Over seven million Germans immigrated to America during the past three centuries, the largest non-English-speaking group that came to America. German immigration to the United States occurred in three main waves: from 1820-1850, driven by economic hardship and political unrest; from 1850-1870, influenced by the failed revolutions of 1848; and from 1880-1900, because of industrialization and agricultural changes in Germany.
Today, a look at the immigration of four families from Germany to the Chattanooga, Ohio, area, spanning nearly 30 years. These families lived near each other in the Old Country, were close friends, with marriages between the families.
The members of these families did not emigrate at the same time. It was costly for families to sail to America, which may have been a factor. Perhaps the first to settle in America tested the waters and additional family members decided to come later. This study shows that people really did travel to where family and friends had already settled. Basically, they recreated their German community here in America.
Three of these four families are part of my family, Mueller, Kessler, and Linn. The fourth family, the Kable family, is connected by a Kessler/Kable marriage in Germany.
The Familienbuchs of Zion Lutheran Chatt and St. Paul Lutheran Liberty provide little biographies of the early church members and includes dates of their immigration. Some church members arrived in the early 1830s, but this group of four families began arriving over a decade later.
They came from the Saarland/Bavaria area of Germany: Mueller and Linn from Bierbach, Kessler from Walzheim, and Kable from Fechingen.
The information below is from the ship passenger lists. Sometimes married women or widows were listed on the passenger list by their maiden name. The age of each person was included on the passenger list and I include that below. Additional information added by me is in [ ].
The first family of this group to come to America was Christian Kable Jr (1814-1885), his wife Dorothea (Maurer) (1815-1904), and their four children. They departed from Antwerp on the ship Edwina and arrived in New York on 3 December 1846:
Christian Kable, 32 [(1814-1885) listed as C Kable; son of Christian Kable Sr]
Dorothea (Maurer) Kable, 31 [(1815-1904) listed as Da Maurer; wife of Christian Kable]
Jacob Kable, 6 [(1840-1868) son of Christian & Dorothea]
Christian Kable, 4 [(1841-1866) son of Christian & Dorothea]
Louise Kable, 4 [(1841-1892) daughter of Christian & Dorothea]
Johann Kable, 3 [(1843-1881) son of Christian & Dorothea] [1]

Ship Edwina, 1846
The rest of the Kable family immigrated three years later, with the Kesslers. They sailed to America on the ship Henrietta and arrived in New York on 8 May 1849. On the list, Kessler was spelled Kesler and Holderbaum was spelled Holderbach:
Christian Kable Sr, 68 [(1781-bef 1850) father of the 4 Kable children also on the ship]
Catharine [Mueller] Kable, 57 [(c1790-1864) wife of Christian Kable Sr; possibly daughter of John Daniel Mueller]
Frederick Kable, 30 [(1817-1886) son of Christian Sr & Catharine]
Ferdinand Kable, 23 [(1827-1912) son of Christian Sr & Catharine]
Daniel Kable, 27 [(1821-1896) son of Christian Sr & Catharine; married to Louisa Holderbaum]
Louisa (Holderbaum) Kable, 28 [(1821-1849?) wife of Daniel Kable; listed as Holderbach]
Louisa Kable, 3 [(1846-1933) daughter of Daniel Kable & Louisa (Holderbaum)]
Christian Kessler Sr, 32 [(1814-1892) brother of Maria (Kessler) Mueller, who would immigrate in 1871]
Margaretha (Kable) Kessler, 32 [(1816-1862) wife of Christian Kessler Sr; daughter of Christian Kable Sr; listed as Margaretha Kable]
Margaretha Kessler, 4 [(1842-1868) daughter of Christian Kessler Sr & Margaretha]
Christian Kessler Jr, 3 [(1845-1904) son of Christian Kesler Sr & Margaretha]
Christian Holderbaum, 18 [possibly brother of Louisa (Holderbaum) Kable; listed as Christian Holderbach] [2]

Ship Henrietta, 1849
The Kessler and Kable families were intertwined and had intermarried in Germany. Christian Kessler’s wife Katharine “Margaretha” (Kable) was the daughter of Christian Kable Sr and was a sister to Christian Kable Jr, who married Dorothea Maurer.
German records indicate that Daniel Kable, son of Christian Kable Sr & Catharine Elizabeth Mueller, married Louisa Catharina Holderbaum on 24 December 1845 in Saarbrucken, Saarland. [3] Their daughter Louisa (Kable) Slofman’s death certificate names Louisa Holderbaum as her mother. [4] The Christian Holderbaum traveling with them may have been Louisa’s brother. He was born about 1830 and may have resided in Cincinnati and died there in 1888, although this is a theory at this point. [5]
Christian Kable Sr, born in 1781, likely died here before the 1850 census.
Christian Kessler Sr (1814-1892) was the brother of my great-great-grandmother Maria (Kessler) Mueller (1811-1886). Maria and her husband Johann Mueller (1816-1870) were the parents of Jacob Mueller/Miller (1843-1918), my great-grandfather, who immigrated in 1872.
The other Mueller in the Kable family, Catharine Elizabeth (Mueller) Kable, was probably not connected to my Mueller family.
The next person to immigrate was my great-grandfather Jacob Mueller, age 28, a widower, who immigrated in 1871. His wife, child, and father had recently died and starting over in a new country probably sounded like a good idea. He had family in America by that time, his uncle Christian Kessler Sr and some cousins. In fact, traveling to America with Jacob Mueller was one Christian Kessler, age 25, likely Jacob Mueller’s first cousin Christian Kessler Jr (1845-1904), who had immigrated with his family in 1849. Did Christian Kessler Jr travel back to Germany to accompany his cousin Jacob Mueller to America? It looks like he may have.
Jacob Mueller and Christian Kesser Jr arrived in New York on 15 June 1871 on the ship Bremen. [6]

