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PABST FAMILY

Charles E. Pabst (1850-1920)
Charles E. Pabst (1850-1920) was born in Schleswig-Holstein,
northern Germany, in December 1850. In 1866, he and Augustus von
Rosambeau (1849-1912) left their homeland to seek fame and fortune
in America. They had gone to Australia initially, but dissatisfied
sought economic opportunities in this country. Arriving in
Louisiana, the young Germans found work on a sugar plantation owned
by Leon Godchaux. Later they moved to Ocean Springs as employees of
Ambrose Maginnis (1820-1901), a wealthy New Orleans industrialist,
who hoped to raise peanuts at his Front Beach estate. Although the
peanut scheme failed, Pabst and von Rosambeau elected to stay in
Ocean Springs. von Rosambeau became a successful merchant settling
on Jackson and Calhoun Avenues where the family owned four houses,
which are extant. Pabst got involved in carpentry.(Ellison, 1991,
pp. 77-78)
“Pecan
Nurseries”
In
1881, Charles Pabst married a German lady, Elizabeth Ghem
(1851-1916). She had immigrated to the United States in 1851,
probably settling at New Orleans, which had a growing Teutonic
population at this time. The newly wed Pabsts eager to start a life
at Ocean Springs bought Lots 2, 3, and 4 of Block 36 (Culmseig Map
of 1854) from Philadelphian, E.W. Clark, in February 1882, for $80.(JXCO,
Ms. Land Deed Bk. 8, pp. 580-581)
Here, at present day 1304 Calhoun Avenue, Charles E.
Pabst built “Pecan Nurseries”, a one story, wood-frame cottage with
a side gable roof. The facade features a four bay, full width
undercut gallery supported by five square posts. Two transomed
entrances complete the symmetrical facade. The Pabst cottage was
probably completed in 1882. It was built with eight-inch wide floor
joists and double flooring.
C.E. Pabst added to his Calhoun Avenue acreage in January
1887, when he purchased Lot 5 and a part of Lot 6 from Dr. Milton
Clay Vaughan (1832-1903) for $8. Vaughan was Kentucky born and
resided on Goss Avenue (now General Pershing). He served Ocean
Springs as its dentist and Mayor (1895-1896). Two daughters, Susie
Willis Vaughan (1869-1962) and Fannie Thornton Vaughan (1873-1965),
never married, and were involved in public education in Jackson
County for many decades.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 36, p. 576)
After the death of Charles E. Pabst on June 3, 1920, his
heirs sold "Pecan Nurseries", to George E. Arndt (1857-1945) in June
1921, for
$3000. Mr. Arndt was a well-known realtor and insurance agent at
Ocean Springs. He owned the famous Paragon Saloon on Washington
Avenue.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 50, pp. 454-455)
In
August 1944, Charles E. Fink (1898-1956) and spouse Cecelia Buechler
Fink (1909-1999) acquired the old Pabst property on Calhoun. A
concrete block addition was added to the rear of the house in 1947
following the September Storm. As of October 1993, the house had
retained it’s original electric wiring which was of pre-WW I
vintage.
Recently, the Pabst-Fink cottage was occupied by the daughter and
son-in-law of P. Dallas Comeaux and Cecelia Fink Comeaux (1932-2001)
while her home to the west was being refurbished. In 1954, P.
Dallas Comeaux acquired a lot on Calhoun just west of the Pabst-Fink
cottage and erected a brick home at 1216 Calhoun.(JXCO, Ms. Land
Deed Bk. 87, p. 409 and Bk. 181, p. 141)
Horticulture and pecan culture
Initially Charles E. Pabst made his livelihood as a carpenter
and laborer. It is believed that he helped build the First
Presbyterian Church on Ocean Avenue in 1886, where he played the
organ. In 1883, he established
“Charles E. Pabst & Sons”, a nursery business situated on Calhoun
Avenue. Mr.
Pabst
became interested in pecans about 1892. After years of
experimentation, he became the first man to make a successful graft
on a pecan tree.
The earliest attempt to grow pecans at Ocean Springs was made
by another German immigrant, Ferdinand W. Illing (1838-1884).
Illing planted trees on his Washington Avenue and Porter property,
but lost interest. He built the Illing House, a successful hotel
business in 1870. Colonel W.R. Stuart (1820-1894), a retired sugar
and cotton broker from New Orleans also contributed to the early
development of pecans in the area.
Circa 1895, Charles E. Pabst advertised in the Ocean
Springs Directory as follows:
Chas. E. Pabst
Propagator of the celebrated Russell & Pabst Pecans and other
varieties. The choicest variety of seedless Japanese persimmon the
largest in the market.
