Showing posts with label The Englert Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Englert Family. Show all posts

Sunday, June 14, 2026

The Unfinished Circle of Michael Joseph Englert

 In 1911, when Michael Joseph Englert dipped his pen in ink and wrote 228 West 124th Street, New York City on his passport paperwork, he was doing more than recording a temporary residence. He was charting a meridian. He was standing precisely between worlds. Behind him lay the sun-baked, blackland prairie of Olfen, Runnels County, Texas—a German Catholic farming enclave where he had spent nearly three decades carving a life out of the frontier after arriving through the port of Galveston in 1886. Ahead lay Neuhütten, Bavaria, the emerald-wooded village of his birth, where childhood memories lingered like morning mist and family ties still stretched across the Atlantic.

Between those two distinct destinies stood the roaring, vertical colossus of New York City, and between those two lives stood a single, unassuming rowhouse address in Harlem. More than a century later, that address survives in the archives as a genealogical clue. Yet to look closer is to see it as a profound symbol—a brief, suspended breath in the life of an immigrant whose story spanned continents, bridged generations, and collided with the tectonic shifts of the twentieth century. It is, ultimately, a story about the fragile, beautiful nature of human possibility.

When Michael Joseph Englert was born in Neuhütten on October 4, 1845, the world was a vastly different shape. Texas was still a young, fragile republic struggling to define its borders, the American Civil War was a distant thundercloud yet to form, and Germany itself did not exist as a unified empire, but rather as a tapestry of independent kingdoms. Michael’s boyhood universe was bounded by the Spessart hills—a Bavarian landscape of dense forests and ancient paths where church bells dictated the rhythm of the day, and families grew, withered, and were buried within the same few miles of earth for generations. Life followed an ancient, unyielding choreography dictated by the turning of the seasons, the hard-won bounty of the harvest, the solemnity of the liturgical calendar, and the unbreakable bonds of kinship.

Yet by the 1880s, the horizon was expanding. Whispers of a place called America began to filter into the Spessart hills, as letters from departed relatives arrived bearing heavy cardstock photographs and dazzling testimonies of cheap, fertile land, abundant work, and radical self-determination. Michael had already begun building a family of his own in the old country, having married Gertraud in Germany in 1871. Together, they watched the world changing around them. In 1886, at the age of forty—a time when most men of his era were considered firmly settled—Michael chose the path of possibility. He turned his back on the predictable rhythms of Neuhütten, boarded a steamship with Gertraud and their six children, and set sail into the unknown.

Unlike the huddled masses who swept through the gates of Castle Garden or Ellis Island, Michael’s gateway to America was Galveston—a humid, bustling Texas port ringing with the sounds of cotton winches and southern drawls. He was not a penniless immigrant; he arrived with the means, a devoted wife, a large family, and the determination to establish himself quickly. From the coast, he pushed inland, first settling among the established German enclaves of DeWitt County. For nearly two decades, he worked the South Texas soil, adjusting to the rhythms of his new homeland before the promise of fresh frontiers beckoned him further west. Around 1903, he migrated to the rolling prairies of Runnels County, finding his ultimate anchor in the growing community of Olfen.

For a Bavarian immigrant family, Olfen was a brilliant paradox: it was utterly foreign, yet deeply familiar. German was spoken over front-porch railings and in the general store, while the familiar Latin of the Mass echoed under wide Texas skies. Neighbors shared the same folklore, the same recipes, and the same nostalgia for the old country, even as they swung axes and cleared brush together to build something entirely unprecedented.

The geography, however, was a shock to the senses. Instead of Bavaria’s claustrophobic, wooded hills, there was the terrifying, beautiful immensity of the Texas sky; instead of ancient, stone-paved villages, there was the untamed prairie. Yet, Michael and his fellow pioneers broke the sod and tamed the wild grass. Tied to the soil, he and Gertraud anchored their lives and their children to this new landscape. Their children grew up speaking with a blend of German vowels and Texas cadences, survived droughts, and celebrated bumpers. What had begun as a calculated gamble in 1886 gradually calcified into a legacy. The purposeful immigrant had become a prosperous landowner, the isolated newcomer had become a revered patriarch, and the abstract possibilities that had lured Michael across the ocean had hardened into wood, stone, and acreage.

