Their witnesses were Matt (Mattias) Kreitz and Theresa Pollreis, both from Burgenland families near Monchhof. They are identified on the back of the wedding photo. Theresa later married Berjamin B. Saxe, another Burgenlander.
Theresa's parents Stephen and Mary Daninger Pollreis were from Austro-Hungary. Theresa later married Benjamin B. Saxe and they moved to St. Paul where Benjamin was employed as a meat cutter for the Armour Company. (More about the Saxe family later)
After their marriage Frank and Rose moved to Forest Lake. According to his 1917 WWI draft registration, Frank was working on a farm owned by Jackson Simmons. At that time he and Rose had 3 children: Martin, Lawrence, and Leonard.
Before 1920, the young Frank and Rose Schotl family moved to 28 East Maryland Street in St. Paul. Other family members had already moved to St. Paul and were getting their first taste of an urban life after generations of farm labor and rural life.
As early as 1903, Grandma's brother Charles Kunshier was living at 1377 Edgerton Ave., St. Paul and working as a machinist for Griffin Wheel Company located at 1256 Phalen Blvd., per the 1903 Polk Directory.
In 1910, my Grand Uncle, Conrad Kunshier was working as a laborer in building construction and living with his sister Katie and brother-in-law John Schmidt at 452 Van Buren Street. This was the area known as Frogtown and was served by St. Agnes Catholic Church at 548-50 Lafond Avenue.
In 1911, my Grand Aunt Mary Schotl Handler was living with her husband John at 37 West Lawson Street with new born daughter Betty. John was working in a lumber yard. The house was on the corner of Sylvan Street across the street from Oakland Cemetery.