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		<title>For the love of antlers</title>
		<link>https://sophienburg.com/for-the-love-of-antlers/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[director]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Aug 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sophienburg.wpenginepowered.com/?p=7694</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>By Keva Hoffmann Boardman — This is the story of a boy born in Erbach, Hessen, Germany. It is about a boy who was fascinated with antlers. It is about that boy growing up and emigrating to Texas and creating his own future. Ernst Dosch was born in 1822. He grew up hunting in the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://sophienburg.com/for-the-love-of-antlers/">For the love of antlers</a> appeared first on <a href="https://sophienburg.com">Sophies Shop</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><figure id="attachment_7722" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-7722" style="width: 680px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="wp-image-7722 size-large" src="https://sophienburg.wpenginepowered.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210801_antlers_3020d-815x1024.jpg" alt="Photo caption: Forester, saloonkeeper, hunter and antler collector Ernst Dosch in 1900. [3020D]" width="680" height="854" srcset="https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210801_antlers_3020d-815x1024.jpg 815w, https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210801_antlers_3020d-239x300.jpg 239w, https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210801_antlers_3020d-768x965.jpg 768w, https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210801_antlers_3020d.jpg 955w" sizes="(max-width: 680px) 100vw, 680px" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-7722" class="wp-caption-text">Photo caption: Forester, saloonkeeper, hunter and antler collector Ernst Dosch in 1900. [3020D]</figcaption></figure><br />
By Keva Hoffmann Boardman —</p>
<p>This is the story of a boy born in Erbach, Hessen, Germany. It is about a boy who was fascinated with antlers. It is about that boy growing up and emigrating to Texas and creating his own future.</p>
<p>Ernst Dosch was born in 1822. He grew up hunting in the forests of Odenwald, the property of the Count of Erbach. The Count’s father had spent a lifetime collecting antiquities and antlers; the palace has one of the largest and oldest deer and roebuck antler collections in Europe. Young Ernst often walked through the <em>Hirschgalerie</em> at the palace, drawn to the variety and strangeness of the many abnormal antlers — antlers that displayed unusual arrangements and number of prongs.</p>
<p>Dosch graduated from the University of Giesen in Forestry and in 1848, he followed other students to the fabled land of “Texas”. He met young men on board the vessel “Louis” who became lifelong friends and business partners: Julius Dressel, Ludwig von Lichtenberg, G. Theissen, the Dittmar brothers and Ulrich Rische.</p>
<p>Ernst’s Texas story began when he settled with his new friends and some of the<em> Vierziger</em> at the Darmstaedter Farm (present day Danville area in Comal County). The <em>Vierziger</em> or “The Forty” or the Darmstaedters, were a group of about 40 young men from the Darmstadt area who were recruited by Prince Carl and the <em>Adelsverein </em>to set up a utopian socialistic colony in Texas (see <a href="https://sophienburg.wpenginepowered.com?s=Darmstadt">https://sophienburg.wpenginepowered.com/?s=Darmstadt</a> for more information). Almost immediately, the marvelous hunting possibilities in Texas took hold of him and he began to collect his own antler specimens.</p>
<p>Socialism was not for Ernst, and he joined up with the local Texas Rangers for a brief stint. He is later often referred to as Capt. Dosch because of this. In 1851, Dosch and his shipmate von Lichtenberg bought Lot #55 (202 S. Seguin) in New Braunfels. After Dosch constructed a building on it, he, with partner Rudolph Nauendorf, opened a store/saloon. This little building became the Star Exchange Saloon and now sits at Old Town at Conservation Plaza.</p>
<p>The newspaper says that times were tough and Dosch moved his business to San Antonio. His friend Ulrich Rische took over the saloon. Buying a lot on Commerce Street, Dosch and a Mr. Wiener opened a saloon and soon built up a nice clientele. In 1861, the outbreak of the Civil War sent Dosch off to Mexico where he lived in Piedras Negras and Monterrey where it seems he made a great deal of money. Dosch then travelled back to Germany in 1863.</p>
