Schuylkill County PA Archives Misc: Blue Book Of Schuylkill County By Mrs. Ella Zerbey Elliott: Allied Families 361-409 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Gwen Bixler Drivon GGDGEN@aol.com February 16, 2010, 9:43 pm Book Title: Blue Book Of Schuylkill County By Mrs. Ella Zerbey Elliott _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 361 Allied Families _________________________________________________ DESCENDANTS OF DANIEL BARTOLET Daniel Bartolet, Sr. , b. October 11, 1792, d. November 16, 1864. Catharine Merkel (first wife), b. September 8, 1798, d. 1822; children: Abraham, Daniel, Jr. Sara Merkel (second wife), b. July 7, 1807, d. April 18, 1887. The wives were sisters and daughters of Michael Merkel. Children: Susan, Charles, Elizabeth, Carolina, Elias, Amos, Lewis, Richard, Sarah, Emma Rebecca, Catherine, John, Louisa, Joseph, Benjamin. Abraham Bartolet, b. January 4, 1819; wf., Mary Weaver, d. March 17, 1897. Children: Albert (shot in battle of Cold Harbor, Civil War.) William, unmarried, railroad watchman; Catharine, married George Berk- heiser, resides in Schuylkill Haven; Emma, d., married Christ From- knecht; Sarah, unmarried, d.; Franklin, d., married Mary Sowers; Mary, married Alexander Smith, of Orwigsburg; Elizabeth, unmarried, Cres- sona; Wallace, single, engineman, Cressona. Daniel Bartolet, Jr., b. May 22, 1821, d. November 1, 1885; wf., Ella- mina Luckenbill. Children: Henry, d.; Franklin Adam, freight train con- ductor, Harrisburg, Pa.; Louisa, Schuylkill Haven; Daniel, d.; Eliza, d.; Mary, Reading, Pa. Susan Bartolet, b. September 23, 1824; m. Wm. Kantner; both d.; Susan died February 11, 1901. Children: Tamson, d.; Rebecca Sterner, Cressona; Phoebe Simon, d.; Lillian Barton, Phila.; Albert, machinist, Pottsville; Caroline Berger, Schuylkill Haven. Elizabeth Bartolet, b. December 20, 1825; m. Louis Schaeffer, d.; Elizabeth died April 13, 1882. Children: Emma Aulenbach, Middletown, Pa.; Kate Boyer, d.; William, engineman, Cressona; Annie Bretz; Caro- line Minnig, d. Elias Bartolet, b. October 24, 1828; d. February 13, 1904; m. Elizabeth Dengler. Children: Ellen Robbins, Phila.; Cecelia Reiger, d.; Anna Scheetz, d.; Roxanna Wehr, Mahanoy City; Edward, engineman, Mahanoy City; George, engineman, Sioux City, Iowa. Lewis Bartolet, b. October 11, 1830; d. April 26, 1908; m. Rebecca Minnig. Children: Five deceased; William, weaver, Manayunk, Pa.; Harry, confection clerk, Manayunk, Pa.; Edward, postman, Manayunk, Pa.; Iola Virginia, Kendler, Phila. Sarah Bartolet, b. November 2, 1832; d. February 11, 1901; m. George Fessler, d. Children: Catherine Sherry, Pottsville; George, engineman, Pal Alto; Susan Wagner, Cressona; Mary Moyer, d.; Phoebe Fessler, Cressona; Esther Hillibish, Palo Alto; Elizabeth Sterner, Pottsville; Michael, Cressona; Samuel, Cressona; John d.; Sallie, Cressona. Catherine Bartolet, b. June 30, 1834; d. January 25, 1911; m. John Fegan, d., Lyons, Iowa. Children: Daniel B., engineman, Lyons, Iowa; Joseph, machinist, St. Paul, Minn.; John, machinist, Missouri Valley, Iowa; Caroline Johnstone, Lyons, Iowa; Thomas, telegrapher, Dallas, Texas. Louisa Bartolet, b. January 7, 1836; d. November 25, 1913; unmar- ried. Charles Bartolet, b. December 12, 1837; d. October 24, 1905; m. Chris- tiana Neuer, of Harrisburg, Pa., d. Children: George W., inspector, ___________________________________________________ 362 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families ___________________________________________________ Brooklyn Bridge, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Sara Margaret Wagner, Trenton, N. J.; Wilhelmina Catherine, teacher in public schools, Cressona; Anna Eliza- beth Breininger, Cressona; Herndon Lewis, High Springs, Fla. Caroline Bartolet, b. November 17, 1839; m. Samuel A. Mertz; resides in Lehighton, Pa.; no children. Adopted Charles A. Snyder, a great- nephew. He keeps a general store. Amos Bartolet, b. February 10, 1842; assessor and supervisor; m. Rebecca Berger, d.; resides in Cressona, Pa. Children: Beata Davis, Cressona; Bard Bartolet, Cressona, clerk in C. & I. Co. office, Pottsville. Richard Bartolet, b. December 1, 1843, Jersey City, N. J.; engine- man; married Martha Wiggan. Children: Roberta, stenographer, etc., Jersey City; Howard, clerk for P. R. R. Co., Jersey City. Emma Rebecca Bartolet, b. August 31, 1845; d. April 16, 1911; m. Jeremiah J. Kline, d.; resided in Ashley, Pa. Children: Charles Daniel, expressman, Ashley, Pa.; Harry Benjamin, d. John Bartolet, b. May 5, 1847; d. January 8, 1911; engineman, Sioux City, Iowa; first wife, Ellen Forrer, d., Cressona; second wife, Josephine Heffner, Mitchell, Dakota. Children: four deceased, Ida Moyer, Or- wigsburg, Pa. Daniel Bartolet and his two wives, Catharine and Sarah, daughters of Michael and Elizabeth Merkle, had 17 children, all living to maturity. 1816, January 20, Daniel Bartolet, m. Catherine Merkle, Rev. George Mennig. 1823, December 25, Daniel Bartolet m. Sarah Merkle, Rev. Phillip Meyer. Daniel Bartolet and wives are buried in New Jerusalem cemetery, Spring Garden. Joseph Bartolet, b. March 10, 1849; engineman in Mexico, now in San Antonio, Texas; unmarried. Benjamin Bartolet, b. October 28, 1851; engineman L. V. R. R., Lehigh- ton; m. Francis Shuman, of Mainville, Pa. Children: Sara, clerk, Lehigh- ton, Pa.; Clay, d.; Howard, Prof. of Mathematics in Collegiate Institute, York, Pa.; Rena, stenographer, Lehighton; Florence, stenographer, Le- highton. Isaac Strauch, secretary of the New Jerusalem church, had possession of the records when the split occurred, and which were never found. He kept the toll gate when the turnpike ran to the left side from Schuylkill Haven through a covered bridge and thence on the lower road through Mt. Carbon to Pottsville. When the Reading railway was built, the bridge was removed and the turnpike kept on the right side of the river and canal. Michael Merkle, of Minersville, (Phillip, Michael and Elizabeth), b. near Cressona, 1823. He began life eary as a driver on the old horse railway, of the Mine Hill Railway, to Schuylkill Haven, subsequently becoming stationary en- gineer for Richard Kear, Wolf Creek mines. He was one of __________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 363 Allied Families __________________________________________________ a quartette of Minersville men who operated the mines upon the lands of the Forrest Improvement Company. In 1868, under the firm name of Lawrence, Merkle and Company, they leased coal lands at Mahanoy Plane and Frackville, now leased by the Madeira, Hill Company, which were very pro- ductive for a time. Mr. Merkle was engaged in the coal bus- iness up to his death, which occurred from an accidental dis- charge of a pistol. Mr. Merkle was a self made man and one of the foremost citizens of Minersville. Adam Confehr, mar- ried to a sister of his, was engaged with him in the Forest Coal Company. Michael Merkle was twice married. First wife, Ann Bender, of Chester County. Their children were: Phillip, wf. Eliza Hadesty, sister of George Hadesty, division superintendent of the Reading C. & I. Co.; one son killed on railroad; Phillip, a soldier in the Civil War, is spending his declining years at the Erie Soldiers' Home. Emma, m. Praull Boyer, brother of Col. Zaccur Praull Boyer, both deceased; lived in Port Carbon. One son, Claude, m.; several children. Clara, d., m. George Ellis, druggist. Children: Madge, m. Will. Harris, plumber; Sadie, bookkeeper in the office of Oak Hill colliery, Min- ersville. One in the West. J. Harry Merkle, the eldest, wf., Margaret E. Lewis. They had seven children, of whom three are living, George A., a rising young physician, of Minersville, and May and Blanche, at home. Mr. Markle was a mer- chant of Frackville, but removed to Minersville about twenty-five years ago, where he has since been in the same business. Dr. George Merkle, m. E. K. Balliet, of Minersville. George F. Merkle, wf., Annie, da. of the late Henry and Sarah Graeff Hammer, for many years in charge of the Thomas Shollenberger store, of Minersville. Mr. Merkle is the manager of the Frank Law- rence general store of Minersville. Their children were: one daughter, m. Will. Flail, blacksmith at Reading shops, Pottsville. One son, Louis, a very promising young man, mechanical engineer, d. at the age of twenty-six years, of typhoid pneumonia. Michael Merkle's second wf. was Margaret Heilner, with whom he had three children: Horace, a physician, m., died in Montana, no children. William, single, died in Jefferson Hospital, Phila.; Ida, d., single, in Norristown. Mrs. Mary Brady, Norristown. Gideon Merkle, d., lumber merchant, Minersville; came from near Hamburg; da's, Mrs. Mary Bedford and Mrs. Sue Ansty. Gideon Merkle was a descendant of the Merkles of the Trappe, Montgomery Co. _______________________________________________________ 364 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families _______________________________________________________ HISTORY OF THE MUENCHS The name Münch, as originally spelled means monk or friar. It was derived from an estate, purchased from an order of Monks in France. (The diaeresis or "umlaud" over the name Münch has the effect of u e. Muench.) The name since has been vari- ously spelled Minch, Minck, Minnich, Minick, Minnick, Ming, Mennegh, Mennig, Mynich, Minock, etc., but it is from the same origin. Penna. Archives, 2d Series, Vol. XVII, and Rupp's 30,000 Immigrants have the following as settling in Penna. Ship Lists: John Christopher Meng, August 24, 1728. John Adam Meng, August 15, 1750. Michael Meng, October 20, 1752. John Minck (sick) and Christ. Ludwig Muebch, November 3, 1752. John Minnich (sick), November 7, 1754. John Philip Menick, October 6, 1767. Peter Meng, on November 15, 1802. Hans Heinrich Muench, September 15, 1752. Hans George "Manig", October 2, 1749. Lorentz, "Manig," August 27, 1739, aged 40. Wendel "Manig," September 5, 1751. Conrad Muench, see pasport on another page. Phillip Muench, October 26, 1768. Tobias Manich (Rupp's, p. 22), October 17, 1749. Simon Minch, November 3, 1750. The early Münchs were Catholics. During the reign of Luis XIV, in France, a Baron Münch, who had embraced the Calvanistic religion and was a powerful factor in the Huguenot political party, was stripped of all his possessions, his chateau burned and he was among those massacred. His kinsmen, after the dissolution of the title, fled to Germany after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 1685. Some of the younger men joined the armies at war with France and others, when the opportunity opened later, united with the Palatines and came to America, with their families. (Dr. Julius F. Sache, Librarian, Masonic Library, Masonic Temple, Philadelphia, has the illustration and its heraldic emblazonment of the Muench coat of arms, a little figure of a monk with the superscription "der Muench" above it.) _______________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 365 Allied Families _______________________________________________________ One of the first Münchs to arrive in America was Hans "Minigh," on the ship Thistle, of Glasgow, Calvin Dunlap, master, from Rotterdam, August 29, 1730.1 He is described as a "newcomer from Holland, whose children are all at servi- tude," doubtless to pay his and their passage. February 7, 1755, administration was granted George Lambert, of Albany Township, Berks County; Michael Brobst, Linn Township, North- ampton County, friends of this John Minnich, late of Albany Township. (B. 21, p. 401.) A Johannes Minnich settled in Pinegrove Township, Berks County, 1754, where his son Johannes was born, August 8, 1757. Leonard, brother of Johannes, came to this township from Bern Township, 1767. (State and Proprietary Tax Lists, 1779 to 1785.) He had surveyed 200 to 250 acres of land. Johannes2, d., April 27, 1823. Johannes and Leonard, with their wives, Christina and Magdelena, are on Jacob's church records as having communed there, November, 1799. Adam and Berbhard, their sons, bap- tized children in this church. A daughter, Magdelena, m. Jacob Heim. Letters of administration for Leonard Muench, Pinegrove Township, were taken out by Baltzer Hautz, 1802. Peter Münch and Simon Münch came to America on the ship Samuel, Hugh Percy, Master, from Rotterdam, qualified at Philadelphia, August 30, 1737.1 They located in Tulpehocken Township, lancaster County afterward Berks County. Peter was 39 years and Simon 37 years of age. The two men were brothers, and Gottfried Munch, of Mechtersheim, near Speyer, in the Kingdom of Bacaria, was doubtless a brother and a third of a son, or direct kins- man of the Huguenot Baron of France. The two lines, the Berks County contingent and the descendants of the Phila- delphia line are unknown to each other and claim no rela- tionship; yet their ancestral traditions are identical. The same family names occur with little variation through the first and second generations in this country. The letters, too, which follow tell of a misunderstanding between two branches of the Munchs in this country; whether this refers __________ (Note 1-Penna. Archives, 