When Frederick Louis Schlicker was born on 21 May 1880, in Marin, California, United States, his father, Frederick L. Schlicker, was 44 and his mother, Mary Gertrude Berlin, was 31. He married Agatha Apffel about 1902, in San Francisco, California, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons. He lived in Merced, California, United States in 1900 and San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States for about 40 years. He died on 5 February 1957, in San Francisco, California, United States, at the age of 76, and was buried in Colma, San Mateo, California, United States.
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Garfield was shot twice by Charles J. Guitea at Railroad Station in Washington, D.C. on July 2, 1881. After eleven weeks of intensive and other care Garfield died in Elberon, New Jersey, the second of four presidents to be assassinated, following Abraham Lincoln.
Angel Island served as a quarantine station for those diagnosed with bubonic plague beginning in 1891. A quarantine station was built on the island which was funded by the federal government at the cost of $98,000. The disease spread to port cities around the world, including the San Francisco Bay Area, during the third bubonic plague pandemic, which lasted through 1909.
President William McKinley was shot at the Temple of Music, in the Pan-American Exposition, while shaking hands with the public. Leon Czolgosz shot him twice in the abdomen because he thought it was his duty to do so. McKinley died after eight days of watch and care. He was the third American president to be assassinated. After his death, Congress passed legislation to officially make the Secret Service and gave them responsibility for protecting the President at all times.
Some characteristic forenames: German Fritzy, Hans, Inge, Jurgen, Kurt.
German: nickname for a glutton, from an agent derivative of Middle High German slicken ‘to gulp or swallow’.
North German: topographic name for someone living in a marshy area, from Schlick 2 + -er, suffix denoting an inhabitant.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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