Then, on February 27, 1909, the anchor dragged. Gertraud died. Her passing altered the gravity of Michael’s world. For nearly forty years, since their wedding day in Germany, they had lived a shared epic, navigating the terrifying isolation of the ocean, the grueling labor of the Texas sun, and the quiet triumph of building a dynasty from nothing. She was the one person who truly understood the weight of what had been left behind, and the joy of what had been gained. Now, at sixty-three, Michael was a widower. Though surrounded by the laughter of grandchildren, the support of his children, and the deep respect of the Olfen parish, the silence beside him was deafening. It is often in the wake of profound grief that the human heart begins to look backward, as the future, once so bright with ambition, suddenly feels crowded with ghosts. For Michael, the long-dormant memories of Neuhütten began to sharpen. Not because he loved Texas any less—Texas was his triumph—but because Bavaria was his beginning. The church bells of his childhood were calling him to come and say goodbye.

By the spring of 1911, the desire to see his homeland became reality, and the Texas farmer was walking the concrete canyons of Manhattan, preparing to cross the Atlantic once more. Exactly why Michael listed 228 West 124th Street on his passport application remains a tantalizing historical mystery. The address corresponds to a classic late-nineteenth-century brownstone rowhouse, typical of the Harlem of that era, which likely operated as a respectable boarding house or a transient lodge catering to travelers, merchants, and European emigrants navigating the Atlantic lanes. It was never meant to be his permanent home; it was a waypoint, a sanctuary of transition. Yet, temporary places often hold the highest emotional voltage. For Michael, this Harlem address was the literal bridge between the life he had built on the frontier and the life he had left in the forest.

The Harlem Michael stepped into in 1911 was a neighborhood vibrating with change. The Harlem Renaissance was still a decade away, and the Great Migration was in its infancy, yet the streets were already a swirling human kaleidoscope. German bakers operated next to Irish pubs, Italian fruit vendors shared the sidewalks with Eastern European Jewish tailors, and a growing Black population was infusing the neighborhood with a distinct new energy. Imagine Michael stepping out onto West 124th Street on an April morning. The rural peace of Runnels County must have felt a million miles away as the iron rattle of milk wagons on cobblestones, the sharp clang of distant streetcars, and the melodic shouts of pushcart vendors filled the air. A thick sensory stew of coal smoke, roasting coffee, fresh rye bread, horse manure, and sea salt blowing in from the rivers hung over the pavement. For a man used to the quiet horizon of the Texas plains, the verticality and velocity of New York must have been dizzying. Yet, looking into the faces of the crowds, Michael would have recognized a universal kinship. Immigrants were everywhere, holding dual identities in their hearts, balancing old memories with new dreams, and belonging to two places at once. When he penned that address, he was anchoring himself, telling the United States government, his family in Texas, and perhaps himself: "I am here. I am still moving. I am safe."

With his paperwork finalized, stating his intention to travel abroad for six months, Michael made the journey back across the sea to revisit the landscapes of his youth. This 1911 voyage was a successful pilgrimage of memory, a brief closing of the circle between his two lives, and by the dynamic of his own intent, it ended exactly as planned. Before April of 1913, Michael was back on his land in West Texas, returned safely to his family and the community he had helped build.

Yet, having successfully reunited with his past once, the pull of the old country remained. As he walked the rolling acreage of Olfen, his eyes were still set on another voyage across the sea, but this time his actions carried a heavier gravity. He was sixty-seven years old, and the records from that spring paint a portrait of a man acutely aware of his own mortality and his immense responsibility. He sat down with a notary in Olfen and meticulously arranged the affairs of a lifetime, drafting a precise last will and testament, appointing a trusted trustee, and beginning the legal process of transferring his hard-won land to his son. He appended strict, loving instructions that the inheritance must ultimately be divided with absolute fairness among all his children. This was not a man abandoning his post; this was a patriarch protecting his kingdom. To Michael, that Texas dirt was not just real estate—it was the physical manifestation of every tear, every callus, and every prayer he, Gertraud, and their children had spent over twenty-five years. Crossing the Atlantic was a perilous, expensive endeavor, and a responsible man did not tempt fate without clearing his ledger. Family tradition is unshakeable on this point: Michael fully intended to return. His legal maneuvers were a shield for his absence, not a farewell to his home. His heart, his children, and his future remained rooted in the soil of Olfen.

