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Anna Maria Breider

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Anna Maria Breider

Birth
Death
8 Jan 1895 (aged 14)
Burial
Mishicot, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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ANNA MARIA BREIDER - d. 1895

A case of small pox has broken out in the village of Manitowoc Rapids in the family of A. Kugler. The afflicted person is a young man about 20 years of age.
He does not know how he contracted the disease andinsists that to his knowledgehe was never exposed to it.
The Breider girl of Mishicott is so sick with the disease that it is feared shewill succumb to it. Her mother is also seriously sick but the two boys have itin light form. This family likewise claim that they have no knowledge as to howthe disease was contracted. In the city of Two Rivers all who attended the funeral
of the Breider child have been quarantined. But few of those who recovered fromthe disease are marked.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 10, 1895 pg. 3
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Notes From Mishicott:
We have at present 8 cases of small pox in the town of Mishicott there having beenten so far, two having died out of Peter Breider's family. It is hard to tellwhether any more will break out or not of course. We have about twenty five familiesquarantined who have been exposed and are doing our utmost to make thing pleasant.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 17, 1895 pg. 2
********
One of the Breider children died last week of small pox. Hoffman of Mishicott grewworse on Monday though he had begun to improve, and the doctor has doubts of his recovery.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 17, 1895 pg. 3
********
It is now regarded as quite certain that a tramp brought the disease to the Breiderfamily, so that the town of Mishicott owes its affliction to a lazy vagabond. A tramphad his dinner there some time before any member of the family was taken with thedisease. It was learned that this same tramp had been in the town of Two Rivers where
the small pox is. The Kugler family in Manitowoc Rapids no doubt contracted the diseasein the same way as there is absolutely nothing to the story that infected clothing waspurchased by them.
But little is known of the prevalence of the disease in Gibson. There is small pox inthree families there, - Charles Fee, Rudolph Reich and William Reich.
Hoffman, the Mishicott miller, had the disease in very bad shape ad it was feared thathe would not recover. He is improving now.
Later - Philip Hoffman died last night.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 17, 1895 pg. 3
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ANNA MARIA BREIDER - d. 1895

A case of small pox has broken out in the village of Manitowoc Rapids in the family of A. Kugler. The afflicted person is a young man about 20 years of age.
He does not know how he contracted the disease andinsists that to his knowledgehe was never exposed to it.
The Breider girl of Mishicott is so sick with the disease that it is feared shewill succumb to it. Her mother is also seriously sick but the two boys have itin light form. This family likewise claim that they have no knowledge as to howthe disease was contracted. In the city of Two Rivers all who attended the funeral
of the Breider child have been quarantined. But few of those who recovered fromthe disease are marked.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 10, 1895 pg. 3
********
Notes From Mishicott:
We have at present 8 cases of small pox in the town of Mishicott there having beenten so far, two having died out of Peter Breider's family. It is hard to tellwhether any more will break out or not of course. We have about twenty five familiesquarantined who have been exposed and are doing our utmost to make thing pleasant.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 17, 1895 pg. 2
********
One of the Breider children died last week of small pox. Hoffman of Mishicott grewworse on Monday though he had begun to improve, and the doctor has doubts of his recovery.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 17, 1895 pg. 3
********
It is now regarded as quite certain that a tramp brought the disease to the Breiderfamily, so that the town of Mishicott owes its affliction to a lazy vagabond. A tramphad his dinner there some time before any member of the family was taken with thedisease. It was learned that this same tramp had been in the town of Two Rivers where
the small pox is. The Kugler family in Manitowoc Rapids no doubt contracted the diseasein the same way as there is absolutely nothing to the story that infected clothing waspurchased by them.
But little is known of the prevalence of the disease in Gibson. There is small pox inthree families there, - Charles Fee, Rudolph Reich and William Reich.
Hoffman, the Mishicott miller, had the disease in very bad shape ad it was feared thathe would not recover. He is improving now.
Later - Philip Hoffman died last night.
Manitowoc Pilot Thursday, January 17, 1895 pg. 3
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Gravesite Details

tochter of P & M


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