UNIVERSITY

PENNSYLVANIA.

LIBRARIES

Conditions of Pennsylvania During tbe î^ear 1755

A TRANSLATION OF A FRENCH PAMPHLET

FOUND IN THE

DUCAL LIBRARY AT GOTH A, GERMANY

READ BEFORE THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN SOCIETY

BY

JULIUS F. SACHSE

AT THE TWENTY-FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY AT LANCASTER, PENNA., NOVEMBER 13, 1914

LANCASTER, PA. 1917

Copyrighted 1917

BY THE

lpennstlrantaeŒcrman Society.

PRESS OF

THE NEW ERA PRINTING COMPANY

LANCASTER, PA.

THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN SOCIETY.

!/tAUw<r&&

©be Bra&fcocfc Expedition,

URING the summer of 19 13, while delving among the literary treasures housed in the ducal library, in the ancient palace Friedenstein, on the Schlossberg, which overlooks Gotha, the capi- tal city of the duchy of Saxe- Coburg-Gotha, there was found a small French duodecimo volume of 128 pages, which professed to give an account of the conditions in Pennsylvania, from about the time of Braddock's Expedition in 1755 against the French at Fort Duquesne at the junction of the Allegheny and Mo- nongahela rivers in western Pennsylvania (now Pitts- burgh) down to the time when Oswego was captured and destroyed during the same year by the French under the Marquis de Montcalm, commander-in-chief of the French forces in Canada.

Although these events covered but a few months, they

3

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brought about a most critical and portentous period for both the political and proprietary interests in the Penns' province on the Delaware.

Prior to these military movements little was known about Pennsylvania in France. The victories of the French and the defeat of Braddock excited a certain interest in France about the Quaker colony south of Canada, and along whose western borders they had established a chain of forts, which became the chief cause of the war between French and English in America.

The writer of the above account states in his preface that a couple of years ago (i. e.y prior to Braddock's de- feat) Pennsylvania was known only to about three hun- dred Frenchmen.

The reports of the French and Indian victories, how- ever, aroused much inquiry about the Quaker colony, in both official and civil circles. To meet this demand the above duodecimo was published. The name of the author is not given upon the title page.

By the authorities at the ducal library it was supposed that this account was written by one of the French or Ger- man officers in the French army operating in Pennsylvania at the time, a statement which was accepted by the present writer. By careful investigation, however, after returning to America, it was found that this pamphlet was merely a paraphrase of an English pamphlet by the Abbe De la Ville who was the first commissioner to the Minister of Foreign Affairs.

The French work was published in the year 1756 and was supplemented with a unique map of eastern Pennsyl- vania, showing parts of New York, New Jersey and Mary- land. At the instance of Dr. R. Ewalt, chief librarian of the ducal library, permission was given by His Royal High-

The Braddock Expedition. $

ness, Ernst, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, to have a copy made of the map, as well as a translation of the text.

The writer of the French account intimates that the work is a translation from an English letter, sent from Philadelphia to England, and published there. This nat- urally started an investigation as to who this Philadelphia writer was, if such statement was correct. A careful search among the literature published during the year showed that there were two pamphlets published in Lon- don on the conditions in Pennsylvania, both anonymously. The first of these pamphlets bore the title: "A Brief State- ment of the Province of Pennsylvania, etc." The second, and evidently the one used by De la Ville as a basis for his "Tableau," was "A Brief View of the Conduct of Pennsylvania for the year 1755, etc."1 Both of these two pamphlets were written by no less an authority than Rev. Wm. Smith, the first provost of the College of Philadelphia.

This paper is of special interest to us as it shows the means and argument taken by Franklin in this very city of Lancaster to intimidate the German settlers, independ- ent of their religious convictions, and force them by threats to furnish horses, cattle and teams for the use of the army. Further, as a matter of fact, most all of the teams and teamsters for the Braddock expedition were furnished by the German settlers in the eastern counties of our state.