Later that year, Michael boarded a steamer bound for Europe for what he believed would be just another temporary visit, accompanied by his friend and spiritual confidant, the Catholic priest Father F. Garmann. One can imagine the profound emotion Michael feel as the ship neared the European coastline. He was returning to Bavaria not as a struggling peasant seeking escape, but as a successful American citizen, a substantial landowner, and the head of a sprawling Texan dynasty. He likely looked forward to walking the paths of the Spessart hills, praying in the church of his baptism, and embracing the surviving relatives of his youth before returning to Texas to grow old. Had history maintained its ordinary course, he would have done exactly that.

But in the summer of 1914, the world fractured. The assassination of an Austrian Archduke in Sarajevo set off a catastrophic chain reaction, and within weeks, the nations of Europe mobilized for war. Overnight, borders slammed shut. The Atlantic Ocean, once a highway of hope, became a theater of naval warfare and submarine terror. Communications withered to a crawl, travel became virtually impossible, and Michael’s sentimental visit turned instantly into an iron trap. He was caught on the wrong side of an ocean, an unintended exile in the land of his birth. In Olfen, his children watched the mailboxes and scanned the newspapers as months bled into agonizing years, praying that the chaos of the Great War would spare an aging Texan farmer stranded in Bavaria.

The war eventually ended in late 1918, leaving a scarred, exhausted world in its wake. Sometime later, a letter bearing foreign postmarks finally made its way to the German-American community of Olfen, carrying the devastating news the Englert family had spent years dreading. Michael Joseph Englert would never be coming home. He had contracted pneumonia during the bitter war years and died in Germany. In the early twentieth century, pneumonia was a swift, merciless killer in a Europe depleted by wartime famine and medicine shortages. We cannot know how many times his children read and re-read that letter, trying to reconcile the image of their strong, visionary father with a lonely grave in Bavaria. The cruel irony of his life was laid bare: the man who had successfully crossed the ocean to build a future was prevented by the madness of kings from making the final crossing back to his children. It was not a choice. He had never abandoned Texas, nor had he ever stopped loving the family he built; he was simply a casualty of history.

Today, 228 West 124th Street is just a building in a bustling, modern Harlem. To the casual passerby, it is brick and mortar, but to those who know the story, it remains a sacred crossroads where three worlds converged: Neuhütten, the world of memory, youth, and the Bavarian hills; Olfen, the world of reality, sweat, legacy, and the Texas plains; and New York, the world of pure, suspended possibility. When Michael stood in Harlem in 1911, the ledger of his life was still open, and every path was alive with potential. There was the possibility of a joyful reunion in Germany, a safe return to the porch in Olfen, and the chance to bounce more grandchildren on his knee. He could not see the barbed wire and trenches waiting for him in 1914.

Yet, even though history broke his plans, it could not break his legacy. The war took his breath, but it could not touch what he had built. The Texas land remained, the children he protected remained, the community of Olfen endured, and today, generations later, his descendants still carry his blood and tell his story. Michael Joseph Englert died belonging to two homelands. He was a Bavarian by birth, a Texan by choice, and an American in spirit. That single Harlem address survives as a beautiful testament to a moment when he was completely free—an aging dreamer caught between the two halves of his soul, looking toward the horizon, and quietly trusting in the possibilities of tomorrow.

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All primary source information referenced was obtained from a variety of published and archival materials, including books, historic newspapers, U.S. census records, vital records, probate files, and land documents. These sources were accessed through leading genealogical platforms such as Newspapers.com, Ancestry, FamilySearch, Find a Grave, as well as through local, state & federal archival repositories, libraries and private collections. Interpretive narrative may also include Carol Anna Meyer Brooks' personal experiences or family stories shared with her throughout her lifetime.

©2024-2026 Unfolding the Story Genealogy.  All Rights Reserved.

Monday, April 27, 2026

The Night Before, As It Was Meant to Be: Oma & Opa Meyer's Christmas Eve

In my family, Christmas didn’t begin on Christmas morning—it arrived with intention the night before.

That tradition wasn’t born in Texas. It crossed an ocean.

Long before it settled into the warm glow of an Atascosa County living room, it lived in the hearts of German ancestors—Anna and Peter Schorsch, the Henry Sievers family, and the Michael Englert family—who carried Heiligabend with them like something sacred. Not loud or showy, but steady and deliberate. A flame passed carefully from one generation to the next until it found a home within the wood-scented walls of Clara and Herbert Meyer’s house. Clara and Herbert raised seven children, and on Christmas Eve, all of their families would gather together under one roof.

