Helene Brehm Explained

Helene Brehm
Birth Date:24 January 1862
Birth Place:Abterode, Electorate of Hesse, Germany
Death Place:Rinteln, Lower Saxony, Germany
Nationality:German
Parents:Abterode Johannes Brehm
Karoline Neuschäfer

Helene Brehm (24 January 1862 in Abterode, Electorate of Hesse – 24 August 1932 in Rinteln, Germany) was a German school teacher, poet, and author.

Childhood and education

She was the youngest child of the mayor of Abterode Johannes Brehm and his second wife Karoline Neuschäfer, born seven years after her older sister Marie.

First she went to school in Abterode and later as the only girl among 17 boys a private school of pastor Wilhelm Johann Hermann Coing, priest in the parish of Abterode from 1843 through 1867.

She started to read very early. It was advantages that her godfather Geord Dern ran the local post office in the house of the Brehm family, which also served as the living room. This way she could conveniently browse through new newspapers and journals.

At the age of two she suffered from scarlet fever, which permanently damaged her eye sight.[1]

Profession and later life

The pastor who taught her suggested to her parents, that as she was a bookworm, she should be allowed to go to university. Her parents decided that the profession of a school teacher would be the best choice for her.

So she went to the Carolinen school (Carolinenschule) in Eisenach, Germany, and became a teacher. After which she spent another year at her parents house and then took a position at höhere Mädchenschule in Bad Homburg v. d. Höhe. In May 1884 she was appointed at the city school (Stadtschule) in Rinteln, where she taught for nearly 35 years.

She had to retire from this position in spring 1919 because her eye sight was failing as a result of the scarlet fever early in life.[1] [2]

Career

She began writing poems as a young girl. Most of her writing was written in the pergola in her garden. She wrote poems, essays, and stories about her local region, and the local mountain Meissner, which used to be called Wissener. She also wrote about the aristocratic family line of the Bilstein family, and about old Abterode, using local names, and rural customs. And also about here chosen home Rinteln, and the vicinity. Together with her older sister Marie she published the Abteröder calls of the night watchmen and the Abteröder new years song, to which she had music written by a music teacher in Rinteln. She sang it to him in two voices.[1]

She published three books:[3]

In the book 900 years Meissner-Abterode 1076–1976, Helene Brehm was honored as follows (translated from German):

The poet had the gift of depicting people in their lives and the landscape in its beauty, in linguistic simplicity and great truthfulness.
All that she wrote, she gleaned from the life and landscape around her. Helene Brehm has left behind a legacy that deserves to be kept alive.[4]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Brehm, Helene (1924) Etwas über mich selbst, in: Das Werratal, Heft 1, 1924; S. 113–114. An autobiographic article in the journal "Das Werratal (The Werra river valley)" by Helene Brehm: "Something about myself"
  2. Book: Künkel, Ullrich . 2001 . Stadt Rinteln Lexikon . Lexikon of the town of Rinteln . Helene Brehm . https://www.rinteln.de/helene-brehm/ . German . Rinteln . Merkur Rinteln Verlag . 978-3-8120-0010-9.
  3. http://www.lwl.org/literaturkommission/alex/index.php?id=00000004&layout=2&letter=&place_id=00000140&author_id=573 Lexikon of Westfalian authors from 1750 to 1950: Helene Brehm
  4. Book: Steinbach, Karl . 1976 . Helene Brehm, 900 Jahre Meißner-Abterode 1076–1976 . Helene Brehm, 900 years of Meissner-Abterode 1076–1976 . de . Abterode . Meissner-Abterode: Festausschuss zur Vorbereitung d. 900-Jahr-Feier Meissner . 130 . .