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Johannas Romberg LbNA #68181

Owner:Baby Bear
Plant date:Mar 6, 2015
Location: Black Jack Cemetery
City:O'Quinn
County:Fayette
State:Texas
Boxes:1
Found by: topcrop
Last found:Jan 31, 2016
Status:FFFFFaa
Last edited:Mar 6, 2015
Difficulty: Easy
Distance to Letterbox: 50 yards

Here is the history of Johannes Christlieb Nathanael Romberg from the Texas Online Handbook:
ROMBERG, JOHANNES CHRISTLIEB NATHANAEL (1808–1891). Johannes Romberg, poet, son of Bernhard Friedrich Christlieb and Conradine Sophie Friederike (Hast) Romberg, was born on November 10, 1808, at Alt-Buckow in the grand duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. He was expected to follow his pastor father in a scholarly occupation, but measles and an eye infection weakened his eyes. He wanted to become a carpenter, but this was not an occupation approved of for someone of his social class, and he was apprenticed to a merchant, Johannes Dietrich Bauch, in the city of Schwerin. After ten years he became established as a merchant in Boizenburg. On October 8, 1833, he married Fredericke Amalie Elise Bauch, to whom he had been engaged ten years. They became the parents of nine children, one of whom died at childbirth and another of whom died on the trip to America. One of the children was born the day before the ship landed at Galveston; the last child was born in Texas. In 1847 the Romberg family, practically impoverished, arrived in Galveston. They settled first on the San Bernard River and later on Black Jack Creek in Fayette County, where Romberg became a leader in his community. About 1857 he founded the Prairieblume, a literary club that was one of the first of its kind in Texas and included German settlers from the Black Jack Springs and La Grange areas, who read and discussed their stories, articles and poems in the manner of the Latin Settlements of Texas. Romberg is generally conceded to be the most outstanding German-Texan poet and is among the notable German-American poets. Many of his poems, such as "On the Colorado River," "Winter in Texas," and "The Oaks," are of German pioneer and Texas inspiration. A collection of his poems, edited by Alfred Wagner, was published posthumously in Dresden and Leipzig in 1900. Romberg died on February 5, 1891, in the Black Jack Springs community and was buried beside his wife in the little country cemetery of Trinity Lutheran Church (known as the Black Jack Lutheran Church) located off the highway from La Grange to Flatonia.

Directions:
From La Grange, go Northwest on FM 608 to O'Quinn. Look for turn on right on Black Jack Ln, and turn there. Go down to cemetery and park by the historical marker.

To the Letterbox:
Enter the gate near historical marker. Go left along the fend until you reach a low hedge going to the right. Follow that to a large Crepe Myrtle tree about 20 yards away from fence. Box is in the middle of this tree.

** To see Romberg's grave, go up middle of cemetery about 20 yards and on the left.