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  • af Frank Oberle
    292,95 kr.

    Unwald ist ein Heimatroman, der im Spannungsfeld von Religion und Vernunft, Liebe und Tragödie, Natur und Zivilisation oszilliert, und dabei mit einem großartigen Ensemble an Charakteren aufwartet. Das Landleben im 21. Jdht., Kinder haften für ihre Eltern.

  • - Lichty-Harris Ancestry
    af Frank Oberle
    162,95 kr.

    Research notes and diagrams concerning the genealogy of the Lichty-Harris family of Missouri.

  • af Frank Oberle
    362,95 kr.

    Data Management is one of the few responsibilities of Information Technology for which a solid logical and mathematical foundation exists - a proven foundation of organization, categorization, and data validation techniques with a long history that has formed the underpinning for virtually all of the "hard sciences" over the last few millennia. Inexplicably, IT groups generally seem to be unaware of, or at least to largely ignore, this scientific foundation. When typical business database designs are contrasted with minimal scientific standards of data organization, it is difficult not to draw the conclusion that the caliber of these designs is rather amateurish - coming uncomfortably close to what might be considered professional negligence in some other fields. Such design deficiencies represent a significant business risk, the author contends, since commonly used database structures result in far more difficulties for many companies than is generally recognized. These deficiencies severely limit the flexibility and extensibility of business software, impede enhancement efforts, and generally lead to what the author calls "System Constipation." In short, the author argues, we need to take the word "Science" in "Computer Science" more seriously when it comes to our database designs. This book introduces Business Managers as well as Database Designers to "Database Triage" - the process of recognizing and classifying the often hidden symptoms and ills of business databases, and shows how to take the first steps toward mitigating them. Using an overview of IT's history, the author also explains how and why business databases came to be as poorly designed and illogically constructed as he contends they are. Unlike the skills required for database construction - which include data modeling, proficiency in SQL, DBMS tuning, etc., those needed for logical database design - such as predicate logic, taxonomic placement, attribute categorization, etc., are noticeably absent from the repertoires of most IT shops. An introduction to these core database design skills is presented in the book, since these are critically important - often more important, the author argues, than application programming skills. Addressing these long-standing failings will require management understanding, involvement and support as well as some additional technical expertise. To support these objectives, real-world examples are provided to illustrate how commonly occurring database designs impede the smooth conduct and expansion of business, unnecessarily complicate the efforts of application programmers, and often lead to data contamination. The author explains precisely why each of the examples is poorly designed and, to some extent, shows how to correct them - in several cases providing detailed approaches to solutions - while attempting to strike an appropriate balance between the needs of both Business Managers and Database Designers without too much oversimplification of either group's needs. See www.AntikytheraPubs.com for more information and a variety of free Database Design Notes that can be viewed or downloaded.

  • - From Dabo to Baltimore 1711-1975
    af Frank Oberle
    272,95 kr.

    On the night of 27 January 1726, Anna-Maria Anstett, the wife of Johann Oberle of Dagsburg in Lotharingia, took shelter in the Mauri Monastery while traveling in Alsace. With the help of a midwife, Anna-Maria delivered her fifth child, also named Johann, who is believed to be a younger brother of Balthassar Oberle, who was born in about 1711. More than a century later, on 17 July 1855, Balthassar's great-great-grandson Seraphin was born in the town of Engenthal-le-Bas in Alsace. The Oberle family had already lived through the climatic disasters of the middle eighteenth century, the French Revolution with its bizarre calendar and politics, and had seen the Napoleonic era come and go. After an almost eighty year period of stability, however, Seraphin was to experience the Prussian invasion of France, and he himself was to end up "drafted" into the Prussian military. Before too long, he encountered a young figure skater at his posting in Emden, a bustling shipping town on the Ems River in the northern reaches of the Prussian Empire. He and Sarah eventually made their way to the port of Baltimore, where they stepped off the ship and began a new life. With historical context provided as background, this book traces the history of Seraphin's family from Balthassar's birth in 1711 to brief discussions of the lives of his son Joseph's four children and the death of their mother in 1975. The book includes copies of many original records - the first of which is from the Mauri Monastery mentioned above, as well as photographs (including a few from the mid-nineteenth century) and examples of U.S. currency signed by Joseph Oberle during his banking career. A number of appendices are included - including tips on reading and interpreting early records, suggestions for those wishing to undertake further research or visit the areas of Alsace and Lorraine mentioned in the book, and well as a list of seven generations of Balthassar Oberle's family.

  • af Frank Oberle
    187,95 kr.

