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1867 - Gustave SagnerGustave Theodor Sagner was born on March 1, 1867 in the town of Meseritz located in Provinz Posen (Province of Posen) in Königreich Prueßen (the Kingdom of Prussia) to August Sagner and Ernestine Kurtzhan. Today the town is in the Poznan region of Poland and is called Międzyrzecz. Gustave often spelled his name as Gustav. Gustav's father, Johann August Sagner, was born on April 29, 1837 in Meseritz. He was called by his middle name, August, throughout his life in order to differentiate himself from his father, Johann Christian Sagner. August Sagner became a master carpenter, cabinetmaker, wagon maker and wheelwright. Gustav followed suit and became a carpenter and contractor. Gustav's mother, Auguste Ernestine Kurtzhan, was born on June 27, 1842 in Meseritz. She too went by her middle name: Ernestine or Ernestina. August Sagner married her on January 21, 1864. Gustav had two sisters: Louise, born two years earlier in October 1865 and Anna Augusta, born a year later in November 1868. emigrationIn May 1869, Gustav's father, August Sagner, sailed from Bremen to New York. He settled in St. Louis, Missouri, without his family.
The Werra was built by John Elder & Company, Glasgow, Scotland, in 1882 for the North German Lloyd line. It carried 1,255 passengers (125 first class, 130 second class, 1,000 third class) and served the Bremerhaven to New York service. 1871 - Eleanora Wilhelmina GirthoferEleanora Wilhelmina Girthofer was born on February 12, 1871 in St. Louis to Joseph Girthofer and and Katherina Kleen. Eleanora's father, Joseph Girthofer, was born on January 21, 1837 in the town of Straubing, Bavaria. He emigrated to the United States in 1848 or 1849. During the American Civil War, Joseph volunteered for military service on April 22, 1861 and served in the Ohio Infantry from May 8, 1861 to June 7, 1864. Eleanora's mother, Katherina Kleen, was born on September 17, 1848 in Langanhausen or Langenhagen, Hannover. She emigrated to the United States in 1865. Joseph Girthofer married Katherina Kleen on December 5, 1868 in St. Louis, Missouri. Eleanora was the second of five children. 1890 - 1899The 1890 St. Louis City Directory lists August Sagner, a carpenter, Gustave Sagner, a carpenter, and Louise Sagner, a dressmaker, living at 3120 Brantner Place. Gustav T. Sagner received his naturalization papers on November 9, 1891 in St. Louis City Circuit Court. Witnesses were J. G. Kessler and Louis Busch. A report from the St. Louis Health Commissioner dated March 31, 1894, listed all of the licensed physicians and midwives in St. Louis. On page 53, was the name of Ernestine Sagner. marriageOn February 3, 1893, Gustav Sagner married Eleanora Wilhelmina Girthofer in St. Louis, Missouri. childrenGustav and Eleanora had four children, all sons:
Because their first and last children were born at home at the same address, it's probably safe to assume that all the boys were born at 4564 N. Market Street in St. Louis. The informant on the birth record of William Gustave was C. Girthofer. It is a safe assumption that Eleanora's mother Catherina Kleen Girthofer, who was a midwife, delivered the child. And perhaps they were all delivered by their grandmother Catherina Girthofer. It's interesting to note, however, that their other grandmother, Ernestine Sagner, was also a midwife. Spanish-American War
census recordsCensus records give us a sketchy picture of events from 1900 to 1920. The 1900, 1910 and 1920 census records list the family’s residence at 4564 North Market in North St. Louis. 1900 - 1909In 1900, Gustav’s mother Ernestine, a widow at age 57, was living with his family along with his sister Anna, age 31. Gustav’s occupation was listed as a “builder – house” in the census. Anna Augusta Sagner married Gustav Adolph Zimmer on August 13, 1902 in Denver, Colorado. 1910 - 1919
Then, on February 3, 1911, Gustav’s wife Eleanor died at age 39 at the Ellen Osborn Hospital in St. Louis where she had been treated by Dr. Ellen M. Osborn. Dr. Osborn was a graduate of the Women’s Medical College of St. Louis, the first school west of the Mississippi exclusively for the medical education of women. Unlike many other female physicians, Ellen Osborn not limit her practice to the “women's specialties” or to female patients. An internist and surgeon, and founder of her own surgical and quarantine hospital, she was assisted by other woman physicians, who like her, found staff privileges difficult to obtain at other hospitals. By 1911, the Ellen Osborn Hospital was one of the network of hospitals affiliated with the Barnes Medical College. Eleanor Sagner's death certificate lists the cause of death as "suppurative salpingitis" complicated with "pelvic peritonitis." Suppurative salpingitis is a bacterial infection of the fallopian tubes which creates a pus discharge. It can be caused by a staph or strep infection, venereal disease (especially , or infections following a pregnancy or abortion. At the time there were no antibiotics to fight this kind of infection. Eleanor was buried on February 5, 1911 in Zion Cemetery, Section R, Lot 3, at 7401 Saint Charles Rock Road in St. Louis. Eleanor left behind four young sons. William was 17 years old, Walter 15, Arthur 13, and Ernest 9 when their mother died.
