Immigrant Ships
Transcribers Guild

Ship Clementine


Bremen, Germany to Baltimore, Maryland
1 December 1835

DISTRICT OF BALTIMORE – PORT OF BALTIMORE
I, J. H. Gatjen, do solemnly, sincerely, and truly swear, that the annexed list, subscribed with my name, contains to the best of my knowlege and belief, a just and true account or report, of all passengers, who have been taken on board the said Ship at Bremen, or at any other foreign port, or at sea, and brought in said vessel into any district of the United States, since her departure from the said port of (not filled in). (Signed) Joh. H. Gatjen. Sworn to this 1 December 1835, before me (unsigned).
List of Passengers on board the Bremen Ship Clementine, J. H. Gatjen, Master, bound from Bremen to Baltimore.
Columns represent: name, last dwelling-place, occupation, number of passengers in each group, baggage. According to the notes on the original list, there were 198 passengers aboard this ship. Only the head of each group was named.
    
  1 Gerh.           Eichmann             Westercappeln    peasant      1 man  1 box
  2 John Henry      Rotert               Ueffeln          peasant      1 man, 1 woman  2 boxes
  3 Cathar.         Schaberg          *  Westercappeln                 1 woman  2 boxes
  4 Mary            Schaberg             Westercappeln                 1 woman
  5 Henry A.        Voderhase            Wehsen           peasant      3 men, 3 women, 1 child 5 to 12  4 boxes
  6 John Henry      Freese               Westercappeln    peasant      1 man, 1 woman, 2 children under 5  3 boxes
  7 Henry           Wulfekamp            Westercappeln    peasant      1 man, 1 woman, 1 child 5 to 12  2 boxes
  8 Gerh. Henry     Beumer            *  A??e             peasant      1 man, 1 woman, 1 child 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  2 boxes
  9 Cha. Henry      Handelman         *  A??e             peasant      1 man  1 box
 10 John Henry      Brokmeyer            Holte            joiner       2 men, 2 women, 1 child under 5  3 boxes
 11 Bernh.          Kramer               Glandorf         peasant      1 man, 1 woman, 2 children 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  2 boxes
 12 Wm.             Gulker               Glandorf         peasant      1 man, 1 woman, 1 child 5 to 12, 2 children under 5  3 boxes
 13 Bernh.          Lehmkuhl             Glandorf         peasant      1 man, 1 woman  2 boxes
 14 Herm.           Ellerbrock           Glandorf         peasant      2 men, 2 women, 3 children under 5  4 boxes
 15 John Henry      Hoffmann             Glandorf         peasant      2 men, 1 woman, 2 children under 5   2 boxes
 16 Casp. Henry     Heuer                Glandorf         peasant      2 men, 1 woman  4 boxes
 17 Died.           Wiemann              Glandorf         peasant      2 men, 2 women, 3 children 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  2 boxes
 18 Henry           Hyste                Glandorf         peasant      3 men, 1 woman, 1 child 5 to 12, 2 children under 5  3 boxes
 19 Elisabeth       Scheckelhoff         Glandorf                      1 woman, 1 child under 5  1 box
 20 Henry           Heginer              Glandorf         shoemaker    1 man, 1 woman  2 boxes
 21 Bernh. Henry    Inkrott              Glandorf         peasant      1 man, 1 woman, 3 children 5 to 12, 3 children under 5  3 boxes
 22 Casp.           Link                 Glandorf         shoemaker    1 man, 1 woman, 1 child under 5  2 boxes
 23 Melch.          Hildebrandt          Stockhausen      peasant      1 man  a portmanteau
 24 Adam            Neumann              Alsenau          miller       1 man  a sack
 25 Adam            Fath                 Michelbach       peasant      1 man  a portmanteau
 26 Bernh.          Wissel               Rabach           peasant      1 man  a portmanteau
 27 John            Koch                 Hohl             cartwright   1 man  a portmanteau
 28 Lorenz          Sommer               Michelbach       peasant      2 men, 1 woman, 1 child 5 to 12  3 boxes, a basket
 29 ?               W???er               Michelbach       taylor       1 man, 1 woman 1 child 5 to 12, ? child(ren) under 5  2 boxes, a b?
