Klara Elisabeth Stoerker

F, #16, b. 15 February 1853, d. before 13 June 1927
Relationship
Great-grandaunt of Sheila Sue Altenbernd
Father*Christian Friedrich Störcker b. 12 February 1812, d. 9 February 1868
Mother*Clara Maria Poesser b. 2 February 1816, d. 17 June 1898
     Klara was born on 15 February 1853. She was the daughter of Christian Friedrich Störcker and Clara Maria Poesser.
     Klara Elisabeth Stoerker immigrated on 19 November 1857 to in New Orleans, Orleans County, Louisiana, USA, with her parents Christian Friedrich Störcker and Clara Maria Stoerker . They arrived on Ship "Anton Guenther" of Bremen He arrived with his wife and 6 children.

The following information is from the records of John Altenbernd.

About November of 1857, Christian Friedrich Stoerker and his wife, Clara Marie (nee Poesser) moved to a farm near Cappeln Church in western St. Charles County, Missouri. They had a six-year-old son, Conrad Friedrich Stoerker, and some daughters. They had come from Buer, near Melle, Province Hannover, in Germany. (The 1900 Illinois Census for Washington County lists the year of immigration as 1859).1,2
     Either Klara or her sister Maria married someone named Hoesenjoegger. Klara was born on February 15, 1853 at 10 am.

     Klara Elisabeth Stoerker also went by the name of Carrie Theophil Stoerker referred to her as aunt Carrie.3
     Male Hasenjaeger married Klara Elisabeth Stoerker, daughter of Christian Friedrich Störcker and Clara Maria Poesser.
     Klara died before 13 June 1927.4
Last Edited=22 August 2023

Family: Klara Elisabeth Stoerker and Male Hasenjaeger

Citations

  1. [S352] Buer -- Today and Yesterday, online http://www.buer-us.de/Book1_Stoerker.htm . Hereinafter cited as Buer -- Today and Yesterday.
  2. [S438] Christian Stoerker (#3) entry; Anton Gunter Passenger List, 19-Nov-1857; in New Orleans Passenger Lists, 1820-1945 (database on-line) (Provo, UT, USA: www.Ancestry.Com), roll M259_45.
  3. [S1860] Stoerker, Marion (Document Source Number: 00122-19xx-00-00-01).
  4. [S92] (? ?) Obituary, unknown newspaper title, unknown location, 1930's.