Elsa Vorwerk

F, b. 26 September 1897, d. 7 July 1980
Elsa Vorwerk|b. 26 Sep 1897\nd. 7 Jul 1980|p6.htm|August Vorwerk|b. 18 Aug 1869\nd. 26 Aug 1918|p4.htm|Elizabeth Susanna Margaret Kammerer|b. 29 Jan 1879\nd. 3 Dec 1955|p5.htm|Friedrich L. Vorwerk|b. 12 Jul 1830\nd. 19 Aug 1905|p124.htm|Maria J. L. T. Schwab|b. 18 May 1842\nd. 29 Jun 1918|p125.htm|Adam Kammerer|b. 21 Sep 1849\nd. 27 Apr 1911|p7.htm|Ursula Weiler|b. 4 Jul 1855\nd. 24 Jun 1924|p8.htm|

Elsa Vorwerk, 1897-1980

  • The following appeared in the Niagara Falls Gazette: Mr. and Mrs. August Vorwerk of North Main Street are happy over the arrival of a little daughter. 
  • Elsa Vorwerk was born on 26 September 1897 in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York.
  • She was the daughter of August Vorwerk and Elizabeth Susanna Margaret Kammerer.
  • Her name was recorded as Elizabeth in Zion Lutheran Church records and the 1900 census.
  • A photographic portrait was made of Libby and daughter Elsa about 1898.
  • She was baptized/christened on 4 September 1898 at Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York. Sponsor was Ada Kammerer.
  • She enumerated in the US federal census of 1 June 1900 in the household of August Vorwerk and Elizabeth Susanna Margaret Kammerer in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York, at 2132 Main Street.
  • She enumerated in the New York state census of 1 June 1905 in the household of August Vorwerk and Elizabeth Susanna Margaret Kammerer in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York, at 1324 Ontario Avenue.
  • The following appeared on 29 July 1907 in the Niagara Falls Gazette: Mr. and Mrs. August Vorwerk, their children and Ludwig and Carl Laurier are sojourning at Thousand Island Park in the St. Lawrence. 
  • A photograph was made of the August Vorwerk and Eugen Laurier families about 1909.
  • The following appeared on 19 July 1909 in the Niagara Falls Gazette: Mr. and Mrs. August Vorwerk and children of Ontario avenue, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Laurier of Linwood avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Laurier left this morning for a two weeks' sojourn at Alexandria Bay.  And on the 29th, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Laurier of Linwood avenue, Mr. and Mrs. August Vorwerk and children of Ontario avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Laurier, have returned from an outing at Wilson, N.Y. 
  • She and Frederick Augustus Vorwerk were enumerated in the US federal census of 15 April 1910 in the household of August Vorwerk and Elizabeth Susanna Margaret Kammerer in Niagara Falls, New York, at 1324 Ontario Avenue.
  • The following appeared on 30 June 1916 in The Buffalo Morning Express: The marriage of Miss Gertrude Barnett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Barnett, and Joseph F. Lepine was solemnized at 7 o'clock last evening in the Presbyterian church of the Covenant, the Rev. John D. Campbell officiating. The church was decorated with palms, evergreens, pink peonies and marguerites. Ropes of Smilax were caught from the chandeliers. The pews for the house guests were marked with pink peonies and marguerites. Carl Kammerer of Niagara Falls, cousin of the bride, played a programme of organ music as the guests were assembling, ending in the Lohengrin bridal chorus as the bridal party entered, led by the ushers, Myron B. Bloy of Detroit, Mich., and William Lewis. The ushers were followed by the maid of honor, Miss Myrtle Hutchinson, and the two bridesmaids, Miss Helen Kammerer of Niagara Falls and Miss Ruth Barnett, sister of the bride. The bride entered with her father and was met at the altar by the bridegroom and his best man, George J. Barnett. She wore a gown of pussywillow taffeta with lace and pearl trimmings. Her veil was fastened with orange blossoms and she carried a shower bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the valley. The maid of honor, wore green-flowered voile trimmed with green satin bands and carried an arm bouquet of Ophelia roses. Miss Kammerer wore pink-flowered voile trimmed with pink satin bands and carried an arm bouquet of pink Killarney roses. A reception to 100 guests at the home of  Mr. and Mrs. Barnett in Waverly street followed the ceremony. Palms, pink and white peonies and roses adorned the rooms. The bride's table was laid for fourteen and was centered with pink roses. The other guests were seated at small tables which were centered with pink candelabra. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. John Guenther of Welland, Ont., Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Barnett, Miss Nettie Platt of Alden, J. A. Kammerer of Toronto, Ont., Mrs. and Mrs. M. H. Mayle, Miss Helen Mayle, Mr. and Mrs. Louis K. Eimer, Paul Eimer, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ford, Mrs. Adam Kammerer, Miss Marie Kammerer, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ford, Miss Louise Ford, Charles Ford, Jr., Miss Norma Hoffman, Miss Alice Young, Mr. and Mrs. George Benning, Miss Elsa Vorwerck of Niagara Falls, Mr. and Mrs. George F. Loehr of Lancaster, Miss Gladys Williams of Toronto., Ont., Mr. and Mrs. M. Bloy of Detroit, Mich., Miss Winifred Hewetson and Miss Vera Hewetson of Brampton, Ont., Miss Alma Hart of Scranton, Pa.  Mr. and Mrs. Lepine will spend their honeymoon in the Catskill mountains and will be at home after August 1st in Buffalo. 
