we put the two stories together, it makes it look like Peter the 2nd Binat, (husband of Widow Jeanetta/Janatha/Genatt/Johanna nee Schmit/Schmitt/Schmidt, the widow of Johann Gloden, and step-father to Johannes/John Gloden, aka "Binatten Hans" who married first, Anton's granddaughter, Franziska Grun/Green--daughter of John Grun/Green and Anna-Margaretha Binat, and who married second, Mary Holzfeld--[Holfelz?]), was the criminal.

      Who knows--let's face it, as of the time of this initial writing in 1999-2000, no one had ever been able to find them on a ship (Antwerp to NY passages are NOT indexed for these years), so we are assuming the ship records are too hard to find or lost or ALL of them were using false names, but SOME of the records of ships arriving in 1847 are abundant and we know from Tom Green of Newburg that Anton came with many other Luxie families. We do know this for a fact: Anton Grun's son, Johann/John, was married to Peter the 2nd Binat's full biological sister, Anna-Margaretha (known in the USA by the name of Anna) Binat who was born in 1817, and also from the Peter the 1st Binat marriage to Mary "Maria" Bour. I managed to put together legal records collected by Anita Becker, co-founder of the Luxembourg Society of WI along with my mother, Dorothy Schanen Link Simpson. Anita got them from Justine Dollen in Luxembourg. That's how I finally managed to clear up my mother's Binat family mysteries!

      Back to the current subject: what we seem to have missed is this: Anton Grun, on the early town of Belgium census, was listed as having 3 males/2females in the home. Well, we know that his son John had his own place and was listed as head of his own household. This means, we have missed his son or perhaps father, NIKOLAS/NICHOLAS FRANK GRUN/GREEN--Anton, Peter and Nic would make 3 males. (In fact, Nicholas Frank was witness at his sister/granddaughter, Maria's marriage to Nic KIEFER). This important fact might come into play later when it comes to the Romaneskos and the Muellers who lived about 8-10 miles due west, beyond Dacada and into the Town of Fredonia.

      Now here's our next step in reconstruction: we must speak of the Romanesko/Romanesco family. Tom Green of Newburg had part of the story correct. Isabelle Flierl has part of her story correct. But both of them had been given some possible misinformation as is born out in several legal records. I, myself, certainly might have some information wrong as to a certain J. P. Green versus J. B. Green, but the basic story I have reconstructed is, I believe, correct.

      Tom Green of Newburg wrote this (paraphrased): Joseph Romanesko and a brother were escapees from Italy and Joe fled to Holland. This is partially right and partially wrong. Joseph Romanesko had a long, proud heritage stemming from Switzerland, likely near an Italian border, and his relatives migrated to Holland. Joe was born in the village/city of Best. Ils and Peter Romenesco of Holland were a little perturbed at our myths about the Romenescos and they set the record straight in short order back in 1999.
      In Holland, Joe married Theodora Philipsen/Phillipen/Philippen. In 1854 (some source stated 1856, but believe it to be 1854), they immigrated with all but their oldest child, Stephan (Ils and Peter Romanesco of Holland are direct descendants of Stephan). Some of their children were: Mary, Wouter/Walter, William, Henry, etc. Mary Romanesko will marry widower Peter H. Green, son of Anton. William will marry Catherine Grun/Green, the daughter of John Grun/Green and Anna-Margaretha Binat. Henry will marry Mary Ruppert, (sister of Mike Ruppert, and who by 1880 is in an "insane asylum", and one of her daughters will be committed to there as well--but they were not insane--they probably had lung disorders).

      This means, we have a family living in N.E. Becker's area in Fredonia marrying into Anton's family who reside way over near Lake Michigan--quite a trek by foot or wagon in those days (I drove it at what would be an average horse slow trot and it seemed like a gruesomely long trip in my car!)--and obviously demanding some sort of familial "visiting" relationships, since Anton Green and his sons Peter H. and John/Johann used St. Mary's Church in Lake Church (or a little church that may have been on Silver Beach Road--there was once a school there, too), while his relative, Nicolaus Green, used St. Nic's Church in Dacada, etc.

      Now, the Dutch Romaneskos were supposed to be let off the Great Lakes boat (coming from NYC via the usual canals and usual embarkation ports for Great Lakes travel) in Green Bay so they could walk to the Dutch settlement of Little Chute. Miscommunication left them being being put ashore (unknowns to them due to language barriers) in Sheboygan. This unfortunate Dutch family followed their initial instructions to find their pre-planned destination of the Dutch settlement of Little Chute: walking 15-20 or so miles southwest.

