Person:Emma Krumm (3)

m. 19 Apr 1860
  1. Emma Krumm1862 - 1934
  2. Augustus D Krumm1865 - 1931
  3. John Daniel Krumm1867 - 1896
  4. Henry C Krumm1868 - 1941
  5. Christina Mary Krumm1870 - 1900
  6. Margaret L Krumm1872 - 1961
  7. Clinton Krumm1875 - 1896
  8. Carrie T Krumm1879 - Abt 1972
  9. Robert KrummAft 1880 - 1904
  10. Lydia E Krumm1882 - 1886
m. Abt 1882
  1. Gertrude Ida Seydler1883 - 1924
  2. Clarence W Seydler1884 - 1941
  3. Sherman August Seydler1886 - 1965
Facts and Events
Name[1] Emma Krumm
Alt Name _____ Seydler
Gender Female
Birth[2] 6 Mar 1862 Mifflin twp., Franklin Co., Ohio
Marriage Abt 1882 to Frederick August Seydler
Residence[6][13] 14 Jun 1900 Mifflin twp., Franklin Co., Ohio
Residence[7][14] 27 Apr 1910 Stelzer Road, Mifflin twp., Franklin Co., Ohio
Residence[8][15] 30 Jan 1920 Mifflin twp., Franklin Co., Ohio
Residence[9][16] 29 Apr 1930 979 Stelzer Road, Columbus, Franklin Co., Ohio
Residence[5][17] Aft 1932 979 Stelzer Road, Columbus, Franklin Co., Ohio
Occupation[5] housewife
Death[2][11] 9 Oct 1934 979 Stelzer Road, Columbus, Franklin Co., Ohio
Other[10][18] 10 Oct 1934 Columbus, Franklin Co., OhioObituary
Burial[3][4][12] 12 Oct 1934 Green Lawn cemetery, Columbus, Franklin Co., Ohio
Other[3][19] 1995 New Albany, Franklin Co., OhioBio-hist
Reference Number? 22615
References
  1. Carolyn Krumm Naas. Krumm family history book. (self published, Dayton, Ohio, 1995).
  2. 2.0 2.1 Death Registration, Record Type: microfilmed certificates.
  3. 3.0 3.1 edited by Lafayette Haymaker. The First Book of the Dead. (Mainesburg Press, New Albany, OH, 1995).
  4. Green Lawn Cemetery interment cards, ca. 1820-1981, Roll: 20 microfilmreels, copies of interment cards. (General Microfilm Corporation, under contract with the Franklin CountyGenealogical Society, Columbus, Ohio, November, 1981)
    card #73471.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Obituary. (further information available upon request).
  6. United States. 1900 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication T623)
    ED# 40; sheet 12 B; image 24.
  7. United States. 1910 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication T624)
    ED# 26; sheet 12 A; image 23.
  8. United States. 1920 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication T625)
    ED# 21; Sheet 9A; image 17.
  9. United States. 1930 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication T626)
    Roll: T626_1793; Page: 24A; Enumeration District: 203; Image: 0557;ancestry image 47.
  10. The Columbus Dispatch, Location: Columbus, Ohio
    6A.
  11. at home from a goiter since abt. 1920; Medical: hypertension and heartfailure abt. 1928
  12. Secion L Lot 244 Gottleib Seydler (Deed or Trust) Lot
  13. own their home free of mortgage. Living next to Emma's mother, ElizabethKrumm. They have all three children at home
  14. own their home free of mortgage. They have two adult children at home:Gertrude and Sherman
  15. renting their home. They have daughter, Gertrude and Emma's mother livingthere
  16. own their home worth $7,500. They live next to Emma's sister, Maggie
  17. after the death of her husband, Frederick Seydler, Emma's son, Sherman,pressed her to leave the farm and come live with them on Piedmont Road.She refused to leave the farm. Since she needed help in her care, theyleft their home, renting it out to others, and moved into the farm housewith Emma
  18. "SEYDLER- Emma, age 72, widow of the late Fredrick A. Seydler, died ,Tuesday. at her home, 979 Stelzer Rd. Survived by 2 sons, Clarence W.,3783 East 5th Ave, Sherman A., 979 Stelzer Rd., and 3 grandchildren; twosisters, Mrs John Saveson and Mrs John Zimmer and one brother HenryKrumm. Services will be held at the home of son, 3783 E 5th Ave, Fridayafternoon at 2 o'clock. Burial in Greenlawn by JF Margarum and Son."Obitsupplied by Mary Margaret (Anthony) Holland
  19. page 70.
    "She (Emma) was heavy, immobilized in a degree by her own flesh. Also,her neck was enlarged by a goiter, a site common in the Midwest,especially among women, before iodized salt had an effect. Emma hadprominent eyes, an effect, I suppose, of her illness, which made hermark resemblance to other Krumm's into a caricature. Emma died of thegoiter, which had become inoperable.
    Emma's son Sherman and his wife and children moved into Emma's houseto care for her not long before she died. The senior Seydler's wholived in a frame house they built, judging from its architecture, soonafter 1900 on the land Emma inherited on Stelzer road north of mygrandmother's. The house was mainly visible from the north window in mygrandmother kitchen. All of a sudden there was a second set of secondcousins I hadn't known about: Junior, some years old than I; Randall,one year older; and Margie, two or three years younger. the boys hadfair hair, were last round faced and of slighter bone structure than theother Krumm cousins. Margie, who was pudgy, reminded me of Emma.Randall came to see me sometimes at my grandmother's place. More oftenhe and I and Bobby Casto got together to play at the brick (DavidKrumm's home)."
    page 72
    "Emma and her husband- her husband more than Emma-had quarreled with mygrandparents (John and Maggie (Krumm) Swenson). After my grandparentsmarried, they lived in a frame house on the Krumm property a littlesouth of where the Sears roebuck bungalow stood after 1918. Sometimebetween 1900 and 1918, they moved into the brick (David Krumm's home)with my grandmother's mother (Elizabeth (Miller) Krumm). Elizabeth'stwo surviving sons having set themselves up in east Columbus, Elizabethneeded someone to work for 30 odd acres; and my grandfather must haveseemed available. When I knew him he always did some farming inaddition to holding down the full time job in the railroad yards, didactually farmed the land around the bread. My father (Irvin Swenson)said the Seydler's wanted to benefit from taking care of Elizabeth andso insistently that its last my grandmother's threw up her hands anddeclared she wanted to live in her own house. The Seydler's moved intothe brick, or else Elizabeth moved up the road to the Seydler's. Theagreement fell apart. By 1923, at least, great grandmother Elizabethhad moved across the road to the Sears roebuck bungalow, where mygrandmother cared for her until she died."