  • She and Frederick Augustus Vorwerk appeared in the US federal census of 1 January 1920 in the household of Elizabeth Susanna Margaret Kammerer in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York, at 1630-1/2 Ontario Avenue.
  • She was a stenographer at the alkali works, according to the 1920 census.
  • In October 1920, when both Pete Wilson and Elsa Vorwerk were working at the Mathieson Alkali Works in Niagara Falls, someone produced an amusing little cartoon-strip commentary on the results of the World Series office pool.
  • In May 1928, she was employed at Niagara Wall Paper Company, working in the office.
  • She was enumerated in the US federal census of 1 April 1930 in the household of Elizabeth Susanna Margaret Kammerer in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York, at 1638 Ontario Avenue.
  • She was employed as assistant purchasing agent by a paper factory, according to the 1930 census.
  • She appeared in the 1936 Niagara Falls City Directory at 1638 Ontario Avenue listed as assistant purchasing agent for Niagara Wall Paper Company.
  • She appeared in the 1938 Niagara Falls City Directory at 1638 Ontario Avenue listed as assistant purchasing agent for Niagara Wall Paper Company.
  • The following appeared on circa 19 January 1941 in the Buffalo Courier-Express: Niagara Falls, Jan. 18--One of the busiest career women in this city is Miss Elsa Vorwerk of Ontario Avenue. /P/ Daytime she is purchasing agent at the Niagara Falls Wall Paper Company, one of the large plants here. Evenings she frequently devotes to mimeographing of church bulletins and other material. Week-ends she is choir director and soprano at Pierce Avenue Presbyterian Church. /P/ And at the moment, in addition to all this, she has a special project to command attention. It is the massed choir concert to be given at the Pierce Avenue Church Tuesday night, February 11th, under auspices of the Falls branch of the Buffalo Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. /P/ She is program chairman for the event, and is arranging to brigh together that night several units, such as the choir of the First Baptist Church, which is under direction of Florence Tschabold Smith; that at St. James Methodist Church, of which Eleanore Schweitzer is leader; First Evangelical, where Miss Olive Eberling is musical director; Bacon Memorial Presbyterian Church, Felix Hartwig; First Methodist, Robert Pearsonk, and Zion Evangelical Lutheran, Carl Heywang. The individual directors will lead in their own presentations, and Helen Clement Martin in the group offering of Haydn's The Heavens are Telling. Robert W. Stirling will be accompanist. /P/ There are family musical traditions surrounding Miss Vorwerk. Not unusual is it therefore, she insists, that she not only sings but plays the organ and composes sacred melodies.
