Dear Mrs. Dorothy Noltel and Mr. Bob Marhenke, Edward Meyer and list,
here another interestiing M�LLER-finding from Odendorf:
Source: Hillmer, Rolf: Geschichte der Gemeinde Suderburg, Uelzen 1986
"...1849, 30.3 .. Heute ist der Dichter und Heimatschriftsteller Heinrich
GOTTLIEB M�ller als Sohn des Heinrich Christoph M�ller, Anbauers in Oldendorf I
auf der Hofstelle Nr.21. u.d.Dorothee Marie Christine DEHRMANN, geboren worden.
Aus der Feder des Verfassers stammt die Abhandlung "G.M�ller-Suderburg zum 125.
Geburtstag" im "Heimatkalender f�r Stadt und Kreis Uelzen 1971,S.99-105.", S.76
translation:
"..1849, 30.3.. Today the poet and writer for the region Heinrich Gottlieb M�ller
is born as son of Heinrich Christoph M�ller, farmer in Oldendorf I on farmnr. 21
and the Dorothee Marie Christine Dehrmann. From the feather of the author
(Hillmer) is the article "G.M�ller-Suderburg zum 125.Geburtstag" in ...(rest of
the title see above.
...
There is a picture of this Heinrich Gottlieb M�ller (1849 -1922) and a poem from
1876, where he deals with a comparison of the small local jewish cemetary and the
neighboured old stone-graves of 2000 years in age.
In 1831 ther has been the Cholera in the region. It had to be furnished wooden
bed and other things. It was paid to the carpenter Wilhelm M�ller from Oldendorf
for 12 beds 22 Rthlr, 16Ggr. and to the carpenter Gabriel M�ller from Oldendorf
for 2 beds 3 Rthlr., 8 Ggr. on the 1,5.1832. (see work above, page 71)
also in 1831, January
only translation:
...
Those utensils mentioned in earlier dealt church registers of Suderburg , sub
Nr.1,2 and 3", among the told things, ( 1) old silver in weight of 1 Pfund. 22
Lot; 2) a large tin chalice; 3)two alter candlesticks of tin) were by means of
outrageous burglary into the church and the church locker stolen in January 1831
by the now in the "Karrenanstalt Stade" imprisoned "delinquent" Christoph Meyer
from Oldendorf I. The mentioned things were afterward by the trial of melting
them in a fire spoiled in that way, that from the silver of 1 Pfund, 22 Lot
weight after ending of the investigation only 1 Pfund and 14 1/2 Lot could be
handed over from the "K�nigliche Amt Bodenteich" to the accountant of the church,
which in the moment preserves the rests of silver. (page 71) ...
So the hard times were hard all the times. That are the news of M�ller and Meyer
after 1750 and before your documents, I could find.
Greetings Hans Peter Albers