Johann Ludwig Karl Heinrich von Struve

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Johann Ludwig Karl Hienrich von Struve was the youngest son of the large brood of children of Johann Christoph Gustav von Struve and Sibilla Christiane Friederike von Hochstetter.

Heinrich, as he was known, was born August 9, 1812 in Stuttgart, in the Kingdom of Württemberg, during the short-lived Confederation of the Rhine.

Like his siblings before him, he attended the Gymnasium and Polytechnic schools in Stuttgart, before attending law school, which he did not finish, having been bitten by wanderlust before his final exams. He then joined and traveled to the province of Silesia, as a member of the Russian military.

It was there that he met his first wife, Stephanie von Borowsky, the daughter of the the local noble, J. von Borwosky, and on September 19, 1836 they were wed at the von Borowsky estate at Posen.

Heinrich and Stephanie farmed land purchased by Heinrich fom von Borowsky in Froeschen and there they had four children, including an infant who died shortly after birth:


  • Friedrich Wilhelm Amand von Struve (1838-1902)
  • Louis Joseph von Struve (1839-1921)
  • Sibilla "Silly" von Struve (born 1840-1841)


Stephanie died shortly after the fourth child died during its birth.


Heinrich then traveled to Berlin and there he married his cousin, Wilhelmine Charlotte Margarete "Minna" von Hochstetter on September 19, 1844.

With Minna and his young family, Henirch went back to his land holdings in the east and another daughter came, Stephanie von Struve, born 1847 in Chobanin, Kingdom of Poland.

Shortly thereafter the German Revolution of 1848 began, and Heinrich's brother, Gustav Struve, who was a leading component of such, caused the Struve name to be less than honorable for the times and created an environment less than hospitable for Heinrich and his family, as he too had supported the democratic cause. Like many of his German countrymen, Heinrich decided the only solution was to emigrate; to Texas.

On September 19, 1848, Heinrich and his family emigrated from the port of Hamburg to Galveston, Texas, landing there on November 22, 1848. From there they went by ox-cart to Fayette County, Texas, ultimately settling between the Rutersville township and the town of Fayetteville in eastern Fayette County.

In Texas the last four children were born to Heinrich and Minna von Struve:

  • Konrad von Struve (1849-1923) - who later was an Engineer in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, and married his cousin Philippine Von Manuel.
  • Alexandrine Albertine "Fanny" von Struve (1853-1917) - who later was married to a Scots relation of the St. Clairs and lived for a time in Edinburgh, Scotland, where she ran a finishing school, and then moved her school to Leipzig.
  • Sophie von Struve (1857-1909)
  • Elisabeth Pauline Luise "Amy" von Struve (1858-1911) - who later married Julius Karl Betzler and was a missionary in India for a time.

Heinrich was quite active in his adopted homeland of Texas, serving as a postmaster, a cigar-maker, a farmer and rancher and a land speculator. He enjoyed the frontier life. However, his wife, Minna, did not and just prior to the American Civil War, he sent his family back to Europe.

His two older sons, Amand and Louis, remained in Texas. The former, Amand, marrying Christiane Otilie Pfeisler and residing in Burnet County and later in Blanco County. The latter, Louis, marrying Clementine de Lassaulx, the daughter of Otto Phillip de Lassaulx and Maragaretha Fasbender de Wintersdorf, and granddaughter of the noted royal Prussian architect Johann Claudius de Lassaulx (sometimes known as J.C. von Lassaulx), and residing the remainder of his life in Fayette County, Texas.

(The de Lassaulx family had come to Texas also as a result of the pressures of the 1848 Revolution)

Heinrich, like his wife and younger children, returned to Europe from Texas by way of New York, where he visited his brother Gustav Struve, who also had emigrated to America after the 1848 Revolution with his wife, Amalie. He assisted his brother in marketing Gustav's "Weltgeschichte" or World History, which Gustav had written after his arrival in America.

Heinrich came back to Texas several times thereafter to visit his sons, as well as traveled to Brazil, where his youngest son, Konrad had gone as an engineer. In Brazil Heinrich had an audience with the Brazilian Emperor, Dom Pedro II of Brazil, where he regailed the monarch with his tales of the Texas Wilderness.

When finally he returned and remained in Europe, Heinrich put his life story to paper and published it in 1895 as a "Lebensbild". He died March 3, 1898 in Rothenberg in der Odenwald, Germany.

[edit] Sources

  • Heinrich von Struve: Ein Lebensbild. Erinnerungen aus dem Leben eines Zweiundachtzigjährigen in der alten und neuen Welt, Leipzig, Verlag von E. Ungleich, 1895 (2nd enlarged edition in 1896).