Theresa B. Rose

Female 1914 - 2003  (89 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Theresa B. Rose was born on 27 Apr 1914 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA (daughter of August Rose and Elizabeth Froehlich); died on 17 Dec 2003 in Florida, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.

    Family/Spouse: Alfred Wathne. Alfred was born in 1911; died in 1997; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Theresa Wathne

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  August Rose was born on 3 Jan 1885 in New York, USA (son of Joseph Rose and Theresia Redegeld); died on 14 May 1947 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.

    August married Elizabeth Froehlich on 18 Feb 1912 in New York, USA. Elizabeth (daughter of Frank Froehlich and Elizabeth M. Rottkamp) was born on 10 Sep 1891 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 2 Apr 1972 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth Froehlich was born on 10 Sep 1891 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA (daughter of Frank Froehlich and Elizabeth M. Rottkamp); died on 2 Apr 1972 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    Children:
    1. Joseph Rose was born on 25 Nov 1912 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 8 Sep 2004 in Nassau County, New York, USA.
    2. 1. Theresa B. Rose was born on 27 Apr 1914 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 17 Dec 2003 in Florida, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    3. Anthony Rose was born on 28 Apr 1915 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 12 Feb 2006 in Farmingdale, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    4. Mildred Elizabeth Rose was born on 15 Apr 1916 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died in 0Dec 1992; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    5. Edward Rose was born on 12 Feb 1917 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 23 May 2001 in Westbury, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    6. Florence Rose was born on 17 Oct 1918 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 9 Jun 2012; was buried on 12 Jun 2012 in Cemetery of the Holy Rood, Westbury, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    7. Cecilia Marie Rose was born on 22 Mar 1922 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 10 Feb 2011; was buried in Calverton National Cemetery Calverton, Suffolk County, New York, USA.
    8. Clara Henrietta Rose was born on 29 Dec 1923 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 5 Aug 1994 in Santa Ana, Orange County, California, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Joseph Rose was born in 1850; died in in New York, USA.

    Joseph married Theresia Redegeld. Theresia was born in 1850; died in in Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Theresia Redegeld was born in 1850; died in in Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 2. August Rose was born on 3 Jan 1885 in New York, USA; died on 14 May 1947 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.

  3. 6.  Frank Froehlich was born on 27 Aug 1862 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA (son of Franz Fröhlich Froehlich and Magdalena Breiner); died on 20 Jan 1915 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY:
    Reithmann-Ohlson Families
    Entries: 14712 Updated: 2008-06-23 04:27:05 UTC (Mon) Contact: Tom Reithmann
    lyntom@cox.net
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~reithmann/

    Frank married Elizabeth M. Rottkamp on 2 Mar 1886 in New York, USA. Elizabeth (daughter of Bernhard Johann Albert Rottkamp and Caroline Engel) was born on 13 Nov 1866 in New York, USA; died on 22 Mar 1965 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Elizabeth M. Rottkamp was born on 13 Nov 1866 in New York, USA (daughter of Bernhard Johann Albert Rottkamp and Caroline Engel); died on 22 Mar 1965 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY:
    Reithmann-Ohlson Families
    Entries: 14712 Updated: 2008-06-23 04:27:05 UTC (Mon) Contact: Tom Reithmann
    lyntom@cox.net
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~reithmann/