Ocean
Springs Pecan Nursery
Charles E. Pabst is credited with establishing the first pecan
nursery in Mississippi, and is recognized as the father of the paper
shell pecan industry. In 1896, Pabst started the Ocean Springs
Pecan Nursery with his sons in the W/2 of the SW/4 of Section 26,
T7S-R8W. This historic plantation was bounded on the north by the
L&N Railroad, on the east by Hanshaw Road, on the south by Davis
Bayou, and was entered from Pabst Road on the west.
On
twenty acres here, he planted approximately 400,000 pecan trees.
This eighty-acre tract of land was purchased by Elizabeth Smith
Pabst in August 1879, from Stephen Starks. C.E. Pabst added another
forty acres to the nursery in 1908, when he bought the NE/4 of the
SW/4 of Section 26, T7S-R8W from H.F. Russell (1858-1940).(JXCO, Ms.
Land Deed Bk. 8, pp. 583-584 and Dabney, 1915, p. 22)
In March 1916, Charles E. Pabst advertised his business
in The Ocean Springs News, as follows.
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ESTABLISHED 1883
Root Grafted Pecan Trees
Only The Best
Send for Price List
Charles E. Pabst & Sons
Ocean Springs, Mississippi
The Ocean Springs News, March 9, 1916, p. 2
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In
November 1923, after C.E. Pabst had expired, his heirs sold the
Ocean Springs Pecan Nursery to P.A. Lorenz of Chicago. Immediately,
Mr. Lorenz acquired new machinery and hired George C. Pabst to
manage the former Pabst operation. George C. Pabst had been
managing the large plantation since his father’s demise in 1920.(The
Jackson County Times, November 24, 1923, p. 1)
In November 1925, George C. Pabst of the Ocean
Springs Nursery and Pecan Farm won the Blue Ribbon for the best
display of pecans at the Jackson County Fair at Pascagoula.(The
Jackson County Times, November 21, 1925, p. 1)
Many
of C.E. Pabst's earlier agricultural experiments and grafts were
probably made at his Calhoun Avenue location. There are still some
large, old, grafted pecan trees on the property. In 1881, the
Pabsts had their first child, George Carl Pabst (1881-1949). They
were also blessed with more two sons, Ernest G. Pabst (1884-1927)
and William F. Pabst (1886-1940).
Charles E. Pabst was active in the social and political activity at
Ocean Springs. He served as Alderman Ward 3 (1895-1896), and was
president of the Farmers and Merchants
Bank in 1913.
George
C. Pabst
George
Carl Pabst (1881-1949) was a nurseryman like his father. He married
an Indiana born lady, Mary E. Vandergrift (1886-1947). She was the
daughter of Frank M. Vandergrift (1856-1932) and Anna Snyder
Vandergrift (1859-1946). They had two children Berniece Pabst
Mitchel Esche (b. 1913) and Verne Cecil Pabst (b. 1924). Mr. Pabst
played in the Ocean Springs Brass Band and also served the city as
Alderman from Ward 4 from 1917-1918. He was actively involved in
his father’s pecan nursery and later managed the Ocean Springs Pecan
Nursery for P.A. Lorenz of Chicago and William Siebert of LaGrange,
Illinois. During the Depression, Mr. Pabst worked on a construction
crew for the L&N Railroad. In later life, he worked as a safety
engineer at Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula.(Berniece P. Esche,
March 9, 2004)
Berniece Pabst was born on the old Pabst place on Calhoun Avenue.
She married Preston A. Mitchel (1887-1970) and William R. Esche
(1908-2000). Berniece lives in the G.C. Pabst family home at
present day 614 Halstead Road. It was built by her father in 1930.
Verne C. Pabst married Bonnie Mae Moore (b. 1924) who he met in New
Orleans. They have two sons, George Clifford Pabst and Carl Edward
Pabst. Verne is retired from Fairbanks-Morse and resides in
Overland Park, Kansas. (Berniece P. Esche, March 9, 2004)
Ernest
G. Pabst
Ernest
Ghem Pabst (1884-1927) managed an ice factory at Ocean Springs. In
July 1916, he married a widow, Escambia McClure Baker (1880-1947).