The title of the French pamphlet reads :

1 Copies of both pamphlets are to be found in the Philadelphia Library and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Vide also " Life of Rev. William Smith, D.D.," by Horace W. Smith, Vol. 1, pp. 122>-124..

The Pennsylvania-German Society.

ÉTAT PRÉSENT

D E

LAPENSILVANIE*

OU VON TROUVE LE DETAIL

de ce qui s y eji pajje depuis la défaite du Général Braddock jufqu à laprifi £Ofwego > avec une Carte particulière de cette Colonie»

M. DCC. LVI.

TITLE PAGE OF THE FRENCH PAMPHLET IN THE DUCAL LIBRARY, GOTHA, GERMANY

The Braddock Expedition.

present ^tate

of

$euttg]rtfcania

WHEREIN THERE IS TO BE FOUND IN DETAIL THE HAPPENINGS

THERE FROM THE DEFEAT OF GENERAL BRADDOCK TO THE

CAPTURE OF OSWEGO, WITH A PARTICULAR MAP OF

THIS COLONY

MDCCLVI

'HE text is made up of a preface of four pages, and a short account of Pennsylvania covering thirteen pages. Most of this matter is evi- dently taken from " Dumont's Historié et Commerce des Colonies Anglaises." Then follows the "tableau" of eighty-seven pages and closes with nineteen pages of the statute approved No- vember 25, 1755: "An Act for the better ordering and regulating such as are willing and desirous to be united for Military Purposes within this Province."

This statute, which does not appear in the " Votes of the Assembly," was presented by Benjamin Franklin, Novem- ber 18, 1755, viz.:

" By the leave of the House, Benjamin Franklin, a member of this House, brought in a Bill, entitled, An Act for the better order- ing and regulating the Military Force of this Province which was read the first time, and ordered to lie on the table for the perusal of the Members."

Upon the afternoon of the next day, November 19, the the bill was again read and considered, and after consider-

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able time spent therein, the same was committed to John Hughes, Benjamin Franklin, Griffith Owen and others for alteration and amendment.

" On the next morning, being amended by the committee and an alteration made in the title, was ordered to be transcribed for a third reading."

The bill was finally approved by Governor Morris and became a law, November 25, 1755.

preface

URING the past year there has been much dis- cussion in France about Pennsylvania. Two years ago the name of that country was known to hardly three hundred Frenchmen. This colony is one of the most flourishing of the Eng- lish possessions in North America, and has suf- fered more than any of the other colonies, in consequence of the defeat of General Braddock. It is only from these mis- fortunes that this colony has become known to us. The interest which our public now takes in all that relates to the war against England has encouraged us to impart some extracts from an English pamphlet published in London some months ago, wherein there is to be found an account of all that happened in that colony during the past year, and showing the extreme obections of its inhabitants to warfare.

Had the people of the other English colonies as peace- able and less ambitious feelings, peace between the two crowns would still exist.

The singular constitution of this colony, as shown dis- tinctly in this sketch, makes it more interesting, as it ap-

The Braddock Expedition. 9

pears more as a republic allied with England than a prov- ince subject to the crown.

In order to better inform the French public regarding Pennsylvania, we shall give a short geographical descrip- tion of it, as a preface to the abstract which is here pre- sented and in order to leave nothing untold as to its pres- ent state, we add an account of what happened in this colony up to the end of August last [1755].

a ^ort ©egcription of pmngylbania

ENNSYLVANIA, situated between the thirty- ninth and forty-second parallel of north lati- tude, is one of the most important English possessions upon the American continent. Its boundaries on the east are the Atlantic Ocean, Delaware Bay and New Jersey; on the north by New York and Canada, which also bounds it on the west; on the south by Virginia and Maryland.

The seashore is of but little length. The best and most modern maps extend it about three miles south of Reho- both Bay. Some writers start the seashore at Cape Hen- lopen, near Delaware Bay, thence along the southern coast of this bay, where there are to be found the counties or districts of Sussex, Kent and New Castle.

