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PFEFFERLE FAMILY
Rudolph Pfefferle (1829-1894) was born in Bavaria. He made his
livelihood at Ocean Springs as a house carpenter. Mr. Pfefferle was
married to Josephine Pfefferle (1837-1904), also a Bavarian
immigrant. She arrived in America in 1840. In 1900, Josephine
Pfefferle was living on the corner of Ames and Bienville Street,
which is known today as Bienville Boulevard. She acquired this
property from F.M. Weed in April 1897.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 23,
p. 11)
After Josephine Pfefferle passed intestate on January 10, 1904,
her niece, Marguerite Ruffra Makofsky Bader (1835-1906), filed
litigation in the Chancery Court of Jackson County, Mississippi to
be recognized as Mrs. Pfefferle’s sole heir at law. Mrs. Bader was
born in Germany and the mother of six children. In 1900, she was
residing at New Orleans with Charles Makofsky (1866-1900+), a son.
The court awarded Marguerite R. M. Bader the Pfefferle house in
Ocean Springs valued at $500.(JXCO, Ms. Chancery Court Cause No.
1314-September 1904)
After Mrs. Bader passed at New Orleans in 1906, her Ocean Springs
property was inherited by her five living children: Herman Makofsky
(1864-1907), Charles M. Makofsky, Edward Makofsky, Otto Bader, and
Annie Lecke. Herman Mafosky who had lived six years with Mrs.
Josephine Pfefferle, his grand aunt, acquired the Pfefferle home
from his siblings in March 1907.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 32, pp.
403-404)
Prior to Mrs. Bader’s and Herman Makofsky’s demise in 1906 and 1907
respectively, Florence Brabant, a neighbor of Mrs. Pfefferle in
Ocean Springs, filed a claim against the estate of Mrs. Josephine
Pfefferle. Mrs. Brabant alleged that she had had “nursed her,
bought medicine, fed her, and cared for” Mrs. Pfefferle from March
1903 until her death in January 1904. In fact, Mrs. Pfefferle had
been carried to the Brabant home where she was nurtured and
medicated until her death. The Brabant family also buried Josephine
Pfefferle and they wanted to be reimbursed for their expenses
accumulated during her care and for the funeral services provided
for Mrs. Pfefferle. Herman Makofsky response to these allegations
in his deposition to the court was that Josephine Pfefferle paid the
Brabant family for their services from money she had received from
the sale of land to E.M. Westbrook. George W. Davis of the Davis
Brothers Store acted as Mrs. Pfefferle’s banker as Ocean Springs did
not have a bank at this time.(JXCO, Ms. Chancery Court Cause No.
1263)
Isaac J. Murdock
Closure to the Josephine Pfefferle lot came in May 1911, when I.P.
Delmas, court commissioner, sold the property to Isaac J. Murdock
for $410, after forced heirship litigation, post-mortem of Herman
Makofsky (1864-1907). The money was given to Selena Claverie
Makofsky (1874-1911+), the widow of Herman Makofsky, for her
children’s support. The Makofsky children were: Ernestine M. Carey
(b. 1890) married Walter T. Carey; Irene M. Falk (b. 1892) married
J.C. Falk; Walter Makofsky (b. 1894), and Herman Makofsky
(1896-1948).(JXCO, Ms. Chancery Court Cause No. 1804)
Isaac J. Murdock
Isaac J. Murdock lived at 6337 Madison Avenue in
Chicago. In 1881, he found employment with the South Park police.
I.J. Murdock joined the Chicago Police Department in 1887 and was
assigned to the Woodlawn Station in 1906. Captain Murdock retired
from the Chicago Police Department in December 1910. He and his
wife’s picture were published in The Chicago Examiner to
commemorate the occasion. In regards his retirement, Isaac J.
Murdock related the following: “I may not be as
well off as some policemen who have left the force, but I am pretty
well fixed, and all that I have I owe to my wife’s economy.”(The
Ocean Springs News, December 10, 1911, p. 1)
After acquiring the Pfefferle home in May 1911, the Murdocks shipped
their furniture and personal items to Ocean Springs from Chicago.
By late September 1911, they were making significant improvements to
the old Pefferle home north of the L&N Railroad.(The Ocean
Springs News, September 23, 1911, p. 5 and September 30, 1911, p. 5)
REFERENCES:
Chancery Court Causes
Jackson
County, Mississippi Chancery Court Cause No. 1263, “Estate of
Josephine Pfefferle”,.
Jackson
County, Mississippi Chancery Court Cause No. 1314, “Mrs. M.
Bader v. Heirs at Law of Josephine Pfefferle”,
September 1904.
Jackson
County, Mississippi Chancery Court Cause No. 1804, “Celena
(sic) Claverie Makofsky v. Mrs. Ernestine Carey et al”-
.
Journals
The Ocean Springs News,
“Murdock Retires From Police
Force”, December 10,
1910.
The
Ocean Springs News, “Local News”, September 23, 1911.
The
Ocean Springs News, “Local News”, September 30, 1911.
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