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George Gottleib Moser

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George Gottleib Moser

Birth
Germany
Death
8 Jul 1913 (aged 53)
Jasper County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Barton County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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George Gottleib Moser married Fredareka Eckert in Bucyrus, Crawford County, Ohio on March 15, 1887. The marriage license lists Gottleib Moser and Fredareka Eckert. George was born in the country of Wuerttemberg which later became a state in Germany. Records from Germany list George's name as Johann Gottlieb Moser. George left the port of Bremen on the North Sea on 06/24/1883, and arrived in New York on 07/06/1883. He filed his intent to become a citizen on 09/23/1883. George was naturalized on 10/03/1890 at Falls City, Richardson County, NE. George and Fredareka lived in or near Humboldt, Richardson County, NE where four of their children were born. The family brought all of their possessions, including cattle and horses, to Jasper, Jasper County, MO on the train in January, 1895. They went about 5 miles west of Jasper in a snowstorm to a 10 ft. by 10 ft. rock building that was on the property. Posters offering land in Nebraska were displayed in Germany around 1880. These posters may have influenced their move to Nebraska before coming to Jasper County, MO.
George Gottleib Moser married Fredareka Eckert in Bucyrus, Crawford County, Ohio on March 15, 1887. The marriage license lists Gottleib Moser and Fredareka Eckert. George was born in the country of Wuerttemberg which later became a state in Germany. Records from Germany list George's name as Johann Gottlieb Moser. George left the port of Bremen on the North Sea on 06/24/1883, and arrived in New York on 07/06/1883. He filed his intent to become a citizen on 09/23/1883. George was naturalized on 10/03/1890 at Falls City, Richardson County, NE. George and Fredareka lived in or near Humboldt, Richardson County, NE where four of their children were born. The family brought all of their possessions, including cattle and horses, to Jasper, Jasper County, MO on the train in January, 1895. They went about 5 miles west of Jasper in a snowstorm to a 10 ft. by 10 ft. rock building that was on the property. Posters offering land in Nebraska were displayed in Germany around 1880. These posters may have influenced their move to Nebraska before coming to Jasper County, MO.


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