Off To Work
My maternal great grandfather, John Koetzle Jr. was a candy maker. In the census records he is specifically listed as a confectioner. His father, Johann Koetzle Sr. was a baker, as were others in the family. John Jr. was born in 1857 in Philadelphia, PA, the first born child to Johannn Koetzle and his wife Matilda Schuler. His surname is pronounced Kett-zill. They both immigrated from Studdgart Wurttemberg Germany, John in 1856 (still working on Matilda’s timeframe).
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John Koetzle Jr., my mom's grandfather was a confectioner |
John Jr. and his wife Elizabeth Reilly (Lizzie) were my mom’s maternal grandparents. She knew them well, and spent lots of time at their home in Philadelphia, as well as their vacations in Brigantine, NJ in the summer. Yes, he always had a suit on, even at the shore!
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Dot (my mom) and her grandpa John Koetzle Jr. around 1927 at the beach |
Because Mom spent so much time with them, she knew his skills as a candy maker, and she told me that he did most, if not all, of his baking etc in the basement of their home. At least that’s how she remembered it. And I think in later years he did work from home. But in the 1910 census (He was 53 years old that year) he stated he was a candy maker and worked in a factory.
Mom was born in 1918, and two years later her grandfather John Jr. was listed in the 1920 census as a candy maker, working on ”his own account.” So I think as he got older, he was working from home
Earlier on in his confectioner’s career I was able to find one item in the 1879 Philadelphia City Directory that showed he and another person had their own business selling candy. The business name was “Edwin W. Saunders & John Koetzle Jr., Confectioners” with an address of 812 S. 2d, in Philadelphia.
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1879 Philadelphia City Directory |
Mom remembers all of his candies were so good, particularly his strawberry wafers. She also remembers his English language skills reverted to German order of parts of speech. He would mix up his nouns and verbs, typical of “Pennsylvania Deutsch”. Here is an example she remembers: “throw you Pappy down the stairs my pants.” (I think that’s how she said it).
Together John Jr. and his wife Lizzie had 8 children, 6 of which lived to adulthood. I never got to meet John and Lizzie, but I did know and adore my grandmother Florence (my mom’s mom), and her 5 siblings. John Jr. passed away October 1936 at the age of 79!.
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The tea cart that my great grandfather used to display is confections |
I do wish that one or two of his recipes had made it down to us, but they did not. However, we do have one fantastic piece of furniture, a tea cart, that he used to display all of his homemade confections made in his Philadelphia home. My brother Bob and his wife Donna are the proud keepers and custodians of this piece of history and heirloom. It is a treasure to all of us!
Excellent! My great grandparents were also confectioners! Somehow none of their recipes made it down to us. I just can't wrap my head around that.
ReplyDeleteThank you Kira. And you know what’s really strange is I never really thought about it that much until I wrote this blog post. I’m sure my mom would’ve passed them down to me if she had had them
DeleteIf you had gotten a recipe, it likely would have been like my Nana’s preserve recipes—a list of ingredients with no measurements!
DeleteLoved reading this!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much!
DeleteVeryy interesting. I enjoyed reading this.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Judy
DeleteOne branch of my tree were also confectioners and my grandmother used to work at a bakery. She made the wedding cake for my father's cousin's parents (the son of my grandfather's brother). I have a photo of her with her sisters and was told that when she worked at the bakery she was the youngest but she used to run the place.
ReplyDeleteThanks Stephen for your comments, and it’s interesting. How many people had that type of profession many years ago
DeleteFun story about a unique job. I also like the story about how he mixed up his nouns and verbs. It really humanized him. Those are the stories that make our ancestors come alive!
ReplyDeleteHey, thx Kate. I agree. I’m so glad my mom told me that tidbit about him and I actually thought to write it down when she told me.
DeleteThanks again
I think small batch candy making is having a moment. Too bad you have none of his recipes. It's possible they were never written out. I watch a You Tube channel of a small 'mom and pop' candy company based in Syracuse, NY. They use a lot of old-timey equipment, and new as well, it's fun to watch the process of making the hard ribbon candy, and soft creams. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I’m gonna find that YouTube channel. It sounds interesting.
DeleteI have no idea why the recipes weren’t written down. I suspect you are right I don’t think they ever probably were.