Schmidlapp Pipe

This is a story about Jacob Schmidlapp, an exceptional wealthy Cincinnati Ohio businessman and banker, who overcame devastating personal tragedy to become during the beginning of the twentieth century, one of American’s most exceptional and powerful philanthropists, peace advocates, and social reformers deducted to racial equality and woman’s rights.

Growing up, I would visit my grandfather Cleon Gilfillen, a jeweler, watchmaker, and collector of clocks and curiosities, who had a small shop in Piqua Ohio that could have been a set the Twilight Zone. I was told that in the 1930s Cleon Gilfillen acquired an exceptionally beautiful meerschaum pipe that originally had been given toi Jacob Schmidlapp by his brother in Piqua Ohio that had I had verified that the two figures carved on the front would have been of the mother and father. The pipe passed to my father who actually reached out to the family and had an appropriate missing stem made. When I became the current caretaker I knew little about Jacob Schmidlapp, but the more I research about Jacop Schmidlapp, the more I see a very important story about a great American.

In retrospect, a particular issue that makes Jacop Schmidlapp an exceptional social reformer was about 1915 he promoted, financed and got built, housing for workers from Cincinnati’s black community who were often relined by banks. This is a video clip about that:    https://local12.com/news/local/the-history-of-a-community-built-for-black-residents-when-there-were-few-places-to-live-jacob-schmidlapp-childhood-poverty-cincinnati-crisis-west-end-over-the-rhine-otr-model-homes-company-walnut-hills-washington-lincoln-terraces?fbclid=IwAR10jQkVK9QLNmuzL1_eoBpsenh6jPID38SQZCrxTxScRPmDtZHrJaiw1lA

This is still a work in process so if you see something that needs to be better organized or corrected let me know. In July 2019, I made contact with Steve Schmidlapp of Sidney Ohio, a relative who was able to provide additional information.

Below is an additional gallery of pictures showing details of the initials and word brother under the figures.

On June 18, 2020, Blogger, Jack Sullivan at: http://pre-prowhiskeymen.blogspot.com/2020/06/the-tragedies-and-triumph-of-jacob.html posted a detailed biography of Jacob Schmidlapp. I sincerely hope that providing full credit and source to a great bio is acceptable:

Thursday, June 18, 2020

The Tragedies and Triumph of Jacob Schmidlapp

Few men have experienced the tragedies that during his lifetime beset Cincinnati liquor dealer and entrepreneur, Jacob Schmidlapp. Fewer still have been able to rise above their pain and sorrow to do so much for their fellow Americans in need and to advance the cause of world peace.

Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp, right, was born in Piqua, Ohio, on September 7, 1849, the son of Adam and Sophia F. Haig Schmidlapp.  He received his education in the local public schools of Piqua, a city of some 20,000 in Miami County, in the southeastern quadrant of the state.  Perhaps seeing a lack of opportunity in his home town, not long after the end of the Civil War he launched his career working in a large Memphis department store called B. Lowenstein & Bros., shown below. Jacob worked as a cashier, likely in the liquor and cigars department.  After a year learning the trade, in May 1868 he opened his own cigar store in Memphis and, according to a biographer also “became interested in distilling enterprises.”

Schmidlapp as a Liquor Dealer. In the aftermath of the war Memphis struggled during Reconstruction.  The economy suffered; race riots ensued.  Yellow fever epidemics periodically engulfed the Tennessee river town as deaths and residents fleeing from the disease depopulated the city.  Assessing the situation, Jacob decided that Cincinnati, 80 miles directly south of Piqua, offered better opportunities.  He moved there about 1874 and opened a liquor store at 22 Vine Street.

Schmidlapp from the outset was a “rectifier,” that is blending his own whiskey on premises from liquor stocks likely purchased from Kentucky distillers across the Ohio River.  He was bottling them in glass with proprietary labels and selling them at retail.  His early brands included “Amazon,” “Ceres,” “Clifton Springs,” “Venus,” and “Live Oak.”  He appears to have trademarked only two of his brands,  Live Oak Bourbon and Live Oak Rye, registering those labels in 1876,1895 and 1907.  By 1885 his company had become Schmidlapp’s Live Oak Distillery.