      According to TWO sets of families folklore, after their 20-mile long trek, the Romaneskos literally sat down on some logs in the woods and cried, feeling hopelessly lost in the wilderness. (This story was verified by a Romanesco/Green elderly descendant who would now be 120 yrs old if still alive in the year 2000. This person lived to be high 90's.) When the family heard a dog barking, Joe Romanesko went to investigate and through that one dog's barking, found civilization.

      He supposedly ended up at some trading post called "Richmond Corner"---no one in Sheboygan County or Ozaukee County has been able to uncover the exact location of what was probably this trading-post type building on a corner and which may have been named after a family as Maribeth-Schmit Fuchs pondered, but I firmly believe the Romaneskos ended up west of Dacada, near the current corner of Highway 57 where the MUELLER garage is/was. The "Richmond Corner" may have been actually Joe's way of saying: "rich man's corner"--because the farms here were so large compared to Europe.

      Tom Green and I initially thought they wandered in a more direct southerly direction, bringing them somewhere around Jay Rd and Sauk Trail Rd---which is closer to where Anton lived--just an understandable assumption on our part because of the marriages between the families. Census records, relationships, etc., just about disprove the idea, though. Besides, the Romaneskos were looking for Little Chute and they KNEW they had to travel further west when walking south. I believe we both inititally thought the family walked due south because it was the ONLY way we could account for how Anton Grun/Green's children ended up marrying Romanesko children.

      Now let's interject Isabelle Flierl's story: " Joe Romanske, a Russian Jew, showed up disheveled, without a horse, poorly dressed, and knocked on the door of J. B. Mueller's farm in the northern Town of Fredonia." Isabelle was told that he lived with the Muellers for the rest of his life and is buried in the J.B. Mueller plot in St. Nic Cemetery, Dacada.

      The first and last portion of her story is accurate, but Joe was a Catholic Dutchman with a wife and 5 children sitting in the woods that day he knocked on their door (and if he didn't have this family here, then hundreds of people of Romanesco history verified by LDS records in the USA would be a big fib. In fact, there was a reunion scheduled in Holland for the summer of 2001 one for the hundreds-to-thousands of descendants of Joe Romanesco. It was scheduled for a weekend at a rented castle and our family was invited). J. B. Mueller UNDOUBTEDLY helped the Romanesko's get settled nearby, and we will see that his daughter, Margaret, marries into the Nicolaus Grun/Green family while other Romanesko children will marry other children of Anton Grun/Green's.

      The Romaneskos lived in the town of Fredonia, and on the 1860 census, we see Joe Romanesko and his son, Henry, as heads of their own households with listings indicating either living on the same lands or next to each other. Joe's sons, Henry and William are mentioned in N. E. Becker's 1908 Lexicon, too! Henry is also in Civil War records as paying Michael Ruppert (brother to Mary Ruppert, Henry's wife) $100 to take his place in the war. In fact, when we look at Tom Green's story, we see that Nic Green (likely the brother? of Anton), who lived near the Muellers, more than likely helped the Romenesko's plant their first winter wheat and/or possibly contacted his family member, i.e., Anton Green, and Anton gave the Romanesko family the means for a winter wheat crop.

      We know from records that J. P. Mueller and his wife, Mary Calteaux, had a daughter, Margaret, who married a certain John Peter Green, known as Peter Green (note: we don't know which given name came first, but one son was known as John and the other, Peter). John Peter and his wife, Margaret Mueller, had two children: Dominic and Mary. John Peter disappeared after these children were born---Isabelle Flierl thought he might have gone to Saukville where he had relatives. Well, she just might be right! Why?

      Because all you have to do is read John Boatman's book to find them: Nicolaus Green, likely the nephew OR another son of Anton Grun/Green, had a son named: John B. Green who was documented to have been a Silver Creek area farmer and who later in 1889 married a Saukville widow: Mary Schardt--a widow who owned a locally-famous tavern and hall in Saukville. An obituary newspaper notice stated that Nic Green died at the home of his son, J. B. Green in Saukville and was buried in St. Nic's Cemetery, Dacada, after having a large funeral.

      Nic Green has two sons: John and Peter----but the genealogical conflict here is: Maribeth Schmit-Fuchs and Tom Green have info that the man married to Margaret Mueller had parents named: John Green and Margaret Hoffman. This might be rectified by Nicolaus Green's full name being: John Nicholas Green and we know he was married before, i.e., his first wife was likely Margaret Hoffman. His second wife was named, Anna. This is not too far-fetched, because many boys and girls had a pre-given name that was quite repetitive in the same family in those days.