2d Series, Vol. 17, p. 20.) (Note 1-Penna. Archives, Second Series, Vol. 17, p. 133.) _______________________________________________________ 366 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families _______________________________________________________ to Gottfried and Conrad, brothers, of Phila., and sons of Gott- fried, of Mechtersheim, or as between them and their uncles, (supposedly) Peter and Simon, of Berks County, is not clear; but the two lines were close connections, the proof of it is unquestionable. (Note--Cut of original patent found elsewhere in this issue.) Peter Münch settled in Bethel Township, then Lancas- ter County, now in Lebanon, Berks and Dauphin, where he took up a tract of land. Peter's grandson, Simon, son of Si- mon, afterward purchased this tract. March 23, 1750, Peter Minnich took up 300 acres of land in Pinegrove Township, Lancaster County, afterward Berks, now Schuylkill County. The tract included land on both sides of the Schuylkill river, and, as a fac simile of the original patent in our possession, found elsewhere, shows, was the original site of the "Seven Stars" hotel in Manheim Twonship, Schuylkill County, where he built a log house afterward burned by the Indians.1 Peter Münch was twice married. First wife, Christina Barbara, by whom he had the following children: Simon, York County, Pa., yeoman, b. August 25, 1728, d. 1795. Jacob, York County, Pa., yeoman. Henry, wife of Catharine, Botecourt (Bashtourt County, Va., yeoman.) John Michael, Dauphin County, Pa., yeoman; b. January 2, 1738; bap- tized January 24, sponsors, John Michael Becker and wf. (Stoever's R.) Another child, name not given (probably Peter), and John Conrad Muench, b. November 28, 1740; bap., January 21, 1741, sponsors, Conrad Scharff and wf. Appolonia, Little Tulpehocken church, (Stoever's records.) Peter Münch's second wife, with whom he had no issue, was Eva Catharine, widow of John Ritzman. Münch was a taxable in Pinegrove Township, Berks County, in 1754, and in Maxatawny Township, 1759. An old map of Governor Mifflin's time shows "Peter's mountain," "Minnich's Gap" and "Minnich's Mill"; and the Rehersburg church records show him to have stood sponsor, with his wife Catharine, for __________ (Note 1-D. B. 4, p. 298, Berks Co. C. H.) _______________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 367 Allied Families _______________________________________________________ children, from 1748 to '51, of prominent parents in that locality; one of these God-children, John Peter Filbert, was afterward the first Mayor of Reading. August 18, 1751, da. of Albrecht Strauss (Northkill); March 6, 1748, da. of Philip Heiliger (Northkill); August 31, 1746, and May 28, 1749, for a son and da. of Samuel Fil- bert (Northkill); December 9, 1750, da. of George Schaetterle (Tuplehocken); March 8, 1751, for son of Dr. John George Trippner and wife Anna Elizabeth (Tulpehocken); August 25, 1754, for da. of George Muench, Bern. Among the Warrantees of Land, Lancaster County, Pa., published in Vol. XXIV, 3d Series, Penna. Archives, there is shown a warrant for 50 acres to Peter Menig, dated March 23, 1750, but there is no record of a survey having been returned on that warrant. Peter Münch m. Eva Maria Ritzman, May 30, 1756. He died 1766. His widow, from Atolhoe, near Rehersburg, tak- ing out letters of administration; she being described as "the widow of Peter Minnich, late of the part of Berks County, which lies over the Blue Mountains, in Pinegrove Township.1 The first four sons, October 15, 1787, disposed of their interest in the tract in Bethel Township to Simon, grandson of Peter Münch and son Simon. The other two childern are not mentioned in the document. The signatures were proven October 25, 1790, by George and Peter Minnich and two others. The one child, probably a daughter, may have taken her share and John Conrad Minnich having taken out a warrant for 100 acres of the land, in Pinegrove Township, on both sides of the Schuylkill River, settled by his father in 1750. (See map accompanying deed.) The patent shows that he paid the interest and quit rent on this tract from March 7, 1760, acquiring title subsequently, by purchase, to most of the original parent of 300 acres in that vicinity and to lands adjoining it. Just when CAPTAIN CONRAD MINNICH settled permanently on the site of the Seven Stars Hotel, Manheim Township, Schuylkill County, is not definite, but ___________ (Note 1-Vol. 2, p. 148.) _______________________________________________________ 368 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families _________________________________________________ it was not later than 1768, the year he was married. He may have come there and taken possession, 1760, when he took up the original patent for 100 acres of the land, signed by John Penn and upon which his father settled and the family lived, 1751, being driven from there as the patent states "by the burning of their log house and other buildings by the Indians," and then returned to Heidelberg Township, where he appears on the tax lists as "Yeoman," 1767 and 1768. Francis Parvin took up by warrant, 56 acres of land, June 1, 1751, His executors sold this land to Ellis Hughs, October 9. Neither lived upon the tract but Ellis Hughs, who lived in Exeter Township, operated a saw mill upon it. He granted three tracts of land to John Gerber, August 1, 1771. The 174 acre tract was surveyed by warrant, April 12, 1770, granted to George Gardner, who, February 5, 1762, granted the same to Isaiah Willets, who, September 15, 1766, granted the same to Ellis Hughes. On this tract stood the saw mill. The 174 acre tract was surveyed in pursuance of Thomas Hughes' application, who by his deed dated Decem- ber 10, 1767, granted the same to Ellis Hughes, who conveyed it, August 1, 1771, to John Garber, miller of Cumru Township. Conrad Minnich, it appears from the following, lived upon part of this land during these transfers. The Berks County Deed Book says: "John Gerber, of Cumru Township, sold August 18, 1775, to Conrad Minnich, of Brunswick Township, for 600 pounds, a certain messsuage water saw mill and three tracts of land, now in the said Con- rad Minnich's actual possession, being situated adjoining land late of Francis Parvin and Balthazer Neyfung and thence up the Schuylkill River, containing 174 acres; one other of them, adjoining land now or late of Ellis Hughes and Joseph Berger, in the forks of the Schuylkill, containing 114 acres and the other of them bounded on the northeast by the east ________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 369 Allied Families ________________________________________________ branch of the Schuylkill River and on the southeast by land of James Boone and on the southwest and northwest now vacant, containing 56 acres." A reasonable conclusion to arrive at, is that as Ellis Hughes was a non-resident, Conrad Minnich ran his saw mill for him and boarded the men at the road house (as in the case of Neyman, who operated Baltzer Gehr's saw mill on the site of Pottsville), and afterward came into full pos- session of the tract upon which he lived with his father's family, 1750. Christopher Stump patented a tract of 200 acres of land February 25, 1755; 100 acres of this land he and his wife Margaret granted to Nicholas Miller, March 25, 1755. Au- gust 30, 1778, Christopher Balti and Susanna, his wife, sold to Conrad Minnich and Henry Deckert, of Brunswig Town- ship, for 580 pounds, 100 acres and allowances of land, ad- joining Adam Miller's and part of the land of the aforesaid Christopher Stump. Nicholas Miller and Eva Catharine, his wife, sold the said 100 acres to Peter Merkle and Catharine, his wife, April 17, 1765. Peter Merkle, April 4, 1778, granted the same to Christopher Balti. (Book 9, p. 121.) Nicholas Miller removed to Shamokin Township, North- umberland County, where he is noted on the tax list, 1788, and also appears on the tax list of Augusta Township, 1771. September 5, 1782, Henry Deckert and Elizabeth granted their half in this tract to Conrad Minnich. (Book 9, p. 123.) Peter Filbert, Sheriff of Berks County, sold to Conrad Minnich, September 5, 1785, 230 acres of land, the property of Jacob Gemmerling (Kemmerling), Brunswick Township, adjoining lands of Henry Dieter, Martin Dreibelbis and oth- ers, (Book 9, p. 400.) November 1, 1791, Conrad Minnich and Elizabeth, his wife, of Manheim Township, sold to Asa Jones, 200 acres of ________________________________________________ 370 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families ________________________________________________ land, "at the mouth of Tumbling Run, over the Blue Moun- tain," late in Manheim Township. (B. 12, p. 431.) Bought it from Paul Ferger, February 14, 1782. (B. 12, p. 437.) "Mortgage by Asa Jones, Manheim Township, to John Moyer, Hamburg, November 22, 1791, for eleven pounds, in gold or silver, on the two hereinafter named tracts of land: The one thereof situate on Tumbling Run, including the mouth thereof, containing about 200 acres. It being the same tract which Conrad Minnich and Elizabeth, his wife, did, on November 1, 1791, grant unto Asas Jones. The other tract of 176 acres, on the other side of the Schuylkill from the first tract." Conrad Minnich and Peter Minnich were the wit- nesses to the mortgage. (Book 9, p. 154.) This land was af- terward located as in Norwegian Township. The above Peter Minnich is doubtless the Peter who settled in Northumber- land County with Conrad, Jr. He was a son of Simon. Thouron's addition to Pottsville, (Norwegian Town- ship,) was laid out on land patented to Conrad Minnich and Jacob Zoll, July 10, 1792-September 5, 1794.1-2 (See Fisher's, 1831 Map, Schuylkill County, Commis- sioners' office.) Conrad Minnich, as aforesaid, came with his father, Pe- ter, 1750, when ten years of age, to Pinegrove, Manheim Township, returning to Bethel, 1755, and again returning north about 1760-1768, where he lived during his lifetime upon the same land, although the name of the Township changed several times during his occupancy. In these transfers of land, noted above, Conrad Min- nich is mentioned as "Yeoman," "Miller" and as "Church Warden," of Zion's Lutheran church, (Red church), of Brunswick Township. He at one time having bought land and holding the deed in trust for the church. His wife is __________ (Note 1-One of the original tracts constituting the boundaries of Pottsville, so described in Deed Book, Schuylkill Co. C. H.) (Note 2-James Wilson, signer of Declaration of Independence, bought part of a tract of land adjoining the above, 1790, from Jacob Zoll.) ________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 371 Allied Families ________________________________________________ named in the deeds as Elisabeth, daughter of George Peter Zerbe, late of Tulpehocken Township. He was a taxpayer, Pinegrove Township, Berks County, 1772, and the first col- lector of taxes in Manheim Township, 1791. The Proprie- tary State Tax Lists, Berks County, show Conrad Minnich to have paid taxes on a saw and grist mill from 300 to 500 acres; from 1779 to 1784 his family consisted of eight persons. CONRAD MINNICH'S HOTEL now known as the "Seven Stars," was the first public house in (Schuylkill) this county. When rebuilt after its destruc- tion by the Indians, 1755, it was partially constructed of stone; these walls in the rear are still standing, but the front was a low log building. Ellis Hughes' saw mill stool sev- eral hundred yards south of the hostelry, which was sur- rounded by a dense pine forest and as a road house on the state road, laid out 1770, afforded entertainment and lodg- ing for the patrons of the stage coach from Philadelphia and Reading to Fort Augusta (Sunbury) and the few wood cut- ters and wayfarers thereabouts. It is mentioned as, "Capt. Conrad Minnich's, Brunswick Township, near the Schuyl- kill, several miles south of the Sharp Mountain," and as, "being then the 'Frontier' ", August 27, 1777.1 Conrad Minnich was a captain of the second company in the third battalion of Berks County militia, May 16, 1777, in the Revolutionary War. One of the three com- panies partially organized from this side of the Blue Moun- tains, in the part of Berks County, now included in Schuyl- kill County.2 (For military history see Berks and Schuyl- kill in the Revolutionary War on previous page.) There is no record of Conrad Minnich's marriage to Elizabeth, daughter of George Peter Zerbe, of Tulpehocken __________ (Note 1-Penna. Archives, 3d Series, Vol. 14, p. 265, Indian Forts, Vol. 1.) (Note 2-Penna. Archives, 5th Series, Vol. 5, pp. 128-135-190-201.) ________________________________________________ 372 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families _________________________________________________ Township, Berks County. The records of Christ Lutheran church, Stouchsburg, Marion Township, Berks County, for which her father, George Peter Zerbe, was a singer, 1743, are well kept and in remarkable state of preservation from 1748 to 1760, under the various pastors, when Rev. John Nicholas Kurtz and his brother, William Kurtz, took charge. They had charges at St. Michael's, Germantown, Phila., and were itinerants, serving the Red church and others, in that part of Berks, now Schuylkill County, and serving privately the offices of the church to many individuals and families dur- ing the ten years of their itinerancy. To these men is at- tributed, more than to any others, the difficulty experienced by genealogists in this locality, of obtaining, of obtaining official regis- trations of family records. There are no marriages recorded in Christ Church, from 1760 to 1771. Nor are their records to be found in the church archives, as the following attests: Krauth Memorial Library, Lutheran Theological Semi- nary, Mt. Airy, Phila. Rev. Luther D. Reed, Director. September 8, 1913 Dear Madam: - After consultation with the Dean of the Seminary, I regret to inform you that the Kurtz records and papers are not in our possession, nor have we any informa- tion in regard to them. Yours truly, M. E. KAIGHN, Librarian. Elizabeth Zerbe, b. 1740; confirmed, 1760; da. of George Peter Zerbe, 19 years and 6 months. (Christ church records.) Conrad Minnich and Elizabeth Zerbe were married about 1768. 