Anne Elizabeth Cramer, courtesy of the author
Anne Elizabeth Cramer
Kaiser, my second great-grandmother, was born in a small village in Denmark
in 1849. In 1874, Anne brought
her family to the United States of America. They sailed on the Wyoming, a ship
built in 1870 in Newcastle, England. This three-week transatlantic voyage
could not have been easy for the mother of three young children. She brought her younger
brother and two elderly parents on this journey. They sailed to the port of New York and
traveled to Utah via the new transcontinental railroad.
Her husband, Carl Anton Kaiser, arrived at Castle Gardens, New York, the following
year in 1875.
The Wyoming
Carl became a citizen in 1882. He worked in the historic Baron Woolen
Mills in Brigham City. He acquired a passport in 1889. According to
church records, he returned to Europe, going to Bohemia in June of 1890 for his Mission.
He and another Latter Day Saint were arrested and imprisoned there after a
false report that they had been ready to perform a baptism. Finally, on October
7th, 1890, he was released and allowed to return to the United States.
Anne
continued her work as a midwife and furthered her studies, obtaining her
degree in obstetrics in April of 1893, three years before statehood. While Utah was still a territory, she received her license to practice midwifery from the Board of Medical Examiners in Salt Lake City.
She continued to practice for another thirty-eight
years, delivering family, friends, and children of the community. She
delivered some 2000 babies, many of them in Box Elder County. Her records
are held by the State of Utah as some of the first birth records in the
area. She delivered my grandmother and most of my great-aunts and
uncles.
She was a member of the Business and Professional Women's Club of
Brigham City. In 1934, she was made an honorary lifetime member of the club. My
grandmother told me Anne traveled in all weather, walking, bicycling, riding a
horse, driving a buggy or bobsleigh in the winter, and riding
the train to carry out her profession. This brave working woman reminds me she is the reason I am here. She died in Brigham
City in 1948 at the age of 98.
Great story. My great grandmother was also a midwife in Sevier County, from Denmark and immigrated to America in 1869, mother of 18 children. Are there records somewhere of midwife licences? We have nothing that says anything about school, certification.
ReplyDeleteThank you. I am not aware of a repository for licenses. Our family had Anne Elizabeth's. I read up on Utah's midwives in the late 1800s. The church was involved in starting training and licensing programs.
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