By late afternoon on December 24th, the outside world seemed to soften. But inside Oma and Opa’s house, something else took hold—a familiar energy, a sense that the evening was unfolding just as it should. As each family arrived, Uncle Burton and Aunt Doris would begin the round of hugs and kisses, making sure everyone was properly welcomed. Aunt Doris, never missing a chance for fun, would play “I’ve got your belly button” with the kids, drawing out laughter before anyone had even made it all the way into the house.

It always began in the kitchen.

That was the true heart of the house, where the air turned warm and fragrant, thick with vinegar, sugar, and the unmistakable scent of Oma’s cooking. In keeping with old German-Texan tradition, the meal was simple—intentionally so. A pause before the abundance of Christmas Day. Each family brought a dish to share, adding their own touch to the table. We gathered around plates of tangy German potato salad, rich with bacon, and savory sausage that tasted like history itself. Before we ate, Uncle Burton would say the blessing over the meal, a familiar and grounding moment that brought everyone together. And then came the sugar cookies—Oma’s pride. Perfectly crisp, lightly sweet, and decorated with the kind of patience that turned baking into something more like love you could hold in your hand.

Oma's Sugar Cookie Recipe

After dinner came another tradition—dominoes. There wasn’t a family gathering without it. The clack of tiles on the table and the steady rhythm of the game filled the room. Everyone who played was serious about it—loud and intent on winning—and you didn’t dare interrupt once a game was underway. Meanwhile, Uncle Victor was doing the exact opposite—constantly pestering the kids and stirring up just enough chaos to keep things lively. The kids would shout, “Try to catch me!” as they ran by, just within reach, while he made a show of trying to catch them. And somewhere in the middle of it all was Uncle Leroy—his laugh unique and unmistakable. You always knew the moment he arrived, because his laughter reached the room before he did. And Uncle Henry, my dad, had a story for every conversation—whether a tall tale or true, he always managed to capture your attention.

Then, just as the evening settled into its rhythm, the modern world made its entrance.

The rotary phone would ring.

“Aunt Kathryn!” someone would call, and the room came alive again. A long-distance call wasn’t an everyday thing—it was something planned, something valued. The cord stretched impossibly far, winding around chair legs and across laps, tying us together in a very literal way. One by one, we took our turns, voices a little too loud, as if sheer volume might help carry our words all the way to California. And somehow, it worked. In that moment, she wasn’t far away—she was right there with us.

When the receiver finally clicked back into place, the evening shifted into something more focused, more purposeful. The noise didn't disappear—it never really did—but it gathered itself, pulled toward the center of the room by a familiar signal.

Aunt Doris didn’t wait for silence—she created just enough of it. With a firm “Alright now, it’s time,” and a look that meant business, she gathered the children around her on the floor. There might have been one last whisper or a stifled giggle, but it didn’t last long. Somehow, we all ended up settled at her feet.

With her Bible rested in her hands as she began to read.

Her voice, steady and familiar, carried the Christmas story through the room. In that moment, it felt as though time stretched—back to those earlier generations who once sat in candlelit rooms, hearing the same words in a much rougher Texas than we knew. The glow of Christmas lights shimmered in the dark windows, and for a few moments, past and present seemed to meet—just as they had, year after year, by design.

Then we sang.

The brass German carousel was brought out, polished and familiar. One by one, the candles were lit. Slowly, almost magically, the rising heat set the blades in motion. Golden angels began to turn in a gentle circle, their tiny bells chiming softly in celebration of Christ’s birth—a delicate sound that felt less like decoration and more like tradition in motion. As it turned, Annabelle led us all in Christmas carols—“We Wish You a Merry Christmas,” “Jingle Bells,” and “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer”—our voices filling the room, a little uneven, a little loud, but full of joy. We didn’t all know the words, and more than one of us sang a little off‑key, but that only made it feel more real and more ours. Between verses, someone would shout, “Again!” and we’d laugh and start over, leaning into the simple pleasure of singing together. Oma sang “O Tannenbaum” in German, her voice steady and clear, carrying the old carol with a quiet pride that made us all listen a little more closely.

And just when that wonder settled in—

THUMP.

Boots on the porch.

“Ho, Ho, Ho!”

The room burst back to life.