1761, September 21, Conrad Minnich and Elizabeth Zerbe, sponsors for Anna Elizabeth, da. of George Minnich. (Reh- ersburg church records); and June 19, 1768, sponsors for a _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 373 Allied Families _________________________________________________ son, Conrad, of George Yeakley, Conrad Minnich and wife. (Daniel's Corner church records, Robesonia.) October 22, 1783, Conrad Minnich, et al., grantor to Peter Zerby, Jr., son of George Peter Zerbe, deceased, tract of land in Tulpebocken Township. (Recorder's office, B. 8, V. 1, p. 103.) The heirs sold their interests to Peter, Jr., and signed their names, spelled, Zerbe. The first census, 1790, gives Conrad Minnich as having two sons over sixteen years, two under sixteen and four daughters. The baptismal records of the Red church, of which he was Warden, gives only two of these children, the others doubtless being among the Kurtz records. Conrad Münch and wf. Elizabeth - Christina, b. May 16, 1779. May Susanna, da. of Conrad and Elizabeth Munch, b. April, bap. 1781. The other children were: Conrad, Jacob, Joseph, Fred- eric, Elizabeth; one died in infancy. CONRAD MINNICH, SECOND Conrad3 Minnich (Conrad2, Peter1), b. 1770; d. in Sun- bury, Northumberland County, 1809; will, 1809; issue: Henry and Elizabeth, wife of Adam and Christina Sunday. The latter removed to Centre County, 1800, where Adam Sunday died at George's Valley, April 24, 1855, the widow surviving. The warrantees for Northumberland County give Adam Son- tag, Conrad Minnich and Henry, Benjamin and Peter Min- nich as having taken up 400 acres of land each, November 18, 1793. Conrad2 Minnich was a taxable in Manheim Township, Berks County, 1802, later Norwegian Township, Schuylkill County, and is mentioned in land transactions, also, at what is now West Woods, Schuylkill County. The land of Adam Sontag and Conrad Minnich is now included in Mifflin and Catawissa Townships, Columbia County. _________________________________________________ 374 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ Henry Münch (Benjamin3 Munch, Christopher2, Simon1), of Heidelberg Township, married Catharine Reed, of the Tul- pehocken, December 16, 1765. Elizabeth2 Minnich (Conrad1) was m. twice, to Isaac Phillips and to a man named Rudy. She lived in Beaver Valley, Pinegrove Township, and left numerous descend- ants. She was known to everybody thereabouts as Aunt Betsy Phillips and with husbands is buried in St. Pe- ter's cemetery, near Cressona. Two daughters died without issue. Jacob, second son of Conrad1 Minnich, married Mary Pott, daughter of John Pott, the founder of Pottsville. A sampler of homespun linen worked in colored silk by Mrs. Minnich, in possession of a descendant of the family, gives the following dates of birth: "Jacob Minnich, b. 1771; Mary Pott Miinnich, b. June 18, 1797; Jeremiah Minnich, b. June 26, 1820; William Minnich, b. April 14, 1822; Maria Minnich, b. May 28, 1824; Catharine Minnich, b. December 25, 1826; Emma Rebecca, b. March 6, 1833." Jacob Minnich has been variously referred to as "Fred- eric" and "Joseph." He may have had a double name, but is in the court house records as Jacob and so remembered by his grandson, Edwin J. Minnich. The latter has in his pos- session a Masonic Macassar cloth, or Spitalsfields silk hand- kerchief, such as members of that organization sometimes wore about the neck as a muffler. It was made in Spitals- field, England, by Huguenot silk weavers and belonged to his grandfather, Jacob Minnich. "Joseph Minnich lived in Bristol, Pa., in 1820, and belonged to the Masonic order, of that place, but there is no other record of an early Minnich in the Masonic archives, " (Dr. Julius Sachse, Librarian, Phila.) Captain Conrad Minnich d. 1796. Letters of administra- tion were granted to Jacob Brickley, April 6, 1796, his widow _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 375 Allied Families _________________________________________________ Elizabeth renouncing.1 Elizabeth, his wife, died 1799. Both are buried in St. Peter's cemetery, 1 1/2 miles north of Cres- sona. Their graves were recently identified by their great grandson, Edwin J. Minnich, of St. Clair. A Revolutionary War headstone obtained from the government was placed at the head of the old soldier's grave and a suitable marker installed at the head of that of his wife's, this work having been a tribute of descendants of the George Peter Zerbe fam- ily. The following is self explanatory: "St. Bonifacius Rectory, St. Clair, Penna. This is to certify that Mr. Edwin J. Minnich has been in my employ for the past one and a half years and in that of my predecessor's employ for the space of at least three years, and has filled his position in every way satisfactorily. I have found him always a man of veracity and upon such testi- monials I have kept him in employ myself. Jos. A. Scheafer, Rector St. Bonifacius Church, April 10, 1913 St. Clair, Pa." ______ "Trinity Church Rectory, Pottsville, Penna. To whom it may concern:- I have known Mr. Edwin J. Minnich in connection with the church, very well for a long time - twenty years or more. I regard him as a straight, honest, truthful man; and would not hesitate to take his word deliberately given, to be the truth to the best of his knowledge and belief. James F. Powes, April 10, 1913. Rector Emeritus Trinity Church." __________ (Note 1-Berks County Court Book, and Abstract of Wills, Penna. His- torical Society, Phila.) _________________________________________________ 376 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ "St. Clair, Schuylkill Co., Penna., April 9, 1913 I, Edwin Minnich, do hereby certify that the unmarked grave in the northwest corner of old St. Peter's Lutheran and Reformed burying ground, laid out about 1780, one and a quarter miles west of Cressona, Schuylkill County, is that of my great grandfather, Capt. Conrad Minnich, who lived at the present site of the Seven Stars Hotel, Manheim Township, Schuylkill County, Penna. He died 1796 and his wife, Eliza- beth Zerbe, of Heidelberg Township, Berks County, died about 1799, and they were buried beside each other in the above designated cemetery; when a boy I frequently visited this spot with my great aunt, Mrs. Elizabeth Phillips, daugh- ter of Conrad and Elizabeth Minnich, who lived nearby, and whom I assisted in fixing up the graves of her parents. I identify the grave by its proximity to the fence and a large tree, since hewn down, the stump of which is still standing, and also by a tombstone adjoining their headstones which were of sand stone and have long since been destroyed by the elements. Edwin J. Minnich." Sworn to and subscribed before me this 10th day of April, 1913. Frank Little, Notary Public GRAVES OF "MEN OF 1776" MARKED The work of erecting the Revolutionary War tombstones of Capt. Conrad Minnich and George Zerbe, early settlers of this locality, was completed early this week. Conrad Minnich is interred in St. Peter's cemetery, an old burying ground layed out 1780-'90, in Beaver Valley, (Schnickle Creek Dahl), one and a quarter miles west of Cressona; and George Zerbe is buried in St. John's Union cemetery, Friedensburg. Conrad Minnich's wife, Elizabeth Zerbe, for whom a tombstone was also erected, was a sister of George Zerbe. Another sister, Anna Maria Zerbe, was the wife of Leonard Rieth (Reed), Wagon Master in General Washington's army at Trenton and Valley Forge, a rank corresponding to that of Colonel, in the battalions of militia of that period. St. Jacob's _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 377 Allied Families _________________________________________________ church records, next to the Red church, below Orwigsburg, the oldest in Schuylkill County, show him and his wife to have been buried in that cemetery, several miles below Pinegrove, but his grave has not as yet been fully identified. These graves, with the exception of one, all had red sandstone tomb- stones, which long since succumbed to the ravages of time and the weather. Gowen Post, G. A. R. furnished the Grand Army markers for the graves, and the P. O. S. of A. and Washington Camp, of Friedensburg, and Dentzer Post, G. A. R., assisted by W. C. No. 73 and the I. O. I. A. of Cressona, will assume the responsibility of decorating the graves on Memorial Day. Three of these tombstones were obtained from the U. S. War Depart- ment, Quartermasters Corps, U. S. Army, D. C., by Mrs. Ella Zerbe Elliot, who supervised their erection. The work at Friedensburg was done by the sextons of the church and that of Capt. Conrad Minnich's and wife, Elizabeth Zerbe, was performed by Edwin J. Minnich, of St. Clair, a lineal descendant. (Conrad and Elizabeth Zerbe Minnich's son, Jacob Minnich, married Maria Pott, daughter of John and Maria Lesher Pott, and sister of Ben- jamin Pott, who were the great grandparents of the above.) - Pottsville "Republican." (J. H. Zerbey, editor of the "Republican," furnished the tombstone for Mrs. Minnich and made the work possible.) The property of Conrad Minnich was sold to Martin Dreibelbis, who left it by will to his son George, who con- ducted the hotel when it was bought by Benjamin Pott, who transferred it to his sister Mary, wife of Jacob Minnich. The family lived in a farm house in the rear of the hotel which was partially destroyed by fire several times. The farm house was washed away in the freshet and flood of 1852. Catharine died from the effects of the exposure to that disaster and with one exception the remainder of the children died without issue. After the destruction of the farm house the Jacob Minnich family lived in the house south of and adjoining the hotel. The parents were buried in the old cemetery, Potts- ville, on the site of the Grammar School, North Centre St., from which all bodies were removed to the Presbyterian cem- etery, on the transfer of the cemetery to the school board, 1896. Some of the Minnich family were re-buried at the Jerusalem church cemetery, Schuylkill Haven. __________________________________________________ 378 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ William3 Minnich, b. April 14, 1822, (Jacob2, Conrad1) m. Catharine Knoll, who on his death m. John T. Mayer, (who was lame.) They kept the Seven Stars hotel, 1860, the front of which had been rebuilt by George Dreibelbis, and was again improved at that date. The children of Wil- liam Minnich: Mary, William, Caroline, Catharine, Jeremiah, died without issue, Edwin4 J. Minnich (William3, Jacob2, Conrad1), wf. Elizabeth Hoff- man, d. One son, Peter Roy Minnich, wf. Louise Bixler; c., Edwin, Helen, Elizabeth and an infant. Peter1 Muench, born 1698, d. 1766, married twice (see previous page.) John2 Michael (Peter1), b. January 2, 1738, (Stoever's records), d. 1800; wf. Maria Christina Ludige, d. Shrewsbury Township, York Co., 1800; issue: Michael, Jonathan, George, Joseph, Elizabeth, wf. of Jacob Glad- felter. Their descendants in Dallastown and in York County are numer- ous. (Matthias Muench, on Lindemuth's Map, was known in the land transactions as Michael.) John Michael Minnich was a Lieutenant in 4th Co. 1st Bat. Col. P. L. Greenawalt, Capt. George Nuoll, Lancaster County, that part afterward included in Dauphin and then Lebanon County, in the Revolutionary War.1 He took the oath of allegiance, October12, 1777. The roster of this company has never been found. Egle's History, Dauphin and Lebanon Counties, says, p. 38: "1775 a battalion with the following officers was formed, Capt. Geo. Null's company, first organized. Were in active service, 1776, and in the retreat of Gen. Washington, in New Jersey, (p. 52) and at the battle of Trenton, Princeton, Brandywine, Ger- mantown, and at the surrender of Fort Washington, No- vember 16, 1776 (p. 341). Administration papers were granted the sons of John Michael Münch, April 15, 1800. Michael, Jonathan and George. His land was sold to his son Joseph and son-in- law, Jacob Gladfelter, for 405 pounds. George3 (Michael2, Peter1), b. 1770; d. Wrightsville, Pa., 1820; m. 1795; wf. Salome JaneFrank, d. 1833; c., Maria Catharine, Elizabeth, George, Daniel, Michael, John G., Salome. _____________ (Note 1 - Penna. Archives, 5th Series, Vol. 13, pp. 352, 410, 2 Series, Vol. 13, p. 352.) __________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 379 Allied Families ___________________________________________________ John4 G. Minnich (George3, Michael2, Peter1), b. 1811; d. 1892, Bed- ford, Pa., m. October 3, 1843; wf. Maria Catharine Reed, b. 1819, d. 1900, da. of Michael Reed (of the Rieths of Tulpehocken); c., John George, b. 1844, d. 1894, single, dentist; Michael Reed, b. 1846; Luther Weiser, b. 1849, d. 1904, druggist; Jacob Frank, b. 1852, d. 1890, attorney; Salome Jane, b. 1855, wf. of F. W. Jordan, druggist, Bedford, Pa.; Harry Schell, b. 1860. Michael5 Reed Minnich, (John4 G., George3, Michael2, Peter1), m. Oc- tober 1, 1873; wf. Mary Emeline Lovell, b. 1852, d. 1911; issue: Elmer L., b. 1874, d. 1875; George W., b. 1876, d. 1889; Marie L., wife of Wm. L. Keplinger; Clara F., single; Charles H., wf. Lillian Snape. Two sons died in infancy. Keplinger issue: two sons, Wm. Lincoln, Jr., and Arthur F. Mrs. Minnich, da. of Emer Smith Lovell and Mary Cook Lee, was a lineal descendant of Lovell, Borden, Feuner and Le Valley families of Rhode Island and Massachusetts. Michael Reed Minnich, City Missionary of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, Philadelphia, an A. B.; A. M.; Gettysburg College, is an author- ity on Theology in church publications and an author of Historical and Biographical sketches, Penna. Ger. Soc., Vol. 5, p. 164. Simon Münch, of the Ship Lists, 1737, b. July 21, 1700, d. February 17, 1782. His wife, Catharine, b. January, 1700, d. December 12, 1773, both buried in the Little Tulpehocken cemetery (one and a half miles southwest of Bernville.) Simon Munch was one of six trustees to organize this church, November 20, 1747, to whom was patented a tract of land as surveyed by warrant, May 17, 1774, of thirty acres. They had four sons and five daughters: John George, Michael, Christopher, Simon, George, and Maria Appolonia, m. to Jacob Wagner. A tract of land, situated in Bern Township, now in Penn Township, which was formed from Bern and Upper Bern Townships, in 1841, Upper Bern having been taken from Bern in 1789, was first surveyed to Michael Ketner (Kedner), on warrant dated January 12, 1737. Survey returned to Simon "Munich," in a warrant, November 10, 1749. Simon Munich, by deed dated January 13, 1763, conveyed this tract to his son John George Michael Munich. The tract contained 156 acres and the adjoiners were Albrecht Strauss, Hans Cibber, John Kedner and Jacob Pyler. __________ (Note 1 - Patent Book A, A, Vol.4, p. 404, Dept. of Internal Affairs, Harrisburg.) __________________________________________________ 380 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ August 25, 1806, there was patented to Francis Deator, a tract of land of 269 acres, 19 perches, in Pinegrove Town- ship, now in Schuylkill County. The tract was near the Sec- ond Mountain and was known as "Wheatfields"; the adjoin- ers were: Adam Gebhart, John Spicker, d., Peter Bressler, Peter Scholl, and Henry Kephart. In the conveyance of the rights vested in Deator, there were three warrants, one of which, dated May 23, 1750, was granted to Simon "Minig," the Simon mentioned aforesaid. George2 Minnig (Simon1), settled in Hanover Township, Lancaster County, now Dauphin, where he is on the State Tax Lists of Lancaster County, from 1779 to 1782, and is credited with 100 and later with 145 acres of land. This township was included in Dauphin County, March 4, 1785.1 George Minnig died April, 1784. His will, (Dr. W. H. Egle's Notes and Queries, Vol. 1, Third Series, from which other Minnich wills are quoted) gives his heirs as: wife, Catharine. Children: Simon, b. March 20, 1753; Catharine, b. June 5, 1754, m. Jacob Kramer; Margaret, b. May 24, 1758, m. John Zimmern; Susanna, m. Jacob Sichily; Elizabeth, m. Adam Weaver; Christina, George, Catharine Elizabeth, John2 George Michael Munch (Simon1), m. Mary Mag- dalena Wagner, March 20, 1760. George Michael Münch and Mary Magdalena, his wife, sold property, April 12, 1793, in Bern Township, Berks County.2 George Michael Minich was a member of Captain Sebastion Emrich's Company, Bern Township, 3rd Battalion Berks County Militia; and George Minich was a member of Captain John Soder's Company, Bern Township, 3rd Battalion Berks County Militia, as shown in the Accounts of the Lieutenants of Berks County with regard to the excise fines received from the several companies for the years 1777 to 1780. - (Vol. VI, 3d Ser- ies, Pennsylvania Archives.) Simon2 Münch (Simon1). Of this man little is known. May 6, 1753, he and his wife appear as sponsors for Simon3, son of George2 Munch, at the Little Tulpehocken church. His __________ (Note 1 - Penna. Archives, Vol. XVII, 3d Series.) (Note 2 - Deed B. 13-15, p. 418.) ________________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 381 Allied Families _________________________________________________ name does not appear on the tax lists of Bern Township. He may have dispossessed himself of his property early or migrated to Northampton County. He had numerous de- scendants. Maria2 Appolonia Münch (Simon1), b. August 15, 1742, d. January 29, 1815; buried in Christ church cemetery, Stouchsburg. Children: Susanna Catharine, b. May, 1761, bap. May 24,; John Phillip, b. No- vember 1, 1768, bap. November 21; Maria Margaret, b. November 8, 1762, bap. November 21. Maria Appolonia was married to Jacob Wagner, June 29, 1760. - (Christ Church records.) John Jacob Wagner, b. November 22, 1762; bap. December 12. John Wagner, b. October 23, 1764; bap. December 9. They had five sons and five daughters, two baptized at Little Tulpe- hocken church. The graveyard of the Lutheran church, Chambersburg, Pa., tomb- stone inscriptions show: Barbara Ann Minick, b. November 20, 1768; d. June 9, 1833; wife of Simon Minick. Michael Minnich, d. October 28, 1852, aged 80 years, 10 months, 28 days; and wife Catharine, b. June 10, 1772, d. January 10, 1882. Michael Minnich, d. December 15, 1842, aged 40 years, 8 months, 3 days; and wife Elizabeth, b. August 16, 1803; d. November 22, 1856. Tombstone inscriptions in the graveyard of the old Lutheran church, Rehrersburg, Berks County, Pa.: Catharine Minich, b. June 17, 1809; d. December 31, 1884; wife of Michael Potteiger, b. November 28, 1806; d. December 1, 1887. George2 Münch (Simon1), m. Catharine Margaret Guth- man (Goodman), January 5, 1752. Two of his children, men- tioned in will, were baptized in the Little Tulpehocken church, Simon3, b. March 20, 1753; Catharine Margaret, b. June 5, 1754. A George Menig, cordwainer, on the tax lists, of Bern Township, from 1779 to 1784. His family consisted of four persons in 1784. Another George is also noted as a weaver. Letters of administration were granted Catharine, relict of George Minnich, of Manheim Township, weaver, May 4, 1805.1 __________ (Note 1 - B. 6, p. 190.) _____________________________________________________ 382 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families _________________________________________________ Rev. George3 P. Minnich (George2, Simon1) was born in Lancaster County August 12, 1773; d. April 7, 1851, wf. Eliza- beth Goepfert, b. Lancaster Co., June 10, 1774, d. February 27, 1849. He was a Lutheran preacher, serving the early Lutheran churches in what is now Schuylkill County, in East Brunswick, the Red church, St. Jacob's, near Pinegrove, and St. John's, at Friedensburg. He also preached in Min- ersville and in the log school house near where Joyce's hot house stands, Pottsville, in the early days of the 19th cen- tury. His tombstone says: "He preached 1633 sermons, con- firmed 1733 and baptized 1631 persons." He owned a farm at Friedensburg where the family lived until his retirement, when he sold the farm and removed to Bernville, where he and his wife are buried. His children were: Rev. William Mennig, Jacob Mennig, Margaret Mennig, b. April 17, 1809, d. August 20, 1836, m. Isaac Christ; Maria Mennig, b. July 31, 1802, d. June 3, 1850, m. Jacob Ditzler; parents of Rev. J. M. Deitzler, George Minnich respelled his name several times, finally adopting "Mennig." A path across the Blue Mountains, which Mr. Minnig used during his itinerancy in the early Berks County churches and which he followed on horseback, is still known as "Minnich's Path." Edward Mennig, painter, of Pottsville, aged 70, and a soldier in the Civil War, and member of Gowen Post, is a grandson of Jacob Mennig, (War of 1812), of Friedensburg, and g. g. son of Rev. George Mennig. Jacob, of Friedensburg, was a soldier of the War of 1812 (Military History on previous page). From Jacob Men- nig and Rev. George Mennig are descended the Schuylkilll Haven branch, among them W. H. Mennig, one of the pub- lishers of the Schuylkill Haven "Call." John Simon Muench, b. July 21, d. February 17, 1782, is buried at Bernville; wife Catharine, b. January, 1700, d. December 12, 1773, is also buried there. _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 383 Allied Familes __________________________________________________ The Robesonia branch and many Minnichs of Reading, Allentown, and other cities in Penna., are descendants of Simon Muench, of near Bernville, spelling the name variously. Christopher2 Minnich (Simon1), of Bernville. Will pro- bated 1806 (Book A, p. 515). Son. Benjamin, executor, d. 1832. (Will Book 7, p. 60.) John George Michael, b. February 6, 1758; John Philip, b. Novem- ber 1, 1759; Maria Margaret, b. November 8, 1762. Christpher2 Minnich (Simon1), b. about 1737; d. 1806; his will be- ing probated in that year. He m. Anna Barbara Holder, of Bern, March 6, 1757; c., Benjamin, Jonathan, Christopher (Stoever's Records), and sev- eral daughters. Christopher3, (Christopher2, Simon1), wf. Sarah. Susanna Schoepler was the wf. of Benjamin Minnig, son of Christo- pher. - (Daniel's Corner church records), where are also recorded the fol- lowing children of John George Muench: Maria Catharine, b. April 28, 1768; Maria Elizabeth, b. June 18, 1772. Elizabeth Muennich, b. January 8, 1771; d. June 9, 1842; m. October 27, 1792, Matthias Jaeckle (Yeakley), b. June 13, 1769; d. November 2, 1852. Tombstone inscriptions in graveyard adjoining Zion's Union church, (Lutheran & Reformed), Womelsdorf, Berks County, Pa., show a Maria Barbara Minnig, b. March 6, 1765, d. April 25, 1845, and m. John Ben- nethun, b. March 15, 1765; d. December 22, 1828. She was a sister of Benjamin and Jonathan Minnig, and a daughter of Christopher. Christopher Minnich, on the Company Lists as Chris- tian, was a Sergeant in Captain Ferdinand Ritter's Com- pany, Lieut. Col. Joseph Hiester's 6th Battalion, Berks County Militia, in service, Revolutionary War, from August 10 to September 9, 1780.1 The first child of Christopher and Anna Munch was John George Michael, b. February 6, 1758; bap. March 5. Sponsors, John George Michael Munch (Simon) and ____ Strauss (Bern church). From the records of Bern Church, Bern Township, 1739 to 1835, Genealogical Society, Philadelphia: Children of Stophel (Christopher) Muench: Anna Mary, bap. No- vember 20, 1774; John Adam, bap. November 17, 1776. Children of Jost Muench: Elizabeth, bap. December 25, 1778. ____________ (Note 1 - Penna. Archives, 3rd Series, Vol. VI.) ________________________________________________________ 384 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Famies __________________________________________________ Children of Jacob Muench: Catharine, b. January 31, 1785; bap. March 6, 1785. Sponsors, Stophel Muench and his wife Sarah. John Jacob, b. January 16, 1787; bap. March 11. Sponsors, Jona- than Muench and Eva Lerch. Rev. Wm.4 G. Minnich (Rev. George3 P. Munch, George,2 Simon1), b. February 16, 1811, at Annville, Lebanon County. He grew up at the family home on a farm near Friedensburg, Schuylkill County, his father being pastor of Jacob's, St. Pe- ter's, Hetzel's, Summer Hill, Zion's and St. John's Friedens- burg, Lutheran congregations. Wm. Minnich, as he then spelled his name having changed it from Muench, as he sometimes signed it, was licensed to the Lutheran Ministeri- um of Pennsylvania, 1836, and assisted his father in that field. In 1836 he moved to Pottsville, a Lutheran congrega- tion having been formed here, 1834. They united with the German Reformed people and built a small frame church on the site, North Third Street, upon which stands the present handsome edifice, Trinity Lutheran church, Dr. J. H. Um- benhen, pastor. The corner stone was laid June 18, 1837. Mr. Mennig labored in Pottsville until 1859, gradually relin- quishing the county congregations and concentrating his work on the churches, in Schuylkill Haven, Spring Garden, Minersville and other towns which he founded, there now being twenty odd German and English Lutheran congrega- tions in the field he once filled. About twenty-five years' ser- vice he accepted a call from St. Paul's church, Allentown, and