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This post is for my husband, Nick, and my mother-in-law, Helene's, family. Helene's father, August Ries, immigrated from Germany to America in 1924. Here I will share what I have learned about the history of the place he came from, as well as how the German and American lines of the family reconnected.
The Best Greeting from West-Germany
In Sept of 1979, eight years after the death of her father, Helene (Ries) Vigdahl wrote the following letter to the Mayor's Office of Oberderdingen, Germany:
The results are presented to you in the Ries Ancestry and the American/German Ries Descendant documents privately provided to family members. Additionally, I have written a place of origin history below, similar to what I like to do for my own family tree blog posts. May these two family lines never again lose touch of their shared history with one another!
The Ries Surname
The surname Ries is Bohemian (now Czech Republican) in origin. Its literal meaning is "branch" or "twig", and it was probably used to signify a woodcarver. Alternatively, in southern Germany, it could be used to denote a person who was very big or tall. Sometimes it is spelled with the variations of Riess, Reis, or Rüs. Given their Roman Catholic roots, the Ries' of Bohemia may have been part of the House of Habsburg- Austrian's who defeated and then took over the area starting around 1278. Or instead, they may have been a part of the original Slavic inhabitants that were mostly aligned with the Protestants prior to 1620.
Location of Bohemia before becoming a part of Czechoslovakia in 1928. Bordered on the west by Germany. Now a part of the Czech Republic.
Starting in the early 1500s, tensions between the established Roman Catholics and the newly forming Lutheran Protestants created a great deal of unrest throughout Europe (more on this to follow). In Bohemia, this came to a head at the Battle of White Mountain on 8 Nov 1620. The untrained Protestants lost soundly, resulting in the suppression of Lutheranism within Bohemia, and about 600 families being forced to either convert to Catholicism or be exiled. Given the timing of when the Ries line is first recorded in Tiefenbach, Germany, (likely between 1620-1640), it is possible this historic battle played a role in the family's emigration.
Tiefenbach, Östringen, Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Tiefenbach is a small village that was originally owned by the nearby town of Odenheim, but is now a part of the municipality of Östringen. It was first mentioned in records in 1122 AD where it had built up around an Odenheim Benedictine monastery that later became a noble knights monastery. Interestingly, it had early ties to Sickingen as well, (another noble knight town), which their king had pledged allegiance to in 1344. Its ownership changed many times over the generations, and with it, its religious affiliation. Teachings of the Protestant Reformation came to the city in 1556, but were quenched by 1673 when its ownership passed to the Electoral Palatinate. From 1794 until the defeat of Napoleon in 1815, it was ruled by the Catholic French, but then the Congress of Vienna determined that it should become part of Protestant Prussia. Within a year of this decision, the Ries family left Tiefenbach for Sickingen.
Historical Background
Sickingen-Flehingen, Oberderdingen, Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
The village of Sickingen no longer exists by the name of Sickingen. In 1936, it merged with the adjoining town of Flehingen. And then again in 1972, Flehingen and another town, Großvillars, were combined with the municipality of Oberderdingen. Based on monastery records, the original towns of Sickingen and Flehingen existed at least as early as 764 AD and 779 AD, respectively. The Flehingen family line is an offshoot of the Sickingen line that settled the two villages. Unfortunately, the earliest genealogy of the Sickingen line has been lost to time, but the early town was gifted as a fief of the Electoral Palatinate to the noble von Sickingen line no later than 1353.
According to legend, the precursor of the Flehingen line of the von Sickingen family started in 1158, when two brothers, Eberhard and Berthold, were disputing over who should get to claim the ancestral castle. Due to their mother's pleas to avoid bloodshed, they decided on a snowball fight to settle the claim. Each brother would be given 5 snowballs, with the winner taking the castle. Unfortunately, the epic battle ended in a tie, leaving the castle's fate unresolved. Still desiring to refrain from violence, the mother devised a new contest in which the winner would instead be the brother who saw an animal first on the following day. This time, Eberhard was the victor, after spotting a wild swan on the castle moat. A short time later, Berthold caught sight of a wolfhound as well, but the fate of the castle was already sealed. Thus, it would be that Berthold would be forced to build his own "Upper Castle", north of the Sickingen church, while Eberhard would remain south of the church in the "Lower Castle". Each would adopt a coat of arms depicting the 5 snowballs, with Eberhard's also displaying a swan and Berthold's exhibiting a wolf. Over time, the Sickingen crest lost one of its snowballs and the Flehingen crest lost its wolf, but they still exist in similar form today.