      Here is another interesting note on these families: Catherine Grun/Green was a witness to this marriage of J. P. Green and Margaret Mueller, along with Maria Calteaux--the only Catherine Grun/Greens around at the time were the wife of Anton and the daughter of Anton's son, John, and this girl had married William/Walter/Wouter Romanesko.

      Back to our reconstruction of the Grun/Greens, Romanescos/Romaneskos, and Muellers:

      We now have enough information to speculate about John Peter Green in the matter of his parents being "John Green and Margaret Hoffman." The listing of the parents of John Peter Green had stumped all of us researching Grun/Green, Mueller and Calteaux. Basically, this might have happened because all researchers, including myself, ignored the existence of Nicolaus Grun/Green, a substantial and respected farmer in the Town of Fredonia, and another Nicolaus Grun from the 1860 census listings. I had never seen this name come up before--not until I discovered a Nic Grun/Green being a witness of the marriage of his sister/relative, , Maria Grun/Green to Nic Kiefer/Kieffer and until I found the Fredonia Nic Green's obituary/will--right around the same time Maribeth Schmit-Fuchs told me Isabelle Flierl's story. The two never came up in any sort of alphabetical surname order before because Nic Grun/Green's name had changed to Green before the other Grun family member names more regularly changed spellings.

      BURIALS AND GRAVESTONE INFORMATION:

      We know a Nic Green was buried in this area from the obituary because it stated he was definitely buried at St. Nic's Cemetery, Dacada. If so, then this person would likely be the nephew or son of Anton Grun/Green because of the circa earlier 1820s birthdate, and also because of the many factors involving a far eastern Town of Belgium Grun/Green family with the Romanesko family that lived closer to Nic Grun/Green the Fredonia farmer. A family connection between the Grun/Greens is almost the ONLY way that Anton Grun/Greens children would have met the Romanesko children in order to intermarry. I believe this makes a valid connection--before this, we never knew how people living almost on the shores of Lake Michigan would have such close relationships with people living closer to the old Highway 57 near Fredonia.

      I found a most interesting land deed from 1856 where the Fredonia Nicolaus Grun/Green (name listed as Grun with umlauts over the "u" in the document) was trying to leave 20 acres to his beloved wife, Anna, in the event of his death---it was written as such that she could choose her own acreage for a total of 20 acres out of his 80 owned acres. I'm wondering if the 1856 death of Margaret (who I believe was Margaret Hoffman, Nic's first wife) prompted him to think about the future. This Last Will and Testament states that he had children from his first wife and that he was planning ahead for any children born of the second marriage. He said if she remarried, his leaving her the 20 acres of her choice would be null and void. His wish was that she remain on their land and give motherly love to the children.

      These are **Bev Hetzel's stone transcriptions (see asterisked footnote at bottom of story) from St. Nic's cemetery, Dacada, which I went to physically check for accuracy the best I could without tracing equipment:

      "A" Green: born 8/10/1824---no death date<----I'm not sure, but I think this old stone should read: N. Green. I believe this is Nic Grun/Green's gravestone.

      Anna Green: born 6/2/1862; died 5/18/1898<----believed to be a daughter of the Nic Green who was the Fredonia farmer.

      Margaret Green: died 1/2/1856.<----this may have been Margaret Hoffman, the first wife of Nic Green; her death may have prompted Nic to write his Last Will and Testament in the form of a land deed for his wife, Anna. In this document, he states he was married twice and had children by the first marriage.

      Anna Green: born 8/10/1821; died 12/11/1908<---believed to be the second wife of same Nic Green; it has been proven that the name she used was Anna by a land record which is in the form of a Will and Testament.
      ---------------------

      On August 14, 1999, I visited St. Nicolas cemetery and I found gravestones for:

      Dominic Green, 1877-1973<---verified son of Margaret Mueller Green/John Peter Green

      Margareth, 1854-1923<----verified as Margaret Mueller Green who papers listed as born 1855

      Mary, 1876-1971<----verified as daughter of Margaret Mueller Green/John Peter Green

      That Margaret Mueller Green is buried with her children is testament that her husband, John P Green really did leave her---which was postulated by Isabelle Flierl and retold to me by M. S-F (a Calteaux descendant).