removed to that city. He was thrice married. His first wife, Rebecca Seiler, died, 1858. Issue: four children deceased, and two sons, Luther, d. August, 1914, and Augusta W., Allentown, and two daughters, Mrs. A. F. Barber, d., and Mrs. Thos. D. Wilcox, of Freeport, Ill. Second wife, Mrs. Sarah A. Weaver, m. 1861, d. 1875. Third wife, Amanda Bachman, who survived him. William G. Minnich died July 15, 1877, at Allentown, after forty-one years of active service in the ministry. He was in many respects a remarkable man and a _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 385 Allied Families __________________________________________________ most zealous advocate of the religious cause and principles he espoused. His labors partook of the nature of those of a missionary. He opposed formalism in worship and was a promoter of piety in the Lutheran churches of which he had charge. Largely self-educated, he was richly endowed with spirituality and his discourses were conceived and endowed with poetic imagery and original theories that drew to him hearers, in Pottsville, fifty years ago, that were mem- bers of other orthodox denominations, but like others, loved him for his kindliness of heart and for the fervor of the love of God and the church that burned within him. (George, Augustus and Luther, the latter for four years, were all soldiers in the Civil War.) Jonathan3 Minnig, (Christopher2, Simon1), b. February 24, 1764, d. April 24, 1844, married twice; m. Susanna Lasch, b. April 21, 1771, d. March 10, 1838; no children. His first wife was a sister of Anna Maria Lasch, b. 1769 d. 1829, wife of John Gruber, b. 1769; d. 1840. Tombstones Daniel's Corner Church, Robesonia. Benjamin3 Minnig, (Christopher2, Simon1), b. March 17, 1776, d. September 23, 1832; wf. Susanna Schoepler, m. 1791, b. October 4, 1775, d. September 23, 1832. Issue, five sons and five daughters; Jacob, b. February 18, 1806, d. June 14, 1878; m. Elizabeth Potteiger, b. March 12, 1812, d. May 31, 1880; c., Adam and Elenora, who married Jonathan L. Klopp. Jacob4 Minnig, (Benjamin3, Christopher2, Simon1), his first wife was Isabella, a. of Daniel Klopp. (Daniel Klopp, of Berks County, was an early settler of Pottsville. He had a butcher's stall in the first market house, and kept a shop in the building now used as an office by Dr. G. R. Corson. He weighed over three hundred pounds and was a very dig- nified man acting as chief burgess of the town for a time. In his shop he wore a tall silk hat while cutting meat and serving __________________________________________________ 386 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families ___________________________________________________ customers.) Jacob's second wife was Margaret Leiss, b. in Heidelberg Township, January 29, 1836, m. November 1, 1856. Adam5 Minnig (Jacob4, Benjamin3, Christopher2, Simon1), b. October 11, 1834, d. December 16, 1904. He was married to Isabella Henrietta Klopp, b. January 29, 1836, d. January 12, 1898. Their children were Deborah, wf. of Rev. A. John- son Long, d., for a number of years in charge of the Bethany Orphans' Home of the Reformed church at Womelsdorf. Children, Laura, m. to Harry Stauffer, Middletown; Mabel, m. to Joseph Kalbach, Chambersburg; Anna, m. John Yerger, Shillington. Mrs. Long lives at Robesonia and at Chambers- burg with her daughters. Charles6 Oscar Minnig (Adam5, Jacob4, Benjamin3, Christpher2, Simon1), Robesonia, b. September 26, 1860, m. Emmeline A. Kalbach, August 27, 1881, b. August 19, 1865; c., Lloyd, Constance, Salome, Eugene, Willis, James, living and five deceased. Salome m. Calvin C. Master; Eugene m. Annie Kreider. Mr. Minnig is a cement contractor and paver living at Robesonia. (The author is indebted to him and to his son for data of the Chris- topher Minnich line, of which he has a collection of baptismal and mar- raige records.) The tombstone inscriptions in the new cemetery at Hummelstown, Dauphin County, Pa., show the following: Wendel Minnich, b. September 25, 1725, d. September 5, 1781. Wife of Wendel Minnich, b. February 25, 1731; d. 1783. Barbara Minnich, da. of Wendell, b. 1768; d. March 11, 1823. Wendel Minnich, Jr., b. 1755; d. February 14, 1820. Wendel Manig, of the Ship Lists, September 5, 1751, is shown on the State Tax Lists and Census of Derry Township, Dauphin County, with 10 to 40 acres of land, March 4, 1785, with two male persons above 16 years and two under sixteen years and two females, the name is spelled Menich. Wendel Minnich, of Derry, died 1781. His sons, according to the cen- sus, were George and Wendle Minnich, of Derry. _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL 387 Allied Families __________________________________________________ Constantine Menach is shown as a taxable in Strasburg Township, Lancaster County, from 1779 to 1782. Among the soldiers of the Pennsylvania Line in the Revolutionary War, who were entitled to "Donation Lands" in the northwestern part of Pennsylvania, provided by an Act of the General Assembly, of the State, of December 12, 1783, and the Purchase of 1784, as published in Vol. III, 3rd Series, Pennsylvania Archives, under "Return of the Pennsylvania Line, Entitled to Donation Lands Reported by the Late Comptroller" there is shown (page 704): Peter Minick, Private, Hughes Company, 200 acres of land. This Peter Minnich was doubtless the Peter of the 1790 census, as of Allen Township, Northampton County. The tombstone inscriptions in the old Egypt Church graveyard, at Eygpt, Lehigh County (Northampton prior to March 6, 1812), Pa., show the children of Peter Minnich to have been: John Minnich, b. September 4, 1778; d. October 4, 1863; son of Peter and Sybilla Minnich. Susanna Minnich (wife of John), b. February 26, 1777; d. January 16, 1854; 9 children. Maria Minnich, (Braun), b. March 31, 1805; d. December 9, 1847; wife of Michael Minnich; 9 children. Lutheran church record, Campbelltown, Lebanon County, (Dauphin prior to February 16, 1813), names a John Muench who had a son Samuel born in August, 1801. John was doubt- less the son of Peter. The early Proprietary and State Tax Lists and the first census report taken in Pennsylvania, 1790, contain many more Minnich names. ______________ PHILADELPHIA BRANCH OF MUENCHS ______ PASSPORT OF CONRAD MINNICH, OF PHILA. The passport of Conrad Münch, in possession of J. F. Mynich, Lynbrook, Long Island, N. Y., divested of its tech- nical form, states that: "Conrad Münch, of Mechtersheimer, near Speyer, his wife and his brother Gottfreid Munch do intend to settle in the New England (U. S.)" Then follows the usual form that should be permitted to "pass with- out hinderance." The passport is signed by the "Burgermeis- _________________________________________________ 388 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ ter" in the name of the "Rath (Town Council) of the free city of Speyer, of the Holy Roman Empire," April 25, 1765, (Speyer, under the old division of Germany, was near Ba- varia.) He arrived August 24, 1765, ship Polly, Robert Por- ter, master, from Rotterdam.1 Conrad Mynich (as this branch spells it), died 1798. A bill of sale dated February 9, 1799, shows that he died pos- sessed of two houses in North Liberties, Philadelphia, which were sold at auction. Jacob Mynich, his son, was the admin- istrator2. No other children named; wife, Margaret. A notice served on Jacob Mynich to attend a meeting March 4, 1818, shows that he was an active member of a so- ciety, connected with the Dutch Reformed Church then lo- cated at Fifth and Cherry St., Philadelphia, and buried in the burial ground near Tenth and Race, from which the bodies were removed on the sale of the ground and re-interred else- where. Conrad Munch died in Philadelphia, and his body and that of his son Jacob and others of the family were re- moved from the above and re-interred in Laurel Hill ceme- tery. There is a tradition in the Mynich family that their grand- father served in the Revolutionary War. He is doubtless the Conrad "Minnig," private of the Continental Line. Depre- ciation pay.3 Of this branch of the Munchs are those of that name at Harrisburg, Indianapolis, Ind., the Minnichs of Gettysburg and others of that name, variously spelled, in Philadelphia, Reading and elsewhere. August 24, 1728, there landed at Philadelphia, John Christopher Meng. According to the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 1882, Vol. VI, pages 398-401, he was born in Manheim, Germany, in 1697, and married on June __________ (Note 1 - Penna. Archives, 2d Series, Vol. 17, p. 471.) (Note 2 - Will Book "H," p. 357.) Note 3 - Fifth Series, Penna. Archives, Vol. IV, p. 264.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 389 Allied Families __________________________________________________ 29, 1723, Anna Dorothea Baumann. He settled and lived in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Among his children were Melchior Meng, given in the Census of Pennsylvania, who died October 13, 1812, in the 82nd year of his age; and John Meng, a portrait painter of more than ordinary promise, who died at the age of 20 years, having been born February 6, 1734. The name Meng may, however, have no connection with the name Muench; but the brief sketch of the Mengs in the maga- zine referred to is interesting reading. J4. F. Mynich, b. August 20, 1833, (Daniel3, Jacob2, Con- rad1, m. October, 1895); m. twice, second wife, Mrs. Frances Price, son Walter, issue of first marriage. Mr. Mynich was born in Philadelphia, the family subsequently removing to Wilmington, Del., where he was raised. He was a master painter and decorator and was employed as such by the Bal- timore Central, W. C. and Phila., Mexican Central and Mexi- can National Railways, and also at the Brooklyn U. S. Navy Yard. During the Civil War he was Engineer Yeoman, of the Wyalusing U. S. North Atlantic squadron. Mr. Mynich is a 32d deg. Mason and in the year 1876 visited Europe as a special representative of the Grand Master of Masons, to the Grand Lodges of England, Scotland and Ireland. His home is in Brooklyn, N. Y.; he is at present, at the age of 79 years, living at Lynbrook, Long Island, N. Y. His wife, too, is still living. Jacob2 Mynich, (Conrad1), m. Barbara Epis; c., Joseph and Daniel. Jacob2 Mynich and Joseph, his son, were sol- diers in the War of 1812-'15. The latter died from a disease contracted from exposure in that war. Jacob2 Mynich died 1830. Church records, Dutch Reformed Church, 5th and Cherry Sts., Philadelphia. Joseph Mynich's children, Jacob and Julianna, both died unmarried. Jacob is buried in Laurel Hill cemetery, Phila- delphia. _________________________________________________ 390 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ Daniel Mynich m. Ann Crawford Woodcock; c., Eliza, who died at the age of 83, unmarried; William died in in- fancy; Emma Julianna m. Willis S. Holden, a first cousin, son of her mother's sister; Eliza d. 1911; issue: Cora C., d., and William W. Holden, of Wilmington, Del. Jacob4 F. Mynich (Joseph3, Jacob2, Conrad1), m. Laura Ophelia Meyers, December 24, 1854, d. April 20, 1855. He m. Sarah E. Martin, January, 1862; d. 1893; c., Howard N., b. 1863, of Reading; Clara Ada May, m. Charles Hoxie, Fairville, Chester Co.; Gen. L. Z. Manager, New York, sin- gle; Leila Annie, m. John McBride, Richardson Park, New Castle Co., Del.; C. Frank Mynich, postal clerk, m., Richard- son Park, New Castle Co., Wilmington, Del. (The author is indebted to J. F. Mynich, Brooklyn, N. Y., for the above data and for the use of the manuscript and letters which follow that establish the facts. The letters were translated from the German by "Herr" August Knecht, of Pottsville, former editor and publisher of the "Amerikanischer Republikaner.") ______ Philadelphia, March 15, 1784 Our friendly greeting to our dear father, Gottfried Muench, and to our dear mother and to our dear brothers, Simon and Jacob, and to our dear sister, Catherina, and to Margaretha Elisabetha and to our dear brother-in-laws, Jacob Detrich and Christophel Adolf and to our dear sister, Eva Margaretha. We send you all a thousand greetings. We cannot fail at this good opportunity to write you and we hope that these few lines will reach you in good health, the knowledge of which would afford us sincere pleasure. As regards us, we are, thanks to God, getting along very well. Now, we beg of you, that you inform us, through this opportunity, how it is with you, which we heartily desire to know, when so far apart, friends are glad to hear from one another. We are all living in the city of Philadelphia and can amply support ourselves. Now, we beg of you, dear brothers and sisters, to write to us, as we have not heard anything from you, and you nothing from us, and we hope that it affords you as much pleasure to hear from us as it will us to hear from you. We have nothing further to write this time. We commend you all to the protection of God the most High. Herewith we remain your faithful brothers unto death. Conrad Muench, Gottfreid Muench. _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 391 Allied Families __________________________________________________ Waldorf, June 11, 1790 Both brothers-in-law and their families, our friendliest greeting! This opportunity1 which we have through the presence of the Ameri- can, Mr. Peter Ulrich, a native of this place, to send a letter to our esteemed friends in America, in the city of Philadelphia, is in part our greatest pleasure and would become complete if this would reach our dearest friends in good health, as we sincerely wish. As to ourselves, we enjoy, thank God, good health. My family con- sists of four children, to wit: three sons and one daughter, the latter being married to the son of a citizen of this place by the name of Adam Abel and they are living happily together which is a source of pleasure to all parents to have their children entered into such peaceful matri- mony. The three sons are still single, the eldest of them having firmly resolved to emigrate to America with the said Mr. Peter Ulrich, which we would have permitted him to do, if we could feel assured that he would make his journey in safety, he having no doubt about his welcome reception by his esteemed friends. He is an expert in the profession which he learned, so that he can succeed in it. If, therefore, through the said Mr. Ulrich, who contemplates, within a few years to return from America to his native land, we should receive a communication from our friends, informing us of their well-being, it would afford us great pleas- ure and honor. We would beg them to inform us especially what the transportation across the ocean costs and whether they would advise us to let one of our sons make the journey to America. We know of nothing further to communicate but this, that our dear brother-in-law, Deneig, on the Mechlersheimerhof, has passed from time into eternity. In conclusion we wish you, wider repeated, most friendly greet- ings, continuous good health and happiness and commend you to the protection of the Most High. Margaretha Elisabeth, Christophel Adolf. ___ Mechtersheim, August 4, 1810. Dear sister and the rest of the dear friends! This letter which you will receive through Mr. Ulrich, of Waldorf, we sincerely hope will reach you all in good health, which will give us all great pleasure. With sorrow we have heard through him of the death of our two brothers (Conrad and Gottfried) in America, leaving my wife (Margaretha Elisabetha) the only one of the Muench brothers and sisters to survive by the grace of God. Sister Catherina died over thirty years ago and her son Frederick followed her in death seventeen years ago, leaving four children to survive him. The daughter, Dorothea, who was deaf and dumb, died a half year ago, leaving only one of the four chil- dren, Esther, who is, thank God living happy and contented with her hus- band. May Providence grant them many years of health and happiness together. The brother died at Weiller three years ago. We have heard nothing from Phillip to the present day and do not know whether he is living or dead. ____________ Note 1 - There were no mail connections between this country and the old world.) _________________________________________________ 392 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ We are, thank God, in pretty good health, as good as you can expect from old age, as old people are afflicted with many kinds of ailments. We have yet two sons and one daughter living, all married and are get- ting along pretty well. We wish and hope that the two families (Conrad and Gottfried's) that had a disagreement, have again become united and remain good friends, it being best when brethren and the brethren's children live in friendship together and forget old animosities. You have doubtless heard of the great revolution which has affected nearly all Europe. We also suffered through the war but the country about here has nearly recovered from the devastation and we are living happy under the French government. If you should honor us with an- other letter, write under my address at Mechtersheim. Finally, you will accept friendly greetings, those of my family, wife and children. I commend you to the protection of God, and remain as ever your sincere friend and brother-in-law. Christoph Adolph, Margaretha Elisabetha Muench. _______ Mechtersheim, bei Speier, in the Palatina, Kingdom of Bavaria on the Rhine, March 7, 1822. Unknown but nevertheless dear relatives and friends: I give many greetings dearly beloved cousin, Jacob Minnich, I hope my letter will find you still hale and hearty and among the living. I have no news to report, but that my mother died, January 14, 1822, she having come into the world, April 18, 1739. Concerning myself and family, I can say we are all in good health. It was well for my mother that I was living. I was with her, I and my wife, for three weeks day and night, we did all in our power for her. She said, "if she could only live long enough to hear again from our friends in America," but it was "Thy will not my will be done." My dear son, Jacob Adolph: - I had to attend to the draft for you and at the inspection when your name was called, I stepped up. The com- missioner said: "Are you the father of Jacob Adolph? I answered "yes." Then some one said "write to him." Mr. Thierman gave me your number 215 with "soldier" on it. Jacob Moser, Daniel Aot, Frederic Vant and your cousin Christophel are all soldiers. Grain is very cheap but you would not believe that money is scarce. It is my desire that you write soon, that I may hear how my son looks, whether he is obedient or not, whether he follows his profession or how he sustains himself. It may easily be that he is better off than in our coun- try, because there is nothing here neither in the professions or in agri- culture. One thing I beg of you, cousin Jacob Minnich, when you write again, let me know how it is with the youngest brother, Gottfreid Muench, and his family and tell them they should write a few lines to us. I and my family long to hear from all the freundschaft. My mother's brothers and sisters are all dead except her stepsister, Dorothea Muench, who is a widow, in Grossasen and she is also anxious to hear from the family in America. This is the second letter I have _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 393 Allied Families __________________________________________________ written to you within a year. Mr. Fux from Speier, came to me and said, I should not close this letter as he would like to send one with it for Mr. Gund. I have been sorry for this, for Fux acted cruelly and I am afraid because the Gunds here said they would write to their cousin in America and Fux said, "he would write a letter, too, to Mr. Gund, that he would not place in the window." I beg of you, much beloved cousins, that you will take care of my son, John Jacob Adolph. I must banish it from my mind but he was always so thoughtful for his father. It hurts me to my heart, when you raise up children and then have no support in your old age. If he does not like it in America, I beg of you, dear cousins, that you will assist him to return, but he should consider it well first. It is his fate and "What God does is well done. His will remains just." I commend you all to Kind Providence. So much from your unknown friend and cousin. Frederick Adolph. (Two Minnich genealogists having confessed their ina- bility to "unravel the tangled skein" of the two Conrad Muenchs and the numerous Jacobs, the author takes a par- donable pride and pleasure in presenting the above history as the true solution of the generic difference.) _______________ THE STAUDTS, STOUDTS, STOUTS _____ Allied With the Miller, Filbert, Kerschner, Lerch, Ebling, Snyder, Mauer, Wagner, and Other Early Pennsylvania Families Tradition among family connections in Germany traces the Staudt family in Pennsylvania back to 1380, but unfortu- nately the full documentary evidence is lacking. The three Staudts, ubiquitous in the history of so many early families of this Commonwealth, John Michael, John and Mathias Staudt, came from the Chur Pfalz, in the Palatinate, Ger- many, September 15, 1733.1 ___________ (Note 1 - Ship Lists, History of the Filberts, Montgomery's New History, gives John Jacob Stoudt and Johannes Stoudt as having, with Samuel Filbert, Peter and Simon Minnich come over on the Ship Samuel, Hugh Percy, Master, from Rotterdam, qualified August 30th, 1737. _________________________________________________ 394 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ John Michael Stout took the oath of allegiance to the British government, April 10, 1761. Stout's Hill, located at the great bend of the Schuylkill river, about six miles north of Reading, was named after this man. (Note - Scull's or Sculp's Hill, near Schuylkill Haven, was named for Nicholas Scull, the surveyor.) John Michael Staut, b. 1712, d. May 13, 1776; wf., Bar- bara; c., John, Jacob, Michael, George Wilhelm, John George, Jost, Anna Barbara, Catherine, Apolonia, Catherine, Elisa- beth. Johannes2 (John1 Michael), b. 1737; d. 1826; wf. , Maria Catharine Kerscher; c., George, Catharine, m. Henry Rudy; Barbara, m. George Snyder; Elisabeth, m. Daniel Maurer; John, Daniel, Samuel. Jacob, b. 1738; d. 1802; wf., Margaret; c., John Adam, Adam, John Henry, Barbara, Mary, Catharine Elizabeth, wf. of William Ebling. Michael Stout, b. 1742; d. 1807; wf., Elisabeth Brown, b. 1758; d. 1820, at Homestead, Bern. Four sons and five daughters. George William Staudt, b. 1748; d. 1820; wf., Christina Weidenham- mer, b. 1752, d. 1820, Maidencreek; c., George, Margaret, Madelina wf. of George Stoudt, of Rehersburg (son of Johannes), Daniel, Maria, Adam, Jacob, Catherine. John George Stoudt, wf. Anna Margaret, d. 1818. (W. B. Vol. 8, pp. 197-170). Lived in Tulpehocken Twp. Jost Stoudt, wf. Mary Elizabeth, Bern Twp. C., Jacob, Margretha, Catherine, Anna Barbara, Magdelena. Anna Barbara, m. Baltzer Lerch, Berne; seven children: Catharine, m. Christopher Lerch, Heidelberg; Appolonia, m. Daniel Aurand, Buffalo Valley; Catherine Elisabeth, m. Peter Weise, Berne. Johannes Stoudt, the second of the immigrants (1733), d. 1773. He was a taxable in Pinegrove Twp., Berks County, 1759. His estate was settled 1777 and '78,1 and shows that he left four children, namely John, of age, Daniel and Jacob, over fourteen; Anna Margaret, under fourteen. Their guardians were from Maiden Creek. John and Daniel Stoudt were taxpayers in Manheim, 1801-'09. John Stoudt, Jr., settled on a tract of land of one hundred acres, referred to in the deed book as being in Bruns- wick Township, and is doubtless the same tract warranted to __________ (Note 1 - Berks County Court Record, B. 2, pp. 222, 224.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 395 Allied Families __________________________________________________ his father and upon which he paid taxes, 1759. This land adjoined that of Heinrich and Andrew Miller, Sr., (Bear Ridge, between Auburn and Jefferson.) (The division of Brunswick was confirmed, 1791, Manheim being erect- ed 1789.) Mathias Stout, of the Township of Bern, in the County of Berks, Yeoman, "cousin," and principal creditor to John Stoudt, Sr., late of Brunswick Township, Berks County, had letters granted him, August 13, 1773,1 and as above shown, it was not settled until 1777. Mathias Stoudt, the third of the immigrants (1733), b. 1725, d. 1795; wf. Anna Maria Schrader, b. October 13, 1728; d. May 22, 1797; c., John, Abraham, Mathias, Catharine, Maria, Anna Elisabeth, wf. of Andrew Miller. (Note - There is a tradition in the family that Mathias and John Michael were brothers and that their father died at sea, Mathias being five years old, and that John Stoudt, Sr., was a cousin, which is corroborated above.) Abraham2 (Mathias1), b. 1757, d. November 24, 1824; wf., Mary Magdelena Hartzell; c., Mathias, John, Jacob and Elis- abeth; wf. of Conrad Christ, Bern Township. Mathias Stout's will states that his wife, Anna Margaret, should be amply provided for during her life. His plantation, grist, saw and hemp mill, partly in Bern and Heidelberg Townships, adjoining lands of John Dundore, Anthony Bickle and Joseph Obold, on the Tulpehocken, thirty-six acres, charging John Stout, his eldest son, nine hundred and fifty pounds. To Mathias, Jr., he gave 135 acres of land, partly in Bern and Heidelberg. Abraham got four hundred pounds; Catharine, wife of Thomas Umbenhauer, founder of Bernville, the same, and Elizabeth, four hundred pounds. The balance to be divided between the above; no other heirs are mentioned in the will, they probably having been provided for prior to that date. This John Stoudt was an ensign and afterward captain in the Revolutionary War, from Bern Township. ________ (Note 1 - B. 3, p. 102.) _________________________________________________ 396 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ Capt. John Stout was never married. (Note - Heidelberg Township, in Berks County, was a part of Heidel- berg Township, in Lancaster County, before 1752, and remained the same in Lancaster after the boundaries were made.) The children of Catharine and Thomas Umbenhauer were: Catharine, Magdalena, Anna Maria, Susanna. The mul- tiplicity of Johns and Elizabeths in the Stoudt family will be noted. The Stoudts occupied prominent positions among the early settlers and were numerous in the Revolutionary War. There were about twelve immigrants in the first half of the eighteenth century and they were said to have all been of the same origin. The similarity of names among their descend- ants of the second generation makes it almost impossible to classify them. The spelling of the name has no primal sig- nificance. Many are buried at the old church in Bern. The Staudts were mainly of the Reformed faith. John3 (John2, John1 Michael), b. 1756, d. 1823. In the census of 1790 he is credited with one son over sixteen and several daughters. He was a petitioner for his father's estate for an inquest, 1777, and the original papers are on file, when his father's cousin, the principal creditor, was made adminis- trator. John Stout, of Manheim Township, Schuylkill County, died, intestate, August 20, 1823. Heirs, John, Mary, Maria, Peggy and Elizabeth, Mary, wf. of Henry Werner, who was administrator, the widow, Anna Maria, renouncing. The es- tate contained about 190 acres and partition was made among the heirs. The petitioners refused to accept the land at the value appraised and it was sold according to law, at Or- phans'Court, July 31, 1828.1 Elizabeth Stout, a minor, mar- ried ____ Kemmerling. John4 Stout, b. December 13, 1786, d. May 21, 1855. (Zion's church records.) The same records also show his father, John Stoudt, to have stood sponsor at a baptism, 1779. __________ (Note 1 - Orphans' Court Book 1, Schuylkill Co. C. H.