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Facts and Events
Name |
Johann David Reustle |
Alt Name |
Johann David Rüstlen |
Gender |
Male |
Birth[1] |
11 May 1824 |
Walheim, Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany |
Other? |
1824 |
Walheim, Badden Wurttemberg, GermanyFamily Register Church Records |
Christening[2] |
1838 |
Walheim, Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany |
Confirmation[2][19] |
1838 |
Walheim, Badden Wurttemberg, Germany |
Marriage |
13 Oct 1850 |
Walheim, Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germanyto Maria Regina DOLDE |
Residence? |
1854 |
Heilbronn, Germany |
Marriage |
8 Mar 1859 |
Großgartach, Leingarten, Badden Württemberg, Germanyto Hanna Katharina Rexer |
Residence[7] |
1862 |
Cooperstown, Otsego, New York |
Immigration[9][20] |
19 Jul 1862 |
New York City, New Yorkto America |
Other[8] |
Abt 1862 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New JerseyAdvertisement |
Other[10][21] |
19 Jul 1862 |
New York City, New YorkShips arriving in New York Newspaper article |
Residence[11] |
1863 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New Jersey |
Other[12][22] |
Dec 1863 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New JerseyNeighbor |
Marriage |
Abt 1864 |
, , New Jerseyto Caroline (Katrina) WALTMAN |
Census[13] |
1870 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New Jersey |
Census[14] |
1880 |
Landis, Cumberland, New Jersey |
Other[15] |
Abt 1880 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New JerseyMethodist Episcopal Church Photo |
Religion? |
From 1884 to 1895 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New JerseyPresident of the Board of Trustees of the German Methodist Episcopal Church |
Census[16][23] |
1900 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New Jersey |
Occupation[5] |
|
Vineland, Cumberland, New Jersey, United StateFarm on Malaga Road Photo |
Death[3][4] |
9 Apr 1902 |
Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Other[17][24] |
11 Apr 1902 |
Vineland, Cumberland, New JerseyVineland Evening Journal Newspaper |
Burial[3][18] |
12 Apr 1902 |
Oak Hill Cemetery, Vineland, Cumberland, New JerseyPhone: 856-794-2224 Landis Avenue Vineland, New Jersey Oak Hill Cemetery |
Address:
Name: Johann David Reustle
Note: Vineland Public Library
1058 East Landis Avenue
Vineland, NJ 08360
856-794-4244
Vineland Historical Society
108 S 7th St
Vineland, NJ 08360
(856) 691-1111
Vineland Family History Center
110 Highland Ave.
Vineland, NJ 08360 (856) 696-5002
Contact: Ginny & Gene Wallace, Directors
(856) 262-1543
Open: Tues. 6:30 - 8:30 pm; Wed. 9:30 am - 2:30 pm; Thurs. 9:30 am - 2:30 pm & 6:30 - 8:30 pm; Saturday 9:30 am - 2:30 pm
Genealogy collection: Family Search, Ancestral File, International Genealogical Index (IGI)
Vineland Historical Society Library
108 S. 7th St.
Vineland, NJ 08360 (856) 691-1111
Contact: Lana Emmanuel, Genealogist
Open: Tues - Sat. 1 -4; Other times by appt.
Local History: Vineland and Cumberland County histories, maps, pictures, photographs of people, businesses, Daily Journal from 1870, Daily Republican 1892, Evening Journal 1880-1942, Daily Advisor 1874, Daily Independent 1876, Daily Time 1877, Evening Times 1927-1938 plus other newspapers, Perkins Indian art arrowhead pictures, 1880 room, music room, Landis room, 2 rooms of South Jersey glass, guns, sewing items, Civil War material.
Genealogy collection: 500 family genealogies, Cumberland County families, New England families, guide books, genealogist in residence, census records 1830-1900, Vineland city directories 1871-1940 for Vineland, Millville and Bridgeton, family name indexes.
Vineland Public Library <http://www.vineland.lib.nj.us>
1058 E. Landis Avenue
Vineland, NJ 08360 (856) 794-4244
Contact: Holly Rogerson <mailto:[email protected]>
Local History: Pamphlets, NJ Collection, general books, city and county histories, Vineland Times Journal on microfilm from 1876.
Genealogy collection: City and county histories, genealogical guide books, passenger lists, city directories, ethnic guidebooks - Irish, Jewish, Italian, British, family association directories.