  • In a letter dated 27 January 1941 to Elsa Vorwerk in Niagara Falls at 1638 Ontario Avenue, Franz Eugen Laurier wrote from Montvale, Bergen County, New Jersey,: Dear Elsa:  The Old Proverb "You can't Keep a Good Man down" can just as well be applied to a Good and ambitious Women, as proven by you Dear Elsa; public recognition is putting the spotlight on you. The honor is well deserved and we are proud of you -- Your smiling face is splendidly reproduced in that newspaper clipping (we shall carefully preserve it).  We wish and hope that this unique concert will be a great success and an inspiration for closer union and cooperation between the Christian people in Old Niagara. There is nothing of importance to report.  We thank you Dear Folks for the ever useful Christmas present you sent us.  Our Xmas eve Celebration was much subdued, the absence of Poor Bootie cast a gloom over it all.  Aunt Georgette, also Madeleine, Dan and the Babies Michael J. and Nancy spent Sunday before New Year with us;  they paid a more extended visit to Dan's Parents in Elm Hurst? L.I. The Navigators in Washington are trying hard to run our Ship of State into hostile Waters.  I wonder wether or no Dear John Bull would do as much for us. I hope the whole dirty mess will be cleaned up before Our Boys have to sail for foreign shores.   How about Frederick, has he been called to the colors? With his great Knowledge of Radio he would be a good man and should land a good assignment. How about it Frederick? We are well and this hasn't been a bad Winter so far. Good bye! Love to you All and Regards to any of our Old Friends you may meet. Uncle Gene & Aunt Fredericka.  P.S. Will the Concert be on the Air? 
  • During the summer of 1942, Elizabeth Kammerer Vorwerk, and daughter Elsa, visited her sister- and brother-in-law Friederika and Eugen Laurier in Montvale, New Jersey. Also pictured are their son Carl Laurier and Carolyn Wilson Vorwerk, whose husband Frederick likely was the photographer.
  • A biographical sketch of Anton Diefenthaler appears in Portrait and Biographical Record of Sheboygan County, Wisconsin: A worthy pioneer and old settler of Sheboygan County, came from his far-away home in Germany to make his fortune in a new and strange land. Like so many of his countrymen who have become residents of this county, he has proven a valuable citizen. He was born December 28, 1827, in Spiesheim, Hesse-Darmstadt, and was a son of Anton and Magdalena (Scheib) Diefenthaler. In the village of his nativity he received a common-school education. Mr. Diefenthaler had the misfortune to lose his father when but seven years of age. The latter was a farmer in a small way, and after his death Anton, with the assistance of his brother, supported and cared for his mother. When he was seventeen years of age, his mother was laid to rest by the side of her husband in the village cemetery, and the son was left without the guardianship of father and mother. /P/ A few years later Mr. Diefenthaler determined to come to the United States, and in the spring of 1848 sailed from Antwerp for New York. The journey was made on the good ship "Cornelius Grinnell," and after fifty days of storm they reached their destination. So rough had been the voyage, that when the three hundred passengers were finally landed in New York, a general thanksgiving was offered for their safety. Only a few days were spent in that city, when our hardy pioneer proceeded to Albany, from which place he took passage on a canal-boat for Buffalo, and a week later arrived in that city. From the latter city he went by way of the Great Lakes to Milwaukee, Wis., where he spent only one night. The following morning the journey was resumed, he going on foot to Germantown. His mission to the latter place was to look for a brother, who had preceded him to America by several years. /P/ During the summer season, for the next five years, Mr. Diefenthaler worked in Milwaukee, in a brickyard, and in the winter time remained with his brother on the farm. In the fall of 1851, he again crossed the ocean, and after visiting his old home, he turned his face Westward once more. Leaving Antwerp on the 2d of April for America, this time spending thirty-six days on the ocean, he went direct to Germantown, Washington County, Wis. From that village he emigrated with an ox-team to the town of Rhine, where he bought eighty acres of land on section 11, a part of the present farm owned and occupied by him. Later, Mr. Diefenthaler purchased forty acres more on the same section, the last land being secured in 1852. /P/ On the 1st of November, 1852, Mr. Diefenthaler brought his bride to his home. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Gerlach, and she was born in the same place as her husband, August 24, 1827. With her assistance our subject erected their first log cabin, 18 x 24 feet in size, where they began domestic life in a style known only to the pioneers of a new country. This first house still stands as a monument to noble sacrifice, and as a lesson to the younger generations of hardships and privations of which they can know only as they are told. In 1866 Mr. Diefenthaler erected his present home. He has a good, comfortable house and all the necessary outbuildings. /P/ Unto Mr. and Mrs. Diefenthaler eight children were born, four sons and four daughters, five of whom are living. George, born May 12, 1854, is a resident of Elkhart; Lena, born May 12, 1857, became the wife of William Streibel, of Kirwin, Kan; John, born March 9, 1859, is at home; Mena, born July 23, 1861, wedded Henry Menne, and resides in Millhome, Manitowoc County; and Margaret, born December 13, 1864, married Conrad Bub, a farmer of section 22. /P/ In his political relations, Mr. Diefenthaler is independent, preferring to support the man rather than the party. He has served in various official capacities; has been Town Treasurer for three terms; Town Clerk one term; Supervisor one term; and Assessor for two terms. Mr. Diefenthaler came to this country a poor man, but by energy and industry has accumulated a good property. He is a man who commands the respect and admiration of all with whom he comes in contact. He is a very popular man in his community, as his many years of official service would indicate. He and his wife are numbered among the worthy citizens of their town.
