Ida Amalie Albertine Krause1

(1880 - October 20, 1975)
Ida Amalie Albertine Krause|b. 1880\nd. Oct 20, 1975|p166.htm|Ferdinand Krause|b. Nov 11, 1847\nd. Oct 20, 1942|p998.htm|Amalia Splitt|b. Mar 15, 1849\nd. Aug 28, 1912|p999.htm|||||||||||||
     Ida Amalie Albertine Krause was born in 1880 in Germany, daughter of Ferdinand Krause and Amalia Splitt.2 Ida Amalie Albertine Krause immigrated in 1881 to the United States of America. She was about one to two years old at the time.3

Ida married Edward Neuendorf, son of August Neuendorf (Neidorft) and Frances Fischer, on September 22, 1904, at St. Paul's Lutheran Church in Wilton, Monroe County, Wisconsin.1,2


Ida died on Monday, October 20, 1975.4,5
Eddie & Ida Neuendorf's Gravestone
She was laid to rest in the St. Paul's Lutheran Church Cemetery in Wilton, Monroe County, Wisconsin.4

Child of Ida Amalie Albertine Krause and Edward Neuendorf

  • Mildred Neuendorf (living)

Citations

  1. [S37] Alice M. Prochnow, Prochnow, Krueger, Neuendorf, Bungert 1790? - 1984 (3833 N Fairview Av, Tucson, AZ 85705-2206: Alice Prochnow, 1984), P. 43c. Hereinafter cited as Prochnow Family History.
  2. [S88] Edward Neuendorf & Ida Amalie Krause marriage, 22 September 1904, Susan Noyes' Research Compilation, Prescott, Yavapai County, Arizona, USA. No. 160 / 7521.
  3. [S126] 1900 US Census, US Census Search, Heritage Quest Online, 1900, Wisconsin, Monroe, Wilton, Series: T623 Roll: 1808 Page: 296.
  4. [S16] Cemetery Marker/Gravestone Hereinafter cited as "Cemetery Marker."
  5. [S249] Ida Neuendorf, Probate File 23640, Court House, Wills & Probate, Sparta, Monroe County, Wisconsin, USA. Hereinafter cited as Probate File: Ida Neuendorf.
 


  • A family history
    leads to the satisfaction in really knowing who you are
    and from when you came.


  • "Nor long shall any name resound
    Beyond the grave, unless't be found
    In some clerk's book; it is the pen
    Gives immortality to men."


  • A good life lasts for several generations.

  • In all of us there is a hunger, marrow-deep,
    to know our heritage, to know who we are
    and where we come from.


    — Alex Haley
  • To forget one's ancestors
    is to be a brook without a source,
    a tree without a root.


    — Chinese Proverb
  • Family faces are magic mirrors.
    Looking at people who belong to us,
    we see the past, present, and future.
    We make discoveries about ourselves.


    — Gail Lumet Buckley
  • In every conceivable manner,
    the family is a link to our past,
    a bridge to our future.


    — Alex Haley
  • What greater thing is there for human souls
    than to feel that they are joined for life – to be with each other
    in silent unspeakable memories.


    — George Eliot
  • Some people come and go in our lives.
    Some stay forever.


  • We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors,
    we borrow it from our children.


    — Native American Proverb
  • The memories we give may a lifetime live in the heart
    of those we hold so close.


    — Unknown
  • Families are like fudge . . .
    mostly sweet with a few nuts.


    — Unknown
  • The family is one of Nature's masterpieces.

    — George Santayana
  • Having a place to go – is a home.
    Having someone to love – is a family.
    Having both – is a blessing.


    — Donna Hedges
  • Every man is his own ancestor,
    and every man is his own heir.
    He devises his own future,
    and he inherits his own past.


    — Fredrick Henry Hedge