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Anton Eisenbach

Birth
Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany
Death
unknown
Bastrop County, Texas, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
h/o Anna Marie Mueller
======================================
Children:
1. Anton Eisenbach - b. ~1855
2. Carl Eisenbach - b. ~1857
3. Elisa C. Eisenbach - b. ~1860
4. Herman Eisenbach - b. ~1863
5. Dorathea Eisenbach - b. ~1865

Bio written by Ron Sommers:

The death date & year of birth for Anton Eisenbach are not known. The excerpt below is presented to support Anton and Anna Marie's burial in the Grassyville Cemetery. While the quote refers to Anton Eisenbach who appears on the 1870 census as a 15-year-old boy living with Anton and Anna Marie, it offers support that the Eisenbach family was active in the Salem Methodist Church, and that Anton & Anna Marie's final resting place may be in unmarked graves in the Grassyville Cemetery or on a nearby farm.

An article in the Bastrop Advertiser, Feb 3, 1966, entitled "History of the Grassyville Methodist Church," states "quoted from a document found in the cornerstone of this church: "In the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Seventy Five, the congregation met to discuss the possibility of building a church....Present at this meeting were the following:...Anton Eisenbach, Emma Eisenbach..."
h/o Anna Marie Mueller
======================================
Children:
1. Anton Eisenbach - b. ~1855
2. Carl Eisenbach - b. ~1857
3. Elisa C. Eisenbach - b. ~1860
4. Herman Eisenbach - b. ~1863
5. Dorathea Eisenbach - b. ~1865

Bio written by Ron Sommers:

The death date & year of birth for Anton Eisenbach are not known. The excerpt below is presented to support Anton and Anna Marie's burial in the Grassyville Cemetery. While the quote refers to Anton Eisenbach who appears on the 1870 census as a 15-year-old boy living with Anton and Anna Marie, it offers support that the Eisenbach family was active in the Salem Methodist Church, and that Anton & Anna Marie's final resting place may be in unmarked graves in the Grassyville Cemetery or on a nearby farm.

An article in the Bastrop Advertiser, Feb 3, 1966, entitled "History of the Grassyville Methodist Church," states "quoted from a document found in the cornerstone of this church: "In the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Seventy Five, the congregation met to discuss the possibility of building a church....Present at this meeting were the following:...Anton Eisenbach, Emma Eisenbach..."


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