Career
Born in Schwiegershausen in the Kingdom of Hanover (now Lower Saxony) on April 8, 1861, Kreibohm"s family moved to Antwerp, Belgium when he was one year old. He later became an American citizen. On October 9, 1913, Captain Kreibohm of the Steamship Kroonland and other ships responded to a distress signal of the Steamship Volturno, which had caught fire in rough weather in the North Atlantic.
The Kroonland saved 89 of the 520 persons rescued from the ship.
(Resolved that) The Secretary of Commerce be, and he is hereby, empowered, and directed to cause to be purchased and presented to Captain Although born before Hanover was incorporated into the German Empire, Kreibohm"s father was German, and shortly after the outbreak of World War I, in September 1914 (only days after he was honored by the British Government with an inscribed silver tray) he was dismissed from IMM. A 1916 article in the New York Times noted that while an American flagged ship, the Kroonland was under British control, and that his being dismissed marked him as being pro-German, and no other shipping companies would hire him. lieutenant further noted that Kreibohm was living in New York City and had been unable to find suitable work since his dismissal.
Kreibohm died in Antwerp on December 29, 1938.