Christian Brunner

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Swiss Germans, at Sutter's Fort March 1847.  
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Christian Brunner (or Bruner), and his wife Maria (Mary) were a Swiss German couple who traveled overland to California in 1846. After their arrival they settled near Sutter's Fort.  
  
While at Sutter's Fort, the Donner party was starving in the mountains. The Donner children all survived, but were left orphans. Christian and Mary Brunner took Eliza Donner and Georgia Donner to live with them.
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Another group of 1846 emigrants, the Donner Party, was not so fortunate. They were trapped by snow in the Sierra Nevada and forced to spend the winter there. Many starved to death. They following spring rescuers set out from the California settlements and brought out the survivors, including the five orphaned daughters of George Donner. Christian and Mary Brunner took in the two youngest, Georgia and Eliza, aged four and five. The little girls called the Brunners "Grandma" and "Grandpa."
  
 
"A few months later [they] moved to Sonoma where they opened a butcher shop and dairy. The dairy on Second Street East, about two blocks south of the plaza. The butcher shop on First Street East, a few doors north of where First joins Napa Street" (Robert Parmalee, "Pioneer Sonoma")
 
"A few months later [they] moved to Sonoma where they opened a butcher shop and dairy. The dairy on Second Street East, about two blocks south of the plaza. The butcher shop on First Street East, a few doors north of where First joins Napa Street" (Robert Parmalee, "Pioneer Sonoma")

Revision as of 08:34, 6 June 2007

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