This is the first of three pages of the Pallanza Manifest which is the steamer the Batkes sailed on from Bremen, Germany to Quebec, Canada, July 14 - July 28, 1912. The Pallanza left Hamburg, Germany on July 13, stopping at Bremen on July 14 where the Batkes embarked on the ship. The last stop of the Pallanza in Europe was at Rotterdam, The Netherlands, on July 15 before sailing across the ocean and arriving 13 days later in Quebec, Canada. Including the Batkes, there were 378 adults and 104 children who made the trip across the ocean. In Quebec, steerage medical inspection occurred at 9:00 a.m. and was completed at 11:00 a.m on July 28. Only three individuals were detained. The manifest notes that there was a "special" Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) train which left at Noon. Supposedly, the Batkes were on that train.
Information includes stories, images and comments about the Henry Batke/Katherine Reck family from Russia. Also included in this Blog are their close neighbors, Jacob Link/Maria Philips, also from Russia. These two families homesteaded in Saskatchewan then traveled to Alabama and eventually to St. Joseph, Michigan together. Please share your stories and memories about these two amazing immigrant families.
About Henry Batke and Katherine Reck
Heinrich Batke, the son of Martin Batke (c1848-b1912) and Anna Lock (1848-1939) was born in Chortitza, Russia on September 7, 1877. Also in Russia, Catharina Reck was born on October 14, 1890. Her parents were John Reck and Renata Shirk. Henry and Katherine married in Russia on September 22, 1910. On July 13, 1912, Henry, his wife and seven month old daughter, Katherine, sailed from the Port of Bremen, Germany on the ship Pallanza. They traveled to Quebec City, Canada arriving on July 28, 1912. They immediately left on a special Canadian Pacific Railroad train to Saskatchewan, Canada. The Batkes homesteaded in Lydiard, Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan between 1913 and 1918. On October 3, 1917 Henry Batke became a citizen of Canada. Due to England's sovereignty over Canada, he became a British citizen. Finding farming in Canada difficult, on December 7, 1921 the Batke family, now also including Mary, William and Selma, left for Yellow Pine, Alabama. After the birth of Anna and much hardship in Alabama, the family moved to St. Joseph, Michigan where children Henry, Ruth and Edwin were born. Henry, a furniture maker in Russia, became a machine operator at the 1900 Corporation, a fore-runner of Whirlpool, in St. Joseph. After Henry's death on April 7, 1949, Katherine Reck Batke married Gustav Schmeichel in 1959. Katherine Reck Batke Schmeichel died at the Claremont Nursing Home in Benton, Michigan on October 28, 1979.
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