    Children:
    1. Caroline Froehlich was born on 21 Feb 1887 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 1 Jul 1986 in Jamaica, Queens County, New York, USA.
    2. Anna Froehlich was born on 8 Jan 1890 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 11 Dec 1986 in New York, USA.
    3. 3. Elizabeth Froehlich was born on 10 Sep 1891 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 2 Apr 1972 in Floral Park, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    4. John Bernard Froehlich was born on 12 Mar 1893 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 28 Aug 1955 in New York, USA.
    5. Joseph Lawrence Froehlich was born on 5 Jul 1894 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 19 Dec 1970 in Woodbury, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    6. Jacob Froehlich was born on 8 Jan 1897 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died in 0Jun 1978 in Plainview, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    7. Frank Aloysis Froehlich was born on 5 Mar 1898 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died in 0Jun 1983 in Hicksville, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    8. Clara Frances Froehlich was born on 1 Sep 1899 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 13 Jan 1972 in Montgomery, Orange County, New York, USA.
    9. Bernard Froehlich was born on 30 Apr 1901 in Oyster Bay, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 28 Feb 1986 in Hicksville, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    10. Mary Francis Froehlich was born on 25 Oct 1902 in Oyster Bay, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 6 Dec 1932 in Nassau County, New York, USA.
    11. Anthony Joseph Froehlich was born on 13 Nov 1905 in Oyster Bay, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 5 Jan 1998 in Syosset, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in Cemetery of the Holy Rood, Westbury, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    12. Mathilda Froehlich was born on 1 Apr 1907 in Oyster Bay, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 30 May 2002 in USA.
    13. Teresa Mary Froehlich was born on 16 Oct 1909 in Oyster Bay, Nassau County, New York, USA; died on 10 Dec 2002 in Bridgehampton, Suffolk County, New York, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Franz Fröhlich Froehlich was born on 17 Jan 1823 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern (son of Johannes Fröhlich and Maria Magdalena Leininger); died on 19 Jun 1881 in Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    John J. FROEHLICH, a retired realtor, died Sunday at his home, 390 Eastern Parkway. He was born in Brooklyn and was a member of Manual Lodge, No 636, F. & A. M. He is survived by his widow, Helen FROEHLICH; three daughters, Vivian, Edna and Maybelle FROEHLICH, one brother, Joseph FROEHLICH and two sisters, Mrs. Emily SCHWAB and Mrs. Maud ENGLEHARD. Masonic funeral service will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at the Funeral Home, 187 South Oxford Street. Funeral Wednesday at 1 P. M. with interment at Cypress Hills Cemetery.

    FROEHLICH, Francis Bernard When Francis Bernard Froehlich was graduated from the Fordham University Law School in 1943, he was an honor student. That distinction he has carried into his career as lawyer and as a citizen and Catholic layman. For he is prominent not only at the bar, but as a leader of the Minneola Republican Club and the Citizens party of Minneola and an officer of the Knights of Columbus. Mr. Froehlich was born in Floral Park on September 23, 1916. He is a member of a family that has lived in Nassau County for more than a century. His grandfather built the first stores on the Jericho Turnpike in Floral Park. His father, John Frank Froehlich, was a farmer and resident of Floral Park. His mother was Theresia (Rose) Froehlich. Francis B. Froehlich was graduated from the Chaminade High School, Minneola, in 1936. He received the degree of Bachelor of Arts from Fordham University in 1940 and in January, 1943, that of Bachelor of Laws from the Fordham Law School. In October, 1942, Mr. Froehlich passed the New York State bar examinations and in June, 1943, was admitted to practice. He had in the meantime become a law clerk in the firm of Glass and Lynch, New York. In April, 1943, the firm had promoted him to managing attorney. Later he associated himself with Elvin N. Edwards and on January 1, 1946, when James J. McDonough, for many years a special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, joined them, the new firm of Edwards, Froehlich and McDonough was formed. It has its offices at 1501 Franklin Avenue, Minneola. The firm is local counsel for Roosevelt Field. Mr. Elvin N. Edwards, prominent lawyer and former district attorney of Nassau County who was the senior member of the firm of Edwards. Froehlich and McDonough, died in July, 1946. Mr. Froehlich and Mr. McDonough carry on under the firm name. Mr. Froehlich is attorney for the Carle Place Water District, secretary of the Minneola Republican Club and vice president of the Citizens party of Minneola. He is deputy grand knight of the Corpus Christi Council of the Knights of Columbus, member of the board of directors of the Kiwanis Club of Minneola and member of the board of directors of Nassau County Cancer Committee and counsel to same. He is a communicant of the Corpus Christi Roman Catholic Church of Minneola. Mr. Froehlich and Carol Hoar, daughter of George Timothy Hoar and Carol (Williams) Hoar, were married in St. Andrews Church, Flushing, on February 7, 1942. They are the parents of two daughters, Patricia Theresia, born August 19, 1943, and Regina Marie, born September 16, 1944. Mr. and Mrs. Froehlich live at 372 Jackson Avenue, Minneola.