Pennsylvania is very narrow in that part where Mary- land forms its boundary on the south and west. After- wards it widens suddenly, where are to be found the coun- ties of Chester, Philadelphia and Buckingham, the most populous of the colony. It ends in the north and in the west with the counties of York, Lancaster, Berks and Northampton, as the colony continues widening in these latter districts.

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I do not speak here of the chimerical boundaries given to Pennsylvania by the English, extending it beyond the Ohio and as far north as Lake Erie.

The most remote settlements in the interior of the Province, prior to the outbreak of hostilities, were Gnaden- hutten in the north, a hamlet about thirty miles distant from Philadelphia. In the west, the settlements on the Susquehanna, there were up the river near the forks where it receives another, which has been very improperly named the "West Branch."

Finally there are some settlements on the Juniata River above Shippensburg. Accordingly, the true extent of the colony, at its greatest length, is sixty miles, and forty miles as its greatest breadth.

Philadelphia is the only important town of this colony; it is also the capital. It has about 12,000 inhabitants.

There are no fortifications for defence of any sort. Its situation between the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers, which are both navigable for trading vessels, is favorable to

commerce.

Upon the other hand, these rivers make conditions very unhealthy. Inflammation of the lungs, pleurisy and inter- mittent fevers and other diseases are greatly prevalent

there.

The other towns in the colony are very small and would scarcely merit the name of boroughs.

The principal towns are : Lewis, the chief town of the county of Sussex; Dover of Kent; New Castle and Chester, of the counties of the same name; Darby and Germantown near Philadelphia ; Bristol, the chief town of the county of Bucks or Buckingham; Newtown is in the same county; Lancaster and York are chief towns of the counties of the same name.

The Braddock Expedition. IX

Before the war the population of Pennsylvania in- creased daily. In the year 1750 alone there arrived and settled there no less than 4,3 17 Germans, and more than a thousand English and Irish.

Therefore by a census taken of the inhabitants ot the colony early in the year i755 the number of white settlers was stated to be about 250,000. This number did not include about 30,000 negroes. We do not, however, affirm that these estimations are really correct.

So large a population seems astonishing when we con- sider the fact that it was only in 1681 that William Penn received a charter of concessions for this Province, and that when he took possession of it there were only a small number of inhabitants (mostly Dutchmen and Swedes) settled along the shores of Delaware Bay.

Although this colony is upon the same latitude as Por- tugal, there is a great difference in the climate. The win- ters especially are long and cold.

In Pennsylvania the soil « not so good. A great part of it is very sandy and stony. The best and most fertile soil is in the interior of the colony, near the rivers. The country abounds in provisions of all kinds, and are the source of the Pennsylvanian's wealth, and the chief source of their commerce.

But little tobacco is grown in this colony; a few vine- trellises are to be found in the gardens, but the grapes are not pressed. Lumber, furs and hides are also exported in small quantities.

So as to form a conception of the commerce ot Penn- sylvania we give a summary of the number of vessels which arrived and cleared at the harbor of Philadelphia during the last ten months of the year 1749 :

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Arrived Cleared

62 trading vessels 64 trading vessels

72 brigantines 68 brigantines

25 two-masters 26 two-masters

25 corvettes 21 corvettes

119 sloops 112 sloops

303 291

A fifth of these vessels, and of course the largest, came from England and Ireland, and returned thence.

The Messrs. Penn are the proprietors of this colony, and from which they derive much profit, as they grant no land without direct taxes or rent. They appoint the Gov- ernor of the Province, who is confirmed by the King.

As to the political constitution of the colony, the Gov- ernor has the executive power, but this is greatly limited by the authority of the Assembly. Of these there are two one for Pennsylvania proper, so-called, and a special one for the three lower counties on the Delaware called the territories or Lower Pennsylvania.