<p>On his return to San Antonio in 1866, Dosch got Ulrich Rische to sell the New Braunfels saloon and join him on Commerce Street. Their saloon was advertised as Dosch and Rische in the newspapers, but was commonly known as “The Deer Horn Bar”. Décor of the bar was an eclectic mix of German gingerbread woodwork and the ever-increasing collection of Dosch’s abnormal antlers. Folks visiting the city made a point of stopping to gawk at the more than 600 antler specimens on view. They had to pay attention to the unusual closing times though: 8 pm on weekdays and closed all day Sunday.</p>
<p>Dosch was respected by both the Anglo and German communities in San Antonio. He worked on the elections of friends, petitioned the city council for changes in statutes and advocated for new state laws to change deer season to August thru December (for some reason, the law said you could shoot deer from January to July!). Dosch was a charter member of the San Antonio Texanische Schuetzenverein and its president in 1857. He was a frequent prize winner at shooting meets and festivals across the Texas Hill Country. He presented an old rifle to the New Braunfels Schuetzenverein that he had used in the very first German-Texan Shooting festival on July 4, 1849, in New Braunfels.</p>
<p>Ernst was 81 years old when the Deer Horn Bar closed its doors in 1905. The saloon had had a good run, 36 years, and was known as the oldest, continuously owned and open bar in San Antonio at that time. His fantastic antler collection was moved to storage.</p>
<p>Ernst Dosch died in 1906, but his legacy does not end then. In a wonderful quirk of history, Albert and Emile Friederich open a bar in 1896. They, too, love antlers; Emile even makes furniture out of the horns. Their “Buckhorn Saloon” acquired the Dosch antler collection prior to 1920 and added it to its own. The Buckhorn Saloon (and I hope some of Ernst Dosch’s abnormal antlers) lives on and amazes and entertains San Antonio visitors today.</p>
<p>There is one more memorial to Ernst Dosch. When Carl J. Iwonski drew his view of New Braunfels in 1856, he included the figures of Dosch, Dr. Wilhelm Remer and Viktor Bracht. Ernst Dosch is on horseback, looking over the new town of New Braunfels, with his trusty rifle casually laying across his right shoulder. Don’t you just know he is thinking of his next set of antlers?</p>
<p>By the way, you can purchase a great reproduction of Iwonski’s 1856 view of New Braunfels at Sophie’s Shop in the Sophienburg Museum &amp; Archives.</p>
<hr />
<p>Sources: Neu-Braunfelser Zeitung Collection; Freie Presse für Texas, San Antonio 1880-1906; Galveston Daily News, 1870-1890; “German Businesses of San Antonio”, Dana Pomykal; <em>Indian Wars and Pioneers of Texas</em>, p495; Archives collections: 0009 Haas and 1020 Dressel; Old Town at Conservation Plaza; <a href="https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/archives-1892-shooting-fishing-abnormalantlers/">https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/archives-1892-shooting-fishing-abnormalantlers/</a>; <a href="https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook">https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook</a>.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://sophienburg.com/for-the-love-of-antlers/">For the love of antlers</a> appeared first on <a href="https://sophienburg.com">Sophies Shop</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">7694</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>New Braunfels forty-eighters</title>
		<link>https://sophienburg.com/empty-post-clone-to-make-a-new-post-replace-with-post-title/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Jul 2021 05:00:07 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://sophienburg.wpenginepowered.com/?p=7535</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>By Keva Hoffmann Boardman — The forty-eighters were refugees of the failed German Revolution of 1848. They were idealists. They fought to establish a liberal and unified Germany using liberty, democracy and unity as their main tenets. The designation “forty-eighter” excludes the hundreds of thousands who emigrated from 1848-1852 for mostly economic reasons. It also [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://sophienburg.com/empty-post-clone-to-make-a-new-post-replace-with-post-title/">New Braunfels forty-eighters</a> appeared first on <a href="https://sophienburg.com">Sophies Shop</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure id="attachment_7697" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-7697" style="width: 680px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-7697 size-large" src="https://sophienburg.wpenginepowered.