Oma & Opa Pleasanton, Texas circa 1970

In true German tradition, Christmas came that very night. The door swung open, and in came Santa Claus—though we all had our suspicions which uncle was behind the beard. It didn’t matter. In that moment, he was real. The red suit, the booming voice, and the velvet sack slung over his shoulder brought a rush of excitement with him. From that sack came gifts and laughter—but for many years, there was something else, too. Tucked inside were crisp $2 bills for each grandchild, a short-lived tradition Opa had started, simple and thoughtful, just like so much else he did. Ol’ St. Nick filled the room with joy and was gone almost as quickly as he arrived, leaving behind a floor blanketed in wrapping paper and the lingering echo of laughter in every corner.

Pleasanton, Texas circa 1979

By the end of the night, the air still smelled faintly of sugar cookies, and something deeper lingered beneath it all.

This wasn’t just celebration.

It was intention, carried forward.

Every December 24th, whether we thought about it or not, that old flame still burned. Not just in the food, or the phone call, or the spinning carousel—but in the way Oma and Opa made space for it, year after year, making sure we didn’t just remember where we came from…

…but felt it.

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All primary source information referenced was obtained from a variety of published and archival materials, including books, historic newspapers, U.S. census records, vital records, probate files, and land documents. These sources were accessed through leading genealogical platforms such as Newspapers.com, Ancestry, FamilySearch, Find a Grave, as well as through local, state & federal archival repositories, libraries and private collections. Interpretive narrative may also include Carol Anna Meyer Brooks' personal experiences or family stories shared with her throughout her lifetime.

©2024-2026 Unfolding the Story Genealogy.  All Rights Reserved.



Monday, February 17, 2025

Roots in a New Land: The Journey of the Sievers and Englert Families

On the brisk morning of October 4, 1884, Henry Sievers, Sr. stood on the bustling docks of Bremen, Germany, his wife Wilhelmine and their children huddled close beside him. Before them, the German Lloyd steamship SS Ohio loomed large, its iron hull gleaming in the morning light. The air buzzed with the nervous excitement of fellow emigrants, their voices a mix of hope and anxiety as they prepared to leave their homeland behind. 

Henry took one last look at the country where generations of his family had lived, then stepped forward. It was time. With their few belongings packed in wooden trunks, the Sievers family boarded the vessel, bound for Galveston, Texas.

SS Ohio

The journey was arduous. The SS Ohio cut through the Atlantic, its massive steam engines churning day and night. Below deck, the steerage quarters were cramped and dimly lit, filled with the sounds of restless passengers and the cries of seasick children. Wilhelmine did her best to comfort their children, while Henry spoke of the new life that awaited them in Texas—a land of opportunity, wide-open spaces, and freedom.

After twenty-two days at sea, on October 26, 1884, the SS Ohio finally arrived in Galveston. The humid sea air was a stark contrast to the crisp German autumn they had left behind. As they stepped onto American soil, the Sievers family knew their journey was far from over. From Galveston, they would travel inland to Dewitt County, a place where many German immigrants had already begun to carve out a new life.

Two years later, on September 11, 1886, another German family stood on the same docks in Bremen. Michael Englert, his wife, and their children clutched their belongings as they prepared to board the SS Weser (1867), another German Lloyd steamship bound for Galveston. Like the Sievers family before them, the Englerts left behind everything they knew in search of a better future.

SS Weser (on the right)

Their voyage was much the same—long days at sea, unpredictable weather, and the endless hope that carried them forward. The SS Weser docked in Galveston on October 1, 1886, and the Englert family took their first steps onto American soil. Their destination? Dewitt County, where the Sievers and other German families had already begun to establish themselves.


When the time came for Henry and Michael to be naturalized, they took their oaths in Dewitt County. Under the laws of the time, when the head of a household became a U.S. citizen, so did every member of the family. With their naturalization, the Sievers and Englert families fully embraced their new homeland.

Both families farmed cotton, given the land conditions in Dewitt County. They labored under the hot Texas sun, working the fields to build a future for themselves and their children. They built homes, contributed to the growing German-Texan community, and remained deeply connected to their heritage.

The Henry Sievers, Sr Family

The Michael Englert Family

Their ties to one another deepened when Henry Sievers Jr., son of Henry and Wilhelmine, married Mary Ann Englert, daughter of Michael Englert, on November 21, 1893, in Dewitt County. The union of these two families was not just a marriage but a symbol of the shared struggles and dreams of German immigrants who had left everything behind to forge a new life in Texas.

Though they had left Germany behind, their traditions, language, and values remained an integral part of their lives. Their journey across the Atlantic had been only the beginning—now, as Americans, they were ready to shape the future for generations to come.                