These assemblys are composed of representatives of the various counties. They are elected for only one year, by the people, who renew these elections in the beginning of October. It is in these chambers that all bills are passed, but they only acquire legality after they are approved by the Governor. The same spirit prevails in both Pennsyl- vanias, and their laws are nearly the same.2

The public revenue of the colonies is not very extensive, as the Assembly has taken care to avoid burdening the people with taxes. The revenue does not amount to over £8,000 (180,000 livers tournois) up to the present day, no troops having been maintained in time of peace, in

2 Copies of both pamphlets are to be found in the Philadelphia Library and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Vide also " Life of Rev. William Smith, D.D.," by Horace W. Smith, Vol. 1, pp. 122—124.

The Br ad dock Expedition. 13

Pennsylvania. The above amount has been sufficient for the salary of the Governor and officials, together with all expenses of the government, including the present annually given to the Indians.3

From the foregoing one will be able to form a proper idea of the present state of the colony.4

Of the Conduct of Pennsylvania, during the year 1755, So far as it affected the General Service of the British Colonies, particularly the Expedition under the late General Braddock.

'N my last letter, sir [says the writer to him to whom he addressed his pamphlet], I remarked that I could not remain silent nor look calmly at the dangers to which the colonly I live in has been exposed. I observed too that our enemies, sure of meeting with no resistance, in the prov- ince, on account of the religious principles of the Quakers or Tremblers who govern us, had conceived the plan for conquering us.

3 (Footnote in original pamphlet.) M. Dumont in his book bearing the title of " Historié et Commerce des Colonies Anglaises," p. 173, mentions Frankfort as the second town of Pennsylvania. He says that it has as many inhabitants as Bristol. It is of course Bristol in Pennsylvania he speaks of, for I do not think that he intends to compare this village to Bristol in England, a city having more than 50,000 inhabitants.

"Two miles northeast of Philadelphia there is a little river which flows into the Delaware. It is called Frankfort Creek. A mile from its mouth there is to be found a church of Sectarians, and many habitations are scat- tered near it. But this place has never shown any approach to a town, and I do not know whether there is any other settlement in Pennsylvania bear- ing the name of Frankfort."

4 (Footnote in original pamphlet.) "This charter is dated from March

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Besides I remarked to you that there was no hope for diverting the members of the Assembly from their ob- stinacy, since they had brought over to their side, the for- eigners5 who formed about one half of the population of Pennsylvania.

All that I feared has happened since the defeat of General Braddock. The enemies have invaded the prov- ince and are masters of nearly all of the country between the Ohio and the Susquehanna.

In the beginning of December bands of savages ad- vanced within twenty miles of Philadelphia, and it is to be feared that they intend to take up a fortified position as near as possible to this town. They have massacred and scalped a great number of families. Several thousand of the inhabitants near the borders of the colony left their homes taking refuge in the interior of this Province. A panic reigns amongs the people, and if some citizen enlist to face the enemy it is impossible to keep them under dis- cipline, as the martial laws are not popular.

The result of all this will be the inevitable ruin of this rich and useful colony, if the King and Parliament do not interpose their authority to redress that grievance. There- fore, I have now much stronger reasons than formerly to rise up against the weak measures taken for the safety of this Province. I see my poor fellow-citizens, still covered with blood, left to their sufferings; our capital scarcely saved from the incursions and snares of the enemy, not farther from us than a day's journey.

The chief Quakers or Tremblers meet in this colony

4, 1680, old style, which has made several writers err, who fixed the date of the charter at 1680, not paying attention to the fact that, according to the old style, the year does not begin before Easter." 6 /. e., the Germans.— J. F. S.

The Braddock Expedition. 15

every month, and beside this once more during the year. Religious questions are not the sole object of these meet- ings, as they have degenerated into political intrigues, where they fix the elections of the members of the Assembly, and issue their orders to the different meetings of that sect.