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210718_forty-eighters-1024x624.jpg" alt="Sketch: 1865 funeral in Comfort of the young Germans killed at the Nueces River. This is a copy of the sketch made by a representative of Harper’s Weekly who attended and reported on the event. It shows Eduard Degener delivering the funeral oration. Two of his sons are among the remains of the 36 young men in the coffin built of native cypress by local men." width="680" height="414" srcset="https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210718_forty-eighters-1024x624.jpg 1024w, https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210718_forty-eighters-300x183.jpg 300w, https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210718_forty-eighters-768x468.jpg 768w, https://sophienburg.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/ats20210718_forty-eighters.jpg 1202w" sizes="(max-width: 680px) 100vw, 680px" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-7697" class="wp-caption-text">Sketch: 1865 funeral in Comfort of the young Germans killed at the Nueces River. This is a copy of the sketch made by a representative of Harper’s Weekly who attended and reported on the event. It shows Eduard Degener delivering the funeral oration. Two of his sons are among the remains of the 36 young men in the coffin built of native cypress by local men.</figcaption></figure>
<p>By Keva Hoffmann Boardman —</p>
<p>The forty-eighters were refugees of the failed German Revolution of 1848. They were idealists. They fought to establish a liberal and unified Germany using liberty, democracy and unity as their main tenets. The designation “forty-eighter” excludes the hundreds of thousands who emigrated from 1848-1852 for mostly economic reasons. It also does not include political refugees from previous periods of political unrest.</p>
<p>There were as many as 4,000 forty-eighters who came to America. Many of the Forty-eighters were young men in their twenties and thirties willing to risk their future. Many of them came from the southwestern Germanic states, from towns like Baden, Hesse, Wurtemburg, the Palatinate, and the Rhineland. Many were highly educated professionals: journalists, soldiers, physicians, pastors, bankers, engineers, lawyers, innkeepers and merchants. And many were “free-thinkers” or even atheistic in their views.</p>
<p>In the book, <em>The Forty-eighters</em>, edited by A.E. Zucker (1950), eleven professors put together a list of several hundred of these men who fled to America. The list includes six who emigrated to Texas — and interestingly enough, five of them have ties to New Braunfels. Let’s take a look at these guys.</p>
<p><strong>Eduard Degener</strong> (1809-1890) was the son of a wealthy banker in Braunschweig. He was privately tutored and studied in England. He ran in aristocratic circles even though he favored liberal, democratic ideals. In his elected government positions, he voted for proposals pushing a German republic. He was a member of the first German National Assembly at Frankfurt in 1848. When the revolution failed, Degener emigrated to Maine and in 1850 he made it to Texas. He lived near New Braunfels, and then in Sisterdale, as a gentleman farmer. Degener was a German Unionist and vocal abolitionist. Two of his sons were in the group of young men who tried to get to the North via ship from Mexico in 1862. Overtaken at the Nueces River by a force of Confederate soldiers, many of the men, including the Degeners, were killed. Eduard was put in prison in San Antonio for several months. After the war, he was a wholesale grocer in San Antonio, elected to two constitutional assemblies in Texas and also served in the Forty-first Congress for two terms. In 1865, Degener, with William Steves and William Heuermann, bought land in Comfort. There, they buried the remains of those massacred at the Nueces and put up the “Treue der Union Monument” in their honor.</p>
