Hij is getrouwd met Maria Catharina Buhmann.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 14 juni 1879 te San Francisco, CA {marriage records were destroyed in the earthquake and fire of April 18th, 1906. Family records contain the date and place, however.}, hij was toen 35 jaar oud.Bronnen 7, 8
Kind(eren):
*****Confirmation note from KIRCHENBUCH CRAMON: Confimierte Kinder am Palmsontageh 28. Name, Occupation and Hometown of Parents--Heinrich Langpaap, Day laborer of Gottmannsförde, dead. Mother--Marie, born Bull, previously married to the day laborer Johann Carl Hans Schütt in Gottmannsförde."cumenting his completion of training and recognizing his skill, dated 16 October 1864, Lübeck, Germany. [Copy in the possesion of Richard L. Cosby, great grandson]. His activities over the next 6-7 years are not documented, but he appeared in San Francisco in 1871, and family lore indicates that he had worked his way to New York, and thence, around Cape Horn to that city. In San Francisco, the Langley's San Francisco City Directories records his occupations as follows: 'Ship's Carpenter' [1873 & 1874]; Saloon Keeper, 133 Drumm Street, with Adolph Weber, [1875]; Proprietor of the Humbolt Hotel, [1876-77]; 'Kuhl and Langpaap Hotel' Proprietor with a Mr. Kuhl [1877 & 1879-80]. In 1880, he married Maria Christina Buhmann, a resident in the Kuhl and Langpaap Hotel according to the Langley's San Francisco City Directory dated 1879-80, and in 1881, the couple, with their firstborn, Hugo, [their only San Francisco born child], moved to Cochise Co., Arizona Territory.angpaap was naturalized on September 16, 1890 at the U.S. District Court, 1st Judicial District, Cochise County, Territory of Arizona. G. W. Swain and Henry Duncker were his witnesses. (Vol. 5, Page 207, Minutes, first Judicial Dist. Crt., Bisbee, AZ.viewed the Great Registers of Cochise Co., AZ Terr. for the years the Langpaap's lived in Tombstone and discovered the following 6 records of Charles' registration to vote., Charles, 39, b. Germany, occu. Rancher, Tombstone, Naturalized 1871*, San Francisco, Calif., 15th Dist. Regist. Sep.4.ural. Sep.16.1890. Cochise Co., A. T. Dist. Court. Regist. Sep.18.urt. Regist. Sep.13.s. H., 54, b. Germany, occ. Miner, res. Tombstone, Natural. Sep.16.1890. Cochise Co., Dist. Court. Regist. Oct.15.tural. Sep.16.1890. Cochise Co., Dist. Court. A.T., Regist. Sep.29.ien immigrant in San Francisco. It is unlikely he intentionally illegally voted in 1884.id that when he was a boy in Tombstone, the biggest celebration of the year was on the 4th of July. There would always be a parade, with the local bands, lodges, fire engines and hose carts ( fire engines were horse-drawn, hose carts were pulled by teams of men). Dad said his father would boast that at one time, he was on a fire hose cart team that included Wyatt Earp, Sherm McMasters and Dr. Goodfellow. (This was long before my father was born.) After the parade and patriotic speeches, there would be a picnic and horse racing at the Tombstone racetrack. The family would go to all events. The miners would celebrate by what was called 'shooting an anvil'. A blacksmith's anvil would be set up in an open field. The 'hardie hole' in the anvil would be plugged at the bottom and then filled with blasting powder. A blasting cap would be put on the anvil and struck with a blacksmith's hammer. The purpose of the contest was to see who could make the most noise. Dad said it was 'earsplitting' and you sure did have to look out for flying cap fragments. He and his brothers would make their 4th of July noise with their dad's old horseman's pistol. They would put several charges of powder down the barrel, tamp in newspaper wadding and set it off. It made 'lots of noise'. They would also fill cans with blasting powder, bury them in the sand, and light the fuse. He said they worked 'great'."y all the Langpaap kids as "Unkity-Unk", and later as "Unk". He lived with and near the Langpaap's in Tombstone, and after they moved to San Francisco, he lived with the family for 6 months of the year, doing odd jobs to earn a "grubstake" after which, he'd go prospecting. He never "struck it rich". While they lived in Tombstone, he bought property from the Langpaap's for $1.00, and sold them property for the same price. In his last years, he lived with the Langpaap children, and was supported and taken care of by them. He didn't die until 1929, 12 + years after Carl's death, and 10 years after Marie's.e a "Ship's Carpenter". He used these skills to work his way to New York, New York, and subsequently, around Cape Horn to San Francisco. Even there, he continued that work until he opened his Saloon at 133 Drumm street in San Francisco by about 1874. He also was listed as a carpenter in Tombstone, AZ in 1890 when he registered to vote. Much later when he had moved his family back to San Francisco, he is listed as a Carpenter in the San Francisco City Directory of 1904. He apparently never mastered English, though he spoke it well enough to "get by". He preferred to communicate in German with anyone who spoke German. At home, he and Marie had decided the children should speak only English. Max, my grandfather, told me that his parents spoke aloud to each other in English, but whispered to each other in German. But they never spoke to the children in German. Max said there was enough German overheard that he could understand what was being said, but never learned to speak German, despite having facility with languages. He spoke Hawaiian, and read Latin and Greek. [January 28, 2008].
Carl Heinrich Teodor Langpaap | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1879 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Maria Catharina Buhmann |
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=28696621&pid=5311
Birth date: abt 1846 Birth place: Prussia Residence date: 1880 Residence place: San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States
Birth date: Nov 1845 Birth place: Germany Marriage date: 1880 Marriage place: Residence date: 1900 Residence place: Tombstone city, Cochise, Arizona Territory Arrival date: 1867 Arrival place: