
The Story
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2001
The Real Von Trapps
The Sound of Music |
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The Captain |
Popular and
decorated as a naval war commander in Austria, Captain Georg von Trapp
married Agathe Whitehead in 1910. Both came from privileged families, so
their lifestyle was opulent and comfortable even after the Captain lost
his naval position following World War I. Since Austria no longer had a
coast, von Trapp found that he no longer had a job. To make matters worse,
he then lost his beloved wife. He was disconsolate and lost without both
the mainstays of his life.
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| Maria was
actually removed from the convent due to her own failing health rather
than her difficulty in adapting to convent life. The doctor thought fresh
air and exercise would help, so the decision was made to send her to the
von Trapp home to be governess to one ill von Trapp daughter. Never to
return to the convent, she married the Captain on November 26, 1927.
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Maria Kutschera |
The real von
Trapp children had different names than those used in the stage or film
versions. They were; Maria, Rupert, Agathe, Werner, Hedwig, Johanna and
Martina. (Rosmarie, Eleonore and Johannes were later children of Maria and
Georg.) The death of their mother meant the seven children needed a
governess. Many were hired but none stayed very long...until Maria.
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The Family Villa |
Also unlike the stage version of the
story, the von Trapp house had always been full of music. The children
always sang and were very musical, often accompanied by their father on
guitar. Maria helped polish their singing and introduced new types of
music, and the Captain's high naval and social reputation provided them
with a well known name.
Captain von Trapp lost his fortune
through bank failure long before he fled Austria. The family was forced
to do their own chores, and eventually they had to sing for money, which
didn't sit very well with Georg von Trapp. He thought work, and
especially singing for money, was beneath his station in life. The
Anschluss, or invasion of Austria by the Nazis, meant yet another change
for the family. In a family discussion, it was decided that they should
leave their country rather than bend to the Nazi regime. They arrived in
America in 1938 with nine children...and one on the way.
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For the next eighteen years, the
entire family was constantly on the road with their traveling family
singing act. Maria demanded
total loyalty of the children, and after their father died in 1947 they
began to rebel at her unwillingness to let them live their own lives.
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In 1942 they bought property in
Stowe, Vermont, where they ran a farm and converted it to an Austrian style
home. By 1950 they had begun renting the home out to skiers while they were
touring. They stopped touring in 1956. Although the original structure
burned in 1980, the home was rebuilt and is now a vacation lodge retreat known
as the von Trapp Family Lodge, Inc.

The Trapp Family Lodge

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