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Lohrenz, Anna M. Friesen (1877-1975)

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She was born Anne M. Friesen on April 24, 1877, in Klippenfeld in the Molotshna Colony of the southern Ukraine. Her parents were Julius Friesen, M.D., and Anna Jantzen Enns Friesen. With them and several siblings she emigrated to America when she was two. The family lived first at Boone County, Nebraska and later in Mountain Lake, Minnesota.
 
She was born Anne M. Friesen on April 24, 1877, in Klippenfeld in the Molotshna Colony of the southern Ukraine. Her parents were Julius Friesen, M.D., and Anna Jantzen Enns Friesen. With them and several siblings she emigrated to America when she was two. The family lived first at Boone County, Nebraska and later in Mountain Lake, Minnesota.
   
[[Image:lohrenz_anne_m_friesen_1972.jpg|200px|left]] '''HER LIFE''' spanned the years from homesteading in a sod house to seeing men on the moon and traveling by air herself. Before her marriage to the late Henry W. Lohrenz, founder of Tabor College and active in the ministry and missions administration, Mrs. Lohrenz taught in public schools of Minnesota and Dakota. For about 40 years, until her 80th birthday, she was an active Sunday school teacher, and for ten more years, to her 90th birthday, she substituted as teacher in these classes. [note: last 1 and 1/2 sentences duplicated in original]
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[[Image:lohrenz_anne_m_friesen_1972.jpg|100px|left]] '''HER LIFE''' spanned the years from homesteading in a sod house to seeing men on the moon and traveling by air herself. Before her marriage to the late Henry W. Lohrenz, founder of Tabor College and active in the ministry and missions administration, Mrs. Lohrenz taught in public schools of Minnesota and Dakota. For about 40 years, until her 80th birthday, she was an active Sunday school teacher, and for ten more years, to her 90th birthday, she substituted as teacher in these classes. [note: last 1 and 1/2 sentences duplicated in original]
   
 
Until a little more than two years ago Mrs. Lohrenz lived alone in her home at 209 South Madison Avenue, Hillsboro. Her present address is Apt. 15 A, Parkside Homes, Hillsboro.
 
Until a little more than two years ago Mrs. Lohrenz lived alone in her home at 209 South Madison Avenue, Hillsboro. Her present address is Apt. 15 A, Parkside Homes, Hillsboro.

Revision as of 11:33, 1 June 2023

Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 1972 May 4 p. 11 (bio)

Birth date: 1877

text of obituary:

Early Immigrant from Russia

Observes 95th Birthday

HILLSBORO, KAN. — Mrs. H. W. Lohrenz observed her 95th birthday Sunday afternoon, April 23, with an "open house" for more than 200 friends and relatives in the Mennonite Brethren Church, Hillsboro.

She was born Anne M. Friesen on April 24, 1877, in Klippenfeld in the Molotshna Colony of the southern Ukraine. Her parents were Julius Friesen, M.D., and Anna Jantzen Enns Friesen. With them and several siblings she emigrated to America when she was two. The family lived first at Boone County, Nebraska and later in Mountain Lake, Minnesota.

Lohrenz anne m friesen 1972.jpg
HER LIFE spanned the years from homesteading in a sod house to seeing men on the moon and traveling by air herself. Before her marriage to the late Henry W. Lohrenz, founder of Tabor College and active in the ministry and missions administration, Mrs. Lohrenz taught in public schools of Minnesota and Dakota. For about 40 years, until her 80th birthday, she was an active Sunday school teacher, and for ten more years, to her 90th birthday, she substituted as teacher in these classes. [note: last 1 and 1/2 sentences duplicated in original]

Until a little more than two years ago Mrs. Lohrenz lived alone in her home at 209 South Madison Avenue, Hillsboro. Her present address is Apt. 15 A, Parkside Homes, Hillsboro.

Mrs. Lohrenz' daughter Mariana and her husband Henry D. Remple of Lawrence, Kan. were hosts at the birthday event Sunday. They were assisted by their daughter Lucy Jean McAllister of Marshall, Minn.

A SPECIAL FEATURE of the open house was a display of items from Mrs. Lohrenz' family possessions brought from the Ukraine at the time of the emigration to America, and some photographs and objects from her childhood and youth. Tied into these historical themes was an extensive exhibit of color photographs made from slides taken by the Remples in June 1971 when they visited former Mennonite villages of the Ukraine with Dr. Cornelius Krahn's tour group. Mrs. Lohrenz' birthplace, Klippenfeld was among those shown.

Mrs. Lohrenz' son Henry Herbert, was unable to come from his home in Seattle, Wash. but one of his three daughters, Mrs. Carol Cater, was present at Sunday's event. Carol's daughters Karen and Jeanne were with her. Other grandchildren are Robert Keith Remple of San Francisco; Cay Lohrenz Evans of Dallas, Texas, who has two daughters, Kristin and Kara Lynn; and Mary Beth Lohrenz Fox of Rumson, N. J., who has a daughter, Lisa.


Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 1975 Mar 6 p. 4

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