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1895 JOHN JOHANNES FAUTH Gonzales Texas 1833 Dörrenbach BAVARIA GERMANY Letter

$ 72.07

Availability: 31 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Condition: Normal letter folds, in very good condition.

    Description

    PLEASE READ BEFORE BUYING.
    I sell ONLY ORIGINAL items and NOT ANY reproductions. Click on my ebay store icon to see other items.
    This sale is for one LETTERHEAD from....
    THE OFFICE OF JOHN FAUTH, dealer in wagons, plows, lime and cement, all sorts of wagon and buggy material in GONZALES, TEXAS , during April of 1895.
    This RARE letter is hand written and signed by JOHN FAUTH.
    This item has normal letter folds and is in VERY good condition.
    Letterhead is approximately 8 1/2" X 10" in size.   Sold AS IS.
    BIOGRAPHICAL Notes:
    Born 1833 in Bavaria, Germany
    Died 1909 in Gonzales, Texas
    USA.
    Johannes Fauth, born April 7, 1833, was the son of barrel maker, Christopher Fauth and Lusanna Margaretha (Wuest) Fauth.  He immigrated to the United States from his home town of Dörrenbach, Bavaria, Germany, when he was only nineteen years old.  He traveled steerage and landed in New York in June of 1852.  Shortly after arrival, he made his way to Buffalo, NY, where a large settlement of German immigrants were working on the Erie Canal just outside of Buffalo, NY.  For two years he served as an apprentice to a wheelwright (a barrel, buggy & carriage maker).
    During that time he met Margaret(h)a Kuhnle, born April 3, 1834, in Beihingen, (Baden-Württemberg, Germany).  This area is known as the Swabian (Schwaben) historical region of Bavaria Germany.  Swabia is in the SW corner of Germany in the region of the Black Forest.  Margaret(h)a also came to the United States in 1852 through the port New York when she was only 18 years old and also settled in Buffalo.  It is not known if they traveled together to the U.S., but it is know that they fell in love in Buffalo, N.Y.
    Somehow, John Fauth heard of the new Texas frontier town of Gonzales which was being settled by many German, Czech, & Polish immigrants.  Realizing Gonzales'  probable need for his skills as a wagon/carriage/barrel/casket/furniture maker, Fauth headed for Texas in 1854 ahead of Margaret whom he had not yet married.  He entered Texas at the port of Indianola and opened his wood-working shop in Gonzales.  After he had established his business and a home that he built facing the Main Square in Gonzales, he returned to Buffalo to marry Margaret in 1858.  They soon traveled back to Gonzales; together they had five children.
    By 1869, they purchased two lots one block east of downtown Gonzales and built a framed one-room cabin with a high, steep roof.  This original structure now forms the kitchen and small bedroom portion at the back of the Fauth Cottage.
    As Mr. Fauth's fortunes expanded, so did his home at 521 Saint Peter Street on the corner with Saint George Street.  He worked mostly using the native walnut lumber in the area.  The barrels that he made were used to ship cane syrup and Tabasco peppers from J. B. Wells' Willow Springs Ranch in Gonzales to the McIlhenney Plantation in Louisiana.  He frequently would proudly display his latest hand-made casket in the large front window of his home for people to view before purchase.  He also sold and repaired many carriages and buggies.  But, he did not sell the furniture that he made.  He used it for himself or he gave it to members of his family.  Only a few pieces remain now in the possession of his descendants.  One piece was appraised on the
    Antiques Roadshow
    TV program for a substantial sum.
    By 1874. he built the "new" front half of his house which featured a large parlor with an intricate inlaid floor and an impressive entry hall with double front doors. He hand-carved a beautiful mantel around the fireplace in his master bedroom and built carved doorways from the entry hall into the main rooms.  Later smaller additions were added in 1884.  Both sections of the Fauth cottage were constructed with bricks from Gonzales Brick Co., cypress, and long-leaf pine hauled from the port of Indianola on the Texas Gulf coast because there was no sawmill in Gonzales at the time.  The Fauth cottage sits upon hand-hewn pillars of stone from the Maurin quarry which is located between Gonzales and Shiner.  None of these building materials is commercially available now.
    Fauth was instrumental in organizing the German Methodist Church, and he served as an alderman in the city council.  He also started a short-lived German language newspaper.  During the 2003 restoration, a remnant of this newspaper was found pasted behind the wallpaper in the entry hall as insulation.  A date on the newspaper was 1869.
    His obituary states that he "was a man of exemplary character, and in his daily life was a consistent Christian."
    One of the pallbearers at his funeral was Julius Remschel, his across-the-street neighbor who built Remschel House at 524 Saint Peter Street in 1907.  A black walnut tree once grew in the side yard of the Remschel House.  When that tree died, it was cut into thick slabs of lumber, and a beautiful piece of that wood was made into a mantel for the kitchen fireplace in the restored cottage.
    John Fauth died in the home on May 7, 1909 and Margaret (Kuhnle) Fauth died there on November 25, 1924.  They are buried side-by-side in the Gonzales City Cemetery.
    The "EBAY ITEM" thing is just a loose piece of paper that is not attached to the letterheads.
    FREE SHIPPING TO THE CONTINENTAL U.S. only.
    PAYPAL PAYMENT WITHIN 1 DAY OF THIS PURCHASE.   When you receive your item, PLEASE consider feedback (I will see it) and I will reciprocate feedback at that time.   PLEASE view my other auctions and ebay store items for related ephemera, antique documents, and paper collectibles.
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