    The earliest members of the Hartman family - Quakers from the Palatinate - had settled in William Penn's territory by late 1740, with the particular branch discussed her settling in Berks County, northwest of where the first Hartmans arrived in Philadelphia. In the late 1780s, when the many frontier (then in east-central Pennsylvania) disputes had been settled, the family migrated further northwest to what is now Pennsylvania's Columbia County. By the late 19th century, Grier Hartman had migrated to Illinois. This book summarizes the family history of this Hartman branch from colonial times, including marriages to Fox, Breece, and Caruth women along the way, until Ray Ellis Hartman's daughter met and married a descendant of Johann Johannsen Küster, who lived in what we now call Germany during the 17th century. Johann Küster's 5th great-grandson Anton Koester migrated to the United States in the late nineteenth century, settling originally in Iowa, then later in Illinois, where his youngest son met and married Ray Ellis Hartman's daughter. A brief history of this line of the Koester family and Anton's Bruns in-laws is given, along with a reproduction of "The Koster Family Album" originally created by some German descendants of Johann Küster in 1928. Copies of ancestry diagrams, and selected census pages, draft registration cards, and passenger arrival manifests and/or naturalization petitions related to members of these family lines are included, as well as a few maps showing where they lived in earlier years.

  • - Missouri Pioneer
    af Frank Oberle
    252,95 kr.

    Possibly the most interesting descendant of Justice and Magdalen Gonce, the ancestors of virtually all Gonces in the United States today, was Abraham Rudolph Gonce. "Doc" Gonce was not only a medical practitioner and Missouri pioneer, but at various times was a public servant, bootlegger, and murderer. He married at least four times (including a pair of concurrent marriages that resulted in a prison term for bigamy) and had at least seventeen children. He is most infamous for the murder of his town's postmaster, for which he served another term in the Missouri Penitentiary. In addition to full transcripts of Doc's trials for bigamy and murder, this book also documents the outlaw activities and sometimes tragic stories surrounding a few of "Doc's" Gonce descendants that continued well into the twentieth century - a burglary committed by two of "Doc's" great-great grandsons was even featured on the popular television show "America's Most Wanted."

  • af Frank Oberle
    272,95 kr.

    In about 1759, a ship carrying Justice Gonce and his family sailed up the Delaware River toward Philadelphia. When the ship (likely British) made its normal stop at the Fort in Newcastle (modern day Delaware), the family disembarked and soon traveled overland to Cecil County, Maryland. Within fifty years, descendants of Justice and Magdalen Gonce and their three sons Rudolph, Abraham and Daniel had not only settled in both Maryland and Delaware, but had spread as far south as the frontier areas of Tennessee and Alabama. Justice, Magdalen and their sons are the ancestors of virtually all the Gonces now living in the U.S. This book discusses the family's early days before and during the American Revolution, and traces the line from Justice Gonce's youngest son Daniel to his descendants in mid-twentieth century Baltimore, Maryland. Details about the early migration of the "Southern Branch" of the family to Tennessee and Alabama are documented, and Gonce family members (including a female POW) known to have taken part in both sides of the American Civil War are introduced. Various publications or postings have suggested at least twenty-one different countries as possible origins of the original Gonce settlers; an appendix debunks many of these theories, while providing commentaries on and references for the other proposals in the hopes of aiding those who wish to undertake further research into the Gonce family.

  • af Frank Oberle
    277,95 kr.

    In the latter part of the 1680s, Johannes David of Hul's Hoff (Hul's Farm) became a Dragoner and was eventually stationed at Gut Swede in Cappeln - some 100 miles to the northeast. There he met and married Anna Margareta Thoben from nearby Dingel. In 1855, their great-great grandson Johann Gerhart Hulshoff and his pregnant wife Lisette left Bremen on the bark Eberhard and sailed to the port of New Orleans Louisiana. The child was born during the journey. From New Orleans, the Hulshoffs traveled overland to Baltimore Maryland. In September 1896, Johannes David Hulshoff's fourth great-granddaughter Anna Gertrude was born in Baltimore, Maryland. This is the story of the Hulshoff line from Johannes David to Anna Gertrude, encompassing the three centuries from roughly 1665 to 1983. Also included are histories of our Kerchner and Kern ancestors written for his family by Fr. Frank Kunkel prior to World War II; these two manuscripts are reproduced here with corrections, updates, and commentary. Other family surnames discussed in Fr. Kunkel's manuscripts are Etter, Haynes, Huguenin, Marshall and Rauch.

  • - From Moccasin Flats to Parliament Hill
    af Frank Oberle
    218,95 kr.

  • - A War Child's Journey to Peace
    af Frank Oberle
    118,95 kr.

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