
My name is Alexandra
Elisabeth Bettcher. I am thirteen years old, and I
live in Maple Plain, Minnesota, a suburb of
Minneapolis. I am in seventh grade at Calvary
Memorial Christian School. My interests include
horses, rollerblading, reading and Genealogy about
my family. My grandfather got me interested in my
ancestors, and also encouraged me to enter this
contest. I learned a lot about my past relatives,
and am interested in learning even more in the
future.
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GRANDPA
JOHN
A Man
Possessed With Wanderlust
At the age
of eleven, Johannes Sperr began the adventure of a lifetime that
would take him across many regions of the world. Johannes was my
great, great, great, great grandfather, but I'll call him
Grandpa John.
Grandpa John was born on March 8, 1821 in Rielingshausen,
Wurttemberg, Germany.
In the year
1832, his father Phillipp decided to take advantage of the
opportunity to have free land, offered by the Czar of Russia. So
John, along with his parents, Phillipp and Margaretha, his older
sister, Maria Katharina, his younger brother, Gottlieb and his
two younger sisters, Anna Magdelena and Christina, began their
trek to South Russia. While their destination was Bessarabia,
they stopped in the city of Odessa where John's mother Margaretha died. The family was then assigned to one of the
newest colonies, Friedenstal, Bessarabia, founded in 1833.
John's father remarried in 1834 and three more
sisters and
one brother were added to his family.
Because of the lack of land in Friedenstal, the family once
again decided to relocate,
this time
across the Danube River to the province of Dobrudscha in the
country of Turkey. The year was 1842, and John was 21 years old.
At this early age, he was already a subject of three different
countries. The family finally settled in the small village of
Atmagea. In 1845, Grandpa John married Louisa Fandrich, whose
family had also come from Bessaarabia. She was born in 1827 in
the village of Brienne.
After
the Russian-Turkish War of 1877-78, Dobrudscha came under
Romanian Rule. At age 57, Grandpa John was subject of a fourth
country. John and Louisa had three daughters. On of the
daughters, Maria Elisabeth, married a newcomer to the area,
Samuel
Bettcher. Samuel was born in 1857 in Paris, Bessarabia and moved
to Atmagea in 1875 with his family to avoid the conscription
into the Russian army. In 1898, John, who was then widowed,
immigrated to the United States with his daughter and
son-in-law, Samuel Bettcher and their children. They traveled by
train to Hamburg, Germany, then sailed to New York City on the
S.S. Furst Bismark.
From
New York City they took the train to North Dakota. At age 77,
Grandpa John filed a homestead claim in what is today Rosenfeld
Township, Sheridan County. He was now subject of his fifth
country. After living there only twelve years, wanderlust again
set in. Samuel Bettcher, Grandpa John's son-in-law, traveled to
both Havana, Cuba and Montana to evaluate land opportunities.
After careful consideration, opportunities appeared best in
Canada. In 1910, Grandpa John relocated to Golden Prairie,
Saskatchewan, Canada with his family. At age 89, he once again
filed a homestead claim and naturalization intent, making him a
subject of his sixth country.
On
September 30, 1912, Grandpa John died at the age of 91. He is
buried in the Rosenfeld Cemetery, near Golden Prairie,
Saskatchewan. Grandpa John was a very brave and adventuresome
man. He loved life and experienced it fully in his 91 years. By
the time I was eleven years old, the age Grandpa John began his
adventure, I had already lived in 5 homes. The Wanderlust lives
on.
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This essay is copyrighted and no parts of it
shall be used by others in any form without
permission of the author.
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