Jacob had a flair for advertising and from early on was marketing his whiskeys to all parts of the country.  Shown above is an ad from the Pacific Wine and Spirits Review identifying his San Francisco outlet. At left is a 1900 ad that appeared in Buffalo newspapers.  He issued advertising shot glasses for Live Oak and other brands.  They would have been given to saloons, restaurants and hotel bars stocking his whiskeys.

Although Jacob actually would not own a distillery until 1889, he apparently had an assured supply of raw whiskey that encouraged him as the Live Oak Distillery to issue a blizzard of brands.  They included “Antelope,” “Applewood,” “Brookvale,” “C. T. Harvey,” “Clifton Club,” “Eastbourne,” “Fernvale”, “Four Seasons,” “Good As Gold,” “Hard To Beat,” “Imperial,” “King Lear,” “Lake Mills,” “Maple Grove,” “Old Todd,” “Palmetto,” “Pleasant Run,” ”Reindeer,” “Rock City,” “Runnymede Rye,” “Silver Star Rye,” “Southern Cross,” “St. James,” “Starbuck,” “Stone Ridge,” “Tiger,” “Tom Peck,” ”Village,” “Virginia Club,” and “Zebra.”

As a result of his strong business sense, Jacob’s profits from his liquor enterprise were substantial and allowed him with partners to acquire a distillery in Hamilton County not far from Cincinnati, shown below.  Established in 1849 the facility was located between the Mill Creek, the B&O Railroad, and the Miami-Erie Canal. It had a troubled past, in 1857 destroyed by fire and in 1872 shuttered by the government for non-payment of taxes.  Jacob and his partners bought the property in 1889, incorporating it as the Clifton Springs Distillery Co.  Eventually the property, shown above, included a plant with a mashing capacity of 4,000 bushels of grain per day, a 100,000 bushel capacity grain elevator, three warehouses holding 35,000 barrels, and three drying silos producing 6,000 tons of feed annually.  As shown below it was a major operation.

Schmidlapp as a Family Man. Despite his growing wealth, Jacob already had known great sorrow.  In 1877 he had married Emelie Balke, a local Cincinnati woman, the daughter of Charlotte and Julius Balke, a billiard table manufacturer. Emelie was 19 at the time of their wedding;  Jacob was 28.  Their first child, a son they called Julian, was born in September of the following year.  After seven months of winning the hearts of his parents, to their great sorrow, Julian died.

The 1880s, however, brought joy as in rapid succession four more children were born healthy, Emma in 1881, William in 1883, Charlotte in 1887, and Charles in 1888.  Then death came again.  Rudolph, a son born in September 1893 lived only five months before dying in January 1894.

By this time Jacob could afford to move his family into a large home in the East Walnut Hills area of Cincinnati, shown here.  He called the mansion, “Kirchheim,” after the town in Baden-Wurttemberg from whence his family had originated.  It was located on 49 acres overlooking the Ohio River.  Indicating the kind of wealth he had amassed selling whiskey, he purchased the mansion in 1895 for the equivalent today of $3.3 million and put more than $300,000 into remodeling.

The 1900 census found the family there, augmented by Jacob’s brother- and sister-in-law and their young son, and a live-in staff of six, including a housekeeper, governess, laundress, nurse, food server, and general servant.  Missing were Jacob’s wife and daughter, Emma.

During February of the previous year, possibly to escape the Cincinnati winter months, Jacob had sent them off to enjoy the warmth of  California.  We can image the excitement of the 42-year-old Emelie and 19-year-old Emma as they traveled around the West, sending postcards back to Jacob and the children still in school.  Then came the awful news.  Both had been killed in a railroad accident.  Their bodies were returned to Cincinnati where they were buried in Spring Grove Cemetery at the Schmidlapp plot (Garden Lane, Sec. 29) next to Julien and Rudolph.  After 23 years of marriage Jacob, 51, was now a widower.  Remembered as a “loving and caring father,” he never remarried.

The fates had one more blow to deal Jacob. When his daughter, Charlotte, reached maturity, she yearned to travel in Europe, especially to see France and Germany.  Recalling what had befallen Emelie and Emma, the father likely hesitated but eventually acceded to the girl’s desires.  In the autumn of 1908, age 19, Charlotte departed from ship from New York for Europe, on the trip of her lifetime, likely landing in Le Havre.  Days later the message reached Jacob — she had been killed in an auto accident in France.  Her body was returned and laid beside her mother and three siblings.  For many fathers it might have been a blow from which there would be no recovery.  But not Jacob.