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 397 Allied Families __________________________________________________ Daniel3 Staudt, (Johannes2, John1 Michael), brother of John3, lived in Manheim Township, near what is now Land- ingville; wf., Maria Salome. They baptized the following children: da. ___, b. October 26, 1783, d. 1841; George Wil- helm, bap. May 5, 1792; Jacob, bap. March 7, 1795; Maria, bap. July, 1796; Catharine, bap. February 9, 1798; another, Su- sanna, m. John Schaeffer; Peter, bap. March 30, 1804; Henry, bap. February, 1806.1 Daniel Staudt gave seven shillings six pence to the Summer Berg church, 1799. There was also a Phillip Stoudt living in Pinegrove Township, near the Lebanon County line, who at the census, 1790, had two sons and six girls living. Daniel Stoudt died 1825.2 Phillip had an Elizabeth among his daughters. MARRIAGES IN PENNA. ARCHIVES 1775, December 8, Stout, John Henry, to Margaret Calan. 1778, May 1, Stout, Elizabeth, to Elijah Crawford. 1765, September 20, Stout, Sarah, to Abraham Freid. 1772, October 21, Stout, Abraham, to Mary Magdelena Hartzell. 1772, September 3, Stout, Brightwed, to William Nichols. (2nd Series, Vol. 2. The marriages of about fifty Millers occur in the same volume.) LAND WARRANTS IN LANCASTER Land warrants in Lancaster, Lebanon, Dauphin, now Lebanon Coun- ty, are as follows: 1733, March 21, 200 acres, warranted to Charles Stout. 1734, March 30, 200 acres, warranted to Margaret Stout. 1738, September 14, 300 acres, warranted to Charles Stout. 1750, November 1, 60 acres, warranted to John Stout. 1757, April 15, 25 acres, warranted to Michael Stout. 1751, April 15, 60 acres, warranted to George Stout. Joseph and Samuel, (Jost, son of John Michael, and Samuel, son of Johannes2), were settlers of Bethel Townships, Lancaster County, now Lebanon, formerly Dauphin, in 1751. ____________ (Note 1 - Red Church and Summer Berg church records.) (Note 2 - W. B. , Vol. 9, p. 298.) _________________________________________________ 398 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ THE MUELLERS (MILLERS) ________ One of the Earliest Families in Schuylkill County The development of that part of Berks County, of which all but one-sixth now forms the component parts of Schuyl- kill County, must be conceded to the influence of the early German settlers. Brunswick Township was so called when the land it embraced belonged to Lancaster County and there were Muellers settled in it as early as 1742. They were An- dreas, Nicholas, Michael and Johannes. Andrew and Michael were probably only sojourners and lived in Bern Township, which then extended on both sides of the Blue Mountains. Johannes Miller, taxable, Brunswick, 1769; Peter, John and Adam, who were taxables in Pinegrove Township, 1754 and 1759, were doubtless sons of the pioneers, 1742. The first mentioned, with Henry, may not have been brothers but there were congenital relations between them. Christina Mueller, b. in Brunswick Township, December 11, 1742, d. July 26, 1816;1 was a daughter of one of the above, either Andreas or Nicholas. The Red Church records begin 1755. Services were held there before that date. Johannes Miller baptized children there from 1766. There are no records kept between 1757 and 1765, the date of the Indian scare and burning of the church. Johan Gottfried Orwig (Orbich) was born, 1720, in Nassau Wildburg Dorf, Maren-Weilburg; d. May 26, 1804. He came to Pennsylvania before 1745 and settled in Bruns- wick Township about that date. He and his wife, Gloria, baptized a number of children. Michael Teubert (Deibert), Paul Heim, Joseph Finscher, Valentine Dress and other names occur in the early Red Church records, among them;: __________ (Note 1 - Zion's, Red Church records.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 399 Allied Families __________________________________________________ Johannes and Magdalena Rickert, who baptized a son John, July 26, 1781. (Note - Uncle of George Rickert, father of Col. Thomas Rickert, of Pottsville.) Richard Rickert was the father of George Rickert. A Casper Rickert was a settler in this vicinity, 1754, and John and Richard Rickert were probably sons of his. The Red Church is situated in West Brunswick Township, in the southern part of Schuylkill County, one and one half miles southeast of Orwigsburg. November 28, 1758, Michael Miller, Bern Township, administrator, to wf. Catharine, Berks Co., Vol 1, Abstract of Wills, His. Soc., Phila.) HENRY MILLER Heinrich Mueller and wife Magdalena came from the Rhine Pfalz, Oderscheim, Palatinate, Europe, August 15, 1750, on the ship "Royal Union," Capt. Clement Nicholson, sailing from Rotterdam.1 He came directly to Eastern Pennsylvania to relatives in Bern Township, Lancaster County, going thence to Brunswick Township, in the same county. He settled in the valley between the Blue and Sec- ond and Sharp Mountains, on Bear Creek, near Bear Ridge, between what is now Auburn and Jefferson, Schuylkilll County. The original tract was not patented until August 12, 1774, and the parts of two other tracts were patented February 27, 1775, in the name of his son, Andreas Miller, by patent recorded2. Having transferred the patent rights of his land to his son Andreas, Heinrich Miller wrote his will, Sep- tember 22, 1775, which was probated December 15, 1778. (Abstract of Wills, Berks Co. 1752-1793, Vol. 1, Penna. His. Soc., Phila. The will directs that Andreas gets every- thing and shall care for the mother, Magdalena, and that the daughter (no name mentioned) "must pay Andreas for her right to anything." Mrs. L. T. Medlar, Pottsville, a descendant, has in her possession a flask, of fine workmanship, brought over by the couple from Germany. ___________ (Note 1 - Ship Lists, Penna. Archives, 2nd Series, Vol. XVII, p. 312.) (Note 2 - Patent Book 53, p. 463, Harrisburg, Office of Interal Af- fais. Recorded also B, A, A, Vol. 15, p. 110, Berks County C. H.) ________________________________________________________ 400 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ There is no other record as to when or where Heinrich Miller died. He is doubtless buried at Summer Hill church, where his wife, Magdalena, is interred, his grave being among the many unnamed, the date of death being December, 1778. Magdalena, wife of Heinrich Miller, b. in Oderscheim, Rhine Pfalz, 1726, d. April 24, 1806.1 St. Paul's church, Summer Berg, South Manheim Township, three miles from Auburn, on the S. and S. railway, the Protocol says, was built in 1782. This was the second building, a small log house having stood on or near the site where now the third building, a handsome edifice is erected. The church was for the worship of the Reformed and Lutheran congregations alternately. It gets a complete list of the ministers who served, among them Rev. Phillip Meyer, Reformed, who officiated forty- seven years. At a meeting, March 7, 1780, to raise funds for the erec- tion, Andrew Miller is credited with having paid 6 shillings 9 pence and subsequently 8 shillings 4 pence toward the build- ing. (One of the largest subscribers to the fund is crossed off as not having paid his one pound subscribed.) (The tax lists of Berks County were made up 1752, but were not en- forced until 1754. Henrich Miller, taxable, north side of Blue Moun- tains, 1754.) There were altogether less than fifty persons east of the Schuylkill River between the Blue and the Sharp Mountain, when the Indian purchase, 1749, was made, one authority says, "only twenty-seven," and when the Indian troubles be- gan. After beginning their little clearings and erecting their humble log cabins they united, 1755, in building the first log church, known as the Zion's Lutheran or Red church, which was reduced to ashes by the Indians, 1757. Here were born the two first children of Heinrich and Magdalena Miller. Andrew, b. February 15, 1756, d. January 23, 1842, tombstone, Reformed (White) church cemetery, Or- ___________ (Note 1 - Summer Hill church records.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 401 Allied Families __________________________________________________ wigsburg, and Johannes, three weeks old, bap. April 21, 1757; sponsors, Johannes and Barbara Clouser.1 Of this Johannes nothing further is known, but he was probably killed by the Indians when they attacked the Miller home, or died from exposure in their flight across the moun- tains to Bern Township, where their third child, the daughter mentioned in the will was born.2 Brunswick Township, Lancaster County, was inhabited as early as 1740, but it was not erected into a township before 1768, when afterward (1810) were taken from it and Pine- grove Township, the seven townships that, with all but one- sixth, included all of the part now embraced in Schuylkill County. When in Lancaster County, Brunswick Township extended over the Blue Mountain, a small strip protruding over where Windsor and two other townships formed what was known as "Die Ecke" (the corner). The Indian Terror broke out in this locality November 24, 1755. Up to this time the settlers had gone into hiding in the Block Houses and Forts Franklin and Lebanon and with friends across the mountain in Windsor and Bern Town- ships. In the fall of 1757 murder and rapine drove them to a refuge of safety and the Millers fled to Bern Township.3 They remained south of the Blue Mountains until 1765, when with a scattered remnant of their neighbors, the first pioneers, they returned to their homes in Brunswick Township (Braun- schweig.) After rebuilding their homes, many having re- turned to plant and harvest their crops in the interim, they rebuilt the log church, completed 1770, the present being the fourth church of that name.4 _________ (Note 1 - "Tag Buch," Rev. Daniel Schumacher, Archives Lutheran Ministerium, Mt. Airy, Phila., Pa.; Schuylkill County Historical Society Publication, Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 225.) (Note 2 - Indian Forts, Vol. 1; Indian Troubles, Part One.) (Note 3 - Miller History, Indian Troubles, Part 1.) (Note 4 - Red Church records, Vol 2, No. 3, p. 236, Schuylkill Co. His. Soc. Pub.) _________________________________________________ 402 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ James Burd, Commissioner, 1758, directed Jacob Morgan to continue to patrol between Fort Lebanon and Allemaegle. In 1776 Henry Miller joined Captain Michael Forrer's company, enlisted in Tulpehocken Township, eight or ten miles over Blue Mountain, and made up of forty-two men from the northwestern section of Berks County. Captain Forrer was a resident of Pinegrove Township. His com- pany was one of four on duty during August and September, 1776, at South Amboy, N. J., at the mouth of the Raritan river opposite the southern extremity of Staten Island. They reinforced the Colonial forces during the battle of Long Is- land and belonged to the battalion of Col. John Patton. The captains were John Lesher, Michael Wolff, George Miller and Michael Forrer. The companies were collected together at Womelsdorf, Berks County, where they received their first rations and from there they marched to Perth Amboy, leaving Womelsdorf, August 11th, 1776, for their destination, 135 miles, arriving on the 22nd.1 The history of the Mueller family is involved in that of the early churches of what is now Schuylkill County. They were of the Reformed faith. The first and second Red Church congregations, with log churches built 1755 and 1765, were Lutheran. Reformed ministers and teachers visited their people, baptized their children, taught them and performed other rites of the church whose records unfortunately were not preserved. These from 1783 to 1795 were: Revs. Stoy, Lehman, Hautz, Wagner, Hartzell and others. The Reform- ed congregation was formally organized, 1795, as Christ Re- formed church, Brunswick Township. The church was built a few rods west of Zion's or the Red Church, on the opposite side of the road near the forks where the road from Landing- ___________ (Note 1 - Penna. Archives, 5th Series, Vol 5. Penna. Archives 2, p. 249. Montgomery, Berks in the Revolution, p. 107. Penna. Associates, Vol. 2, pp. 257-276. Tax list, Berks County Court House, Pinegrove Township, 1771, Michael Forrer.