NameWilhelmine Hinz  3187
3187 
Birth18 May 1830, West Prussia
Death30 Jun 1913, Foard, TX13 Age: 83 
BurialNew Braunfels Cemetery, Comal Co TX
 
 
Spouses
Birth9 Oct 1820, West Prussia, Danzig, Koenigreich, Preuzen
Death9 Sep 1897, Four Mile Creek, Comal Co TX Age: 76
BurialNew Braunfels Cemetery, Comal Co TX
 
 
Marriage14 Apr 1847, Comal Co TX3186 
 
 
 
Notes for Wilhelmine Hinz
1900 Census of Guadalupe Co TX
Name                         	Age
Wilhemina Hoffmann 	72    head, b May 1828, widow, b Germany, father & mother b Germany, immigrated 1847, mother of 12, 10 living
Fritz E Hoffmann        	47    son, b Dec 1852
Elisa Hoffmann            	41    dau, b Nov 1858
Alwine Hoffmann         	40    dau, b Mar 1860
Thekla Hoffmann       	32    dau, b Mar 1868
1910 Census of Comal Co TX
Name                        	Age
Wilhelmine Hoffmann	80    head, widow
Fritz E Hoffmann       	58    son, single
Elisa Hoffmann          	55    dau, single
Alvnia Hoffmann        	50    dau, single
Thekla Hoffmann      	42    dau, single
Notes for Friederich Bernhard (Spouse 1)
Friederich Hoffman and his wife Wilhelmine must have been in Texas in or before 1848, when their oldest daughter Antonie was born there.  They lived near New Braunfels, in the Texas “hill country.” which was a center of German immigration in the 1840s (see following note).  They have not been found in the 1850 census.  
One source says that Friederich and his brother Gustav came to Texas in 1845, but no source is given to support this statement.  It is also staed that Friederich Hoffman studied at Gymnasium in Danzig and at the University at Koenigsburg and that Gustav Hoffmann was the first mayor of New Braunfels.  Although no sources are provided, the detail in this record means that it probably comes from a family menber.
31881860 Census of Comal Co TX (outside New Braunfels)
Name                        	Age
F B Hoffmann              	39    b Prussia
Wilhelmine Hoffmann	32    b Prussia
Antonie Hoffmann        	12    b TX
Gustav Hoffmann         	10    b TX
Friedrich Hoffmann      	  8    b TX
Heinrich Hoffmann     	  7    b TX
Elise Hoffmann             	  5    b TX
Emma Hoffmann         	  3    b TX
1870 Census of Comal Co TX (New Braunfels)
Name                         	Age
Friedrich Hoffmann     	49    b Prussia
Wilhelmine Hoffmann	40    b Prussia
Gustaw Hoffmann      	20    b TX
Frits Hoffmann             	18    b TX
Heinrich Hoffmann       	17    b TX
Elisabeth Hoffmann      	15    b TX
Emma Hoffmann          	13    b TX
Alwine Hoffmann       	10    b TX
Hedwig Hoffmann       	  7    b TX
Agnes Hoffmann         	  4    b TX
Thekba Hoffmann        	  2    b TX
Gustaw Hoffmann       	52    b Prussia
1880 Census of Comal Co TX
Name                         	Age
Friederich B. Hoffmann	59     b Prussia, father & mother b Prussia
Wilhelmine Hoffmann	50     b Prussia, father & mother b Prussia
Friederich E. Hoffmann	28     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Heinrich S. Hoffmann	26     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Eliese Hoffmann         	25     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Emma Hoffmann        	23     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Alwiene Hoffmann      	20     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Hedwig Hoffmann      	17     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Agnes Hoffmann       	14     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Thekla Hoffmann      	12     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Franz Hoffmann           	  9     b TX, father & mother b Prussia
Notes for Friederich Bernhard (Spouse 1)
Following from the article “German Texan” at 
Wikipedia.com:
3189In the 1840s, the social, economic, and technological conditions in Germany, coupled with the availability of lands in frontier Texas, created an ideal climate for an influx of immigrants. In 1842, a group of German noblemen formed the Verein zum Schutz deutscher Einwanderer in Texas (English: Group for the Protection of German immigrants in Texas), called the Verein or the Adelsverein, to secure land in Texas for immigrants. The Verein obtained a grant of 3,800,000 acres (15,400 km2) in west-central Texas from Henry Fisher and Burchard Miller, thus known as the Fisher-Miller Land Grant. Prospective settlers were promised 320 acres (1.3 km2) of land for a married man or 160 acres (0.6 km2) for a single man, plus transportation across the ocean and to the land; a house, household furnishings, utensils, and farming equipment; churches, hospitals, roads and general provisions for their welfare.
Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels preceded the group to prepare for the arrival of the colonists. He realized that the huge land grant could not be settled immediately because it was too far from the coast and from existing settlements for transportation and supply, and so he established the town of New Braunfels as a way station to the Fisher-Miller lands. Prince Carl returned to his homeland, and was succeeded by Baron Ottfried Hans von Meusebach, who discarded his title upon arrival in Texas, and became known as John O. Meusebach. When it became evident that large numbers of expected settlers could not be located at New Braunfels, Meusebach laid out another settlement and named it Fredericksburg. About this time, it became clear that the grant of land was not suitable for settlement: the soil was not fertile enough for farming, and large numbers of Comanche Indians inhabited the area.
In the meantime, thousands of immigrants were en route to their promised lands when the war between the United States and Mexico broke out. Due to the war, all means of transportation were needed by the Army, which left thousands of German immigrants stranded on the Texas Coast. Many perished from exposure to the elements and disease, but some made the long overland trip, even on foot, to New Braunfels and to Fredericksburg. Some remained in the coastal towns and in the earlier-established settlements.
About this time, the Adelsverein, always underfunded, was bankrupt. When Texas became part of the United States, the state government awarded certificates of land to immigrants due lands in the Fisher Miller Grant. The treaties that Meusebach made with the Comanches opened the land for future settlement. Other German settlements in this part of the Texas Hill Country include Boerne, Comfort, Kerrville, Castell, Hilda, and Luckenbach.
Meanwhile, the European revolutions of 1848 brought talented and well-educated Germans to Texas; these are known as the "Forty-Eighters". Some of these gathered in "Latin Settlements" to pursue common interests in music, literature, philosophy, and theoretical politics. Such settlements included Latium, Bettina across the Llano River from Castell, and Sisterdale in Kendall County. Most of these settlements did not last long, and the Forty-Eighters moved into the larger cities, notably San Antonio, Houston, and Galveston. Each of these had a population that was about one-third German.
Research notes for Friederich Bernhard (Spouse 1)
There was another family in Guadalupe Co TX headed by a widower named Fredric Hoffmann:
1860 Census of Guadalupe Co TX (New Braunfels)
Name                	Age
Fred Hoffman    	34
Amelia Hoffman	26
Willm Hoffman  	  6
Minna Hoffman 	  4
Fred Hoffman    	  2
Amelia Hoffman	     3/12
1870 Census of Guadalupe Co TX (Seguin)
Name                 	Age
Fred Hoffmann    	46
Emiley Hoffmann	36
William Hoffmann	16
Minnie Hoffmann	14
Fred Hoffmann    	12
Amelia Hoffmann	10
Bertha Hoffmann	  8
Emma Hoffmann	  5
Edith Hoffmann 	  5
Augusta Hoffmann	  2
Anna Hoffmann 	     10/12
1880 Census of Guadalupe Co TX
Name                  	Age
Fredric Hoffmann	51    b Prussia, father & mother b Prussia
William Hoffmann	23    b TX
Mina Hoffmann       	21    b TX
Fritz Hoffmann     	19    b TX
Bertha Hoffmann	16    b TX
Emma Hoffmann	14    b TX
Ida Hoffmann      	14    b TX
Augusta Hoffmann	11    b TX
Anna Hoffmann 	  9    b TX
Hulda Hoffmann	  6    b TX
Paulina Hoffmann	  4    b TX