      Next burial: On (next to?) the J. P. Mueller/Mary Calteaux plot, we do, indeed, find the 1862 burial of Joe Romanesko/Romeneske---why he's buried there could only be explained by a very close, loving relationship with the J. P. Mueller family. Quite possibly, Joe's widow, Theodora, was not well off, and his burial in the Mueller plot was a kindness extended by the J. P. Mueller family. Obviously, the Muellers must have been quite wonderful, caring people to help the Romaneskos as much as they did. Joseph Romanesko died before his wife, Theodora Philipsen Romanesko, and long before the original immigrating children Romaneskos and Grun/Greens picked up stakes and relocated in the Little Chute and Greenleaf, Freedom, Kaukauna, etc., WI, areas.
      -----------------------------------

      MORE ON ANTON GRUN: The immigrant Anton Grun (born Antoine GRENG in either 1788 or 1792) has the most interesting story. We know he was a money hustler of sorts and supposedly a smuggler of goods that were strapped over the backs of sheep for transport over rough terrain in a herding route designed to make sure Anton could avoid paying tariffs on whatever goods he was moving. He even sold his own farm in America to his own sons at substantial profit, or so wrote Tom Green. Actually, I found Peter Binat, Mathias Prom, Christina Grien (she may have been a sister-in-law of Anton's?), John Green, and John Gloden doing most of the land transactions over in those far Northeastern sections of the Town of Belgium. They were transacting with surnames like: several Ellenbeckers, Jungers, other related Proms, Plier, Gales/Galles, Schiltz/Schilz, etc. But let's not forget: the first little log church in the rural eastern areas of Lake Church, Town of Belgium, Wisconsin, was built by Anton Grun and his sons, too.

      We already know the stories of Anton's sudden decision to emigrate. As I had stated previously, Tom Green, direct descendant of Peter H. Grun/Green, Sr., (one of Anton's son's), stated in his book on the Greens and Mary Hein (not officially but only self-published nicely, and of which a full, illustrated copy is owned by me) that Anton had cut the shackles off off of a criminal on his property. And again, this same story, with no names mentioned, appears slightly altered in Nicholas Gonner's 'Luxembourgers in the New World,' Volume 1, page 29, 1985 revised edition by Jean-Claude MULLER, Jean ENSCH, and Robert E. OWEN.

      Here it states that Anton was actually hiding this criminal behind his home's fireplace in Mondorf.

      Well, knowing what we know about Anton "the smuggler and hustler", I'd say it was either Anton or Peter the 2nd Binat who might have been the criminal element in trouble with the police, and it might have been Peter the 2nd Binat who was helping him OR being helped by him, eh? Remember this, too: the European ancestor, Elisabetha Grun who married John Bina/Binna makes familial connections to the Binats and Gruns.

      Or could an alternative scenario have been that Peter and Janetta had prior plans to immigrate and it was just Anton's good fortune to be able to "get out of town" at the same time with relatives? How else could all of them have ended up coming at the same time, to the same place and buying land in adjoining sections of Town 12, i.e., Belgium, WI? There has to be some logical explanation for their lack of names appearing on ship lists--and I have checked thousands upon thousands of names at a myriad of ports for a twenty-year span of time. Could these families have been traveling incognito to avoid detection and possible passport denial if found out? This story warrants further investigation.

      Let's end the reconstruction story to find out how am I tied into all of this and why am I interested in this story: because Peter the 2nd Binat is my gr gr gr grandfather and he serves as a pivotal, connecting person for our maternal family to many other families: the Romaneskos, Grun/Greens, Binsfelds, Schneiders, etc.

      Peter's daughter, Margaret, b. 1838--whom Jean Ensch of Luxembourg claims is really not his daughter but his half-sister who was born in 1836, i.e., that she was from the 2nd marriage of Peter the 1st Binat and #2 wife, Margaret Jungers, back in Luxembourg---BUT, since contradictory information exists in America, and all of us, including 19th century Nic Gonner in his Lux. Gazette have it recorded that she was the daughter of Peter the 2nd, then that's the way I'm leaving it. This woman, Margaretha Binat, became my gr gr grandmother when she married Mathias Prom, and they had a daughter Anna Prom who married John Mallinger; in turn, this couple had Catherine Elizabeth Mallinger who married Adolph N. Schanen, son of Jacob James Schanen, Proprietor of the Schanen Lake House Inn, Lake Church (which is still operational today, in 2016, and they have great fish frys, but no grocery store), and these last two are my grandparents. Also, our Proms AND Schanens married into the Gonnering family, just like the Grun/Greens did when they married into the Blindauer/Gonnering family up in Outagamie County.
      -------------------------------