As alluded to previously, the religious affiliation of the inhabitants of Sickingen and Flehingen was caught in the same Protestant Reformation tug of war as of much of the rest of 16th century Europe. It began in 1517, when Martin Luther published his famous "Disputation on the Power of Indulgences", calling into question the all-encompassing authority of the Roman Catholic Church. Ultimately, the Reformation helped to introduce social and political ideas that would one day bring down the feudal system, and usher in more democratic forms of government. But many lives were lost or upended in the long transition.
These Protestant ideals enamored not just the peasantry, but many of the free noble class as well. In the late Middle Ages, the world economy was undergoing a gradual shift into industrial, rather than agricultural, wealth. This created declining conditions for the noble land Barons, who felt impoverished in both property and political power. Imperial Knight Franz von Sickingen (born March 2, 1481) was an early adopter of this new way of thinking, as was also the nephew of Konrad von Sickingen, the Lord Baron of Sickingen at that time. After his wife died in 1515, Franz began campaigning in earnest to improve the conditions of the free nobles. In doing so, he came into acquaintance with humanist Ulrich von Hutten in 1519, an ardent supporter of Martin Luther and an outspoken critic of the Roman Catholic Church.
The result for Sickingen was that in 1522, the von Sickingen family became members of the Protestant faith, and their church began to preach Luther's doctrine. This change seems to have inspired the building of a new church in 1523, a structure which still stands in the town today. Throughout the remainder of the 16th century and the Thirty Years War soon after, Sickingen and Flehingen remained Protestant. Tides changed in 1685, when Catholic French King Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes that had helped to secure peace between Catholics and Protestants since its signing in 1598.
The railroad industry has also been of prime importance to the economic growth of Germany. Napoleon's defeat in 1815 lifted the Continental Blockade that had prevented trade with the British Empire. Unfortunately, the gradual weakening and final collapse of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806 initially left future Germany fractured and disordered, with no organized economic center. Town specific cottage industries involving a particular specialty such as linen, wine, or iron works, began to apply more mechanized forms of industry from the 1830s onward. But he real leap forward in industrialization began in the 1850s when Germany began to invest more heavily in railway construction. In addition to connecting centers of trade, railroads also increased demand for iron and coal, leading to expansion in these industries as well.
Initially, Sickingen was somewhat left out of this booming expansion, due to early railroad routes that circumvented the region for the larger cities of Heilbronn, Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, and Stuttgart. This diverted traditional trade routes, and threatened the economic interests of the Eppingen, Kraichital, and Oberderdingen regions. Construction of the Kraichgau Railway in 1880 helped to remediate those concerns. The line runs from Karlsruhe to Heilbronn, crossing directly through the towns of Bretten, Flehingen, and Eppingen on its path. Many generations of the Ries line have maintained their livelihood by working for the railroad, including the father of August Ries, Franz Josef (b. 1873) and August's brother Anton (b. 1920).
The Ries Line
Passage to America
August Ries came to America in 1924, at the age of 19, to continue his training as a locksmith. His brother Wilhelm had left for America the year prior, and for the first two months they lived together with their first cousin (once removed) John Haag (b. 1867). John's family was descended from the line of August's great aunt and uncle, Ludwig Haag and Elizabeth Ries (b. 1838), who had come to America in 1886. They settled in Middlesex County, New Jersey, and over the years rented out their home to a number of different immigrant boarders.
For unknown reasons, August lost track of both his brother Wilhelm and his German family back in Sickingen. At the age of 26, he married Mary Dernar, whose parents had immigrated from Slovakia to Pennsylvania in about 1900. In 1941 they moved to Cincinnati, Hamilton Co., Ohio where they raised a family of 5 children. August worked initially as a machinist, and eventually as an electrical appliance repairman. The Ries line surname carried on for two more generations in America, but at this point has ceased to advance, though many DNA descendants on female branches of the line still remain.
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