The Tremblers have bribed the Germans, persuading them that they would be rendered slaves, if it ever hap- pened that any one not a Trembler should be elected a member of the Assembly. There is no lie nor malevolent insinuation concerning these elections which has not been told these foreigners. The number of Germans of differ- ent sects has of late greatly increased in this Province. They have most all objected against the carrying of arms, on account of their religious principles. In these senti- ments they are encouraged by the Tremblers. For this purpose they have from time to time distributed among the Germans, books and pamphlets, written in a manner to fortify them in their principles never to resist an enemy principles which will only result in the ruin of society.

But of all these papers the German newspaper is the most pernicious. Lately, at the time when alarm was spread around us and the danger greatest, people were as- sured in this newspaper that there was nothing to be feared from the enemy, and that if the French and their Indians should enter our territories, he would be blessed who would open unto them the doors of their houses and offer them bread and milk, and that by resisting them and having recourse to the weak weapons of man, would be a sin of most evident pride.

This doctrine was not alone that of the press. The preachers of the Tremblers stopped at nothing in their endeavor to get this into vogue throughout the whole colony. At the first news of General Braddock's defeat,

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when terror appeared upon all faces, when our women and children were seen bursting out into tears, and when all honorable men shuddered at the situation of our country, the most famous preacher of the Tremblers of Philadelphia exhorted his audience to stand firm in their belief and prin- ciples of their faith, and not to do anything to defend themselves, nor to contribute anything that could procure the safety of this country, for, said he, "If weak frag- ments of an earthen pot clash together, what does that concern us?"

Having seen this excess of fanaticism of the Tremblers, we shall not be astonished that in the Assembly they pub- licly declared, they would not do as their neighbors and furnish money for the general defence of the colonies. Therefore the Governor, Mr. Morris, presenting to them the dangers resulting from such unwarranted conduct, said to them : " It seems to me that you have taken all the measures necessary in order that you might prevent any bill passing which fixed the raising of money for the de- fence of the colony. Should I have any doubt about it, when the Tremblers whose pressure you are following, publicly declared they would like better to suffer the trials of war than contribute anything for such an object, when you refused to furnish even horses and wagons to the late General Braddock for his expedition?"

This latter reproach [the writer continues] will astonish you, sir, who have read in the English newspapers, that all support of that kind has been furnished him promptly by Pennsylvania.

But I am giving you the facts as they actually occurred. When the general had arrived at Fort Cumberland he had hoped to find there all things necessary for his march to Fort Duquesne. Virginia and Maryland had promised to

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The Braddock Expedition. 17

furnish some vehicles; but these colonies could not keep their word, vehicles being very scarce there and the horses very bad. Pennsylvania was the only province to furnish the needed number of vehicles and the necessary provisions.

Therefore our governor, before and after the arrival of General Braddock, had asked the Assembly to vote funds for that expedition. It should have granted this demand, much more readily as the neighboring colonies had fur- nished troops for the general service at great expense, while our Assembly did not give a single soldier. It contented itself with sending some presents of provisions and horses to the officers of the army, trying thus to win back their good graces, as they had loudly complained of its conduct. But whatever remonstrances Governor Morris made, it was impossible to obtain anything more.

General Braddock saw the season advancing without the least hope of being able to perform what he had planned. He expressed to Sir John Sinclair, quarter-mas- ter-in-chief, his dissatisfaction at having vexations every- where. Sir John Sinclair, seeing that there was nothing to be gained except by force, threatened into the colony as into a hostile country, if the number of horses and wagons necessary for the service of the army were not forthwith sent to him.

In the meantime Benjamin Franklin, postmaster in the north of America, was with the army. This worthy citizen, seeing that if wagons were taken by military force in the Province, and without the assistance of the civil authorities, it might result in bad consequences; supposing, moreover, that it would be possible to induce the people to give whatever was wanted, provided they were only asked for it properly. He thought it his duty to speak about it

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to General Braddock and asked him for the necessary time to induce his countrymen to furnish what he desired.

