Alexanderwohl Church
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The village of Alexanderwohl was founded in 1821 by families from Prussia.  The congregation at Przechowka moved to Molotschna together.  Przechowka was the village where the "first Ratzlaff" was documented in the church records.  According to legend, the immigrants met Tsar Alexander while en route, and he wished them well; consequently, Johann Cornies named the village, Alexanderwohl.

Great-great grandfather Peter Ratzlaff was probably not in that group.  We surmise that his ancestry went from Przechowka to Volhynia (or maybe before that to the Neumark region in what is now Germany.)  Then Peter's family may have migrated to his home in the village of Waldheim from Volhynia with the group in 1839.  In any case, his family joined the Alexanderwohl congregation where he was baptized.  He became a minister of the congregation in 1853.

The Alexanderwohl Church building was constructed in 1865.  Old photos show it as a stately two-story building with hip gable roof.

After the revolution, the building was cut down in size and today there are only decaying walls remaining.
Alexanderwohl Church Ruins This view is toward the main entrance.  The church is on the site of a "combine brigade" which is part of the regional collective farm.  It was in use about five years earlier. 

It was a highlight for me to walk in the church where Reverend Peter had given leadership.   I took a brick from the far wall as a remembrance of the church in which Great-great grandfather Ratzlaff once preached.

AlexanderW_Window-L.jpg (35292 bytes)A window of the Alexanderwohl Church on the opposite side from the previous photograph.  Once at the back of the stately sanctuary, it is now only a couple rows of bricks from collapse.