Vest
Object number2014.112.3
Date1886
OriginCoburg, Bavaria
MediumFabric/Thread
Credit LineGift of Roberta Egelston
DescriptionDouble-breasted wedding vest. Light blue fabric embroidered with pink/orange floral designs. Back and interior lining is beige fabric. Seven blue fabric buttons down proper left front panel and proper right front panel. One hip pocket on each front panel. One beige fabric button inside each front panel at bottom.Dimensions16.75 x 21.5 in. (42.5 x 54.6 cm)Historical NotesPart of a collection of clothing from the donor Roberta Egelston's great-great-grandparents. This vest is made from the same material as the wedding dress (2014.112.1) that was worn by Eva Barbara Dietz on August 26, 1866, when she married Martin Schuster in Coburg, Bavaria. Martin was the brewer and baker to Prince Ernest of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. He had been shipping beer he brewed to South America and lost a lot of money because he did not have other items coming back on the ships, because of this he decided to start again in America. The couple had four children, all born in Germany. In 1880, Martin came to America on the ship Mosel; he came to Pittsburgh and settled in Lawrenceville; the family thinks he had friends in the area. The next year his wife followed with her eldest and youngest daughter on the ship Elbe, their only son had died as a child. Their middle daughter Marie stayed behind to care for a relative and came in 1886/1887. Martin is listed as a laborer in the 1885 Pittsburgh Directory. In 1888, they bought property at 907-913 McCandless Avenue, but by the 1890 Directory they are listed at 5130 Butler Street where they owned a saloon and lived above it. Barbara cooked for the patrons. In 1894, Martin died suddenly of heart failure, he is buried in Allegheny Cemetery. Barbara remarried in 1903 and died in 1910, she is also buried in Allegheny Cemetery.
Related person
Martin Schuster
(died 1894)
Related person
Eva Barbara Dietz
(died 1910)
Related person
Prince Ernest of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
On View
Not on view1886
1941-1953
1894