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St. Louis Newspapers

Westliche Post

Westliche Post

The Westliche Post was a German-language newspaper published in St. Louis from 1857 to 1938. Death notices are in German and printed in Fraktur, a Gothic typeface. Anzeiger des Westens merged into the Westliche Post in 1898. 

 

Digitization by Newspapers.com

History & Genealogy supplied microfilms for the digitization of the Westliche Post by Newspapers.com.  Newspapers.com divided the Westliche Post into the following collections:

  • Westliche Post
  • Westliche Post Daily Country Edition
  • Westliche Blätter (Sunday edition)
  • Mississippi Blätter (Sunday edition)

Westliche Post obituary index

History & Genealogy produced an index of obituaries found in the Westliche Post: The index covers issues for 1875–1895 with the following gaps:

Jan.–June, 1879; July–Dec., 1881; Jan.–June, 1882; July–Dec., 1885; July–Dec., 1886;  April–May, 1890, July–Sept. 1895.

Dates in the index are the dates on which notices were published. Names followed by an asterisk (*) were published in the newspaper as probable misspellings. In such cases, a reference to the entry with the probable correct spelling is included.

The index is an ongoing project; further years will be added as work progresses. 

See "Additional resources for German death notices" for a guide to the Fraktur typeface, a word list with English equivalents and other helpful information.

Photocopies of indexed articles may be requested by email from the History and Genealogy Department. Limit of three searches per request. Please review the library's lookup policy.

Indexes by Name

1875-1895, indexed cumulatively by last name

Indexes by Date

Tips for searching

Obituaries usually appeared on the first page of the daily edition newspaper in early years, except on Sundays, when notices were placed on an inside page. In later years, obituaries began appearing consistently inside the newspaper, usually two or three pages in. Obituaries are easy to spot. They appear below the heading “Todes-Anzeigen” (Death Notices) and a bold black line precedes and follows each one. Besides death notices, some indexed references are to “Nachruf,” memorials that appeared on the anniversary of a death.

A typical death notice lists

  • Name of the deceased
  • Maiden name if a married or widowed woman
  • Age
  • Address
  • Family members, with relationship to the deceased

Other considerations when searching the index

  • Women are listed both by married name and maiden name, if known.
  • If no age was listed in the death notice, but an age was listed in the St. Louis Death Register, the age was placed in brackets, for example: [38 yr].
  • If the surname includes an umlauted vowel (ä, ö, ü), it is listed three ways in the index: spelled with the vowel without an umlaut, spelled with the umlauted vowel, and spelled as ae, oe, or ue (an umlaut represents the letter “e”). For example, the name Schräder would also be indexed as Schrader and Schraeder.

For historical information about the “Westliche Post,” see Harvey Saalberg, “Westliche Post of St. Louis: A Daily Newspaper for German-Americans, 1857-1938,” Ph. D. diss., University of Missouri, 1967; R 977.866 S111W.

Examples of published death notices

 

Typical death notices as published in the Westliche Post. The column heading can read "Neue Anzeigen" (new notices) or "Todes-Anzeigen" (death notices).

More examples of death notices. These were published in the Westliche Post on April 19, 1893.

This example has been recreated from the original. Microfilm will not usually produce such clear, crisp images.

Lodges often posted notices about deceased members. "Nachruf" (literally: obituary) were posted an the anniversary of a death to memorialize a deceased loved one.