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Marie Goslich
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Marie Goslich : ウィキペディア英語版
Marie Goslich


Marie Eva Elwine Goslich (24 February 1859, Frankfurt (Oder) – 1936) was a German journalist, photographer and magazine editor. She is listed in the Berlin Residents Directory as “Writer and Editor” from 1902 to 1908 in Berlin W 57, Kurfürstenstraße 18, in 1909 she lived in Bülowstraße 59 and in 1910 in Berlin W 62 in Massenstraße 35. During the years 1907 to 1910, she was editor of the journal ''Körperkultur'' (Body Culture). In Potsdam, she became a member of the editorial board for the journal ''Bote für die christliche Frauenwelt'' (Messenger for Christian Women), published in the Foundation Publishing House by Pastor Theodor Hoppe (1846–1934), the founder of the Oberlinhauses. She also published in ''Die Mark'' (The Mark), an illustrated journal for tourism and local history. From 1916 to 1920, she was the responsible script manager for the ''Bote für die deutsche Frauenwelt'' (Messenger for German Women), as the ''Bote für die christliche Frauenwelt'' has been named since 1913.
== Life ==
Marie Goslich was the daughter of Friedrich Julius Goslich (18 October 1807, Berlin – 6 May 1875, Frankfurt (Oder)), Court of Appeal Councillor at the Court of Appeal in Frankfurt (Oder) up to 1875.〔The manual of the Royal Prussian State and Court for the year 1875 lists Friedrich Julius Goslich as Court of Appeal Councillor in Frankfurt (Oder) and as bearer of the Order of the Red Eagle 4. Class.〕 Her mother was Marie Rosalie Elwine Hesse (6 June 1821, Spandau, Berlin – 7 August 1865, Frankfurt (Oder)). Marie Goslich was the youngest of four children. Her sister Elsbeth Valesca Goslich (24 February 1855 – 4 August 1923) was a teacher in Berlin, living in Karlshorst, Dönhoffstraße 1 in 1901, and Schöneberg, Akazienstraße 5 in 1907.
Marie was educated in the awareness of social responsibility at a very early age. In a Letter to the Editor of ''Bodenreform'' (Land Reform) (Publisher Adolf Damaschke from 1914), she recalls one incident from the 1870s: … The day before my father had heard about the invitation to the birthday party. “Where is the party?” he asked. – “At P. vom Wilhelmsplatz? – But that’s out of the question….. that man buys properties, just to resell them, it is pure land dealing. My daughter shall not enter such a house”.
From 1865 to 1875 Marie Goslich attended the State Höhere Töchterschule (Second-level Girl’s School) in Frankfurt (Oder). After the early bereavement of her parents she lived with her sister, Elsbeth Valesca, in the house of their guardian, the royal Prussian Secret Justice Councillor, Rudolf Tirpitz (1811-1905), the father of Alfred von Tirpitz and a student friend of Marie’s father. In 1877 she went to live with friends of the family to the Hertwigswaldau Manor in Schlesien, to learn housekeeping. At a Boarding School in Dresden she was educated in languages, music and tailoring. In 1882 she spent a year in the French-speaking region of Switzerland to improve her knowledge of French.
Marie Goslich worked as a governess and private French teacher in Berlin. She lived in the so-called “Republic Lützow-Ufer”, with Laura Delbrück, mother of the Publisher of the Prussian almanac, the historian Hans Delbrück, and with Helene und Irene von Henning.
From 1891 to 1898 she worked as a secretary at the Editorial Department of the Publishers of the Prussian Almanacs. After leaving this job, she took up teaching again and taught the daughter of the Head Groom of Stables, Graf von Wedel. However, she never completely gave up her writing and journalist activities, as demonstrated by her contributions to the Berlin Daily Papers such as the ''Vossischen Zeitung'' and other illustrated journals as well as the ''Bote für die christliche Frauenwelt'' (Messenger for Christian Women). On 16. February 1910 she married the author Karl Kuhls, born on 4 February 1862 in Wewern, Kreis Lasdohn/Livland, son of the teacher Karl Kuhls, Director of the School in Riga and Königsberg and his wife Emma, née Fröhlich from Memel. From this time on she published her contributions mainly under the name Marie Kuhls or Marie Kuhls-Goslich.
In 1911 the Kuhls-Goslich couple moved to Potsdam to the Bismarckstraße 9, and in 1912 to the Albrechtstraße 3. After a divorce from Karl Kuhls, whose illegitimate son Hans Kuhls (born 11 March 1915) she adopted, her address from July 1918 was Potsdamerstraße 84a, Berlin, and later Alten Königstr.1. At the end of the 1920s she moved to Geltow, living first with the Hermann family at their Guesthouse Baumgartenbrück and then at the house of the Rottstock family in the Havelstraße 4. In the Geltow Address Register she is last named in 1936/1937 as Marie Kuhls, author.〔“This Curriculum Vitae is taken from notes and tape-recorded memories of Lieselotte Herrmann (1909–1981), the owner of the Guesthouse Baumgartenbrück in Geltow, Schwielowsee, modified with information from the letters of Hans Kuhls, the adopted son of Marie Goslich, to the Herrmann Family and journals found to date in which her contributions gave details of her current address. The cause of her death is being researched.”〕

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