Schmidlapp as Banker and Beyond.  About 1890, with his profits from his liquor business, Jacob organized a group of local business men to found the Union Savings Bank and Trust Company, serving as its chairman and guiding light.  The bank met with almost immediate success, with its $500,000 in assets growing to $5 million, paying liberal dividends for most of its existence. Union Trust was accounted as one of the foremost financial institutions of the Midwest. Under Jacob’s leadership, in 1900 the bank erected the first tall building built in Cincinnati, shown here. 

Describing his occupation as”capitalist” to the census taker, Jacob could point to a dozen or more enterprises in which he was a director or trustee.  They included the American Surety Company, Equitable Life Insurance Society, The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, Degnon Contracting Company, Degnon Realty and Improvement Company, Queens Place Realty Company, Electric Securities Corporation, Montana Power Company, Champion Fibre Company, Monitor Stove and Range Company, and the Export Storage Company.  He also sought to improve transit in Cincinnati by offering a plan for a tunnel to facilitate railroad and interurban rail access to downtown.

Schmidlapp as Philanthropist and Peace Advocate.  Jacob is best remembers in Cincinnati today, not as a liquor dealer or banker or wealthy business man, but as an outstanding philanthropist in city history.  Following the deaths of his wife and daughter and accelerated by Charlotte’s death, Jacob began giving away large portions of his millions.  He financed a “magnificent annex” to the Cincinnati Art Museum, built a dormitory for the Cincinnati College of Music, and created an institution for women’s education in the name of daughter Charlotte.  He also gave a library and memorial monument to Piqua, his home town.

Jacob is said to have been particularly proud of Washington Terrace, Walnut Hills, a development of more than 400 homes he built to house working class African-Americans, “in whose welfare he was deeply interested.”  Said an observer: “His model homes form the most outstanding effort along this line in the country.”  Jacob also was a trustee and contributor to Cincinnati’s McCall Colored Industrial School.

Jacob’s philanthropic works did not end with his death.  He did not leave his money to his two sons, William, a prominent Cincinnati attorney, and Charles, a New York City banker.  Having given most of his money away during his lifetime Jacob willed his residual estate, then amounting to about $1 million, to the Union Bank to create a charitable trust.  Roughly a quarter of that amount went to the Charlotte R. Schmidlapp Fund, created to empower and advance young girls and women.  What started as a $250,000 fund has grown to almost $30 million in assets. It began by awarding interest-free loans to aid young women in pursuit of higher education and continues to finance scholarships for women.

Funds in the Schmidlapp Trust also go to other worthy causes in Cincinnati.  For example, in 2014 the bank’s trustees awarded $1.5 million to a charitable coalition dealing with 1) reducing preterm births in neighborhoods that are disproportionately affected by poor pregnancy results and infant mortality, 2)  strengthening health education systems for pregnant women, and 3) assisting children vulnerable to “toxic stress” from unfavorable home environments.

Jacob’s other concentration was on international peace and arbitration of conflicts.  He was a director of the Carnegie Peace Fund and treasurer of the American Society for the Judicial Settlement of International Disputes. Noting the years he devoted to these causes, one biographer commented: “It is to such men that the world looks for leaders in the movement for peace…when all the races of the earth shall dwell in harmony.”

Active into the last days of his life, Jacob as peace advocate lived just long enough to see the end of World War I;  as a whiskey man he died just before the imposition of National Prohibition.  He passed away on December 18, 1919, in Cincinnati and was buried in the Schmidlapp plot next to Emelie and the other family members. 

The encomiums written about Jacob after his death were voluminous and full of praise.   I have chosen one to end this vignette about a truly extraordinary man who rose above the grief and pain of personal loss to assist his fellow human beings in need:  “Mr. Schmidlapp represented American manhood in the ideal — courage, honesty of purpose, simplicity and the power of preserving friendships. He has left a record after which the youth of America might well pattern their lives.”

