As seen in the last post, in 1900 six of the surviving children of Sarah Goldschmidt and Abraham Mansbach were living in the United States, as was Sarah. Their oldest daughter Breine Mansbach Bensew was still living in Germany, and three children had passed away, as had Abraham in 1889.
The six children living in the US were split between Colorado and Philadelphia. Amelia Mansbach Langer and her family were living in Denver, and her brothers Berthold and Meyer were living in Trinidad, Colorado. Sarah and her other three children—Louis, Julius, and Hannah —were all living in Philadelphia. All of Sarah’s children except Julius, the youngest, were married by 1900, and she had nine grandchildren born in the United States plus her German-born grandchildren, the children of her daughter Breine Mansbach Bensew. A tenth American grandchild was born when Meyer and Ida (Jaffa) Mansbach had a second child, Edith, on December 15, 1901, in Colorado.1
In 1903, Julius, Sarah’s youngest child, married Frieda Bensew in Wunstorf, Germany.2 Frieda was born on March 6, 1883, in Wunstorf, the daughter of Moses Bensew and Theodora Freudenthal.3 Julius had applied for a passport on August 10, 1903, stating that he was temporarily residing in Wunstorf, Germany, where he had been since July 8, 1903, and that he intended to stay there for two months. I assume this was when he must have married Frieda.

Julius Mansbach, 1903 passport application, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA); Washington D.C.; Roll #: 41; Volume #: Volume 075: Germany
Ancestry.com. U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925
Their grandson Art shared this photograph of Julius and Frieda dated 1903 when they were engaged:
Julius and Frieda returned to the United States and settled in Philadelphia where on July 12, 1904, their daughter Beatrice was born.4 In May 1905, Julius, Frieda, and Beatrice sailed to Germany, presumably for Frieda’s family to meet the new baby.
Here are two beautiful photographs of Frieda and her baby daughter Beatrice, courtesy of my cousin Art Mansbach:
The year 1907 brought two sad losses to the family. First, on June 26, 1907, Sarah Goldschmidt Mansbach passed away from nephritis at age 88.

Sarah Goldschmidt Mansbach death certificate, Pennsylvania Historic and Museum Commission; Pennsylvania, USA; Pennsylvania (State). Death certificates, 1906–1966; Certificate Number Range: 059571-063330
Ancestry.com. Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1966
Sarah was the oldest child of Seligmann Goldschmidt and Hincka Alexander and had outlived all but three of her younger siblings. Unlike her younger siblings who had immigrated as young adults, Sarah came to the United States and settled in Philadelphia in the 1880s when she was already in her sixties and had grown children. It must have been a hard transition, especially with half her children living half a continent away in Colorado and one daughter still back in Germany. She had survived her husband and three of her children and lived to 88.
She must have been an exceptionally strong woman. That strength and her warmth certainly show in this photograph of Sarah with her granddaughter Beatrice taken shortly before she died:
The second loss the family suffered in 1907 came less than two months after Sarah’s death. Cora Eslinger Mansbach, Louis Mansbach’s wife, died from tuberculosis on August 22, 1907; she was only 40 years old and left behind not only her husband, but her eleven-year-old daughter, Rebecca.

Cora Eslinger Mansbach death certificate, Pennsylvania Historic and Museum Commission; Pennsylvania, USA; Pennsylvania (State). Death certificates, 1906–1966; Certificate Number Range: 078391-082250
Ancestry.com. Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1966
This photograph was taken just eight days before Cora’s death. It is dated August 14, 1907, and taken in Cape May, New Jersey. The young girl on the left is Cora and Louis Mansbach’s daughter Rebecca, and she is with Julius and Frieda Mansbach and their daughter Beatrice:

Rebecca Mansbach, Beatrice Mansbach, Frieda Bensew Mansbach, and Julius Mansbach. August 14, 1907, Cape May, New Jersey. Courtesy of Art Mansbach
Rebecca’s face conveys sadness; her mother must have already been quite ill and had been sick for six months. Perhaps Julius and his family took her to Cape May to distract her from her mother’s illness.
