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KUPPERSMITH
F. (probably Ferdinand) Kuppersmith (1859-1920), an Alabama native,
came to Ocean Springs from Mobile, Alabama. In September 1916, he
leased the Eagle Point Oyster Company building on Front Beach. It
had been operated by Anton P. “Tony” Kotzum (1871-1916), the son of
Joseph Kotzum (1842-1915).(The Jackson County Times, September 23,
1916)
In May 1920, Mr. Kuppersmith advertised his business as
follows:
Retail Fish, Oysters, and Crabs
Located on the Beach Jackson
Avenue.
Always Open F. Kuppersmith.
(The Jackson County Times, May 22,
1920,p. 5)
It appears from Federal Census data that F. Kuppersmith was the son of
Anthony Koppersmith (1831-1880+), a Prussian engineer, who settled
at
Mobile. F. Kuppersmith died February 19, 1920, at Ocean Springs.
His remains were sent to Mobile for internment. Mr. Kuppersmith was
respected in the Mobile business community where he had a wholesale
seafood enterprise vending oysters, fish, and produce.(The Jackson
County Times, February 21, 1920, p. 5)
William Kuppersmith (1875-pre 1930), the son of F. Kuppersmith,
continued the seafood business at Ocean Springs, for a few years
after the death of his father. He was born at Mobile and circa
1901 married Lena Kuppersmith (1880-1930), a native of Alabama.
They had four children: William Kuppersmith (1901-1980), Gladys K.
Dick (1904-1990), Godfrey Kuppersmith (1910-1980), and Marie
Kuppersmith (1911-1930+).(1930 Mobile Co., Alabama Federal Census
R41, 4B, ED 46)
George H. Dick
In January 1926, Gladys Kuppersmith (1904-1990) married Herman
George Dick (1896-1941) of Ocean Springs, the son of Benedict Dick
(1869-1904) and Louise Zeolide Seymour (1875-1903). They had three
children. The
Dick family moved to Ohio and Illinois, where he worked for the
Western Union. G.H. Dick was killed in a railroad accident at Witt,
Illinois on
September 27, 1941. He was buried in Mobile, Alabama. (The Daily
Herald, January 13, 1926, p. 3 and The Jackson County Times, October
11,1941, p. 1)
The William Kuppersmith family moved back to Mobile in
the mid-1920s, and George Davis Maxwell (1881-1951) took over their
Jackson Avenue business site.
REFERENCES:
The Daily Herald, "Dick-Kuppersmith", January 13, 1926.
The Jackson County Times, “Local News Items”, September 23, 1916.
The Jackson County Times, “Death of F. Kuppersmith”, February 21,
1920.
The Jackson County Times, "Fast Train Killed Herman George Dick",
October 11, 1941, p. 1.
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