Bertha (1918-2015) was the daughter of Herman and Fredareka (Rambow) Heiden who lived in Isabella County, Michigan. These are some remembrances and family stories that Bertha had about her grandparents, uncles and aunt in her mother's (Rambow) family in Raisinville Township, Monroe County, Michigan.

We give information about the people referenced at the bottom of the article.

My Grandpa Rambow died two months before I was born. My parents and Nellie went down on the train for the funeral. Lewis was there visiting with cousins at the time. My mother told me everyone was shocked when she came because they didn't know she was pregnant until then.

My Grandma Rambow lived with my Aunt Minnie and Uncle Willie, her son and daughter who never married. They lived on a farm in a very big brick house with two big porches. Their house, as well as many others in the area, had been built by my Grandpa Heiden  who was a brick mason. There were two stairways with one that went up from the living room and the other went up from the other side. The boys went up one side to their rooms and the girls went up on the other side.

My mother told me about a time that she and her sisters were supposed to be cleaning the upstairs while Grandma was out in her garden. Instead of cleaning, they were riding the broom down the stairs. My mother was the unlucky one who arrived at the bottom of the stairs just as Grandma came back in. Grandma grabbed her and gave her a "lickin''.

I stayed in a beautiful upstairs bedroom. Her beautiful garden looked like the pictures you see of gardens in Germany. The flowers and vegetables were all lined up in short neat rows with paths between them. The path to the outhouse had flowers on each side. The boards in the outhouse were white and clean because lye was used.

The garden was not far from the back porch. Grandma Rambow was always working in it. She wore long gray dresses with long sleeves and a large sun bonnet.

The Rambows came to the USA from the same area of Germany as the Heidens but a year later. Grandma Rambow learned to speak English.

The breakfast table was always set the night before going to bed. The cups were turned upside down. Then in the morning, we all sat around the table and bad to be quiet. Grandma would read in German from the Bible before we had breakfast.

Aunt Minnie was always strict with us cousins. We sat on a couch that was in the dining room. The pillows were not to be moved and everything was to be kept neat while the grownups were talking in the living room. Then there was the parlor that was used only for weddings, funerals, and when the preacher came to call. The parlor had a chair, a platform rocker, and a setee with pretty red figured upholstery that matched. A big fern sat on the stand in front of the window. There might have been a library table. I don't remember for sure because the doors to the parlor were closed most of the time. After Uncle Willie died, I got the English family Bible. I wanted the German Bible but no one knew where it was.

My mother told me about when my Grandma Rambow was a girl in Germany. She was a goose girl and had to take care of the geese. She would drive them along the river to eat the grass and then back to their pen. Once a mean gander got her down and almost killed her. They had lots of geese to care for. The feathers and down were used for beds to sleep on, covers, and for pillows. You made them yourself with heavy material. When I was a girl, I had a feather bed. Even though there was no heat in the upstairs bedrooms, I stayed warm even during the cold winter.

Grandpa Rambow had to do his duty as a German soldier before they could come to America. Grandma Rambow was said to know more about farming than her husband did. When they were making plans to come, Grandma's father died. So her mother, sister and brothers were coming too. Then her mother became sick and died and was buried next to her husband. In that village there were no family plots. People were buried in the order they died so it was unusual to be buried next to another family member. So Grandma and Grandpa Rambow brought her sister and brothers (last name was Milhan) with them on the ship to America as well as their own children.

People mentioned by Bertha Drake include:
  1. Grandpa and Grandma Rambow are Heinrich and Wilhelmina Rambow
  2. Nellie Ayris was Bertha's sister
  3. Lewis Heiden was her brother
  4. Aunt Minnie was Bertha's mothers sister whose name was also Wilhelmina
  5. Uncle Will was Berth's mothers brother William Rambow
  6. Grandpa Heiden was August Heiden
  7. Heinrich Rambow served in the Seven Weeks War (Austro-Prussian War) in 1866 prior to coming to America in 1874.
  8. For more information on their move to America, Click Here.

On November 30, 1922, one of the most pleasant events occurred at our mother, Mrs. Wilhelmine Rambow’s, place, it being her 75th birthday anniversary. The occasion was a joyous one as all of her sons and daughters and their wives and husbands were there except Fredaricke and Herman Heiden who were greatly missed.

Although she has passed her 75th milestone in life, there were none more pleased and younger in heart than mother and some tokens of remembrance were left to remind her that her children were brought up to love her. We hope she may live many years yet to celebrate those golden days. A fine dinner was served at noon.

November 24, 1921  

The home of Mr. And Mrs. Fred Rambow was the scene of a happy family gathering to celebrate the 52nd birthday of Fred Rambow. It was a surprise party.  

A lovely dinner was served by his wife, Emma, at noon. The centerpiece for the table was a beautiful birthday cake with 52 candles which was presented to him by his daughter, Esther.