Note:  This post was gathered from a variety of sources. Most useful were two short biographies, one written while Jacob was living, the other after he had died.  They were “Cincinnati, the Queen City, 1788-1912,” edited by Charles Frederic Goss, Clarke Publishing Co., Cincinnati & Chicago, 1912, and “The Historical Register,” edited by E.C. Hill, 1921.

Posted by Jack Sullivan at 6:18 AM 

Labels: Clifton Springs Distillery Co.Jacob G. SchmidlappLive Oak BourbonLive Oak RyeSchmidlapp & Co.Schmidlapp’s Live Oak Distillery Co.Tom Peck BourbonZebra Sour Mash Whiskeyi


Below are sections of my email to Steve Schmidlapp Oct 2, 2019:
The pipe is one of those exceptional items of a man and what appears to be his daughter on the left. This pipe was confirmed to have come from the brother’s family in Piqua, Ohio. Although that was the original assumption, the figures as verified by the Fifth Third Museum are of his mother and father.
On the left under the male figure are the initials JGS which would be Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp
According to 1880 Census, Schmidlapp, then a liquor dealer, his wife spelled her name as Amelia.
Some of this may be different spellings, variation of name of same person, or an error when posted: this needs to be verified.
When my daughter photographed the pipe, we failed to get a proper picture of the initials below the figures.
I will be adding some detailed pictures of the initials and the pipe stem to the web page.
In the middle of the pipe under the figures is the word “brother.” I am trying to verify if “brother” would have been William David Schmidlapp who I believe was your grandfather?
This would explain why after Jacob’s death that the pipe might have been returned to William David and your family.

Regarding the bank Joseph Schmidlapp was connected with:
1890 The Third National Bank received Charter Number 20 under the National Bank Act in 1863, and sets up business on Third and Walnut Streets. In 1871, Third National Bank acquired The Bank of the Ohio Valley. By 1882, Third National’s capital was $16 million and is considered the largest bank capital in the state of Ohio. Queen City National Bank changed its name to Fifth National Bank in 1888. Union Savings Bank and Trust Company, organized in 1890, and is also part of Fifth Third Bank’s family tree, led by Jacob G. Schmidlapp, a name that remains prominent in Cincinnati history and Fifth Third’s philanthropic efforts.
1901 In 1901 Union Savings Bank and Trust President, Jacob G. Schmidlapp, worked with architect Daniel Burnham to erect the first skyscraper in Cincinnati and moved the bank to 36 East Fourth Street, now the Renaissance Hotel.


Below is additional information in the process of being upgraded in coming months.

Jacob A Schmidlapp Great Great Grandfather had 6 children and lived upstairs the family business.
William, Charles, Theodore,Jacob G, Emma and Louis
My Great Grandfather William David b 1839 d 1893 married Elizabeth Nolan 
My grandfather Forest b1881 d 1928. Married Mary Lawhorn d 1958
My father Forest JR  b1914 d 2001
JG Schmidlapp b 1849  d 1919. Brother to William David left Piqua on a canal boat in 1865 at the age of 16 and headed south. In 1890 he bought out his siblings and gave the building to the school board to be used as a library. 

Biography of Jacob G. Schmidlapp

Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp, Cincinnati financier and philathropist, was born in Piqua, Ohio, on September 7, 1849. His parents, Jacob A. and Sophia F. (Haug) Schmidlapp, were natives of Germany. In 1886, after finishing his education in Piqua, he moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where he found employment with B. Loewenstein & Brothers, a wholesale tobacco merchant. In 1868, he went into business for himself as a cigar merchant, and in 1874, Schmidlapp moved his business headquarters to Cincinnati and expanded his interests to include distillery and malting enterprises.

Schmidlapp also began to extended his interests into the financial world. He founded the Union Savings Bank and Trust Company of Cincinnati, and was president of the bank between 1890 and 1907, when it merged with Fifth-Third National Bank. Schmidlapp was also one of the founders of the Export Storage Company, and served as director of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, the American Security Co., the Degnon Construction Company of New York, White Rock Springs Company of New York, and the Piqua (Ohio) Malt Company. Schmidlapp was also a trustee for several educational and cultural institutions including the Cincinnati College of Music, the Cincinnati Art School, the Cincinnati Law School, the May Festival Association, and the Music Hall Association.

