“You know how the time flies
Only yesterday was the time of our lives
We were born and raised in a summer haze
Bound by the surprise of our glory days”
Adele “Someone Like You”
Note: In this post, I present photos of Josef and Rosalie Pauly’s nine children, my great-great-uncle and aunt’s offspring, showing them as young children, adolescents, young adults, middle aged, and elderly. Naturally, there are gaps in the photo sequences for some of the children.
Related Posts:
Post 45: Holocaust Remembrance: Recalling My Pauly Ancestors
Post 56: Reflections on Life and Family by The Paterfamilias, Dr. Josef Pauly
Post 57: Disappeared Without A Trace, Maria Pohlmann Née Pauly
Post 57, Postscript: Disappeared Without A Trace, Maria Pohlmann Née Pauly—Mystery Solved!!
Post 58: Finding Therese “Thussy” Sandler Née Pauly, My Great-Great-Uncle and Aunt’s Youngest Child
Post 89: Evidence of My 18th & 19th Centuries Marle Ancestors
I have often thought to myself that upon one’s birth, one is metaphorically handed an hourglass measuring the sands of time slowly or rapidly draining out. Regular readers may recall that in Post 89, I discussed my great-great-great-grandparents, Wilhelm Wolf Marle and his wife Rosalie (“Reisel”) Marle née Grätzer, whose headstones survive in the former Jewish Cemetery in Pless, Germany [today: Pszczyna, Poland]. (Figures 1-2) Given my musings about the passage of time, I was mildly surprised to see that an hourglass is carved into Rosalie Marle’s headstone signifying how quickly time passes. (Figure 2) Clearly, I can take no credit for the originality of this metaphor.
Josef Pauly (Figure 3) and Rosalie Pauly née Mockrauer (Figures 4-5), my great-great-uncle and aunt, had nine children all born in Posen, Germany [today: Poznan, Poland] between 1871 and 1885. (Figure 6) In perusing my digital collection of photographs, I realized I have photos of all of them capturing how they looked through the years. Not unexpectedly, there are gaps in the photo sequences for some of the children, which my third cousin, Andi Pauly, more closely aligned to this branch of my family, was partially able to fill. I think it is unusual to have a “continuous” sequence of photos for one’s relatives who were born in the 19th century and died in the 20th century, and for this reason I thought I would array these photos for readers to see. I certainly find it to be true that I can recognize photos of some of my ancestors from specific periods in their lives but not necessarily from other intervals in their lives; interestingly, I occasionally even find this to be true of photos of myself.
Below, readers will find a table with the vital statistics of Josef and Rosalie Pauly’s nine children. This is followed by the sequence of photos I have for each of them showing how differently they looked at various stages of their lives. The second-born child, Paula Pincus née Pauly, died youngest at age 49, while the last born, Therese Sandler née Pauly, was the longest lived at age 84. Three of the daughters, Helene Guttentag née Pauly, Elisabeth Herrnstadt née Pauly, and Margarethe Neisser née Pauly, died during the Holocaust, two by their own hands.
VITAL STATISTICS FOR JOSEF & ROSALIE PAULY’S CHILDREN
NO. | NAME | EVENT | DATE | PLACE |
1 | Anna Rothholz née Pauly
(Figures 6-7) |
Birth | 14 March 1871 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 20 May 1892 | Berlin, Germany | ||
Death | 21 June 1925 | Stettin, Germany | ||
2 | Paula Pincus née Pauly
(Figures 6, 8-9) |
Birth | 26 April 1872 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 16 November 1891 | Berlin, Germany | ||
Death | 31 March 1922 | Magdeburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany | ||
3 | Helene Guttentag née Pauly
(Figures 6, 10-14) |
Birth | 12 April 1873 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 5 February 1898 | Berlin, Germany | ||
Death (suicide) | 23 October 1942 | Berlin, Germany | ||
4 | Elisabeth Herrnstadt née Pauly
(Figures 6, 15-17) |
Birth | 2 July 1874 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 11 May 1895 | Cunnersdorf, Germany | ||
Death (murdered) | 27 May 1943 | Theresienstadt, Czechoslovakia | ||
5 | Margarethe Neisser née Pauly
(Figures 6, 17-22) |
Birth | 16 January 1876 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 5 September 1898 | Stettin, Germany | ||
Death (suicide) | 12 October 1941 | Berlin, Germany | ||
6 | Maria Pohlmann née Pauly
(Figures 6, 23-26) |
Birth | 21 July 1877 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 30 September 1901 | Posen, Germany | ||
Death | 18 July 1946 | Freiburg, Germany | ||
7 | Edith Riezler née Pauly
(Figures 17, 27-32)
|
Birth | 4 January 1880 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 28 May 1923 | Berlin, Germany | ||
Death | 5 February 1961 | Munich, Germany | ||
8 | Wilhelm Pauly
(Figures 33-38)
|
Birth | 24 September 1883 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 3 January 1914 | Breslau, Germany | ||
Death | 1961 | Tsumeb, Namibia | ||
9 | Therese Sandler née Pauly
(Figures 39-46) |
Birth | 21 August 1885 | Posen, Germany |
Marriage | 31 August 1912 | Posen, Germany | ||
Death | 25 November 1969 | Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Anna Rothholz née Pauly (1871-1925)
Paula Pincus née Pauly (1872-1922)
Helene Guttentag née Pauly (1873-1942)
Elisabeth Herrnstadt née Pauly (1874-1943)
Margarethe Neisser née Pauly (1876-1941)
Maria Pohlmann née Pauly (1877-1946)
Edith Riezler née Pauly (1880-1961)
Wilhelm Pauly (1883-1961)
Therese Sandler née Pauly (1885-1969)