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 403 Allied Families ___________________________________________________ ville joins the turnpike. The two churches united as a Union church with alterative Sundays for worship, Whit Monday, June 11, 1832, and has remained as such ever since. At the organization of Christ Reformed Church, March 19, 1795, the articles upon which it was founded were signed by fifty-five members among whom were Andreas Miller and Phillip Alspach.1 (April 16, 1808, Andrew Miller and John Hammer, of Manheim Town- ship, Berks County, witnessed the will of Phillip Alspach, b. N. Windsor Township, Berks County, 1733; d. August 26, 1808. - Abstract of Wills, Berks County, Penna. Historical Soc., Phila.) (Phillip Alspach (Anspach), Capt. Michael Forrer's Company, Revo- lutionary War.) Andrew Miller settled upon the land of his father, Hein- rich Miller, upon which he was already living. He married Anna Elizabeth, daughter of Mathias Stout, and sister of Ensign, afterward Captain John Stout, Revolutionary War, of Bern Township. No record of the date of this marriage has yet been discovered, but it occurred about 1782. Andrew Miller2 stood sponsor with Elizabeth Orbich, 1774, May 8, for Maria Rebecca, daughter of Peter and Hannah Orbich.3 (Red Church records.) In 1779, Andrew Miller, of Brunswig Township, Berks County, signed a remonstrance against revising the Consti- tution of Pennsylvania (Part 1.) In 1797, April 27, Andrew Miller and wf. Elizabeth purchased an additional tract of land from John Graul, Pinegrove Township, Berks County, and his wf. Julianna, for eight hundred and seventy pounds in gold and silver. (The name of the township had changed from Brunswig but not the locality.) This land, 214 acres, was surveyed July 1, 1784, to John Brown and Michael For- _________ (Note 1 - Zion Red Church records, Schuylkill Co. His. Soc. Pub., Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 214.) (Note 2 - When a man stood up with a single woman for this rite, he was generally unmarried.) (Note 3 - Polly Orwig, Old Schuylkill Tales, pp. 44-46.) _________________________________________________ 404 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ rer and was conveyed with houses, barns, meadows and build- ings. The witnesses were Peter Confehr and Dan Ludwig.1 The children of Andrew and Anna Elizabeth Miller were: John Peter Miller, wf. Salome or Sophia Schwalm; Susanna, b. 1786, wf. of George Reber (Reber History); Catharine, b. January 6, 1792, wf. of Wilhelm Wildermuth; Maria Elis- beth, wf. of Christian Deibert, probably the eldest daughter, (Summit Hill church records); John George, bap. July, 1790, d. in infancy; Maria Magdalena, b. November 15, 1794; there is no other record and this daughter may have been one of the first two named about whom there is a discrepancy as to their surnames, or she may have died young. The name is also recorded Maria Matilda; Andrew Miller, Jr., b. 1781, d. 1858; Hannah Miller, b. May 8, 1798, d. May 30, 1879; twice married, to Henry Zerbe and to Andrew Schwalm. Reformed church (Red) record: bap. Aug. 11; sponsors, Con- rad and Elizabeth Kerscher. (Mathias Stout, Elizabeth Miller's father, died 1795; his wife, 1797.) Andrew Miller, Jr., was married four times. First wife, Christina Deibert; second, Elizabeth Leiser, of Orwigsburg; third and fourth wives were western women. He removed to Wooster, Ohio, 1820, settled near that town. His second wife died after one year, leaving no issue. He had sons and daughters in that state, among them John, David, Mary and Frank. Christina Deibert d. 1811, leaving three children. Of his first wife, Peter Miller, a country commissioner in Schuylkill, in the fifties, was a son and Catharine a daughter, m. to Whiteman. David married a Miesse, related to the Miesse family, of Pottsville, and became prominent in Ohio. Mary m. Frank Weise. Left an orphan at age of six years. Later was raised in the Wm. Wildermuth family, with whom he learned the trade of carpentering. _________ (Note 1 - D. B. Berks County C. H., December 7, 1815; the transaction is again recorded in deed book 2, p. 40, Recorder's office, Schuylkill County) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 405 Allied Families __________________________________________________ Peter Miller, county commissioner, b. October 5, 1805, d. March 15, 1883; wf., Catharine Seltzer, b. April 8, 1811, d. February 21, 1900. Their children were: Amanda, m. Charles Miller (not a relative); Catharine m. Nathan Kindt; Sarah m. Samuel Leffler; Sybilla m. L. T. Medlar, d., builder and contractor of Pottsville; Wesley m., lives at Reading; Emma m. Abraham Long. Andrew Miller, Jr., lived for a time on the Deibert farm (his father-in-law's), below Schuylkill Haven, now known as the Filbert farm. Here were born to him and his first wife, Christina Deibert, their three children, Peter, Elizabeth and Catharine. Peter lived in Orwigsburg on the lower street, near the Evangelical church, where he followed the furniture and undertaking business, afterward removing to a fine farm near Drehersville, which he bought and cultivated until his death. Andrew, Jr., father of Peter, grew sick in Ohio, when his son sent for him, built a small house on his farm and here he ended his days, having been seized with a stroke while in the Evangelical church, Drehersville, from the ef- fects of which he died. His wife returned west to her family. Andreas Miller, Jr., and wf. Christina bap. da. Elizabeth, November 6, 1808. The grandparents, Andrew and Elizabeth were sponsors. Joseph Seltzer, brother of Catharine, wf. of Peter Miller, was married to Elizabeth, sister of Peter Miller and daughter of Andrew Miller, Jr. Andrew Miller, Sr., signed the call twice for the building of the Reformed church, March 19, 1795, near Orwigsburg. He is noted on the Berks County tax lists in Manheim Town- ship, 1791. On May 23, 1808, Andrew Miller, Sr., and Anna Elizabeth, his wife, deeded his three tracts of land to his two sons and one son-in-law as follows: To his son Andrew Mil- ler, Jr., 151 acres 59 perches for seven hundred pounds in gold and silver. This included one whole tract which was patented _________________________________________________ 406 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ to Andrew Miller, Sr., by patent recorded in Patent Book 53, page 463, on warrant dated August 12, 1774, in right of Henry Miller, who also had another tract patented to him February 27, 1775.1 To his son, Peter Miller, 81 acres and 91 perches for forty-three pounds and sixteen shillings.2 To his son-in-law, George Reber, 41 acres and 100 perches. The warrant to this was issued November 3, 1773, and patented to Henry Miller as in preceding tract. Andrew Miller received one hundred and sixty-six pounds for this tract. This land is recorded in Pinegrove Township and later in Manheim. After dispossessing himself of his land, 1808, Andrew Miller removed to Orwigsburg, where he built the present Douglass residence, which the family occupied and where Hannah Miller was married to Henry Zerbe and where her posthumous son, Henry, was born. The house, a large, roomy red brick, old Colonial mansion, is the same as when owned and built by Andrew Miller, Mr. Douglass adding a back building. The trees planted by the Millers have attained a mature heighth and the present owners have cultivated a luxuriant growth of cultured plants and flowers in the box- bordered garden beds redolent with the beauty, perfume and luxuriance of the growth of old-fashioned flowers. These with the well kept lawn and fruit orchard in the rear form a fitting frame for the gentle, well bred and intelligent inmates of the home and their Colonial history. This house was occupied for a time by the father of Mar- tin Sheafer and also by the Schalls, Andrew Miller vacating it about 1818. George Douglass bought it 1830. Miss Rachel Douglass corroborates the above and says, "Andrew Miller built and owned the Douglass home, erected __________ (Note 1 - Berks County D. B. A, A, Vol. 15, p. 110.) (Note 2 - D. B. 28, p. 27.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 407 Allied Families __________________________________________________ 1808-'10. My father, George Douglass, bought it from An- drew Miller." Wm. Miller, son of Peter and grandson of Andrew Mil- ler, of Bucyrus, Ohio, visited relatives hereabouts during the eighties and called upon the Misses Douglas. His father, John Peter Miller, had frequently spoken of and described this home to him. He took back with him fruit from an apple tree, planted by his father, and which had steadily borne the same luscious pippins for over three quarters of a century. After the marriage of Hannah Miller Zerbe to Andrew Schwalm, the old couple lived with their daughter, wife of the above. Anna Elizabeth Miller, b. 1758, d. 1840, and is buried in the Evangelical cemetery. There are those living who point out the locality of her grave, but the tombstone, a large one, has disappeared. She was eighty-two years of age, her death resulted from a stroke of apoplexy. A marker to her memory has been erected near the site of her grave. Andrew Miller, b. February 15, 1756, d. January 23, 1842. He made his home until his death with his daughter, Mrs. Hannah Schwalm; he is buried in the Reformed cemetery, Orwigsburg. John Peter Miller, b. 1784, wf. Salome Schwalm, bap. son William, March 1, 1808; and son, John P. Miller, March 10, 1809, Wilhelm Wildermuth, brother-in-law, spon- sor1. the other children were: Peter, Daniel, Francis, Charles, Phoebe, Eliza and Hannah. Peter Miller left his farm to his son Daniel and he and Peter, Jr., who was a cigarmaker, remained in the vicinity of Orwigsburg, when Peter, Sr., with seven children moved, in 1834, to Ohio. He died in Bucyrus, that State, 1839. His son, Francis, removed to Missouri and in an argument with a fire-eating Missourian, in 1865, was shot and killed. John P. married and removed to Hopkins, Hennepin Co., Minn. _________ (Note 1 - Christ Reformed church records.) _________________________________________________ 408 BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families __________________________________________________ He was living at the age of eighty-four years in 1893.1 He has a son, Charles D., living at the same place. Eliza Miller, b. 1827, d. 1914, m. daughter Jennie, d., married Au- gustine Wells. The daughters married and removed to other states, one living in La Grange, Ind., another in Atchison, Kan. The sons did likewise. William4 W. Miller (Peter3, Andrew2, Heinrich1), Bucy- rus, O.; wf., Christina; c.: Mrs. Maria W. Shonert; Wilson A., railway trainman; James K., and Mrs. Sarah Jump. Mrs. Shonert had three sons, one, Edmund M. Shonert, having great musical talent, was educated in Germany by his grand- father, William Miller, his mother being a widow. He was for years concert pianist for Reminiji, the Russian violinist, having made several foreign concert tours. He is at present playing at Madison Square Garden, New York. Daniel Miller had several children, one a son, Charles, widower, living in Orwigsburg. The children of Peter Miller, Jr., were: Martha, d., un- married; Phoebe, wf. of Rufus Boyer, cigar dealer, of St. Clair, who had a number of daughters, one married _____ Kocher, of Orwigsburg; another, a trained nurse, at Atlantic City, has a hotel or sanitarium for invalids. A son follows his father's business in St. Clair. (Note - Miss Douglass has in her possession some very interesting Colonial relics. Her great grandfather was Col. Jacob Morgan. They had a sugar refinery and bonded ware- house at the southwest corner of Eleventh and Pine Streets, Philadelphia. This ground was purchased by the city and on it is erected a school house. It is a perpetual lease and the ground is entailed. The Misses Douglas draw the rent, which will be perpetuated in their heirs. They have an old receipt book of Stephen Girard, which contains a note of hand, by his clerk, Martin MacDermott, June 15, 1786, for 73 __________ (Note 1 - A letter written him about a year ago remained unanswer- er.) _________________________________________________ SCHUYLKILL COUNTY 409 Allied Families _________________________________________________ pounds to be paid in full with 1102 pounds of coffee. Other receipts from noted Philadelphians who had transactions with the commission house, followed.) This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/pafiles/ File size: 114.1 Kb