In 1877, Schmidlapp married Miss Emelie Balke. In two separate tragic accidents, Mrs. Schmidlapp and their two daughters, Emma and Charlotte were killed. Jacob Schmidlapp found ways to memorialize each of them through his philanthropic work. He started an endowment fund to assist female students at the Cincinnati College of Music in Charlotte’s memory, and in memory of his wife Emelie, he established the Emelie B. Schmidlapp dormitory of the Cincinnati College of Music. A building was added to the Cincinnati Art Museum in memory of his daughter, Emma.

Schmidlapp’s philanthropic work went past just memorializing his family. Schmidlapp was also interested in improving housing for African-Americans and was involved in a project to build 400 homes in the Washington Terrace neighborhood of Cincinnati. Schmidlapp died on December 18, 1919, while visiting his son in New York. Upon his death, he left a trust of one million dollars to be used to assist the people of Cincinnati.

Sources: “Gave Millions Away During His Lifetime.” New York Times. 15 December 1919, 1; Goss, Charles Frederic. Cincinnati; The Queen City, 1788-1912. vol. IV. Cincinnati: The S.J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1912, 198-199; The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. vol. XIX. New York: James T. White & Co. 1926, 312-316.



Jacob Schmidlapp Obituary
Letter fro J.D. Schmidlapp 1918
Kirchheim-Residence of J. G. Schmidlapp Cincinnati, Ohio
Kirchheim-Residence of J. G. Schmidlapp Cincinnati, Ohio

GAVE MILLIONS AWAY DURING HIS LIFETIME; WiII of J.G. Schmidlapp of Cincinnati Records His IdeasAnother Million for Suffering.

Below is biographical information of the J.G.Schmidlapp family.

Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp
BIRTH  7 Sep 1849, Piqua, Miami County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 18 Dec 1919 (aged 70), Manhattan, New York County (Manhattan), New York, USA
BURIAL               Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
     He was born in Piqua, Ohio & died in New York City; He was a resident of Cincinnati, Ohio. He started a Scholarship Fund in memory of his daughter, Charlotte, to enable women to establish themselves. Son of Jacob A. & Sophia Hang Schmidlapp

Emilie Balke Schmidlapp
BIRTH  17 Oct 1858,Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 27 Feb 1900 (aged 41) Independence, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
BURIAL               Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
PLOT    Garden LN, Section 29, Lot 63, Space 9
     Emilie Balke, one of eight children born to German immigrants Julius Balke and Charlotte Haarkemper Balke, married Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp on Feb. 21, 1877. Together Jacob and Emilie had six children, four of whom—Emma Louise, William Horace, Charlotte Rose, and Carl Jacob—survived past infancy.
     In the winter of 1899–1900, Jacob, Emilie, their daughters Emma, 19, and Charlotte, 13, and Emilie’s widowed mother Charlotte Balke, departed their home in Cincinnati, headed to their eventual destination of Florida. On Feb. 27, their Missouri Pacific express train was forced to stop just outside of Independence, Missouri, by drifting snow on the tracks stirred up by blizzard conditions outside. A local train for St. Louis, traveling at a high rate of speed, came up from behind and—unable to stop for the delayed express train—crashed into the rear coach that the Schmidlapp party occupied.
     Emilie and another passenger (the wife of a St. Louis merchant) were killed instantly. Daughter Emma was scalded and blinded, and Emilie’s mother Charlotte was similarly injured. Emma succumbed to her injuries the following day in Kansas City, while Charlotte Balke lingered on until Mar. 15. Jacob and daughter Charlotte were both injured, but recovered.
     Jacob had what is known now as the Schmidlapp wing of the Cincinnati Museum of Art built as a memorial to Emilie and daughter Emma.

Charlotte Rose Schmidlapp
BIRTH  Jan 1887, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 20 Sep 1906 (aged 19), Arles, Departement des Bouches-du-Rhône, Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur, France
BURIAL               Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA 
PLOT    LN-29-63-12
Daughter of J.G. & Amelia B. Schmidlapp; Born & lived in Cincinnati, Ohio; died in Arles, France in an auto accident. Granddaughter of Julius Balke
A scholarship fund was started in her memory by her father, Jacob Schmidlapp. The Fund’s goal is to make grants that would enable women to establish themselves in life. The Charlotte R. Schmidlapp Fund in Cincinnati is the largest fund in the country dedicated exclusively to the needs of women and girls.

