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Home arrow Missouri arrow Gasconade County arrow The Pommers & The Gentners MO675
The Pommers & The Gentners MO675 Print E-mail
Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

Marker Image
Picture Courtesy of Jim Kuntz

THE POMMERS & THE GENTNERS

This house is associated with two early Hermann families. Both the Pommer and Gentner families were among the initial members of the Deutsche Ansiedlungs-Gesellschaft zu Philadelphia (German Settlement Society of Philadelphia). Organized in 1836, the group sought to create a better place for Germans to preserve their language and heritage in the New World

Although her husband, a piano maker and officer of the society, had died, Catherine Pommer moved her family to Hermann and built the house in 1840. But the new frontier could not support a music instrument business and her sons turned to carpentry. That also proved to be insufficient so the Pommers sold their house in 1856 and left Hermann. One son, Frederick Wilhelm, moved to St. Louis where he established a successful music business; his son, William Frederick (1851-1936) studied in Germany and Austria and became a noted Missouri composer, conductor and professor of music at the University of Missouri Columbia.

THE POMMER-GENTNER HOUSE

Catherine Oelschlaeger Gentner bought the house in 1882 for $1,500. She and her husband, G. Heinrich, had been a part of the first group who arrived in 1837 to begin the town of Hermann. Unlike the Pommers, the Gentners started with very little. They first lived in a log house, but eventually they prospered and were able to own one of the finest residences in town.

The design of the house reflects a simplified Greek and Roman temple appearance. Variation of this restrained neoclassical style can be found in brick buildings of German communities all across Missouri.


POMMER-GENTNER HOUSE, Circa 1840, has been placed in the NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES, by the United States Department of the Interior.


Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Division of State Parks.

1st St. & Market St., Deutschheim State Historic Site, Hermann, Gasconade County Missouri

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