The grave stands not far form the jewish cemetery, if I remember right. One would expect this style in Pere Lachaise or in Staglieno, not in Innsbruck. But this now might be a reason to view Innsbruck as a cosmopolitan place;-)
Interesting is this http://boards.ancestry.com/surnames.zohrlaut/1/mb.ashx. Should refer too the same women – maybe mistakenly date of death.
Thank you for finding that!
I had assumed that she, like I, had moved here; perhaps had married an Austrian man. The 21. April may be merely the date on which the telegram was sent. It is an unusual gravestone even by American standards — the Zöhrlauts must have had money. The state of Wisconsin is a bit like Schleswig-Holstein (flat,lots of dairy, coastline) and a Milwaukee had many beer breweries.
The grave stands not far form the jewish cemetery, if I remember right. One would expect this style in Pere Lachaise or in Staglieno, not in Innsbruck. But this now might be a reason to view Innsbruck as a cosmopolitan place;-)
Interesting is this http://boards.ancestry.com/surnames.zohrlaut/1/mb.ashx. Should refer too the same women – maybe mistakenly date of death.
LikeLike
Thank you for finding that!
I had assumed that she, like I, had moved here; perhaps had married an Austrian man. The 21. April may be merely the date on which the telegram was sent. It is an unusual gravestone even by American standards — the Zöhrlauts must have had money. The state of Wisconsin is a bit like Schleswig-Holstein (flat,lots of dairy, coastline) and a Milwaukee had many beer breweries.
LikeLike