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All primary source information referenced was gathered from historic newspapers, U.S. census schedules, vital records, probate files, and land documents, accessed through leading genealogical platforms such as Newspapers.com, Ancestry, FamilySearch, Find a Grave, and federal archival repositories. Interpretive narrative may also include Carol Anna Meyer Brooks' personal experiences or family stories shared with her throughout her lifetime.

©2024-2026 Unfolding the Story Genealogy.  All Rights Reserved.                               

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

A Legacy of Love and Resilience: The Story of Henry Sievers and Mary Ann Englert

 

   From the author’s personal collection; taken circa 1905

Both Henry Sievers and Mary Ann Englert were born in Germany, but their paths to America unfolded separately. Each family immigrated through the Port of Galveston, arriving on different dates and ships. The Sievers family reached Texas on 26 October 1884, aboard the SS Ohio, eventually settling in Gonzales County. The Englert family arrived later, on 1 October 1886, aboard the SS Weser, making their home in DeWitt County before migrating to Olfen in Runnels County.

Mary Ann was the eldest of six children, deeply cherished by her father, Michael Joseph Englert. In 1889, Mary Ann had a son, Frank Alois Englert, though it remains unclear whether she was married to Frank’s father. Michael sought to find a suitable husband for his daughter and chose Henry Sievers Jr. as a promising match. Henry came from a respectable German family and was known for being hardworking, ambitious, and polite. Although the Sievers family did not share the Catholic faith of the Englert’s, both families agreed that Henry would meet Mary Ann, and if they developed a mutual affection, they would have the families' blessing. What began as an arranged relationship blossomed into true love. On November 21, 1893, Henry and Mary Ann were married in DeWitt County, and Henry wholeheartedly embraced Frank as his own son.

Henry and Mary Ann’s first biological child, John Heinrich Sievers, was born on 10 September 1894, but tragically passed away just five months later. The loss devastated both families, and it would be a decade before Mary Ann gave birth again. Their second child, Klara Theresa Sievers, was born on 4 May 1905, in Gonzales County, but heartbreak struck again when Klara passed away on 15 May 1906, at only one year old. The couple’s third child, a baby girl, was stillborn on 14 March 1907. On 2 September 1909, Mary Ann gave birth to their fourth child, Michael Sievers, in Gonzales County. However, joy was once again overshadowed by sorrow, as Mary Ann passed away shortly after giving birth to him.

Henry was left to grapple with the overwhelming loss of his wife. The grief strained relationships between the Sievers and Englert families, particularly with Mary Ann’s firstborn, Frank, who blamed Henry for his mother’s death. Both families wanted to care for the infant Michael, leading to intense disagreements. Ultimately, Henry decided to entrust Michael to his sister, Minna Sievers Meyer, and her husband, Rheinhardt Meyer.

In 1900, nine-year-old Michael was legally adopted by Minna and Rheinhardt, who gave him the new name Herbert Meyer. Henry visited Herbert only a few times as he grew up. Each visit was bittersweet, as young Herbert longed to return home with his father. This made the visits emotionally difficult for both of them, and over time, they grew less frequent.

Minna instilled in Herbert a deep love for their German heritage, as well as a devotion to faith and family values. These principles became the foundation of Herbert’s life and were passed down to his children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

Despite the tragedies he endured, Henry never remarried, choosing instead to focus on the memory of Mary Ann and the legacy of their family. He lived quietly in Gonzales County and later in Atascosa County until his death in 1927.

Henry and Mary Ann shared just sixteen years together, marked by true love, heartbreaking loss, and resilience. Despite the many tragedies they endured while trying to grow their family, their legacy lives on through their descendants, a testament to the enduring strength of their bond.                  

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All primary source information referenced was gathered from historic newspapers, U.S. census schedules, vital records, probate files, and land documents, accessed through leading genealogical platforms such as Newspapers.com, Ancestry, FamilySearch, Find a Grave, and federal archival repositories. Interpretive narrative may also include Carol Anna Meyer Brooks' personal experiences or family stories shared with her throughout her lifetime.

©2024-2026 Unfolding the Story Genealogy.  All Rights Reserved.                         

The Unfinished Circle of Michael Joseph Englert

 In 1911, when Michael Joseph Englert dipped his pen in ink and wrote 228 West 124th Street, New York City on his passport paperwork, he wa...