The general approved his proposition, gave him money, and authorized him to make a bargain for 160 wagons and a suitable number of draught horses.

Mr. Franklin went with all possible speed to the small market-town of Lancaster in the centre of the colony, where he happily met Mr. Allen, the chief justice, and two other judges. At that time there was a large concourse of people there, as the assizes were in session, where civil and crim- inal cases were judged in last resort. He told Mr. Allen of his plan, who cheerfully promised to help him. When therefore the people were assembled at the opening of the court, the chief justice drew a vivid picture in a pathetical manner, of the burdens required by duty to their King, who for the public safety had undertaken so expensive an expedition. Therefore he ordered the commissioners of police of every small market-town to assemble the inhab- itants and to send him promptly an exact list of such horses and vehicles as they could furnish.

This plan was followed by the judges sitting at the same time in the county of York.

Mr. Franklin, on his part, published a broadside in Ger- man and English, in which he explained to the inhabitants that this furnishing would enable them to earn much money during the campaign. He did not forget to give them to understand that if, in consequence of their refusal, they obliged Sir John Sinclair to enter the colony, this Hussar would treat them as those among them who had come from Germany had been by the dragoons in their own country; that he would force them to obey and that they would de- prive themselves of the occasion of showing their zeal for the welfare of their country and for the glory of their king.

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The Braddock Expedition. 19

The menace of two persons who had as much influence as Mr. Allen and Mr. Franklin over the spirit of the people and the care which the magistrates of the different counties of the colony took, provided the required number of teams without delay; and if it had been necessary, to furnish four times the number with the same facility.

The Assembly did not contribute anything. It was not even prorogued at that time. Mr. Franklin had the com- mission from the Assembly only one from General Brad- dock. Those who had furnished their teams should not be paid by the colony, but by the King. To this day he still owes much money to the poor inhabitants who during this unfortunate expedition lost their horses and wagons, which were, to a great number of them, the only resource which they could rely on for the support of their families.

That is what really happened. Therefore we must not confer the praise upon the Assembly, given to the Province for having furnished General Braddock with the teams he needed. Upon the contrary, they must be blamed by everyone, for as our colony was able to furnish these teams, our Assembly is inexcusable for not having taken measures while it was convoked; and surely at the first demand of our Governor they should have fixed the price for these teams. Had it been necessary to employ authority, a simple justice of the peace, at the first notice of the gen- eral, might have sent him all the teams he required. By these means he could have found himself able to advance before the trees were covered with leaves, and to arrive at Fort Duquesne, long before the garrison had been rein- forced, which undoubtedly would have enabled events to take another course.

The Assembly made many other mistakes; refused to give their consent to the offers made, in the name of the

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proprietors of the colony, to grant territory west of the Allegheny Mountains, as by settlements established there the French might more easily be forced to retire beyond the Ohio. These lands should be given to officers and sol- diers, who, far from paying anything for them, should even be exempt from any rent during a term of fifteen years, from the first of March, 1756.

These concessions made to these military men should pass on to their heirs and assigns without any rent or taxes except that of surveying; but on condition that they settle on them within three years, after the French were forced to retire from these districts.

The Assembly answered to these propositions that their offers were illusory; that the Governor was not authorized to make them ; that, if they were accepted, the proprietors, after the patents of the concessions had been delivered, might exact a rent higher than the value of the lands; that the territories inhabited in Virginia were also good, more convenient, and to be had on conditions more advantageous.

But these were not the only quarrels between the Gov- ernor and the Assembly. Those which existed for two years as to the means of raising money in the colony were renewed and maintained with equal temper. Even after the defeat of General Braddock, everybody hoped that the Assembly, touched by the critical state in which their coun- try then was, would promptly provide for its safety and avoid all that would raise many contentions. But from this we saw a new dispute arise regarding the tax of the possessions of the proprietors, and the Assembly mani- fested, by a notification sent to the Governor, that they would not deliberate about anything unless this point was settled. Meanwhile the colony was in a terrible danger, and the Assembly knew very well that legal questions were

The Braddock Expedition. 21

involved in these debates. This question could not be de- cided without the opinion of the proprietors, who were in England. These gentlemen had never thought that so momentous a crisis should arise, which would impose taxes upon their estates. The more so, as the course of action was not alone contrary to the action of the previous assem- blies but was also contrary to the laws of the colony.

