Americans Of Jewish Descent
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Phillip Hagedorn

Phillip Hagedorn[1, 2]

Male 1860 - 1920  (60 years)

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  • Name Phillip Hagedorn  [1
    Born 17 Jan 1860  [1
    Gender Male 
    Reference Number 6189 
    Died 22 Jun 1920  [1
    Person ID I6189  aojd
    Last Modified 11 Nov 2011 

    Mother Clara Rosenbaum,   b. 10 May 1825,   d. 19 Apr 1897  (Age 71 years) 
    Family ID F1618  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • House, at 401 North 14th Street, Lanett, was built in old Bluffton in 1886. The style of the handsome house is more restrained than some of the towering, over-ornamented houses of the era. Designed by the architectural firm of Fay & Eichberg, Atlanta, GA, the large rooms and central hall are outstanding with their excellent woodwork and craftsmanship. The hall features an elaborate screen of turned spindles, and original louvered doors. Phillip and Lulu Heyman Hagedorn, the original builders and owners, were married in a double wedding ceremony with Zach Hagedorn and Jennie Heyman at the home of the brides' parents, Heyman and Betty Merz Heyman, at 201 North 14th Street. The marriage was a great social event of Bluffton and West Point on October 31, 1883. A newspaper clipping of the double wedding of Zach Hagedorn and Jennie Heyman, and Phillip Hagedorn and Lula Heyman, solemnized on Wednesday evening, October 31, 1883, by the Rabbi S. Hecht of Atlanta, GA, has been preserved from which the following is quoted: "The ceremony by the gifted Rabbi was beautifully impressive. Beginning with an admirable invocation and excellent address to the couples about to be united, after the exchange of the marriage vows and of the ring, in token of their endless nature, he concluded with the priestly benediction. Through Hebrew was used in part, each sentence was translated as soon as uttered, and all was thus made intelligible to the large company present, who listened with intense interest to the close. We have never seen a more brilliant gathering in this city of many weddings. Two hundred invitations were issued. The decorations of the residence were simple, but artistic. In the rear of the hallway hung a floral bell, and underneath was a table, brilliantly lighted with candles, before which the misister and the couples stood. All around were pendant evergreens, wreathed into forms graceful and appropriate. The brides were most becomingly attired in white satin,with trains, and the grooms in full dress. En passant, we may remark that the former are intelligent and accomplished ladies, popular and beloved, as well as versed in all domestic lore, and will be helpmeets indeed to the worthy and successful young merchants who have been so fortunate as to win their affections and their hands. The attendants were Louis Mayer of LaGrange, and Miss Emma Hagedorn; Marcus Herzfeld of Alexander City, AL, and Miss Bertha Heyman; Master Louis and Miss Hetty Marx, of West Point. The banquet tables were two --- each in the form of an H -- and spread in separate rooms, and every variety of the good things of this earth crowning them The cakes were baked by the fair hands of the brides, and were beautifully embossed and trimmed by that ladie of exquisite taste, Miss Katie Smith. The ornaments were ordered from London. The presents were arranged on two tables -- one for each couple." [1]

  • Sources 
    1. [S11] .

    2. [S285] .