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First Recorded Hartung Family of Mühlhausen
Although there was a Hartung family dating back to the
First Crusade A.D. 1096, the earliest recorded Hartung family of Mühlhausen,
Thüringia, Germany, was originated by Thomas Hartung, circa 1545.

Johann Christoph Hartung Family Origins
The earliest of my Hartung ancestors located so
far is Johann Christoph Hartung, born 1775 in Mühlhausen, Thüringia,
Germany. Johann was a servant to a local nobleman. He married Johanna
Elisabeth Regina Umbreit (1782-1832) in 1807, at St. Marian (BMV) church
in Mühlhausen. She was the daughter of Johannes Andreas Umbreit
(1757-) of Gotha, Germany.
Johann and Johanna had six children, Marie Elisabeth
(1807-), Eva Elisabeth (1809-), Friedrich Rudolph (1812-), Johann Gottfried
(1818-1819), Marie Salome (1821-), and Johann Christoph (1825-1874).
Johann's son, Johann married Martha Elizabeth Hertz (1822-1867) in
St. Petri-Margareten Church, Mühlhausen, in 1848.
Johann and Martha (Mary) left Germany for Baltimore,
MD in 1863 along with their four children, John Adolph (1847-1906),
Frederick (1850-), Henry William (1855-), and John Christoph (1860-1931).
Soon after arriving their fifth son, Theodore (1864-1945) was born.
After arriving in Baltimore, Johann continued his trade
as a woodworker. John Adolph "Frank" later became a saloon keeper,
John Christoph "Charles" became a shoemaker and Theodore a barber.
Frederick and Henry disappeared from the records in the 1870s. In 1867
Martha died and Johann married Catharine Buder. Johann died in 1874.

Short History of Thüringia, Germany
Thüringia, state and historic region of central Germany.
It was named for the Thüringins, a Germanic tribe that established
a kingdom there in the 5th century AD.
Thüringia was founded in 1130 as a landgraviate,
land governed by a German count. It was an important principality during
the 12th and 13th centuries. The seat of the landgraves was the famous
castle of Wartburg, near Eisenach, noted as the site of contests of
minnesingers (German poets and musicians of the 12th to the 14th centuries).
The old line of landgraves then passed to the house of Wettin, which
ruled in the margraviate of Meissen.
In the 15th century the house of Wettin also acquired
the electoral duchy of Saxony. When the Saxon dominions were partitioned
in 1485, most of Thüringia passed to the Ernestine branch of the
Wettin house. During the Reformation, in the early 16th century, the
Saxon duchies and principalities were separated. They again merged
into the state of Thüringia after the end of World War I in 1918.
After World War II, which ended in 1945, Thüringia
was included in the Soviet Zone. It became a state of East Germany
in 1949 but was dissolved in 1952. After German unification in 1990,
the state of Thüringia was created. The state is bordered by Saxony,
Bavaria, Hesse, Lower Saxony, and Saxony-Anhalt. The chief cities of
Thüringia are Erfurt and Weimar.

Locating Your Ancestor's Ship Information
If you are trying to locate information about the vessel
on which your German ancestors journeyed to the United States, you
might be interested in this page. It
describes the steps I took to locate information about the ship, the Adolphine on
which my ancestors traveled to America. All that it takes is a little
time and persistence. If you think that your Hartung ancestor landed
in Baltimore from Germany, check this Passenger List of Hartungs arriving at the Port of Baltimore
between 1820 and 1897. It was compiled by the WPA during the 1930s.
To see a list of passengers who arrived on the Adolphine
on 5 May 1863 along with my Hartung ancestors click
here. This list is from the Immigrant
Ships Transcribers Guild. There are no photos or paintings of the Adolphine but
these are copies of original sketches from the pencil of Oltmann Jaburg,
a marine painter in Vegesack, Germany of the last century.

This is a list of researchers interested in Hartung families unrelated
to my line. If you would like to have your Hartung family lineage listed
contact me with a short outline of your earliest Hartung ancestor.

German & Baltimore Related
Genealogy Sites

If you would like to have additional family
information and/or your email address added to the information on this
page please contact me with your information.
Comments and Suggestions
E-Mail: Jim Hartung
Copyright James C. Hartung
Last Updated
April 27, 2008
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