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Friday, July 29, 2005

A Visit To The Zerf Heimat Museum








Edith Rommelfanger with butter churn
and the bowl used as a cream separator









In 2002 I planned a trip to the Saarburg area to try to learn more about the lives of my ancestors. I learned that the little village of Zerf, where my great-great grandmother had been born in 1827, had a Heimat Museum, a place where the everyday house and farm tools of the 19th and early 20th century could be seen.

I wrote to the museum to learn more about the open hours but never received a reply. Shortly before my trip, I decided to contact the mayor of the village to find out if there was any way that I could inside the museum. (It sounded so perfect for the kinds of information I needed that the thought that I might not be able to see it was making me crazy). In my letter, I gave my e-mail address as well as my home address and offered to pay for any costs involved.
Almost immediately I received a reply from Edith Rommelfanger, the mayor's wife. She said that when I arrived in the area, I should call, and they would arrange to show me the museum. From then on, the fates stepped in and made my visit to the museum as easy as finding a cheesehead in Green Bay.

Once I arrived in Saarburg, the call for an appointment to see the museum was made not by me but by Ewald Meyer, a retired teacher who was writing a history of another of my ancestral villages, Irsch bei Beurig. Herr Meyer took me "under his wing" and became my charming guide and chauffeur during my visit to Germany.

When all the arrangements were made, Herr Meyer and I drove to Zerf and were met by the mayor, Manfred Rommelfanger and his wife who gave me a two-hour tour of the museum, which is only open by special appointment.

As a souvenir, I was given several sheets of information on the exhibits. I believe Frau Rommelfanger herself wrote them, and she asked if I would translate the pages, which explained the majority of the exhibits, into English so that, should another American arrive, an English text would be available. She understood that my German is mostly self-taught and that mistakes were possible. She did not seem to mind. So when I came home I did my best at a translation and sent it to her.

I have decided to share some of this information in my blog from time to time, hoping that I have made only small errors in translation and that you will enjoy reading about some of the artifacts and how they were used. I will include a picture if I have one available. The quotation marks will indicate which information is translated from my Heimat Museum guide. Information that I added to help myself understand is in parentheses.

Heimat Museum Zerf
"This exhibit is about butter production. The first step was the Milchentrahmung or milk separation. A milk bowl served that function. It had a plug and a little sieve or filter. After approximately 12 hours the plug was removed, skim milk flowed off; and the lighter cream that had collected above was held back by the filter. The successor of the milk bowl was the centrifuge. There was a small bell on this centrifuge. As long as it made a sound, the cock had to remain closed, because the rotating speed was not yet fast enough. As soon as the little bell stopped, one untwisted the cock, and the centrifuge began the separation. The cream came out in front and the skim milk in the back."

"For honey production in former times a bee shed could be made in a very simple way. One pushed four stakes into the ground, placed a slanted roof covered with Ginster (broom) on top; and put the (woven) straw hives underneath." (Broom grows wild all over temperate Europe to a height of 3 to 5 feet. It produces numerous long, straight, slender bright green branches, tough and very flexible. The bright yellow fragrant flowers are large, in bloom from April to July, and are succeeded by oblong, flattened pods, about 1 1/2 inch long. The pods are nearly black when mature. They burst with a sharp noise when the seeds are ripe, flinging them some distance. The continuous crackling of the bursting seed pods on a hot, sunny July day is quite noticeable. The flowers have a great attraction for bees; they contain no honey, but an abundance of pollen).

6 comments:

  1. Hallo Edith and Manfred,

    It was such a nice surprise to find your comment on the blog. Yes, now people here in the States know what generous and welcoming people you are. And I have received several e-mails thanking me for posting the information you gave me when I visited in 2002. Best wishes and
    Viele liebe Gruesse,
    Kathy

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  2. I recently started researching my ancestry. I discovered that my Great Great Grandmother (Mary Rommelfanger) was from Zerf. I have been able to go back 8 generations! One day I hope to travel there and perhaps see the Heimatmuseum for myself. In the meantime, I enjoyed reading your posts. Thanks!

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  3. Jason, thanks for commenting. You are having wonderful success tracing your roots. I too have a Rommelfanger in my family tree, Suzanna Rommelfanger was my 3rd great grandmother, daughter of Nikolaus Rommelfanger. However, she came from Serrig, a few miles away from Zerf and located on the Saar River.

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  4. (I am posting this e-mail since the writer had trouble doing it. Perhaps it will connect with other Rommelfangers out there)

    My husband and I are going to visit Germany the first two weeks in September and hope to spend several days in Zerf and Trier area. We were just forwarded your blog site (http://19thcenturyrhinelandlive.blogspot.com/2005/07/visit-to-zerf-heimat-museum.html) and found it so very interesting. I tried to add a comment, but having never done it before, I was not successful. It said my url wasn’t accepted.

    My husband’s great-grandmother, Eva Rommelfanger was born in Zerf July 15, 1836. What I was surprised to see was a blog from Jason Hochwender regarding his great-great-grandmother, Mary Rommelfanger. Mary and Eva are sisters; daughters of Conrad and Anna (Dickop) Rommelfanger. Conrad is the son of Dionisius and Barbara (Hilgert) Rommelfanger. Mary Rommelfanger married Christian Hochschwender Jan. 24, 1870 in Sheboygan, WI. Well, I could go on, but you see why I was so excited. Our German guide has set up meeting there with Rommelfanger connections, so that should be interesting also.

    Thank you for your very interesting site. It will take my days to absorb it all.

    Connie and Jake Jacobs
    In beautiful Oconto Falls, WI

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  5. Hello there, I found your web site via Google while searching for a related topic, your website came up, it appears great. I’ve bookmarked it in my google bookmarks. hotels frankfurt-oder

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  6. Hello Jim,
    Thank you for your great comment. It's a pleasure to know that you found my blog interesting enough to bookmark it and an even greater pleasure that you took the time to write me.
    Kathy

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