 30 Peter           Seipel               Michelbach       peasant      2 men, 2 women, 2 children 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  2 boxes
 31 Andr.           Simon             *  Rabach           peasant      ? m?n, 2 women, 2 children 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  2 boxes, a trunk
 32 Andr.           Stadtmuller       *  H?msbach         taylor       1 man, 2 women, 2 children under 5  2 boxes
 33 John Geo.       Hofmann           *  Mucheldorf       taylor       1 man  a trunk and 1 b?
 34 Fredk.          Schafsberger      *  York, Pa.        peasant      1 man  a trunk and 1 b?
 35 Fredk.          Schwarz              Winnerden        cooper       1 man  a portmanteau
 36 Henry           Schafer              Altenstetten     peasant      1 man, 1 woman  2 boxes
 37 Anton           Bruning              Neuenkirchen     merchant     1 man  a portmanteau
 38 Robert          Breite           *   Schmiedeberg     musici??     1 man  1 box  
 39 Gerh.           Furste               Gehrde           dyer         1 man  a box
 40 Herm. Henry     Rotert               Gehrde           peasant      1 man  a trunk
 41 Anna            Vehslage             Badbergen                     1 woman  a trunk
 42 Joseph          Temme                Harsewinkel      peasant      1 man, 2 women, 1 child 5 to 12, 2 children under 5  5 boxes, a trunk  
 43 Gerh.           Hucht Hanewinkel  *  Herzebrock       peasant      3 men, 3 women  2 boxes, a trunk
 44 Joh.            Jutze                Wolkersdorf      peasant      4 men, 3 women, 2 children 5 to 12  1 trunk, 9 boxes
 45 Fredk.          Schottler            Siegelbach       peasant      1 man, 2 women, 2 children 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  10 boxes, a trunk
 46 George          Uhrlaub              Alfeld           basketmaker  1 man  1 trunk
 47 Chr. Fred.      Ruhrup               Lubbecke         peasant      1 man, 1 woman, 1 child 5 to 12  1 box
 48 Herm. Henry     ??tsman           *  Rodinghausen     peasant      1 man  1 trunk
 49 ?               ?                 *  ?ft              peasant      1 man  1 trunk
 50 Ferd.           Emme                 Grossenschneen   joiner       1 man  a portmanteau
 51 Fredk.          Poll                 Buckeburg        peasant      1 man  a trunk         
 52 Fredke.         Schwaneken           Stadthagen                    1 woman
 53 Wdw.            Bruns                Dortmund                      1 man, 2 women, 1 child 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  4 boxes, a basket
 54 Ed.             Nieds                Neustadt         peasant      1 man  2 boxes
 55 Fredk.          Rehling              Haldem           peasant      1 man  1 trunk
 56 Fredk. Henry    Schmidt              Haldem           peasant      1 man  a portmanteau
 57 Cha.            Hodtkamp             Oberbauerschaft  peasant      1 man  1 box
 58 Wm.             Blase                Oberbauerschaft  peasant      1 man  1 box
 59 Franz           Casten               Haldem           peasant      2 men, 1 woman, 1 child 5 to 12, 2 children under 5  1 trunk, 1 box
 60 Jobst H.        Stuver            *  Spad?o?          peasant      1 man,  2 women, 2 children 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  2 boxes
 61 Louis           Emme                 Reifenhausen     peasant      1 man, 2 women, 1 child 5 to 12, 1 child under 5  1 trunk, a basket
 62 M. L.           Mohnkern             Kleinschnee      peasant      1 man  1 box, a portmanteau
 63 Fredk.          Schoer               Schlagern        carpenter    1 man  a trunk
 64 Mary            Kasting              Haldem                        1 woman  a box
 65 John            Dehn                 Kitzingen        coppersmith  1 man  a trunk

Together One Hundred Ninety Eight Steerage Passengers

Bremen, the 30th Septbr. 1835
(Signed) Joh. H. Gatjen

Commutation - Money is to be paid 
for  79 Men
     55 Women
     30 Children of 5 to 12 years of age
    164 Passengers at 1-1/2 dollars    .........$246
     34 Children under 5 years, free
    198 Persons                        .........$246

Transcriber's Notes: 
Manifest was marked a City List.
 