 

Grandma and Grandpa (Fred and Emma (Westfahl) Rambow) were married December 23, 1898 in Olin, Iowa. I remember Mom saying he went to Iowa to work and that's where he met Grandma.

They had 3 children - Esther, Henry and Helen. Helen, the youngest died in infancy. Grandpa farmed for years in various places and worked for a time at Consolidated Paper Co. For 18 years, he worked as custodian at the Waterloo School (South Custer Road). When they lived on South Custer Road, they owned several acres of land in back of the home which are not homes on Rambow Drive.

Some of my memories of Grandma and Grandpa include that they usually had Sunday dinner with us, they always went to church and we had Thanksgiving dinner with Grandma and Grandpa. We would have roast duck with apple and raisin dressing and butterscotch pie. I remember Grandpa taking Grandma to Detroit so she could buy shoes...can you imagine that?!

Grandma and Grandpa were required to register as German Citizens during World War II. This included a document which allowed Grandpa to come with a radius of 1/2 mile of the post office.

HENRY RAMBOW AND CAROLINE WEILNAU’S COURTSHIP

The Rainbow and Weilnau farms are located on the North side of South Custer Road (M50) West of Monroe, Michigan. Separating the 2 farms Is a couple acres of apple orchard. It was in this orchard, I was told once, that Henry Rambow courted Caroline Wellñau, which led to their marriage.

 

Caroline Rambow had a reading given her at Adrian, Michigan by Madame Ellis concerning the whereabouts of Uncle Crist Milhan. She said that “he had been gone a good many years and he had died overseas many years ago.” But, it did not come clear enough to tell just where he was buried.

Conversations about the Rambows

  1. Wm Carl & Mary Heiden
  2. Wm Carl Heiden
  3. Mary (Rambow) Heiden
  4. Heinrich & Emma (Stock) Heiden
  5. Herman & Reka Heiden (Article)
  1. Herman & Reka Heiden (Drake)
  2. Heinrich & Wilhelmina Rambow
  3. Walter Berns Poem
  4. Family Fun Times

  1. Alice Berlin
  2. Edna Berns
  3. Lavern Berns
  4. Walter Berns
  5. Wilma Bicking
  6. Myrna Bishop
  7. Caroline Brown
  8. Bertha Burgard
  9. Donna Burge
  10. Rika Burmeister
  11. Janice Clark
  12. Bertha Drake
  13. Mildred Eipperle
  14. Hilda Fuller
  15. Walter Grams
  16. Sally Guy
  17. Arthur Heiden
  18. August & Rika Heiden
  19. August Heiden Children
  20. Carl Heiden
  21. Ernst Heiden
  22. Harold Heiden
  23. Heinrich Heiden
  24. Heinrich Heiden Children
  25. Helen E. Heiden
  26. Henry Wm Heiden
  27. Herman Heiden
  28. Herman & Reka Heiden
  29. John Heiden
  30. Leo Heiden
  31. Lester Heiden
  32. Maria Heiden
  33. Mary Heiden
  34. Meta Heiden
  1. Norma "Jeanie" Heiden
  2. Robert Heiden
  3. Roger Heiden, Sr.
  4. Velda Heiden
  5. Wm Carl & Mary Heiden
  6. Wm Frank Heiden
  7. William Leo Heiden
  8. Dianne Houpt
  9. Kanseyer Family
  10. Lena Koster
  11. Marvin Koster
  12. Laas Family
  13. Libbie Laas
  14. William Laas
  15. Lucille Lehmkuhl
  16. Milhan Family
  17. Frederick Milhan
  18. Henry Milhan
  19. Linda Miller
  20. Möller Family
  21. Helma Nickel
  22. Mary Lou Opfermann
  23. Rambow Family
  24. The Rambows by Drake
  25. Fred Rambow
  26. Henry Rambow III
  27. Minnie Rambow
  28. Wilhelmina Rambow
  29. Fredareka Schmidt
  30. Pastor Don Thomas
  31. Carol Toburen
  32. Dennis Tommelein
  33. Marie Tommelein

  1. Bridge School
  2. Christmas Eve Party
  3. Dentist Visit
  4. Dixon Rd Lots
  5. The Great Depression
  6. Education
  7. Emigration
  8. Five Generations
  9. German Book
  10. Germany
  11. Grape Community
  12. Wm Heiden Home Farm
  13. Indian Burial Ground
  14. Letters from Germany
  15. Life on the Farm
  1. Lutheran Church
  2. Mecklenburg, Germany
  3. Middle Names
  4. Nephews
  5. Helma Nickel's Cooking
  6. Old Receipts
  7. Reunions
  8. Sparrow Hunting
  9. Stormy Weather
  10. Wedding Shiveree
  11. Willows by the River
  12. The Woodlot
  13. Work on the Farm
  14. Wakefield Gifts