She had married Orion A. Baker (1869-1908) in 1896. The Baker
children were: Frank E. Baker (1897-1958), Richard M. Baker
(1900-1961), Orion S. Baker (1898-1951), Eleanor Mae Baker Davis
(1903-1947), and Morris McClure "Babe" Baker (1907-1994). Ernest
Pabst died in an accident at the ice factory on Jackson Avenue were
he was electrocuted on July 25, 1927. He was serving as Alderman
from Ward 3 at the time.
Eleanor Baker Pabst also died tragically on July 30, 1947 in a fiery
automobile accident on Highway 90 in Biloxi. Her daughter, Eleanor
M. Baker Davis (1903-1947), the spouse of S. Chester Davis
(1900-1973), and a granddaughter, Martha Anne Baker (1937-1947), the
daughter of Morris McClure Baker and Eleanor Yousko Baker
(1907-1994), were also killed.(The
Daily Herald, July 31, 1947, p. 1)
William F. Pabst
William Frederick Pabst (1886-1940) became a linotype operator.
Before 1922, he left Ocean Springs for New Orleans. In 1928, Pabst
was employed with The Cordelle Dispatch at Cordelle,
Georgia. He later relocated to Norfolk, Virginia. W.F. Pabst
married Bertie Mae Galle (1909-1944), the daughter of Frank E. Galle
(1877-1934) and Jessie Bird Galle (1880-1942). They had no
children. Mr. Pabst served in the European theater during WWI. He
returned to Ocean Springs and died at the VA Hospital in Gulfport.
Mrs. Pabst was employed with a large jewelry firm at Norfolk, and
returned there after her husband's demise.
In early March 1916, Katherine Ghem Pabst (1851-1916) expired
at her Calhoun Avenue home. The funeral ceremonies were held in the
pecan orchard prior to internment in the family plot in the
Evergreen Cemetery on Old Fort Bayou.(The Ocean Springs News,
March 9, 1916, p. 2)
During
WWI, relatives of Charles Pabst with the family name Beck, who
resided at Hanover, Germany, wrote him asking for assistance as they
were devastated by the turmoil. Shortly before his demise, Charles
E. Pabst married Hoosier, Maude R. Wright, (b. 1887), at Biloxi on
March 26, 1919. He expired on June 3, 1920. Pabst’s corporal
remains were also interred in the Evergreen Cemetery.
REFERENCES:
Books
Thomas
Ewing Dabney, Ocean Springs: The Land Where Dreams Come True,
(reprinted by 1699 Historical Committee: Ocean Springs-1974), pp.
22-23.
Regina
Hines Ellison, Ocean Springs, 1892, (2nd Edition),
(Lewis Printing Services: Pascagoula-1991), p. 77, 81.
C.E.
Schmidt, Ocean Springs French Beachhead, (Lewis
Printing Services: Pascagoula-1972), p. 50, p. 127, p. 133, and p.
135.
The
History of Jackson County, Mississippi,
"Pecans", (Jackson County Genealogical Society: Pascagoula-1989),
pp. 19-20.
Journals
The
Daily Herald,
"Pabst-Wright Nuptials", March 27, 1919, p. 4.
The
Daily Herald,
"C.E. Pabst, Expert Pecan Culture, Dies", June 7, 1920, p. 6.
The
Daily Herald,
"Ernest Pabst Obit", July 27, 1927, p. 2.
The
Daily Herald,
"Man Killed At Ocean Springs", September 22, 1934, p. 1.
The
Daily Herald,
"Three
Burned To Death in 3-Way Crash At Biloxi", July 31, 1947, p. 1.
The
Daily Herald, “Know Your Coast”, ‘The Paper Shell Pecan
Originated in Ocean Springs’, 1957.
The
Jackson County Times, “Another Good Citizen Passes Away
Thursday”, June 5, 1920.
The
Jackson County Times, “Pabst Pecan Farm Sold To Chicago Man”,
November 24, 1923.
The
Jackson County Times, “Local and Personal”, November 21,
1925.
The
Jackson County Times, “Pabst Pecan Farm Has New Owner”,
March 17, 1928.
The
Jackson County Times, “Local and Personal”, September 22,
1928.
The
Jackson County Times, "Willie F. Pabst", November 2,
1940, p. 2.
The
Jackson County Times, “Bertie Mae Pabst”, February 26,
1944, p. 1.
The
Jackson County Times, “Mrs. Mary E. Pabst Succumbs Tuesday
Night”, February 4, 1947.
The
Ocean Springs News, “Local News”, August 6, 1910.
The
Ocean Springs News,
“Charles E. Pabst & Sons”-(advertisement),
November 4, 1915.
The
Ocean Springs News,
“Mrs.
C.E. Pabst”,
March 9, 1916.
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