A 'Swenglish' journey through family photos, notes and postcards
from the early 20th century.
Showing posts with label 1900s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1900s. Show all posts

2024-08-12

Greetings from Lake Geneva, Wis. (Sepia Saturday 736)

 



To: Mr Gustaf Ekman, Galeton, Box 342, Potter Co, Pa
From: Gerda (sent from Chicago, Jun 9, 1908)

Käre bror! Undrar hur du mår. Jag är nu på landet, detta är platsen som jag arbetar, men den är så otydlig. Du väntar nog på bref, jag skall snart skrifva. Här är så vackert, jag önskar du vore här. Jag har just varit och badat i sjön idag. Kära hälsningar frän syster Gerda. 

Dear brother, I'm wondering how you are. I'm now in the countryside, this is the place where I work, but it [the picture] is very blurry. You will be waiting for a letter, I will write soon. It is so beautiful here, I wish you were here. I have just been to the lake for a swim today. Love, sister Gerda




To: Mr Gustaf Ekman, Galeton, Box 342, Pa.
From: Gerda (Lake Geneva, Wis, Jul 23, 1909)

Käre bror! Jag är nu på landet, och jag har ej hört någonting från dig på så länge. Jag undrar hur du mår. Jag mår fint. Jag minns ej om jag skref till dig innan jag lemna Chicago, så kanske är min tur. / Här är förtjusande vackert, jag önskade du kunde komma hit. Jag kanhända lemnar här nästa vecka. / Min adr. är c/o Mrs Seipp, Lake Geneva, Wis.

Dear brother, I'm now in the countryside, and I haven't heard from you in so long. I'm wondering how you are. I'm fine. I don't remember if I wrote to you before I left Chicago, so perhaps it's my turn. / It's charmingly beautiful here, I wish you could come here. I might leave next week. / My adress is c/o Mrs Seipp, Lake Geneva, Wis. 

After a few shorter employments in Chicago, my great-aunt Gerda ended up working in the household of a well-known physician, Otto L. Schmidt. (Among other things, he was prominent enough to be one of 25 citizens to have his name engraved on The Illinois State Archives building in Chicago in 1938.  He was also the first physician in Chicago to use X-rays.) His wife was Emma Seipp, daughter of a wealthy Chicago brewer, Conrad Seipp. They were both of German heritage; and had three children: Ernst, Alma and Clara.  

I have written about them before on this blog (some of the posts not linked to Sepia Saturday). For example, you can read more about Otto L. Schmidt in a post from September 2012, and about his wife Emma and the Seipp family in a post from April 2021

Here, I'll just repeat that it seems the Schmidts (and at least some of their servants) used to spend the summers at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, where Mrs Schmidt's mother had a house - or even two. An article I found online says that the Seipp family built a summer home there in 1888, and after the death of Conrad Seipp, his widow (Catherine Orb Seipp) added a rather large and more modern "cottage" in 1905 - "to also accommodate her large and growing family".

I have also come to the conclusion that the two photos below of Gerda together with other servants were probably taken at Lake Geneva, on two different occasions. My guess is that both these photos show the summer staff at the Lake Geneva houses, consisting of Mrs Seipp's own servants +  those that Mrs Schmidt brought with her from her own household in Chicago. (In case you are wondering, Gerda is standing in the middle of the top row in the first photo, and sitting down on a tree stump or a rock in the second.)





The second postcard above (with the boat) shows the residence of a Mrs. Otto Young. I also found an article about Otto Young and his stone manor. It seems that Young was another German immigrant who arrived in New York in the 1850s, worked his way up in business (involving jewellry and real estate) and ended up very rich. He had a stone manor built at Lake Geneva, and died there in December 1906. I suppose that after his death the manor came to be known as the residence of his widow - and so named on this postcard.

To finish off this post, I recently noticed two more postcards of residences along Lake Geneva, Wis.,  in Gerda's collection of unwritten cards. I have not yet done any research on those names - maybe I'll return to them some other time... (I'm already late with this post as it is!)





 




2022-08-27

Chicago Then and Now - Sepia Saturday 636

... or, Time Travelling with Google ..

