The Speicher family was a widely ramified family in Krasna. They were among the founders of the colony in 1814, and their clearly traceable ancestor in Krasna is Georg Speicher.
Georg Speicher is a son of Jakob and Anna Maria Speicher in Püttlingen/Saar, born on 29.03.1767.
His ancestors:
- Conrad Speicher ca 1550 - & Elsa Neumann ca 1560 - ca 1631
- X Speicher ca 1590 - & ? ? †
- Wilhelm Speicher ca 1630 - & Margaretha Speicher 1635 - 1680
- Johann Speicher 1655 - 1726 & ca 1680 Anna Margaretha Holl 1660 - 1724
- Peter Speicher ca 1685 - 1733 & Katharina Karrenbauer 1688 - 1749
- Jakob Speicher 1719 - 1793 &1750 Anna Maria Pistorius 1731 - 1778
- Johann Nicholas Speicher 1750 -
- Johann Georg Speicher 1767 -
The Speicher clan is a very old family in Püttlingen1. Presumably her ancestor is Johanne von Spicher, born on January 1, 1480 - Völklingen, died on January 1, 1520 - Püttlingen, married in 1499 to Katharina Kessler 1487 - 1503. Johanne VON SPICHER was a sworn notary of the choir bishop of Saarburg in the church of Metz.
A descendant of Spichers was SPEICHER Philipp * around 1510.
The oldest evidence of the granaries in Püttlingen can be found in a tax list for the former "Bächer Herrlichkeit". The list was compiled in 1563 according to information from the Meyer "Heintz von Derlen". According to it, in the time before that, in addition to five other people from Püttlingen, "Philips Speicher" from there also had to pay "one quart of fruit and four albus of money" to Derlen for his estate on "Wölfringer Bann". This is the only mention of the Speicher's ancestor from Püttlingen. He must have died shortly afterwards, because in these years a series of serious disputes began between the inhabitants of Püttlingen and their lordship, whose records mention all the inhabitants several times. It is striking that the name Speicher does not appear at all among those involved in the first dispute, in which the population had not yet completely rebelled due to the fact that they had never before been asked to pay labor.
Until the end of the 17th century, the region of today's Saarland was exposed to heavy burdens. The Thirty Years' War raged particularly hard on the Saar. This was followed by the Wars of Reunion between 1667 and 1697.
In the 18th century, the severe damage and losses of the Thirty Years' War and the Reunion Wars had not yet been repaired. Indentured labor and the tax burden were constantly increased by the threat of war. The little people had hardly anything left to live on.
It is therefore not surprising that the regions along the Saar (Lorraine, Kurtrier) were among the classic areas of emigration to south-eastern Europe.
Several Speicher descendants emigrated to Galicia to escape the hardship.
Galicia belonged to Poland and gradually became part of Austria from 1772. The country endeavored to settle colonists in its newly acquired territory.
The Speicher emigrants lived in the Zamosc region.
The emperor's recruiters concentrated their efforts particularly on the Palatinate and the Saarland, as this was an area of Germany that was particularly impoverished due to frequent wars with its neighbor France.
Around two thirds of the colonists came from the Palatinate and today's Saarland, mainly in 1784/85. Settlers from other parts of Germany formed a minority in the new homeland.
Two Speicher families emigrated from Püttlingen2 to Galicia3 in 1784.
They were settled in the Zamosc area as private settlers. There, the government had managed to get large landowners to make land available to colonists.4. Count Zamoyski did the same in Zamosc. Each settler received around 12 hectares of land, a house, stable and barn.
Private settlers in Sitaniec are named in Count Zamoyski's settlement contract:
Parents: Jacob SPEICHER 1719 - 1793 and Anna Maria PISTORIUS 1731 - 1778oo with Anna Catharina (BALDES) BALTES 1752 - on 28.02.1772, Püttlingen(D),
According to Jacek Klaudel from Danzig - ancestors also emigrated to Sitaniec - who researched the Lublin archives, it is clearly Nikolaus Speicher). Klaudel: "When Nicolas Speicher died, his land went to his son-in-law Piotr Altmajer, as he himself had no sons. Elsewhere it is stated that Nicolas Speicher had a son named Valenty, who gave his land to his son-in-law Jan Schram. There were two colonies of Speicher: "Nikolas and Johann".
Johann Speicher is clearly documented in Püttlingen. This does not apply to Nikolaus. No "suitable" Nikolaus Speicher could be found in Saarland documents (church registers etc.). He was not found in the Püttlingen family register.
He may have come from another place in the vicinity of Püttlingen; the name Speicher is very common in this area. He may have emigrated without permission.
Johann Georg Speicher * 29.03.1767, a brother of Johannes Speicher who emigrated in 1784, also went to Galicia, but he does not belong to the group of private settlers named in the 1785 contract.
He probably only moved there in 1788/89, but without permission; he is not entered in the transportation list in Vienna (see Wilhelm/Kallbrunner).
Werner Hacker writes on p. 692 in Auswanderungen aus Rheinpfalz Saarland im 18. Jahrhundert, Konrad Theiss Verlag Stuttgart: "Speicher, Georg, Püttlingen, sells his inheritance for 200 fl. Emigration refused. (Nevertheless emigrates, because) the 200 fl are requisitioned by the Winnweiler Superior Office from Nassau-Saarbrücken, as the emigrant in Zamosc only has to pay deductions (1788)."
