Column from The New York Sun, July 1, 1903 |
The hot July sun, beating down on a busy pier, bustling with activity, had heated the air into the high 80's. Storms the previous night brought with it a high pressure system that swept warmer breezes up from the southern states and the heat was expected to last for the next several days.[2] Welcome to America! Northern Germany seldom got this hot. Ottilie and Erwin had finally arrived in New York after enduring a week long ocean voyage from Bremen, Germany on the luxury passenger steamship Kronprinz Wilhelm, the same ship that brought her husband, Rudolph, here nearly one year previously.
Erwin Rudolph Packhieser about age 7 |
Ships arriving in New York from Europe would dock at the Hudson or East River piers. The first and second class passengers would disembark, pass through Customs at the piers and enter the United States. Steerage or third class passengers were then transported from the piers by ferry or barge to Ellis Island, where they would undergo a medical and legal inspection before being allowed to enter the country or "land", a process that normally took 4 or 5 hours, but could result in a longer stay if there were any issues. Even though an Immigrant was physically standing in America, on Ellis Island, they were still considered "outside" U.S. boundaries. Passengers who failed these inspections would be sent back to Europe and not allowed to land in America. [4]
Perhaps Rudolph's detention at Ellis Island, the previous year, prompted him to pay the higher fare for his family, to spare them from a similar or worse fate than he may have experienced spending a night in the stuffy dormitories in the humid heat of a New York July night. [5]
An example of a typical second class cabin of the period |
I recently spoke to my mother, Jeanne Ottilie (Packhiser) Walton, who was named for her grandmother. She recalled stories about the Mühlwitz's being somewhat wealthy. They owned some sort of business in their hometown of Königsberg in East Prussia. Perhaps future research will help us identify this. As an indicator of their wealth, my mother recalled that they owned their own pew in the church and had a carriage. Neither may sound very impressive today, but a century ago, most people couldn't afford these luxuries. [8]
Reading room in the Kronprinz Wilhelm |
Looking at her immigration manifest (transcribed below), you may notice it is slightly different than the one in use only the year before. (See Rudolph's manifest). Her age is listed as 28 (field 3) which means she would have been born in 1875. Her newspaper obituary lists her birth date as "15 November 1872". [9] Her grave stone lists 1872 as well. If this is correct, then her age at immigration should have been 31. But who can blame her for this "mistake". She would not be the first woman to shave off a few years off her age on her way to start a new life in America.
She listed herself as married (field 5) and she listed Michalowo, located in present day Poland near the Russian border, as her last residence (field 10). According to records in the Packheiser family bible in my mother's possession.[10] Michalowo is where they got married, I would guess this was their village. The nearest big city was Bialystok, which Rudolph claimed as his last residence the year before when he arrived. Bialystok had a textile industry, so perhaps this is where he worked as a silk dyer. Ottilie married Rudolph Packheiser on 18 May 1896. Their son Erwin was born on March 26, 1898.
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One object that was passed down to my mother was a large, brass Russian Samovar or Tea urn. Was this brought to America by the Packheisers, purchased here or sent to them after they were settled? These questions may never be answered but I will discuss them with Jeanne and Dee to see if we can come up with a list of Packheiser heirlooms from the old country and speculate how they got here.
The scanty official records leave many other questions unanswered. Was Rudolph waiting for his bride and their son when she arrived? If not how did they get to Boston? We know her final destination is Boston because this is also specified on her manifest (Field 16): Husb[and] Rudolph Packhiser, 112 Brookside Ave, Jamiaca Plains [Boston]
For Erwin entry it simply says "father".
Columns showing amount of money Ottilie Packheiser Carried ($6) and her destination |
Speaking of money, Ottilie arrived with just $6.00 (Field 14). This doesn't seem like a lot of money today, but what was it worth relative to the cost of living in 1903? I found several price surveys on the web for 1903, the following is a sample.
- Average annual salary, postal worker: $924
- Average annual salary, schoolteacher: $358
- A night in a hotel: $2
- Houses for rent-Morristown, NJ, 7 rooms and bath, $12.50/month
- Men's suit, serge, $5.75-6.50/each
- Beef, sirloin steak, .20/lb
- Soda, Hire's, ginger ale, .09/bottle
- Couch, $4.00-5.00/each
- Refrigerator, $4.75-15.00/each
- Railroad tickets, Newark-San Francisco, $67.00/round trip ticket
- One pound coffee: 13 cents
- Loaf of bread: 5 cents
- Stamp: 2 cents
The manifest tells us where they were going, but not how they got there. She didn't have a prepaid ticket to her final destination (field 12). Was one waiting for her and her young son? What mode of transportation took her on the final leg of her journey? The July 2, 1903 "New York Sun" contained an ad for a railroad "Parlor car" [12] from NY to Boston for a fare of $7, one dollar more than she had reported. The same paper also advertised steamship tickets to Boston and a Special 4th of July vacation trip to Boston for $3. We may never know how she decided to travel, but it would be a long, hot journey before she was finally reunited with her husband, after a year of being apart.
The remaining items in the manifest either have fairly predictable answers or are useful for confirming what we may already know. I have transcribed their complete manifest below.
Immigration Service
form 1500 A.
