Schoenfeld Colony (Alexandrovsk, South Russia)

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

Source note(s)

  • Schroeder and Huebert, Mennonite Historical Atlas, p. 102
  • Krahn, Cornelius. "Schönfeld Mennonite Settlement (Zaporizhia Oblast, Ukraine)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 15 Mar 2016.

Display note(s)

Hierarchical terms

Schoenfeld Colony (Alexandrovsk, South Russia)

Equivalent terms

Schoenfeld Colony (Alexandrovsk, South Russia)

  • UF Brazol Colony
  • UF Schönfeld Mennonite Settlement (Zaporozhye Oblast, Ukraine)

Associated terms

Schoenfeld Colony (Alexandrovsk, South Russia)

31 Archival description results for Schoenfeld Colony (Alexandrovsk, South Russia)

31 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

The Peters Store owned by Peter Peters, maternal

  • CA MAO M2004B 1
  • Item
  • 1915

The Peters Store owned by Peter Peters, maternal grandfather of Marg Boldt. Jewelry was sold here and the family was well off. The Brasol Colony was just north of the Molochna Colony.

Unknown

Anna Reimer family fonds

  • CA MHC PP
  • Fonds
  • 1925-1978

This fonds consists of 3 volumes of letters translated into English depicting life in Russia and the Soviet Union 1925-1978. In 1925 Anna Reimer's daughter, Katherina Enns and her husband Wilhelm Enns immigrated to Canada along with Anna's son's family, Johann and Kaethe Reimer. Anna and her other children remained in Russia, hoping also to move later but could not do so. This fonds consists of the letters the family members in Canada received, documenting the situation in the Soviet Union. The letters were translated by Katherina and Wilhelm Enns' children Con Enns and Elizabeth Enns, her husband Edward Enns and daughter Ruth Enns. "Katherina Enns and Johann Reimer left behind in Russia their sisters Anna Epp, Mariechen Reimer, Margareta Enns, Susanna Reimer, Elisabeth Teichroeb, and a brother Dietrich Reimer and their mother Anna (Peters) Riemer."

Teichroeb, Elisabeth (Reimer), 1890-1978

Schoenfeld school, 1902

Front row (left to right): Anna Neufeld, Gredel Thiessen, Anna Thiessen, Gerthrude Peters, Luise Wilms. Second row (left to right): Maria Schroeder, Aganetha Dick, Henriethe [?] Banmann, Katharina Peters, Lehrer [teacher] Franz Peters, Maria Peters, Gretha Wiens, Luise Thiessen, Anna Schroeder. Third row (left to right): David Dick, Peter Dick, Wilhelm Dick, Abram Dick, Johann Heidebrecht, Heinrich Papke [?], Heinrich Banman [?], Gerhard Heidebrecht. Back row (left to right): Heinrich Mirau, Johann Dick, Otto Schrieber [?], Wilhelm Heidebrecht, Gerhard Schroeder, Peter Neufeld, Wilhelm Peters, Johann Wiens, Johann Papke [?].

Unknown

Anna Neufeld's locket

Anna Neufeld's locket with pictures of her brother and husband. They are dressed in the uniform of Red Cross workers during the First World War. She is wearing the locket in photograph 350.1.

Thiessen family, victims of bandits

This is a photo of one woman and four men in open coffins placed outside on the ground. They were murdered in their home, near the station of Sojiewsky Sawood Ekaterinoslov Gouvern in January, 1918. (Left to right): Annie Thiessen, eighteen years old, threw herself in front of her father, Abram Thiessen, and thus saved his life; her uncle, Aron Thiessen; Heinrich Thiessen left a wife and three children; Peter Thiessen, engaged to be married and Gerhard Thiessen, engaged to be married.

Unknown

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