The picture above was taken at Chamber's Pasture on July 14, 1918. From left to right are Walter Sagner (22), Frieda (Kitty) Stubbe (23), Arthur Sagner (21), Anita Stubbe (20), Gustav Sagner (51), William Sagner (24), Alice Schuller (16), and Ernest Sagner (17). Frieda and Anita were sisters. All of the couples married over the next few years. William never married. Arthur is in uniform. The three oldest boys had to register for the draft. William entered the army two days after this picture was taken. Walter's draft registration card lists his occupation as a mechanical draftsman at the Moon-Hopkins Billing Machine Company at 2235 O'Fallon. Moon-Hopkins was founded in St. Louis in 1911. They produced a combination typewriter and calculator, unique for its time. In 1920, the Burroughs Adding Machine Company purchased Moon-Hopkins. The machine was redesigned, improved, and sold as the Burroughs Moon-Hopkins. At the time of his registration, Arthur was working for the Southern Surety Company in Des Moines, Iowa. He returned to St. Louis on June 7, 1918, just a month before the group photo was taken. He was inducted into the service at Scott Field, Illinois on June 19, 1918. The photo above was taken four weeks later. (Arthur's Army serial number was 963,480) There is no information on his service record about European service or his length of military service. On William's registration form, he stated he was a bank clerk at the Central National Bank at Seventh and Olive Streets. He claimed to be exempt from the draft because he had been "rejected from the 5th Regiment." Still, William entered the army just two days after the group photo was taken. William Sagner served in World War I from July 16, 1918 to November 17, 1919 as a member of Company L of the 7th Infantry. (Army serial number 3,766,736) He was inducted into the service in St. Louis. From July 22 to September 17, 1918, he was stationed in Texas. He was then sent to Europe on September 25, 1918 and arrived in France on October 4th. He was sent to Germany on November 16 where he served in the Army of Occupation along the Rhine River until May 7, 1919. On that date he returned to France where he remained until June 12, 1919. William then shipped out to Hampton, Virginia, arriving there on June 22. On November 17, 1919, he was honorably discharged from the army with a 100% disability. William Sagner never recovered from his wartime experiences. In World War I they called his condition "shell shock." In World War II, it was known as "battle fatigue." Today, we call it "post-traumatic stress disorder." Later in his life he would have mental and nervous problems, finding it difficult to hold down a steady job. He spent some time as an inmate in the Missouri Sanitarium in South St. Louis and at a Veterans' Hospital in Iowa. Family members recalled that he was a changed person after the war and was difficult to be around. Later in life, he settled in Chicago, Illinois. 1920 - 1929Ernest Frederick Sagner married Alice Elizabeth Schuller on January 3, 1920 in St. Louis. (See Ernest Sagner and Alice Schuller.) Their first daughter Betty Lea Sagner was born on June 22, 1921. In the 1920 census, Ernestine, at age 77, was back in Gustav’s household, most likely helping Gustav out after the death of his wife, Eleanor. Gustav’s occupation was listed as a “carpenter – contractor.” William Sagner was 25 and unemployed, Arthur was 22 and a bank teller, and Ernest was 18 and a clerk in an asbestos company. However, just days before the census was taken, Ernest had gotten married. By 1920, Walter was married to Frieda Elizabeth (Kitty) Stubbe and had moved to Hartford, Connecticut, where Walter worked for the Underwood Computing Machine Company as a designer. The Underwood Typewriter Company had produced its first typewriter in 1901, considered the first widely successful, modern typewriter. By 1910, they had also produced combination typewriting-adding machines. The computing mechanism was electric. In 1911, an ad stated that "the Underwood Computing Machine meets the long felt want for a machine that will write names and descriptions and list amounts in as many columns as may be required, and