This induced the Governor to refuse his consent to the bill sent to him on the occasion to raise a sum of £50,000 by a tax upon the real and personal property of the colony. No reproach can be made to him because of this refusal, for he, being bound by his instructions, could not swerve from them.

The principal inhabitants of Philadelphia and many other inhabitants of the different counties, full well feeling the dangers to which they were exposed, were so much alarmed that they thought that there was no other resource but to appeal to his Majesty. They resolved to have re- course to this, and therefore addressed a petition in which, having set forth the consternation of the inhabitants at see- ing the colony of all, and without any defence, they showed the King how afflicting it was for them to see an unhappy police-system acting against nature tying the arms of sev- eral thousand brave citizens, who would have applied them- selves earnestly to drive back the enemy. They added that the savages, our allies, seeing us of such peaceable disposi- tion, and being without any support had forsaken us that this desertion had encouraged our enemies to continue their ambitious schemes and that as it seemed our colony would not adopt different principles, as long as the Tremblers who absolutely reject the carrying of arms, would find ways and means of retaining the seats they occupy in the Assembly. As it was seen that they abused their influence

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over the foreigners settled amongst us that under these circumstances the Petitioners did not see any other recourse for saving the colony than by the authority of his Majesty, by whose interference the colony would be enabled to de- fend itself for the present and provide for its safety in the future.

The petition was signed by the chief inhabitants of the town and some of the neighboring counties, and sent by a vessel sailing for London. If there had been time enough it would also have been signed by a large body of the settlers of the outlying counties, who were even more inter- ested in the proposed measure. But, alas, before the copies sent to them could have reached them, all fears of the dangers therein set forth had already been realized.

Towards the middle of October a large body of Indians composed mainly of Shawanese and Delawares, invaded the province by different routes, nearly at the same time, massacring, burning and ravaging. Nothing was to be seen but a sad picture of destruction and devastation, in the live counties of Cumberland, York, Lancaster, Berks and Northampton, which included more than half of the terri- tory of the colony.

The loss which these counties suffered, the abandoning of the plantation passes all valuation and fails to describe the terrible misery of the poor inhabitants. A great num- ber have been obliged to flee from their homes without de- lay, where they enjoyed an abundance of all necessaries of life. Now they are exposed to the severity of the ap- proaching winter, and find themselves compelled to beg for bread. As for those who fell into the hands of the sav- ages, there is not to be found in history any ^vent which compares with the horrible cruelties inflicted upon them.

At Gnadenhutten, a small Moravian settlement in North-

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ON THE WAR PATH

The Brada ck Expedition. 23

ampton County, while the settlers were seated peaceably at their supper, those cruel murderers, under cover of the [light, which was as dark as their infernal plan, fell upon them stealthily, massacred them, and scalped them. They were set all on fire, consuming in the Barnes trie bodies of the unfortunate settlers; their stores, provisions, horses, and about sixty head of horned cattle, which were destined for the Moravian brethren at Bethlehem. Thus, when the day was breaking there was nothing but a heap of cinders left.

At the "Cove" in Cumberland County, at Tulpehokin in the county of Berks, and in several other places, the sav- ages exceeded all bounds men, women, children and cattle were all destroyed, and in places where everything was not reduced to ashes, there were to be seen the bodies id men and animals torn to pieces and scattered about the ground. When the savages are victorious they celebrate their vic- tory by perpetrating the most abominable cruelties in cold blood. Many particulars of their expeditions have been told to me; but I have been too much affected by those which follow not to repeat them.