    Franz married Magdalena Breiner on 30 Apr 1851 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern. Magdalena (daughter of Johannes Friedrich Breiner and Katharina Eva Hoff) was born on 1 Nov 1823 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern; died on 8 Apr 1906 in Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Magdalena Breiner was born on 1 Nov 1823 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern (daughter of Johannes Friedrich Breiner and Katharina Eva Hoff); died on 8 Apr 1906 in Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    Children:
    1. Peter Fröhlich was born on 22 Jan 1852 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern; died on 23 Jan 1852 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern.
    2. Peter Fröhlich Froehlich was born on 24 Feb 1853 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern; was christened on 24 Feb 1853 in Bundenthal, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in New York, USA.
    3. Mary A. Froehlich was born in 0Mar 1858 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA; died in 1930 in Newark, Essex County, New Jersey, USA.
    4. George Froehlich was born on 15 Oct 1859 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA; died on 30 Apr 1941 in Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried on 3 May 1941 in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    5. 6. Frank Froehlich was born on 27 Aug 1862 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA; died on 20 Jan 1915 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    6. Caroline Pauline Froehlich was born on 7 Aug 1863 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA; died on 8 Mar 1926 in Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    7. Jacob Froehlich was born on 9 Aug 1865 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA; died on 26 Nov 1952 in Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    8. John Frank Froehlich was born on 5 Mar 1867 in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA; died on 27 Nov 1943 in Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.

  3. 14.  Bernhard Johann Albert Rottkamp was born on 17 Nov 1822 in Grosseneder, Westfalen; died on 19 Jul 1891 in New York, USA.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY:
    Reithmann-Ohlson Families
    Entries: 14712 Updated: 2008-06-23 04:27:05 UTC (Mon) Contact: Tom Reithmann
    lyntom@cox.net
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~reithmann/

    BIOGRAPHY:
    Two of Bernard Rottkamp's daughters, Caroline and Elizabeth, married George and Frank Froehlich, brothers in another large Long Island farming family with German-Catholic roots. Ralph Schmitt and Teresa Rottkamp were already second cousins through the Rottkamp family when she married Ferdie Schmitt, Ralph's first cousin.

    This article is from the Wednesday, August 2, 1995 New York Newsday newspaper article (The Long Island Edition).

    IT'S A SMALL WORLD FOR A BIG FAMILY There are villages with populations
    smaller than the number of Rottkamps on Long Island
    [ALL EDITIONS]

    Newsday - Long Island, N.Y.
    Author: By Ken Moritsugu. STAFF WRITER
    Date: Aug 2, 1995
    Start Page: B.04
    Edition: Combined editions
    Section: PART II

    IN 1850, Bernard Rottkamp met Caroline Engel at St. Nicholas Roman
    Catholic Church in Manhattan.

    It was the start of something big. Really big.

    The following year, Rottkamp, a 28-year-old immigrant farmer from Germany,
    married Engel, a 17-year-old native New Yorker. They weren't Adam and Eve
    but what came next is more reminiscent of Genesis. They begat 14 children,
    who begat 279 children, who begat 794 children. Today, 144 years and six
    generations later, the family can count a whopping 2,232 direct
    descendants of the original couple. And about 2,000 are living, many on
    Long Island The family is so big that relatives have stumbled into
    previously unknown relations in their daily lives.

    There was the young man and woman who dated three times before they
    realized they were cousins. And the high school pals in Wantagh who didn't
    find out that they were related until a year into their friendship. And
    the East Northport dietitian who ran into two other dietitians she knew
    professionally - but not as Rottkamps - at a huge Rottkamp family reunion
    in Hauppauge this year.

    "We knew we had a large family," says 87-year-old Josephine Seidler of
    Valley Stream, one of the great-granchildren, who spent a year charting
    the first family tree in 1947. "But we didn't know any of them if we fell
    over them."

    And they could fall over a Rottkamp in almost every walk of life. Once the
    family name was synonymous with farming on Long Island. Now Rottkamps are
    police officers and lawyers, priests and school teachers, computer
    analysts and pharmaceutical sales representatives, carpenters and
    investment bankers. A handful still carry on the tradition that Bernard
    Rottkamp started as a worker earning $5 a week on a farm near Astor Place
    in Manhattan. In 1861, he settled his family on their own fields in what
    would become Elmont.

    The evolution of the Rottkamps mirrors that of Long Island from an
    agrarian to a suburban society. All but one of the 10 children of Bernard
    and Caroline who survived into adulthood went into farming. The exception
    was John Rottkamp, who became a butcher on Hester Street in Manhattan. Few
    of the children in the early generations went beyond sixth or eighth
    grade; they left Catholic school to work on the farm.

    They lived through the Depression - well fed but with hand-me-down clothes
    and no toys for the children. "My cousin passed clothes on to me. I wasn't
    proud," says 71-year-old Ralph Schmitt of Valley Stream. "But being on the
    farm, that's one thing you always had - plenty of good food."