We have the contract between Georg Speicher and his brothers Nikolaus and Valentin concerning the sale of his property in Püttlingen.
He lived in Sitaniec at least some of the time, as he is mentioned several times in the church register there (see below).
It is quite possible that he went to Poland with Valentin Löb, because he was godfather in Püttlingen from Sitaniec in 1788 and went back to Poland: "Valentin Löb, who comes from Püttlingen and lives in Poland in the vicinity of Schidanitz (Sitaniec)", was godfather to Valentin Balzert on February 12, 1788.
He may have bought a farm privately from his fortune (see above). The following statement by Jacek Klaudel, whose ancestors emigrated together with Dirk, Söhn, Speicher, Paul etc. and who researched the Lublin archives, supports this: "Jan Tressler returned to his home country after his house burned down and his land was given to Grzegorz Speicher, who went bankrupt and sold it to Jan Thor."
Georg Speicher's family appears repeatedly in the church register of Sitaniec:
The Zamosc region was annexed to the Duchy of Warsaw founded by Napoleon in 1809.
When the Russians came to Poland in 1813, many German settlers found themselves in a desperate situation. This also applied to the colonists in the Zamosc area. These settlers had been through very troubled/difficult times:
This situation gave rise to the reasons for the onward migration of the people to Bessarabia.
The Krasna community report of 1848 says the following about the reason for the onward migration: "...The all-destructive war campaigns of the French to Russia via Poland deprived the colonists of almost all their possessions. The colonists felt that the torn Poland could not give them any security and protection for the future and followed the invitation issued by the Russian government at the time to settle in Bessarabia8."
Many members of these families moved to Bessarabia in 1814 and were co-founders of the Krasna colony.
Most of the colonists from the Zamosc area who migrated on to Krasna were probably born in Poland; there is no personal data on them unless and until we find sources in Poland.
The family fathers who emigrated from Germany in 1784/1785 were already between 20 and 50 years old when they arrived in Galicia. By the time they left for Bessarabia, some of them were no longer alive or had not moved on. In 1814, they were already quite old by the standards of the time (around 60 years and older).
In these families, children were born in the new (Polish) homeland between the time of immigration to Galicia and the onward migration to Bessarabia (approx. 30 years). It is likely that in many families these children in particular - or only these children - migrated onwards9.
According to Hopf, the following people moved to Russia from Zamosc in 181410:
As explained above, Johann and Nikolaus Speicher died in Sitaniec before the onward migration to Krasna began.
The Johann and Nikolaus Speicher named as onward migrants must therefore be children of these two. The wife of Johann Speicher Sr. was Katharina, for example, and that of the onward migrant Gertrude.
We do not know with absolute certainty who the first two onward migrants were, because children born in Sitaniec cannot be fully traced. From 1789 to 1810 we have no parish register entries at all. It is conceivable that there were other children in this period and they could be numbers 1 and 2.
We do not know whether all three of the onward hikers mentioned by Hopf wanted to go to Krasna or got there.
No. 1 above seems to have come to Krasna. This is supported by entries in the baptismal register there:
739 Schpeicher, Johann 1814 Zamosc/Lublin/Dutchy of Warsaw Russia 634 5434271 with wife Gertrude Profession "Tenant"
The Krasna baptismal register records the birth of a daughter to the couple:
No. 235 *3.12.1819 Marianna Szpaycher (Speicher) Parents: Johannes Szpaycher and Gertrud (Gertrude) Szpaycher (Speicher)
Johannes SPEICHER ?Okt. 1785 in Poland, POL † deceased
Baptism: 18.10.1785 in Schitonitz, Warsaw, | Sitaniec, Zamosc, PL-06
? 1815 First settlers in Krasna #113
Ehegatte: Gertruda ? 1795 in Unknown, † deceased
? to 1812 in Poland, POL
Children
The statement in OFD that a Michael Speicher was the father of Johann is not confirmed.
The church register of Sitaniec states:
Szprygier Jan liber 1785 O: Michal, M: Magdalena zd. Fulleynr, kolonisci niemieccy; Sitaniec
This could be the Springer family of colonists, as the name Speicher is usually translated in this medium as Szpraycher, Szpeicher, Szpaycher, Szpajcher, Szpeycher.
In this case, another Johann Speicher, who was born there, would be the onward migrant.
No. 2's arrival in Krasna cannot be determined. Neither he himself nor his children named in the Hopf document appear in the baptismal register (e.g. as godparents) or in the local family register or other documents of the village.
Family no. 3 has arrived in Krasna.
808 Speicher, Georg 1814 Zamosc/Lublin/Dutchy of Warsaw Russia 634 543427612 with family
Wife: Elisabeth
Children: Michael, Katharina, Gertrude, Anna-Maria, Johanna
However, Georg must have died very soon afterwards, as he no longer appears in Krasna documents (baptismal register 1814 - , census 1835).
Only the family of Georg Speicher is clearly documented in Krasna (see Johann and Nikolaus above). It appears in the baptismal register of the early years and other documents:
Descendants of Georg Speicher lived in Krasna until the resettlement of the Germans from Bessarabia in 1940. Klara Speicher was the last member of the family to be born in Krasna on 15.02.1940.
Note: The name Speicher occurs in Bessarabia only in Krasna.
Eduard Volk
Neuwied, Juli 2024
Eduard's ancestor is Klemens VOLK