John David Reustle passed his boyhood and early manhood under the paternal roof, and enjoyed the advantages of a good education. He learned the trade of linen weaving, which he followed in the winter months. He helped in his father's vineyard duing the summer months. In 1854 he removed to Heilbronn, where he found employment for eight years in the office of an oil factory. He then came to this country settling at Cooperstown, NY. After a stay in this place of a year and a half, during which he was employed in quarrying, he came to Vineland. Here he purchased a farm of ten acres, to which he subsequently added twenty acres. The cultivation of this land has been his chief occupation since. He makes a specialty of grapes, of which he raises from three to five tons yearly. The wine he sells in all the leading cities of New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
References
- ↑ Evangelische Kirch Walheim. Kirchenbuch 1555-1968. (Germany)
Microfilm: FHL INTL Film 1184933 Taufen (birth) 1775-1888; year 1824, line 21. - ↑ 2.0 2.1 Evangelische Kirch Walheim. Kirchenbuch 1555-1968. (Germany)
Microfilm: FHL INTL Film 1184935; Walheim konfirmation records 1838.
Reference number: BA-R007
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Philadelphia Inquirer
10 Apr 1902, Page 7.
Reference number: NS-R025
- ↑ Pennsylvania. Philadelphia City Death Certificates, 1803-1915.
- ↑ Kellogg, D. O. Illustrated Vineland. (Philadelphia)
p 57.
Quality: 4 Reference number: BK-R003
- Cushing, Thos. MD and Charles E. Sheppard, Esq. History of the Counties of Gloucester, Salem & Cumberland, New Jersey. (Philadelphia, Everts and Peck, 1883)
Chapter XCIX, pages 703-708 & 711-714.
Quality: 4 Reference number: BK-V001
- ↑ Schley, Mary E. Early Settlers of Vineland West of Malaga Road. (Vineland, NJ, Vineland Hist & Antiquarian Society, 1917)
Page 23.
Quality: 4 Reference number: MN-r002
- ↑ Landis, Chas. K. Vineland - General Information - Sales List Improved Real Estate
Copy of advertisement placed in local and New York newspapers.
Quality: 4 Reference number: BK-R004
- ↑ New York. Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York 1820-1897. (Washington, D.C., National Archives)
19 July 1862.
- ↑ New York Times. (New York, NY)
19 Jul 1862.
Quality: 4 Reference number: NS-R024
- ↑ Schley, Mary E. Early Settlers of Vineland West of Malaga Road. (Vineland, NJ, Vineland Hist & Antiquarian Society, 1917)
Vol. II, Number 2, April 1917, Page 23.
Quality: 4 Reference number: MN-R002
- ↑ Schley, Mary E. Early Settlers of Vineland West of Malaga Road. (Vineland, NJ, Vineland Hist & Antiquarian Society, 1917)
Vol. II, No. 3; July, 1917, p 41- 45.
Quality: 4 Reference number: BK-R009
- ↑ New Jersey, Cumberland. US Census New Jersey 1870 - population schedule (2). (Washington, DC)
M593_859, Page 352.
Quality: 4 Reference number: CE-R054
- ↑ New Jersey, Cumberland. US Census New Jersey 1880 - population schedule. (Washington, DC)
T9_0776; Page: 365A; ED 84.
Quality: 4 Reference number: CE-R021
- ↑ Ira P. Sharp Real Estate and Insurance. Beautiful Vineland. (4th Edition, 1907)
page 21.
Reference number: BK-R007
- ↑ New Jersey, Cumberland. US Census New Jersey 1900 - population schedule. (Washington, DC)
T623 961; Page: 45; Sheet: 4A; ED: 134.
- ↑ Vineland Evening Journal
April 11, 1902.
Quality: 4 Reference number: NS-R026
- ↑ Visited Oak Hill Cemetery in October of 2004. Did not find the grave; but did find the grave of his sister, Caroline F. Beck and her husband John Philip Beck.
In May of 2007, found an obit in Historical Newspapers online at Allen County. According to the Philidelphia Inquirer, J. D Reustle died in Philly on April 9th and was returned to Vineland to be buried on the 12th of April 1902.
I made a phone call on 27 August 2007 to Oak Hill Cemetery and talked to Gene. He looked up the records and found J. D. Reustle listed in plot 39F. Further inquiry shows Caroline and Philip Beck in plot 82G along with Mary and B.F.Langreher(sp?) and infant.
- ↑ at the age of 12 in the Walheim Evangelisch Kirch.
- ↑ The ship Republik sailed from Bremen, Germany on June 5, 1862.
- ↑ New York Times Saturday July 19, 1862 - "Ship Republik (Brem.,) Schmidt. Bremen June 5th with mdse. and 249 passengers to E. Unkhardt."
- ↑ bought land in NJ. In January of 1864, the Mootz family moves from Cooperstown to Vineland [along with Reustle and Beck].
- ↑ Living on Chestnut Avenue.
- ↑ "J. D. Reustle who died in Philadelphia about noon Wednesday, will be buried here on Saturday. The remains are expected on the morning train, after which the funeral will be held in the German Church, on Grape Street, and the interment will take place before noon at the Oak Hill Cemetery."
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