automatically add or subtract the amounts in all columns both vertically and cross-wise. The computing mechanism is attached to the figure keys (of the standard typewriter keyboard), which do computing automatically as the keys are struck and the figures are imprinted on the paper." The prices of the four models of computing mechanisms (not including the price of the necessary typewriter with decimal tabulator) were $200 to $275 in 1911. It was this division of Underwood that Walter Sagner began to work for after World War I. Geer's Hartford City Directories report Walter's employment and home addresses every year during this decade from 1921 to 1929. In 1921 Walter and Kitty's home address was Apartment 2-5 at 255 Sisson Avenue in Hartford. His work address was at 22 Arbor. In 1922, they moved to a home at 1072 Broad Street in West Hartford and in 1924 to a home at 100 Beverly Road in West Hartford where they remained until sometime between 1931 and 1935. In 1924, Walter's job description became a mechanical engineer. In 1927, Time magazine reported, "Directors of the Underwood Typewriter Co. last week asked their stockholders to meet Dec. 15 to approve merger with the Elliott-Fisher Co. (general office equipment) as the Underwood-Elliott-Fisher Co." By 1929, the city directory in Hartford was listing Walter's employer as the Underwood Elliott-Fisher Company. Arthur John Sagner married Anita Stubbe, Frieda’s sister on June 10, 1922. Ernest and Alice Sagner gave birth to their second daughter, Alice Anita, on January 17, 1926. Arthur and Anita Sagner gave birth to their only child, Carol A. Sagner, on September 16, 1928. 1930 - 1939In April 1930, the census lists William Sagner (36) as a resident at the Veterans Bureau Hospital 1657 in Knoxville, Iowa. He was housed in a ward of "incompetent patients." In 1930, Arthur Sagner (32), Anita (32), and their daughter Carol (18 months) were living at 4946 Miami Avenue in St. Louis. Arthur was working as a secretary at a bank. In 1930, Ernest Sagner (29), Alice (28) and daughters Betty Lee (8) and Alice Anita (4) were living in a two-family flat at 4723A Leduc Street, rented for $45 a month. He was the manager of a radio shop. In 1930, Walter Sagner (34) and Frieda (Kitty) (34) were living at 100 Beverly Road in West Hartford, Connecticut, where the census reports that he worked for a "computing" company. By 1935, Walter and Kitty had moved to a new home at 185 Clearfield Road in Wethersfield, Connecticut. By 1939, Walter was a development engineer and they had moved to 39 Four Mile Road in West Hartford where they remained until Walter's death in 1984. 1940 - 1949Walter Sagner was required to register for the draft again in December 1941. He was living at 59 Four Mile Road in West Hartford, Connecticut and was working for Underwood, Elliott, Fisher, an engineering firm. By 1945, the company name had changed to the Underwood Corporation. William Sagner registered in 1942. He was living at 2107 North Clark in Chicago, Illinois, and was working at the restaurant of the Plaza Hotel at 1543 North Clark. Gould's St. Louis City Directory for 1944 listed Arthur Sagner as a vice-president and secretary for the Easton Taylor Trust Company. His home address was 5339 Mardel Avenue. The same directory listed Ernest Sagner as the owner of the E. F. Sagner Radio and Electric Company at 5048 Easton Avenue. He lived above the store at 5048A Easton. Gustav Sagner died at 11:45 PM on December 30, 1946 in St. Louis. He was buried on January 2, 1947 in Zion Cemetery, Section R, Lot 3, at 7401 Saint Charles Rock Road in St. Louis. 1950 - 1959
1960 - 1969By 1961, the Hartford city directories were no longer listing an employer for Walter Sagner, suggesting he had retired by that point. 1970 - 1979Ernest Sagner died on November 1, 1978 at House Springs, Missouri. His wife, Alice, died on March 15, 1980. 1980 - 1989Arthur Sagner died on January 25, 1982 in St. Louis. His wife Anita died on December 9, 1991. Walter Sagner died on September 4, 1984 in Hartford, Connecticut. His wife, Kitty, returned to St. Louis where she died ten years later on December 14, 1994.
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