Saloon, Cabin and Steerage Aliens must be Completely Manifested.
This sheet is for Second Cabin Passengers
_______
List or Manifest of Alien Passengers for the U.S. Immigration Officer at Port Of Arrival
List No. __ 30
Required by the regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, under Act of Congress approved March 3, 1903, to be delivered to the U.S. Immigration Officer by the Commanding officer of any vessel having such passengers on board upon arrival at a port in the United States.
SS Kronprinz Wilhelm sailing from Bremen, June 23rd 1903 Arriving at Port of New York [ June 30, 1903]
Field Name
|
Data: Ottilie
Data: Erwin (if different) |
My Comments
|
---|---|---|
(1) No. On List:
|
8
9
|
This is on a page labeled "List Number 30" There are 30 names on this page |
(2) Name In Full:
|
Ottilie Packheiser
Erwin "
|
|
(3) Age
|
28
5
|
my records indicate Ottilie is born in 1872 which would make her 31. Erwin was born in 1898 |
(4) Sex
|
F
M
|
|
(5) Married or Single
|
M
S
|
Married 18 May 1896 |
(6)Calling or Occupation
|
None
|
|
(7) Able to read/write
|
Yes/Yes
|
|
(8) Nationality (country
of last permanent
residence)
|
Russia
|
Probably considered himself German. In my research,all Passengers from Bialystok are labeled Russian, even though they came from diverse cultures |
(9) * Race or People
|
German
|
New question on the 1902 form. Race was intended to indicate a cultural bias rather than a color. |
(10) Last Residence
|
Michalowo,
hezbulka ?
|
Located within Russian Empire in 1903, Rudolph answered Bialistock in 1902 |
(11) Final Destination
(State, City or town)
|
Boston, Mass.
|
|
(12) Whether having a ticket
to such final destination
|
No
|
|
(13) By Whom
was passage paid
|
Self
Mother
|
|
(14) Whether in Possession of
$50, and if less,how much?
|
$ 6.00
|
|
(15) Whether ever before in US
|
No
|
|
(16) Whether going to join
a relative and if so what
relative or friend ,
their number and address
|
husb Rudolph Packheiser
112 Brookside Ave
Jamaica Plain, Mass
father
|
|
(17) Ever in Prison,
Almshouse or
supported by Charity
|
No
|
standard answer |
(18) Whether a Polygamist
|
No
|
standard answer |
(19) Whether an Anarchist
|
No
|
standard answer |
(20) Whether coming by reason of any
offer, solicitation, promise,
or agreement, express
or implied, to labor in the
United States.
|
No
|
standard answer. Labor Unions did not want employers to import cheap foreign labor. |
(21) condition of Health
|
good
|
standard answer. Americans had a real fear that immigrants would bring disease and plagues to their cities if not inspected. |
(22) Deformed or Crippled
|
No
|
standard answer |
* "Race or People" is to be determined by the stock from which they sprang and the language they speak. List of Races will be found on back of this sheet.
"Race or people" is to be determined by the stock from which aliens sprang and the language they speak. The original stock or blood shall be the basis of the classification, the mother tongue to be used only to assist in determining the original stock.
LIST OF RACES OR PEOPLES
African (black). Armenian. Bohemian. Bosnian. Bulgarian. Chinese. Croatian. Cuban. Dalmatian. Dutch. East Indian. English. Finnish. Flemish. French. German. | Greek. Hebrew. Herzegovinian. Irish. Italian (North). Italian (South). Japanese. Korean. Lithuanian. Magyar. Mexican. Montenegrin. Moravian. Pacific Islander. Polish. Portuguese. | Roumanian. Russian. Ruthenian (Russniak). Scandinavian (Norwegians, Danes, and Swedes). Scotch. Servian. Slovak. Slovenian. Spanish. Spanish American. Syrian. Turkish. Welsh. West Indian (other than Cuban). |
Sources:
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norddeutscher_Lloyd
2. The New York Sun, July 2, 1903, Page 3, Weather
3. Cannato, Vincent J.,American Passage, The History of Ellis Island, 2009, Harper Collins, NY, pg 129
4. www.ellisisland.org
5 Record of Detained Alien Passengers, SS KronPrinx Wm, July 22, 1902, Sheet 151, Line 29, Packhieser, Rudolf (sic) www.ellisisland.org
6. http://www.thegreatoceanliners.com/kpw.html,
7. Cannato, Vincent J.,American Passage, The History of Ellis Island, 2009, Harper Collins, NY, pg 299
8. Phone conversation with Jeanne Ottilie (Packhiser) Walton on 19 Jan. 2013
9. Middletown Times Herald, Middletown, NY, September 3, 1949, Page 3, deaths and Funerals, Mrs. Rudolph Packhiser.
10. Packhiser family bible in possession of Jeanne Walton. Photos may be seen at https://picasaweb.google.com/104920865641639603179/PackhiserFamilyGermanBible?authuser=0&authkey=Gv1sRgCOrg_4mxmNPpVQ&feat=directlink
11. Cannato, Vincent J.,American Passage, The History of Ellis Island, 2009, Harper Collins, NY, pg 196-197
12. Parlor Car- A railroad car for day travel fitted with individual reserved seats.
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