William Horace Schmidlapp
BIRTH  25 May 1883, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 28 Jan 1929 (aged 45), At Sea
BURIAL               Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
PLOT    Garden LN, Section 86, Lot 21, Space 2
     Horace was one of four boys and six children born to banker Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp and Emilie Balke Schmidlapp, a daughter of billiard manufacturer Julius Balke.
     By 1906, he had married Jean Maxwell, the daughter of Lawrence Maxwell, the Solicitor General of the United States under President Grover Cleveland, and they had four children together.
     They lived for a time at “Kirscheim”, his father’s imposing stone mansion (since destroyed) on Grandin Road in East Walnut Hills neighborhood of Cincinnati. The Schmidlapps commisssioned architect Grosvenor Atterbury to build “Ca Sole” a house in the fashionable Hyde Park neighborhood, but by the time the dwelling was completed in 1927, the couple had separated.
     In business, Horace was affiliated with Cincinnati’s Monitor Stove Company, which made Caloric brand pipeless heating stoves. (The Caloric brand, perhaps best known for kitchen stoves and ranges, and was sold to Amana in 1967.)
      Horace was also president of a concern called “Travel Movie Films, Inc.” that planned to produce 16 and 35 mm travelogues of foreign countries. According to an item in Movie Makers magazine, company personnel were to head out to the Mediterranean, the West Indies, and Central and South America to begin filming in early January 1929. Horace and company secretary/treasurer W. J. F. Roll—perhaps accompanying a film crews—were sailing on board SS Santa Barbara off the coast of Peru late that month. Horace suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died in the early morning hours of January 28, 1929. His body was shipped back to Cincinnati for burial on February 14.
 
Emma Louise Schmidlapp
BIRTH  12 Mar 1881, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 28 Feb 1900 (aged 18), Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
BURIAL               Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
PLOT    Garden LN, Section 29, Lot 63, Space 10
     Emma Louise Schmidlapp was the eldest daughter among six children born to banker Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp and Emilie Balke Schmidlapp, a daughter of billiard manufacturer Julius Balke.
     In the winter of 1899–1900, Emma accompanied her parents, sister Charlotte, and her widowed maternal grandmother, Charlotte Balke, on a train trip, headed for their eventual destination of Florida. On Feb. 27, 1900, their Missouri Pacific express train was forced to stop just outside of Independence, Missouri, by drifting snow on the tracks stirred up by blizzard conditions outside. A local train for St. Louis, traveling at a high rate of speed, came up from behind and—unable to stop for the delayed express train—crashed into the rear coach that the Schmidlapp party occupied.
     Emma’s mother was instantly killed. Emma and her grandmother were gravely injured. Doctors were summoned from Kansas City and the injured were taken to hospitals there. Emma succumbed to her injuries on Feb. 28 at University hospital. Her grandmother died at the same hospital on March 15.
     Her father had what is known now as the Schmidlapp wing of the Cincinnati Museum of Art built as a memorial to Emma and her mother.
 
Julien C. Schmidlapp
BIRTH  25 Sep 1878, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 21 Apr 1879 (aged 6 months), Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
BURIAL               Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA 
PLOT    Garden LN, Section 29, Lot 63, Space 7
According to his card on file with the cemetery, Julian died of “spasms” at the age of 4 months, 25 days. His actual date of birth was omitted from the card, so the Nov. 26, 1878, date above is calculated from the date of death and his given age.

Rudolph O. Schmidlapp
BIRTH  30 Aug 1893, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 27 Jan 1894 (aged 4 months), Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
BURIAL               Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA 
PLOT    Garden LN, Section 29, Lot 63, Space 8
According to his card on file with the cemetery, Rudolph died of pneumonia at the age of four months. His date of birth was omitted from the card, so the Sep. 1893 date is an approximation.

Carl Jacob Schmidlapp
BIRTH  10 Aug 1888, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA
DEATH 18 May 1960 (aged 71), New York, New York County (Manhattan), New York, USA
BURIAL               Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, Bronx County, New York, USA  Show Map
PLOT    Park View Plot, Section 138

Revised Oct 2, 2019 XXstatlergilfillen@hotmail.comXXX
Revised May 14, 2023