    Rottkamp men served in both world wars and Korea and Vietnam. During World
    War II, some of the women worked at Grumman, where they ran into other
    Rottkamp women.

    After the war, successive generations left the potato fields to become
    secretaries and mail carriers, grocery store workers and Long Island Rail
    Road conductors. But they kept their green thumbs. As 61-year-old Carol
    Ann Hintze of East Northport explains, "We all have nice flower gardens."

    A few families stuck with farming - steadily moving east to stay one step
    ahead of development as they moved from the family homestead in Elmont to
    East Meadow to Melville to Calverton. In Melville they still farm land
    they once owned and now lease back from Tilles Companies, land that may
    soon be developed for offices.

    Today a long list of Long Island landmarks lie on land once farmed by
    Rottkamps, from Levitt homes in Hicksville to the Westbury Music Fair,
    from Elmont High School to Newsday in Melville, from Green Acres shopping
    mall to the Cross-Island Parkway, which split one Rottkamp farm in half,
    part in Nassau County and part in Queens.

    That was the farm in Springfield Gardens where Ralph Schmitt, a
    great-grandson of the original couple, grew up and raised chickens for his
    father until he was 27. He remembers fattening a turkey to 30 pounds on a
    steady diet of corn; his mother, Theresa, had to go out to buy a pan big
    enough for it, and they still had to hacksaw off the legs to make it fit
    the oven.

    Schmitt raised guinea hens, which he says he never really cared for,
    before they took on a modern-day cachet as rock cornish hens. Accustomed
    to bringing in warm, fresh-from-under-the-hen eggs for breakfast, Schmitt
    was shocked the first time he encountered refrigerated eggs at the grocery
    store - and even more shocked that people would want to eat them.

    But times change, and so did Schmitt. His father retired and sold the farm
    about 1950 - it's now covered by PS 176 and dozens of homes with neatly
    kept lawns in a middle-class neighborhood - and Schmitt, who didn't finish
    high school, had to find a job.

    He lied about having a high school diploma and landed in a supermarket.
    Schmitt spent 31 years amid cold eggs, chicken parts and frozen turkeys at
    King Kullen and A&P. Retired now at 71, he lives in a Valley Stream senior
    citizen complex not far from the old family farm and clips coupons for
    meals around the corner at a fast food chain famous for chicken. His
    verdict: "It ain't bad."

    But the farm boy remains. Every spring, Schmitt comes home from King
    Kullen with a bunch of rhubarb and a pint of strawberries that he stews
    over a low flame with sugar and a little water. "My nephews and nieces,
    they say, `Rhubarb? What's that?' "

    John Herman, who married Rottkamp granddaughter Anne Froehlich, also left
    the farm but for a related field. When he lost his New Hyde Park farm
    during the Depression, he got a job as a sales representative for a New
    Jersey fertilizer company. "His territory was Long Island, and he sold to
    all his relatives," recalls his daughter, Carol Ann Hintze.

    Today Hintze's 24-year-old son, Philip, is a sales representative on Long
    Island for another New Jersey company, pharmaceutical giant Merck. And
    although he knows the area only as subdivisions and strip malls, his
    territory - which runs from Syosset to New Hyde Park - was once dotted
    with Rottkamp farms, including his grandfather's.

    Besides farming, the other constant in Rottkamp life was St. Boniface
    Roman Catholic Church in Elmont, where the children went to school and
    everybody went to Mass. There are so many Rottkamps buried in the church
    cemetery that "even gravediggers can be confused about where the graves
    are," Schmitt said.

    In the close-knit German-American farming community, many Rottkamps
    married in-laws whom they met at church. "They were all farming families
    and there was no one else," said Hintze, whose mother's brother married
    her husband's sister. "They had no cars, and there was church. They all
    went to church."

    Two of Bernard Rottkamp's daughters, Caroline and Elizabeth, married
    George and Frank Froehlich, brothers in another large Long Island farming
    family with German-Catholic roots. Ralph Schmitt and Teresa Rottkamp were
    already second cousins through the Rottkamp family when she married Ferdie
    Schmitt, Ralph's first cousin.

    The first person to try to untangle the jumble of roots in the family tree
    was Josephine Seidler, who set out in 1946 to find out just how many
    Rottkamps there were. "It was just curiosity that started it," she says.

