top of page
Search

"I'm a Warrior by name and a warrior by nature."

  • Writer: Rog Smith
    Rog Smith
  • Apr 16, 2022
  • 3 min read

I heard my grandmother Helen Warrior Betts say those words a hundred times and they were spot on. She was feisty, opinionated, and tenacious. But this piece isn’t about Grandma Betts. It’s about her father, Christopher Warrior.


My father dabbled in family genealogy and the Warrior branch of our tree always dead-ended with my great-grandfather Christopher. We knew

little more about him than that he was born on March 29, 1844 and he became a tailor to the well-to-do in Titusville, Pennsylvania.


Speculation was that Warrior was a made-up name, but no one really knew. After Dad died, my niece Maggie picked up the genealogy baton. With the internet, she had access to many more resources, but Christopher Warrior remained a mystery.


*****

For the past five years, I have been writing a series of historical novels that starts in Philadelphia in 1835. My protagonist, who we meet in Book 1 as an 11-year-old girl, is the daughter of a German father and an Irish mother. In the book's first draft, her last name was Reichter. She was feisty, of course, and one inspired morning I thought of injecting Grandma Betts’s motto - “I’m a Warrior by name and a warrior by nature” - into the storyline. Googletranslate told me that the German word for warrior is krieger. Thus my protagonist became Rian Krieger with the push of Edit / Find-and-Replace.


I finished Book 1 and sent it off to beta readers, including Maggie, for critique. She and I talk about Rian Krieger’s journey whenever we are together. She loves that I injected some family lore into the storyline.


*****

The other night, Maggie was poking around ancestry.com. In her own moment of inspiration (“Could it really be that easy?”), she changed Christopher Warrior in her list of ancestors to Chrisopher Krieger, then went to DNA Matches and clicked on Common Ancestors.


Maggie’s DNA matched a man named Vinnie in Baltimore who listed Christopher Krieger in his family tree. According to the 1850 census, Christopher Krieger, age 6, lived in Baltimore with his parents, George Michael Krieger, born in 1813 in Hesse, and Josephine Bamsberger, born in 1816 in Switzerland. By 1870, Christopher had changed his name to Warrior and moved to Titusville.


Bingo!


*****

Now, a new mystery arises, and more speculation. Why did Christopher Krieger change his name to Christopher Warrior? Here’s my best guess:


In 1848, a series of revolutions swept across Europe, including in the Germanic Confederation, causing massive unrest. Largely unsuccessful, those on the losing side became "the ‘48ers," immigrants who fled world-wide, especially to America, Brazil, and Australia. The Germanic influx into the USA was HUGE.


Those who came to America mostly headed to what is now the Midwest (think Milwaukee and beer). There was a marked increase in anti-German activity during this time, because the nativists didn't like the immigrants' otherness, their religion, or their alcohol.


It isn't a great leap to think that amidst all this rancor, and with the desire to assimilate, Christopher Krieger changed his name to Christopher Warrior.


*****

So is Rian Krieger going to encounter this wave of anti-German sentiment? Most likely, but by the late 1840’s, we will be well into Book 4: The Suffragist, and Rian will be living in Newport, Pennsylvania under the assumed name Sarah Smith (punctuated by occasional trips to Harrisburg as Jakob Wainwright).


Hang on. It’s going to be a helluva ride.


 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All
The Excitement is Building

I think back on the arc of my life, and the writing I have done as a child, a teenager, a college student, and in my adult life. I...

 
 
 

Commenti


© 2023 Roger A. Smith
bottom of page