Besides the postcards sent by my great-aunt Gerda to her brother Gustaf, I also have a postcard album with Christmas/New Year/Easter greetings sent to Gerda, while she was living in Chicago, c. 1903-1910. The most useful information they've provided me with so far is that they show how during her first years in the big city, Gerda moved around quite a lot, before (in 1906) she ended up working in the household of a rather prominent Chicago family at 3328 Michigan Avenue, where she then seems to have remained until she went back to Sweden in 1911. 

I decided to have a go at looking up the addresses in Google Street View, to see if any of those neighbourhoods still have some old buldings preserved.

To sum up, the streets are still there, but most of the houses from back then are probably long gone. And house numbers may have changed in some places as well. However, what the Street View exercise did give me was a general impression of how Chicago was and still is a city consisting  of a 'grid' of very long and straight streets. Also confirmed by this street map from 1906 that I found somewhere (sorry, forgot to make note of where):

Map of Chicago from 1906

I was also quite surprised to find population statistics informing me that in 1900, Chicago already had around 1.7 million inhabitants, in 1910 increased to 2.2 million - to be compared to around 2.7 million in 2020. (Seems the number has been even higher in between, though.) For Gerda, having grown up on a farm in the Swedish countryside, coming to Chicago as a young girl in 1902/03, 21 years old, it must have been rather overwhelming. 

6019 Morgan St - January 1903

6017 Morgan St

(Actually, I think some of the houses here do rather look like they may have been around since the beginning of the 20th century!)

35 Elaine Pl - April 1903


Elaine Place

I can't find a number as low as '35' for Elaine Place nowadays. This modern apartment building kept coming up in my searches, though.

Elaine Place is the only one of Gerda's addresses with a c/o name added - Deutsche. I took a chance and had a peek at the surname in the 1900 US Census. Only one family by that name in Chicago came up for that year. I don't currently have a subscription allowing me to view details, but I'll assume for now that these were Gerda's employers in 1903. Husband Wm (William, I presume), wife Harriott (I looked up the name and it's of German origin  - related to the name Harriet, and meaning 'home ruler'), and son Richard.



1240 Addison Ave - year unknown (1904?)

1240 W Addison St

Well,this building obviously has not been there since 1904... I was hoping to find out if maybe the church has, but so far no luck.


W Addison St - Holy Trinity Church


1831 Barry Ave - January 1905


Now, that's weird... Looks like someone cast an invisibilty spell on that house! (lol)
(Below:) Looking straight on further down that street: 




1619 N. Campbell Ave -  Dec 1906
(forwarded to 3328 Michigan Ave)


 
1619 N Campbell Ave 

Well, I can see why Gerda wouldn't want to stay for very long there... (lol)




3328 Michigan Avenue

Disappointingly, the modern street view of 3328 Michigan Avenue doesn't really give a clue what it may have looked like back in 1906-10. Nowadays it seems to be part of a large university campus area.


Because (back in 2012) I found Gerda in the 1910 US census, I know that her employers at 3328 Michigan Avenue were Otto L Schmidt with wife Emma, both of German heritage; and with three children in their teens. At the time of the census there were three more white female servants besides Gerda in the household, plus a 'mulatto' chauffeur with wife and two children. I also know that Otto L Schmidt was a physician and a prominent Chicago citizen. Some day I may go back to revise some old posts involving them, and try to sum up what I know about them. 

Meanwhile, here is a photo of Gerda with two other girls. Judging by hairstyles and fashion, I think the photo must be from her years in Chicago. I don't recognise any of the other two.

Gerda in the middle


I found some vintage Chicago street views on other websites:

Michigan Avenue, looking south, Chicago, Illinois, 1900
[bygonely.com]


1902 Michigan Ave and Art Institute Museum


View of Monroe Street,
west from Michigan Avenue, 1904


1905 Chicago Lake Shore Drive

1900 Madison Street Trolley Cars


1900 Chicago 'L' Elevated Subway Train on Wabash Street


1907 Concert in Lincoln Park


1905 Chicago River/State Street Bridge



 



... in spite of problems thinking of a clever connection to the prompt this week!