Introduction
Hi, my name is Todd Howard Saalman and this website is dedicated to the genealogical
history of all those surnamed 'Saalman' and its variants. The Old World Germans
from whom I descend spelled their surname 'Saalmann', and the ancestor of mine who immigrated
to the United States and made me and this website possible, was named Christian
Saalmann. Here is his story, and the story of other Saalmans whom I know about. If you
are a Saalman, you can add your story, too. Just contact me and share it.
Anhalt Duchy, Saxony, North Germany
My ancestor, Reinhart Gottfried Christian Saalmann, was born 25 January 1829, in
the village of
Hoym, located in a region called Saxony
in eastern Germany. The political landscape was in turmoil, with various German
and foreign states vying for power over the region. In 1849, when Christian was
20 years old, Prussian troops occupied Saxony, suppressing popular uprisings against
the Prussian King's desire to annex Saxony and several other small German states.
Christian was of an age to be conscripted into the Prussian army.
Family tradition says that to escape these dangerous and turbulent currents, Christian
emigrated to the United States, settling finally in
Branchville, Indiana
to live with his growing family as farmer and father. Ironically, the
peril he escaped in Europe soon swept over him in the New World. As a Union
soldier in the American Civil War, he was captured and imprisoned in the infamous
Andersonville prison...
more
Branchville to Bataan
Christian Saalman's great-grandson, Otis Saalman, was also a farmer, as well as
teacher and a career Army man during WWII. He advanced rapidly in the ranks
and in 1941 was a captain on General MacArthur's staff in Manila, the Philippines,
when the Japanese army invaded. After valiant but doomed resistance, Otis
was taken prisoner.
He and hundreds of other prisoners were forced to march 160 kilometers across the
Bataan peninsula to distant prison camps without food and water, through tortuous,
tropical jungles and oppressive heat. 10,000 prisoners died on this so-called
"Bataan Death March". But Otis and others escaped...
more
the Esareys
Twenty years after her husband Christian's death and not long after her daughter,
Anna Amenda married a man from Branchville named Hiram Marcus Esarey, Dorothea Saalman
also married Hiram Marcus Esarey, but this one was the former's uncle.
In fact, the Esareys and Saalmans have a number of connections from the past and
in the present. An Esarey descendent, Duane Esarey, maintains an excellent Esarey
family website that adds new dimensions to the Indiana Saalman records, providing
photographs of
Dorothea Saalman
and related genealogy information from the
Esarey family
archives.