<p><strong>Carl Daniel Adolf Douai</strong> (1819-1888) was born in Altenburg. He studied at the University of Leipzig, got his doctorate and then travelled to Russia where he became a private tutor. He also married a baroness. From 1846 to 1850, Douai was in and out of prison five times! His revolutionary writings and his experimental school made him a target. Leaving Germany in 1852, he settled in New Braunfels and founded his own school. By 1853, he had become editor of the <em>San Antonio Zeitung</em> in which he advocated the gradual abolishment of slavery. Public outcry against his editorials necessitated the help of the Sam Antonio<em> Turnverein</em> (Athletic Club) to protect his offices. He moved to Boston in 1856. He founded a kindergarten and school but after several years this closed due to his atheistic articles. Moving to New York in 1866, he opened another school and edited a socialist newspaper. Through it he became one of the first to popularize Marxist philosophy in the US. Douai wrote articles on philosophy, German grammar, world history and education, as well as short stories and a novel. He was “a brilliant and courageous writer, unafraid of offending his readers’ opinion.” He was also a musician who composed over 60 songs.</p>
<p><strong>Julius Dressel</strong> (1816-1891), born in Geisenheim, Rhineland, was the son of a prosperous wine merchant. He studied history, literature and law in Heidelberg. Julius joined his father’s wine business and promoted Rhenish wines around Europe. The Dresel home welcomed guests with radical political ideologies; Julius soon joined the ranks of these revolutionaries and was present at their major meetings. At the failure of the 1848 Revolution, Julius was exiled and he emigrated to Texas where his brother Gustav was employed by the <em>Adelsverein</em> (The Society for the Protection of German Immigrants) as general agent. He was good friends with Lindheimer and many of the early New Braunfelsers. He bought land in Sisterdale but he first worked the New Braunfels farm of John O. Meusebach. Several years later, he moved out to the Sisterdale property. During the Civil War, his abolitionist leanings caused the Confederates to place him in prison in San Antonio. After release, Julius did business in the city until his brother Emil died in California. He became heir to the estate and moved his family to the Sonoma Valley where he took over his brother’s vineyard until his own death. Dressel wrote and published essays and poems in various journals and newspapers, many dealing with the subject of homesickness for his <em>Vaterland</em>.</p>
<p><strong>Gustav Wilhelm Eisenlohr</strong> (1811-1881) was born in Loerrach, Baden. He studied theology in Karlsruhe, Halle and Heidelberg. He became the vicar in Emmendingen. Eisenlohr was very outspoken in his support of the 1848 Revolution. Accused of high treason and imprisoned, Gustav was given the choice of being sentenced or to leave Germany. Fleeing to Switzerland, he then emigrated to America in 1850 with his young son. He first took a pastorate in Richmond, Ohio. Eisenlohr then answered an advertisement for the pastorate of the German Protestant Church in New Braunfels. He was installed by Hermann Seele in 1851. After six years, he accepted a pastorate in Cincinnati. He edited and wrote many poems for the <em>Protestantische Zeitlaetter</em> (newsletter) for 20 years. It was “for the instruction and edification of thinking Christians.” Educated in Greek and Latin, this liberal theologian also translated the poems of Petrarch! Pastor Eisenlohr and his second wife returned to New Braunfels 22 years later to retire. Both he and his wife are buried in Comal Cemetery.</p>
<p><strong>Oskar von Roggenbucke</strong> (1811-1883), born in Suhl, Thuringia, was a career soldier who attained the rank of major in the Prussian army. Like many other soldiers, he resigned his commission and joined the forty-eighters. A political refugee, he emigrated and came to Texas in 1854. He and his family stayed six months in New Braunfels before settling on a farm in Comfort. He was also an abolitionist. His two sons refused to become soldiers for the Confederacy. They joined the group of Germans headed for Mexico and were among those slaughtered on the Nueces River. Von Roggenbucke lived in Comfort until his death.</p>
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<p>Sources: Sophienburg Museum &amp; Archives: Oscar Haas Collection; Dresel Family History; <em>The First Protestant Church Its History and Its People</em>, O. Haas; <em>The Forty-Eighters</em>, A.E. Zucker; <em>A Hundred Years of Comfort in Texas</em>, G. E. Ransleben.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://sophienburg.com/empty-post-clone-to-make-a-new-post-replace-with-post-title/">New Braunfels forty-eighters</a> appeared first on <a href="https://sophienburg.com">Sophies Shop</a>.</p>
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