    By the next year, she had compiled the first family tree, showing 512
    direct descendents, and organized the first family reunion. About 450
    Rottkamps turned out on June 29, 1947, at the former Commercial House in
    Queens Village. Dinner was $2.25 a person, and the dancing continued until
    midnight.

    Today the task of keeping track of the family tree has fallen to
    68-year-old Teresa Schmitt, a widow carrying on the farming tradition in
    Melville with the help of her two sons, Ferd, 42, and William, 41. Her
    daughter Margaret, 36, runs the farmstand on a corner of the property.
    Schmitt herself takes orders on the phone at her house from other Long
    Island farmstands and an Upper West Side fruit and vegetable market.

    But a sign of the times has gone up along the edge of the Schmitts'
    cornfields. The family sold the land 15 years ago to Tilles Companies, and
    has been farming it on leased time. Earlier this year, Tilles put up signs
    announcing that the land had received local government approval for
    commercial office development.

    Tilles is talking with several potential users about developing the site,
    says Gary Lewi, a company spokesman. It says something about the Rottkamp
    presence on Long Island that Lewi grew up in a North Merrick home built on
    a former Rottkamp potato farm, and remembers buying fruits and vegetables
    from a Rottkamp farmstand at the end of the street.

    Teresa Schmitt knows that the day will come when her family will have to
    retreat from the farm, as previous generations did from theirs. "You don't
    really know," she says when asked about the future. "We think about it.
    But you know, when the time comes, something happens."

    The phone rings, jarring her back to the present. She takes an order from
    the Manhattan fruit and vegetable market: 50 boxes of basil, six of
    chicory, 55 each of green and red leaf lettuce and 30 of Boston lettuce,
    all of which will be delivered the next day.

    It's the same hand that carefully pencils in each new birth, death and
    marriage in the family-tree book, and updates a thick 3-ring binder full
    of family addresses, carefully divided into the 10 family branches.

    The term family tree may be a bit of an understated misnomer for this maze
    of intertwined branches. Family forest may be more like it.

    The last edition of the family tree, issued in 1990, is a 60-page,
    calendar-size booklet. An update, issued this year at a family reunion in
    March, lists 25 pages of births and deaths just in the past five years.

    The number of descendants has more than quadrupled since the first reunion
    in 1947, and the price of the reunion dinner, held in March at the IBEW
    hall in Hauppauge, has gone up 13-fold to $30. And despite about a dozen
    reunions over the years, Rottkamps still don't know all their relatives.

    Take Carol Ann Hintze, 33, who shares the same name as her mother. At the
    March reunion, the dietitian and nutritionist at Little Neck Community
    Hospital ran into two other dietitians whom she knew previously, but not
    as extended family.

    Similarly, Susanne Zimmer Stone, 31, and Stacy Friedmann Field, 30, were
    part of a group of Wantagh girls that hung out together at the swimming
    pool and the roller rink during their high school years.

    One day, Stacy asked Susanne if she were related to Jack Zimmer. "Yes,
    that's my uncle," Susanne replied.

    Well, Stacy said, Jack Zimmer also happened to be a good friend of her
    great-uncle, Herbert Wulforst. What the girls learned later from their
    parents was that Wulforst and Zimmer weren't just old pals from Jamaica
    High School; both also were Rottkamp descendants.

    And that's how the two high school girls discovered that they, too, were
    related. "I was surprised and happy," says Susanne Stone, now a nurse in
    pediatric chemotherapy at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in
    Manhattan. "It's a small world."

    Especially when you're a Rottkamp.

    Bernhard married Caroline Engel about 1851. Caroline (daughter of Carl Engel and Mary Tennies) was born on 4 Jul 1834 in New York, USA; died on 31 Jan 1910 in New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Caroline Engel was born on 4 Jul 1834 in New York, USA (daughter of Carl Engel and Mary Tennies); died on 31 Jan 1910 in New York, USA.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY:
    Reithmann-Ohlson Families
    Entries: 14712 Updated: 2008-06-23 04:27:05 UTC (Mon) Contact: Tom Reithmann
    lyntom@cox.net
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~reithmann/

    Children:
    1. Caroline Rottkamp was born on 5 Nov 1863 in New York, USA; died on 27 Jun 1952 in Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA; was buried on 30 Jun 1952 in St. Boniface Cemetery, Elmont, Nassau County, New York, USA.
    2. 7. Elizabeth M. Rottkamp was born on 13 Nov 1866 in New York, USA; died on 22 Mar 1965 in North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York, USA.