      Footnote:
      **RECORDS WARNING ON LOCAL GRAVE TRANSCRIPTIONS: BEV HETZEL'S 1991 CEMETERY TRANSCRIPTIONS FOR OZAUKEE COUNTY CONTAIN NUMEROUS ERRORS--FOR EXAMPLE, I FOUND 10 OR MORE ERRORS WHEN CHECKING JUST THE FIRST 20 TOMBSTONES SHE HAD TRANSCRIBED FOR ST. MARY'S CHURCH, LAKE CHURCH. IT IS MOST UNFORTUNATE THAT THE LDS CHURCH IN UTAH ACCEPTED THOSE TRANSCRIPTIONS AS RECORDS. MANY TIMES THIS TRANSCRIBER WROTE THAT A STONE WAS UNREADABLE, ETC., AND IT WAS READABLE IN THE YEAR 2000 YET, ETC. SOME OF THE ERRORS ARE UNDERSTANDEABLE ON THE OLD MOSS-RIDDEN, WEATHERED, CHALKY LIMESTONES. FOR EXAMPLE, SOMEONE WITH THE FIRST INITIAL OF "N" COULD LOSE THE LAST STEM OF THE LETTER AND IT COULD LOOK LIKE AN "A". ALSO, SOMEONE'S SPOUSE COULD SEEM TO BE MISSING BECAUSE IN BEV'S ESTIMATION, THE LETTERS WORE AWAY. I FOUND THESE AND MANY MISTAKES MADE WITH GRAVESTONES AND EVEN GRAVESTONES LISTED IN CERTAIN ROWS WHEN THEY WERE ACTUALLY ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE CEMETERY, ETC. HOWEVER, IN SOME CASES, BEV'S TRANSCRIPTIONS HAVE PROVEN PRICELESS--SHE DID A LOT OF DIFFICULT, TIME-CONSUMING WORK ON OZAUKEE COUNTY CEMETERIES.
    Died 19 Mar 1862  Fredonia, Ozaukee, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Obituary Aft 19 Mar 1862 
    Buried Aft 19 Mar 1862  St. Nicholas Catholic Cemetery, Fredonia, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Family History Researcher Abt 1999 
    Person ID I28  1FamilyTree | JaysRelated, PatrickKempen16182
    Last Modified 3 Jun 2018 

    Father ROMANESCO, Stefano Innocente,   b. 16 Jun 1766, Pollegio, Switzerland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 8 Nov 1847, Schijndel, , Noord-Brabant, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 81 years) 
    Mother VANDECAM, Maria,   b. 4 Jun 1770, Best, , Noord-Brabant, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 26 Apr 1830, Best, , Noord-Brabant, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 59 years) 
    Family ID F825  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family PHILIPSEN, Theodora,   b. 15 Jan 1788, Zetten, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 4 Feb 1877, Freedom, Outagamie, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 89 years) 
    Married 23 Oct 1824  Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Marriage Record (Family) 23 Oct 1824 
    Children 
    +1. Male Romanesco, Stephanus,   b. 3 Apr 1824, Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 13 Jun 1899, Leiden, , Zuid-Holland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 75 years)
    +2. Female Romenesko, Mary,   b. 1 Jan 1825, Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 13 Feb 1904, Freedom, Outagamie, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 79 years)
     3. Male Romanesko, Wouter "Walter",   b. 1 Oct 1828, Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 4 Dec 1835, Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 7 years)
    +4. Male ROMANESKO, Henry,   b. 16 Jun 1831, Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 29 Apr 1913, Freedom, Outagamie, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 81 years)
    +5. Male Romenesko, Gerhard "Garrett",   b. 10 Oct 1833, Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 26 Feb 1903, Wrightstown, Brown, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 69 years)
    +6. Male Romenesko, Walter William,   b. 2 Feb 1837, Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 22 Jul 1913, Freedom, Outagamie, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 76 years)
    Last Modified 3 Jun 2018 
    Family ID F7543  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 19 Jan 1799 - Best, , Noord-Brabant, Netherlands Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarried - 23 Oct 1824 - Dreumel, , Gelderland, Netherlands Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google Maps1860 Census - Page 135 - 1860 - Fredonia, Ozaukee, Wisconsin, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - Cause: Unk in Wis., Ozaukee - Aged 63 Years - 19 Mar 1862 - Fredonia, Ozaukee, Wisconsin, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBuried - Aft 19 Mar 1862 - St. Nicholas Catholic Cemetery, Fredonia, Wisconsin, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 
    Pin Legend  : Address       : Location       : City/Town       : County/Shire       : State/Province       : Country       : Not Set

  • Sources 
    1. [S1169] Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2012;), https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=30056759.


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