Ohio History Journal

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DOWN THE RHINE TO THE OHIO

DOWN THE RHINE TO THE OHIO

The Travel Diary of Christoph Jacob Munk

April 21-August 17, 1832

by AUGUST C. MAHR

Professor of German, Ohio State University

 

The diary* published in the following pages in the original

German, with an English translation, merits attention for two prin-

cipal reasons: (1) it gives a complete, almost day-by-day account

of its writer's emigration with his family from Germany to Ohio;

and (2) it covers their entire journey, that is, not only the ocean

voyage and their trek by wagon to their new home in this country,

but also their lengthy trip by river barge on German inland water-

ways to their port of embarkation, Amsterdam, Holland.

This travel record is contained in a notebook, size 41/4 x 63/4

inches, and 5/8 of an inch thick. Obviously it had not been bought

for the purpose, but seems to have served previously as the order

book of a bookseller. Many of its pages are headed by names

entered in ink of men in various German cities, some of them names

of book dealers' firms (for instance, Mohr and also Jaeger, in

Frankfurt am Main), and underneath titles of books and pamphlets

of a diversified nature. The first pages, about ten, were torn or

cut out; on the present first page somebody failed three times, and

succeeded the fourth time, in writing in ink the word Baltimore

in its correct spelling. It is clearly the same hand that wrote on

top of the page "Herr Brede in Offenbach"-apparently that of

 

* The editor is greatly indebted to Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Munk, 1322 Oak Street,

Columbus, Ohio, for their permission to publish in these pages the original notebook

and diary left by their ancestor Christoph Jacob Munk. This manuscript volume has

been donated to the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society by Mr. and

Mrs. Munk.

Thanks are due also to Mr. J. E. Heacock, 1493 Larchmont Avenue, Lakewood,

Ohio, grandson of Christoph Jacob Munk, who furnished the genealogical material

concerning the first two generations of his grandfather's family in this country; to

Professors John W. Price (Zoology), Edgar N. Transeau (Botany), Guy H. Smith

(Geography), and Eugene Van Cleef (Geography), all of the Ohio State University,

who gave assistance in their special fields; and to J. Richard Lawwill, landscape

architect of the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, who drew the maps

that illustrate this article.

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