Ship Bremen, 1871
But Jacob Mueller still had family back in Germany, his mother and his two married sisters. His sister Catharine was married to Jacob Linn and his sister Margaret was married to his brother, Philip Linn.
A year later, the fourth group immigrated. This group included Jacob Muellers’s widowed mother Maria (Kessler) Mueller, her two daughters and their families, and some other Linn family members. Maria Mueller and the Linns arrived in New York on 28 May 1872 on the ship Hannover:
Maria (Kessler) Mueller, 64 [(1811-1886) Johann Mueller’s widow; mother of Jacob Mueller, Margaret & Catharine (Mueller) Linn; listed as Maria Kesler]
Philip Linn Sr, 31 [(1841-1920) married to Margaret Mueller; son of Philip “Daniel” Linn & Gertrude Fuchs]
Margaret (Mueller) Linn, 24 [(1847-1924) wife of Philip Linn Sr; daughter of Marie (Kessler) Mueller]
Philip Linn Jr, 9 months [(1870-1877) son of Philip Linn Sr & Margaret Mueller]
Jacob Linn Sr, 34 [(1838-1919) married to Catharine Mueller; son of Philip “Daniel” Linn & Gertrude Fuchs]
Catharine (Mueller) Linn, 32 [(1839-1913) wife of Jacob Linn Sr; daughter of Marie (Kessler) Mueller]
Jacob Linn Jr, 7 [(1866-1927) son of Jacob Linn Sr & Catharine Mueller]
Philip Linn, 4 [(1868-1935) son of Jacob Linn Sr & Catharine Mueller]
Heinrich Linn, 9 months [(1871-1934) son of Jacob Linn Sr & Catharine Mueller]
Christian Linn, 14 [(1856-1936); aka Godfrey Linn, christened as Christian Linn; son of Philip “Daniel” Linn & Gertrude Fuchs]
Johann/John Jacob Linn, 19, [(1853-1935) son of Philip “Daniel” Linn & Gertrude Fuchs; occupation shoemaker] [7]

Ship Hannover, 1872
Widow Maria (Kessler) Mueller had several relatives living in the Chatt-area when she arrived: her son Jacob Mueller, her brother Christian Kessler, and several nieces and nephews.
The final group of Linns from that same family came to America in 1874. The father Philip “Daniel” Linn, widowed in 1871, came to America with three of his younger children. They sailed together on the ship Westphalia and arrived in New York in June 1874:
Daniel Linn, 62 [(1812-1886) the father, Philip “Daniel” Linn; returned to Germany]
Michael Linn, 24 [(1849-1926) son of Philip “Daniel” Linn & Gertrude Fuchs]
Peter Linn, 15 [(1859-1925) son of Philip “Daniel” Linn & Gertrude Fuchs]
Maria/Mary Linn,15, [(1859-1892) daughter of Philip “Daniel” Linn & Gertrude Fuchs] [8]

Ship Westphalia, 1874
The father Philip “Daniel” Linn (b. 1812) did not stay in America. He went back to Germany and lived out the rest of his life there. One wonders if he did not like it in America or if he even intended to stay here in the first place, because some of his children had remained in Germany.
The final result was a community in the New World that mirrored their community in the Old Word. They probably felt right at home.
[1] Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1820-1897, New York, Record Group 36, Microfilm M237, Christian & Dorothea (Maurer) Kable, Ship Edwina, 2 Dec 1846; Ancestry.com.
[2] Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York, 1820-1897, microfilm M237, Records of the U.S. Customs Service, RG 36, Christian Kable & Christian Kesler families, Ship Henrietta, 8 May 1849; Ancestry.com.
[3] Landesarchiv des Saarlandes, Saarbrucken-Scheidt, Deutschland, Personenstandsregister, Signatur DezTab 67, Saarland, Germany, Births, Marriages, Deaths, 1776-1875, Johann Daniel Kahle [sic] & Luise Catharina Holderbaum, 24 Dec 1845; Ancestry.com.
[4] Louise Laura (Kable) Slofman, Death Certificate, 3 Jan 1933, Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio; Find a Grave.com.
[5] Christ Holderbaum (1828-1888), Potters Field, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, Find a Grave memorial no.155728186; Find a Grave.com. [This record indicates he was 60 years old, born in Germany.
[6] Ship Bremen manifest, 15 June 1871, roll M237_344, Allen County Public Library, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
[7] Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New York, New York 1820-1897, Microfilm M237, Records of the US Customs Service, RG 36, Linn & Kessler, Ship Hannover, 28 May 1872; Ancestry.com.
[8] Staatsarchiv Hamburg, Hamburg, Deutschland, Hamburger Passagierlisten, Vol. 373-7 I, VIII A 1 Band 030 C, p367, Microfilm No. K_1720, Hamburg Passenger Lists, 1850-1934 [database on-line]. p.374, Daniel Linn & children, Ship Westphalia, Jun 1874; Ancestry.com.
You can contact Karen at karen@karenmillerbennett.com























