Evandberg Orphanage

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Coordinates29°44′27″N 98°06′34″W / 29.74081°N 98.10952°W / 29.74081; -98.10952 (Evandberg Orphanage)
Other name
  • ☆ Das Waisenhaus (The Orphanage)
  • ☆ New Wied
  • ☆ Western Texas Orphan Asylum
TypeIndigent Children Asylum
Established16 March 1848 (1848-03-16)
Evandberg Orphanage
Evandberg Orphanage ca. 1961
Address
1276 Ervendberg Street



New Braunfels
,
Comal County
,
78130

Coordinates29°44′27″N 98°06′34″W / 29.74081°N 98.10952°W / 29.74081; -98.10952 (Evandberg Orphanage)
Information
Other name
  • ☆ Das Waisenhaus (The Orphanage)
  • ☆ New Wied
  • ☆ Western Texas Orphan Asylum
TypeIndigent Children Asylum
Established16 March 1848 (1848-03-16)
Founder
  • ♦ Louis Cachand Ervendberg
  • ♦ Ludwig Bene
  • ♦ Hermann Spiess
AuthorityAdelsverein
Language
WebsiteWaisenhaus (Orphanage)

Evandberg Orphanage was established as a guardianship orphanage located in Comal County, Texas approximately 3.5 mi (5.63 km) north of New Braunfels, Texas. The indigent children home was created by a charter enacted into state law by the 2nd Texas legislature on March 16, 1848.[1] The Texas charter appointed Louis Cachand Ervendberg, Ludwig Bene, and Hermann Spiess being of German descent as founding directors of the displaced shelter for exiled children in the Central Texas region.[2][3][4]

The American frontier settlement was founded by the German Emigration Company often referred as the Adelsverein.[5] The self-reliant homestead endured disease outbreak hardships during the preparatory years of the German Emigration Company establishment on the Texas Guadalupe River.[6] Beginning in 1845, the German colony suffered an infectious disease epidemic inflicting cholera on the New Wied inhabitants.[7] By 1846, the New Braunfels Cemetery confirmed three hundred and forty-eight interments in the New Braunfels burial grounds situated divergent to Old San Antonio Road.[8]

Texas Historical Commission Site

The Texas Historical Commission endorsed the Western Texas Orphan Asylum as the first orphanage in the state of Texas. The German Texan Waisenhaus site received a Texas Historic Landmark medallion and plate in 1970.[9]

See also

References

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