  #3-4 baggage bracketed together.
  #8-9 town name looks like Atte.  
 #29 damage on this line but first name could begin with J.  
     Surname W??ker or W??her perhaps.
 #31 probably 1 man in group, but perhaps 4; some damage.
 #32 town name could be Hemsbach.
 #33-34 page of copy cut off at baggage area.
 #38 occupation probably musician, but damage on end of word.
 #43 uncertain if surname is Hucht Hanewinkel, or if Hanewinkel is part of
     the town.  Could be surname of Hucht Hanewinkel, or town of Hanewinkel,
     Herzebrock. 
 #48 surname could be Peetsman or Ritsman or Bitsman.
 #49 entire line has been torn and damaged; unable to get passenger name or
     town. This passenger was not even counted when the list was numbered at
     a later date; was missed entirely.
 #51-52 baggage bracketed together.
 #60 town name looks like Spadrou.

Correspondence - 3/00
 #8 Gerh. Henry Beumer and his family were from Reine, Westphalia, Prussia.
The family first settled in Jasper, Indiana and then moved to Lawrence County, 
Tennessee in time for the 1880 US Census.  Gerh. Henry Beumer was born in 1775, 
probably in Reine, and his wife was named Anna Maria Adheid Richter.
The child recorded as under 5-years-old with this group was John Gerhard
Beumer who was born 27 October 1832 in Reine.  The name of the older child
traveling with this family is unknown.   John Gerhard Beumer's son John
Bernard Beumer was born at Jasper, Indiana, 8 January 1866.
Marie Eck Rockhold [drockhol@neo.lrun.com]

Correspondence 06/17/01 passenger #33 HOFMANN 
 #33 Johan Georg Hofmann was born in 1817, as he was 18 when the Clementine
arrived in Baltimore from Bremen, Germany in 1835.  We do not know where he
was born.  He is registered on the ship's log as coming from Mucheldorf.  At
that time in Germany, there were two Micheldorf's, and we think that he came
from the one in North Bavaria.  This region is called the Oberpfalz, and the
major town is Weiden.  Weiden is famous for its porcelain factories.  

Micheldorf is located under a great "burg" that belonged to the Counts
of Leuchtenberg.  Sometime in the 16th or 17th century, the family had no
offspring, and the castle was abandoned.  Those who were employed at the
castle and owned no land fell on hard times.  They were forced to become
"steinbrechers", i.e. quarrymen, and the work was so hard that alcoholism
became common.  With alcoholism came gambling, and many families emigrated
to escape being jailed (so says the local priest).  

At any rate, Johann Georg Hofmann came to the US as a tailor (Schneider).  
He is said to have worked for many years at a large men's clothing factory 
called Sonneborn.  Johan Georg Hofmann became a US citizen in 1852,
when he "gave up his allegiance to the King of Bavaria".  Johan married
a German woman, Barbara Hein (or Hoehn) about whom nothing is known.  There 
was brother named Adolf Hofmann.

Johann Georg Hofmann brought a large trunk with him when he came to
this country.  Nothing is known of its contents.  Probably all of his
possessions were destroyed in the great Baltimore fire of 1904.  It is not
known where he is buried.

He had one son, George Washington Hofmann, who was born in 1863 and
became a skilled upholsterer.  He married a Swiss (French Swiss) immigrant,
Elvina duBois (or Zwald) who, after the death of her mother, and the
remarriage of her father, decided to emigrate to America and work as a 
governess.  (Information on Elvina Hofmann can be found in the Maryland 
Historical Society.)

George and Elvina had a number of sons and one daughter, all of whom
contributed to Baltimore in various ways.  The longevity of the family was
unusual: Elvina lived to 92, son Paul lived to 101, son Tim to 104, and the
last two children, Joseph Enoch Hofmann and Priscilla Hofmann died in 2000 
and 2001, 96 and 98, respectively. Priscilla was a beloved teacher of French 
and Spanish at Eastern High school.

Timothy worked for Fidelity trust, rising in the ranks from runner to
comptroller; Phillip was in charge of office furniture maintenance at the 
Baltimore Gas and Electric company; Paul became vice president of Towson 
nurseries and planned the landscaping of many of Baltimore's estates; and 
John was a crabber on the Eastern shore.

Additional details can be obtained from the middle son of Joseph, 
Alan F. Hofmann, M.D.
  
National Archives and Records Administration, Film M255, Reel 1.
Contributed and Transcribed by Mary Koelzer a member of
the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild
4 December 1999



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