  • During the summer of 1950, family gathered at Zion Lutheran Church in Niagara Falls for the christening of Frederick Augustus Vorwerk, Jr. Pictured are baby Frederick and his parents, Pete Wilson, Marilyn Wilson (husband Bob the photographer), Elsa Vorwerk, Elizabeth Vorwerk, Louise Wilson and Eleanor Hayworth, with young Frederick's sisters Margaret and Elsa Vorwerk in front.
  • The following appeared on 12 October 1963 in the Niagara Falls Gazette: Church Music Director Named. The Commission on Worship, James L. Swartz chairman, has announced the appointment of Miss Elsa Vorwerk as director of music at the First Baptist Church. /P/ A prominent musician, voice teacher and choral leader in this city, Miss Vorwerk has had extensive vocal training and has attended seminars and church music institutes led by Dr. Roberta Bitgood, Dr. Elaine Brown, Dr. Clarence Dickinson, Hans Vigeland, and other outstanding church musicians. /P/ She is secretary of the Niagara Falls Chapter in the American Guild of Organists and previously served as dean for three years. As director of music, Miss Vorwerk will be responsible for the direction of three choirs at the First Baptist Church. /P/ The choirs will be presented to the congregation at a special service of dedication Sunday at 10:45 a.m. Under the leadership of Rev. Edward Gunther, the choirs will be consecrated to their sacred task with members of the congregation participating. The musical portions of the service will be sung by the three choirs under the direction of Miss Vorwerk, accompanied by Mrs. A. G. Abendroth, interim organist. /P/ Miss Vorwerk and the members of the choir will be guests of honor at a coffee hour immediately following the morning service, when members of the congregation will have an opportunity to express their appreciation for the music so consistently rendered. /P/ As the Children's Choir is dedicated, they will sing "We Give our Youth to Thee" by Peace. "A Psalm of Praise" will be the response to the charge to the Youth Choir. The Senior Choir will present "Sing Praise to God" arranged by Williams. /P/ Rev. Edward Gunther, pastor, will take as his sermon topic "When We Worship."
  • At the time of her death Elsa Vorwerk was living in Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York, at Seventh Street.
  • Elsa Vorwerk died on 7 July 1980 at age 82 in Niagara Falls, New York.
  • She was buried at Oakwood Cemetery, Niagara Falls, Niagara County, New York.
  • The following appeared on July 1980 in Niagara Falls Gazette: Elsa Vorwerk, 82, formerly of Seventh Street, died Monday (July 7, 1980) in Memorial Nursing Home after a short illness. A native of this city, she was a purchasing agent for the former Niagara Wallpaper Co for over 30 years and was an executive secretary of Life Underwriters Association. She was also a choir director, church organist, piano and voice teacher, a member of the Zion Lutheran Church, the American Guild of Organists, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and a former member of the Zonta Club. She was the sister of the late Frederick A Vorwerk, who died in 1977. She is survived by an uncle and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held at 1 pm Friday in the Otto Redanz Funeral Home, Michigan Avenue and 10th Street with the Rev Schatzi Schmidt, pastor of the Zion Lutheran Church, officiating. Burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery. Friends may call from 2 to 5 pm and 7 to 9 pm Thursday at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to Zion Lutheran Church.
  • Last Edited: 20 Jun 2010
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