In the war of 1805 Bavarians fought along side the French against the Austrians. Within four years Bavarian troops were once again fighting the Austrians along side the French and through various treaties the lands of the region routinely changed hands. By 1813 Bavaria had thrown alliance ot the allied forces against Napoleon who met his ultimate defeat at Waterloo in 1815. Following Napoleon's defeat tensions remained high with Austria over disputed territories with the 1819 Treaty of Frankfurt finally resolving most formal disputes.
The crest to the right is the official coat of arms of Sailauf. In this crest the water represnts the Main River which flows nearby, the wheel represents the electorate of Mainz and is very commonly displayed on many crests of the region, and the acorn and leaf represent the dense forests of the Spessart mountains. A small town to this day, Sailauf covers an area of roughly 5 square miles and todays has a population of about 4,000 inhabitants. The Sailauf home page which is automatically translated at this link, though not all translations read well, contains additional information and is an important link to our family heritage. One of my goals is to determine what information is avaialble in the churches and historical records of this city.
Martin Voelker and Bernadina Catharina Brockhuis

As a young man Martin Völker was granted deferral from military service and was granted release in 1843, linked here is a copy of Martin's military release papers. Within this document is a description of Martin's physical appearance which describes his as being 5'7" tall with a stubby build with brown hair, blue eyes, a broad chin, flat nose, and round forehead. The signature above was taken from this document. In the spring of 1849 when he was 29 years old Martin left the familiar surroundings of his hometown and his family as he began traveling northwest towards the Netherlands and the sea port of Rotterdam. Once there he boarded the 260-ton ship General Harrison where along with 84 others he began a voyage across the Atlantic to the port of New York to begin a new life in a new land.
Arriving in New York City on June 30, 1848 Martin then made his way inland towards the new western frontier and the booming city of Cincinnati, Ohio which had a burgeoning population of German immigrants. Around this time Martin changed the spelling of his name from Völker to Voelker which was the accepted translation of the German alphabet. On October 9th, 1854 Martin was granted citizenship to the US in the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas and began working as a carriage painter.
It was in Cincinnati that Martin met his future wife, Bernadina Catharine Brockhaus, herself a German immigrant who was living in Cincinnati with her brother XXXX, who was a cigar maker by trade. Martin and Catherine settled in an area of Cincinnati known as Over the Rhine for the large concentration of German immigrants. In 1860 Martin and Catherine were renting a house in the 600 block of Vine St and had Catherine’s brother living with them as a boarder.
In 18xx Catherine gave birth to the first of two sons, Adam Voelker who was followed by his brother Henry in 18yy.