Julius and Frieda Mansbach and their daughter Beatrice moved to Wunstorf, Germany by 1910, where Julius and Frieda’s son Alfred Heinz Mansbach was born on February 10, 1910.5 They did not return to live in the US for another two decades. Thank you again to Art Mansbach for sharing these wonderful photographs of Julius and Frieda and their young children:
In 1910 Louis Mansbach, now a widower, was boarding with his thirteen year old daughter Rebecca in the household of the Beutelspacher family. I cannot find any connection between his family and the Beutelspachers. Louis continued to practice veterinary medicine.6
Hannah Mansbach Dannenberg, the only other sibling still in Philadelphia, was living in 1910 with her husband Gerson and their three children as well as Moses Dannenberg, Gerson’s brother. Gerson and Moses were both merchants and owned a supply house. Hannah and Gerson’s son Arthur was in college.7
As for the three siblings in Colorado, Amelia Mansbach Langer and her family were still living in Denver in 1910. Her husband Henry, now 71, was retired. Their sons were both living with them. Joseph (30) was a newspaper photographer, and Lester (26) was a photographic printer in a portrait gallery.8
In 1910, Berthold Mansbach and his wife Rose and son Alvin (15) were living in Trinidad9. Bert and his brother Meyer, who had been the proprietors of a dry goods store known as Mansbach Brothers, were now in business with John and Barney Tarabino as owners of The Famous Department Store, as listed in the 1910 Trinidad directory. The directory lists Bert as the treasurer and Meyer as the secretary.
Bert and Rose’s daughter Corinne had married Herbert J Kahn on October 11, 1909, in Trinidad. Herbert was a Trinidad, Colorado native, the son of two German immigrants, Jacob and Rosa Kahn. His father was a dealer in hides and wool.10
The Denver Rocky Mountain News posted this news item about the wedding on October 12, 1909 (p. 4):
In 1910, Herbert and Corinne were living in Trinidad where Herbert was working as a salesman in a clothing store.11
Berthold’s younger brother Meyer was also living in Trinidad in 1910. He and Ida and their two children Arthur (13) and Edith (8) were living with Ida’s mother Amelia Jaffa, and Meyer was, as described above, the secretary of The Famous Department Store, the store he owned with his brother Berthold and others.12
Thus, in 1910, the family of Sarah Goldschmidt and Abraham Mansbach was doing well. Bert and Meyer and their families were living in Trinidad where the brothers were partners in a department store. Amelia and Henry Langer were living in Denver where Henry was retired and their sons were both involved in photography. Hannah Dannenberg was living with her family in Philadelphia and had a child in college already. Louis and his daughter Rebecca were in Philadelphia, moving forward after the death of Cora. In addition, as we will see, six of the children of Breine Mansbach were also in the US by 1910.
The only descendants of Sarah and Abraham still in Germany in 1910 were their oldest child, Breine Mansbach along with her husband Jakob Bensew and their daughter Roschen and her children, and their youngest child, Julius Mansbach and his wife Frieda Bensew and their children Beatrice and Alfred.
- Ancestry.com. California, Death Index, 1940-1997, Social Security #: 573387763. ↩
- As per Julius Mansbach’s grandson, Art Mansbach. ↩
- Ancestry.com. U.S., Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007, SSN: 351248754 ↩
- Pennsylvania, Philadelphia City Births, 1860-1906,” database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VBYL-HSB : 10 March 2018), Beatrice Mansbach, 12 Jul 1904; citing 18961, Department of Records; FHL microfilm 2,110,929. ↩
- Number: 341-03-5638; Issue State: Illinois; Issue Date: Before 1951, Ancestry.com. U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014 ↩
- Louis and Rebecca Mansbach, 1910 US Census, Census Place: Philadelphia Ward 20, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Roll: T624_1394; Page: 8A; Enumeration District: 0355; FHL microfilm: 1375407. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census ↩
- Gerson and Hannah Mansberg and family 1910 US census, Census Place: Philadelphia Ward 29, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Roll: T624_1399; Page: 2B; Enumeration District: 0692; FHL microfilm: 1375412. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census ↩
- Henry and Amelia Langer and family, 1910 US census, Census Place: Denver Ward 10, Denver, Colorado; Roll: T624_116; Page: 18A; Enumeration District: 0134; FHL microfilm: 1374129. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census ↩
- Berthold Mansbach and family 1910 US census, Census Place: Trinidad Ward 2, Las Animas, Colorado; Roll: T624_122; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 0120; FHL microfilm: 1374135. Enumeration District: 0120. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census ↩
-
Registration State: Colorado; Registration County: Las Animas; Roll: 1561836, Ancestry.com. U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Kahn family, 1900 US census, Census Place: Trinidad, Las Animas, Colorado; Page: 4; Enumeration District: 0064; FHL microfilm: 1240126.
Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census ↩ - Herbert and Corinne Kahn, 1910 US census, Census Place: Trinidad Ward 2, Las Animas, Colorado; Roll: T624_122; Page: 8B; Enumeration District: 0120; FHL microfilm: 1374135. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census ↩
- Meyer Mansbach and family, 1910 US census, Census Place: Trinidad Ward 2, Las Animas, Colorado; Roll: T624_122; Page: 2B; Enumeration District: 0115; FHL microfilm: 1374135. Ancestry.com. 1910 United States Federal Census ↩
Every one of the gorgeous photo’s shared in this post told their own story. Sarah with Beatrice is so precious! I could spend hours just talking about each photo and it’s intricate details. Always enjoy starting my day reading your posts.
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You’re right—each photo could be a post itself. But alas, then I would never get to tell all the stories! 🙂 Thanks, Sharon!
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It is so nice to be able to visually connect with the people of your widespread family. I looked up Wunstorf , which was only a small village near Hanover around the turn of the century. Looking forward to read your next post, Amy. Have a great weekend!
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Now we can map where our families’ paths crossed. Most of my father’s family came from small towns near Kassel—Sielen, Breuna, Oberlistingen, and Jesberg—as well as some from the Rhine Valley—Gau-Algesheim, Bingen, and Mainz–and a few from the Alsace region. You have a great weekend also, Peter!
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A wonderful collection of photos Amy. I particularly like Julius and Frieda’s engagement portrait. It is so informal and naturalistic for the time.
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Yes, I assumed it was more like a snapshop than a formal photo, but I guess those didn’t even exist back then.
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Absolutely gorgeous pictures. Every single one is beautiful!
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I agree—thank you!
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Knowing Rebecca’s mother would die only eight days after the photograph was taken gives so much more meaning to the picture. Without the story, it would be a family enjoying their vacation time. It breaks my heart to look at Rebecca knowing Cora’s imminent death. But your post is not all about sadness. Sarah Goldschmidt Mansbach’s smile in the photo with Beatrice made me smile. She must have been a wonderful person.
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I was so disturbed when I put the date of the photograph up against Cora’s death. And sadly the same is true of that photo of Sarah with Beatrice—she did not live much longer (and Beatrice herself died as a young teenager). So lots of sad thoughts. But overall, the Mansbach family has lots of happy stories as well. Thanks, Cathy!
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Yes, I agree. If you just looked at the photo without the story behind it you could not detect that Cora was ill and near death.
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What I find interesting about this posting is how the family continued to branch out in different locations. This is the very beginning of the process of assimilation. The family members arrive and pursue their professions where opportunities exist, even if it means going away from their parents or siblings. As time goes by the nuclear family is more predominant in each person’s life.
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So true, and still true today, isn’t it?
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Yes, very much the story of each new immigrant family to America.
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These are some great photos. I particularly like Sarah’s expression in the photo with granddaughter Beatrice reaching around her shoulder. Real treasures.
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Thank you, Michael. I agree.
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Again, the photos are phenomenal. AND THE LACE. In more than one photo I noticed the quality of the lace used in the clothing. Gorgeous!
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I am so bad at those details. Lace? What lace? Now I need to go back and look again. (As you know, clothing is not my thing. I am more focused on the faces and expressions.)
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Now I am in the comments thing and can’t remember who was wearing what, but there is a photo where a woman and baby both have gorgeous lace and fabric and then another with a woman in a gorgeous lace dress.
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I will take a look. Thanks!
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The pictures are absolutely beautiful. How cute is Alfred in his little sailor suit?
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I know! He is so adorable!
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