A family consisting of the husband, wife and a new-born babe, were found murdered and scalped. The woman was found stretched out upon her bed; her body mutilated and her babe put under her head as a pillow. Near by lay the husband on the ground, his body opened with entrails protruding.

In another place a woman, nursing her baby, finding that she was ambushed, amidst the fear of inevitable death, threw herself down with her face to the ground, covering the child with her body. The savage then rushed for- ward from the spot where he had cowered, struck her with his tomahawk and scalped her, after which he fled to the

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forest wîrhout seeing the baby, which shortly afterwards waa drawn alive from beneath the body of its mother and i > s t 1 1 aln c.

In these various incursions, the savages have \cd away as captives a considerable number of our wives and daugh- ters. They are, perhaps, destined to more cruel tortures than those wh « death we have just reported. Would there be anything astonishing in fearing it? The savages are more cruel to their captives than to those on whom they vent their first rage.

59 After so many misfortunes, Searroyady, one of the chiefs of our allied savages, a man of a very rare faith, bravery

tdity, came to find the Governor. Having been

admitted to the Assembly he made a very touching speech

to excite the members to defend the colony thoroughly and

bravely. But he spoke in vain. It seemed that nothing

was able to touch their hearts.

Complaints At last thx inhabitants of the borders of the colony lost

of the mhab- pat;ence> They presented petitions, made remonstrances, itants of the , ". . , . , r,. ., , , . . ,

border, evc*n threatened they would march to Philadelphia and

60 massacre the members of the Assembly if they were not assisted immediately. They complained that it was an evident injustice not to allow the frontier-counties a conve- nient and proportional number of representatives in the Assembly and this was the reason why the legislative As- sembly did not pay attention to their interests, and that their misfortunes in time of calamity were not paid atten- tion to.

Defects In There are. in fact, with any free nation, few examples of

the Cos^hu- j:Spr0p0rtiunate inequality such as are to be found in. the

Colonv % wa>' m w^c^ the people of this province is represented in

ii '" the Assembly. Our colony is divided into eight counties.

Bmddock Expedition.

The Assembly consists of thirty-six members* or represen- tatives. The three oldest counties, where all Tremblers are settled, have the privilege of electing twenty-six of these members, while the five other counties, peopled by inhabitants of different religions, chiefly in Presbyterians from the north of Ireland, send hut ten. This arrange- ment, made since the erection of these (We counties, is a political move of the Tremblers. By it and by their in- fluence over the Germans settled in the colony they always have the majority oi votes in the Assembly, although they form only the fifth part of the people.

The Tremblers, seeing their peaceable system attacked by the demands and threatening of th f the

frontier counties, presented, on the sixth of November, ;;;;. a petition to the Assembly, where they besought it to persevere in all they had ilonc till now and not to order anything contrary to their religious principles. This peti- tion clearly shows which was the spirit influencing the con- siderations of the Assembly; and that all the contests with the Governor were nothing but pretexts to gain time and to favor the party of the Tremblers. For as these had declared openly that they would rather suffer than con- tribute to the defence of the colony, the members of the Assembly did not venture to impose taxes on them, the produce of which would be applicable on these grounds; they feared to lose their seats in the Assembly through the influence of the Tremblers at the election.

Most of the inhabitants of Philadelphia read the peti- tion of the Tremblers with indignation, it was consid- ered as a step of intolerable boldness and people felt well

Petition of the Trem- blers to the Assembly. 63

64

The greatest number of the inhab- itants is of-

8 The at. vanta : for terril

here only speaks of real Pennsylvania or Upper Pennsyi-

-■■- t «amies on the Bav of Delaware, which are called the

wer-Pennaylvaaia, appoint eighteen additional members to

26 The Penmylvanw-German Society,

fended by it. that, if it was taken notice of, the lot of most of the inhab- itants of the colony was sacrificed to the illegitimate ad- vantage of the band of fanatical madcaps. 65 This determined the mayor of the town to invite the in-

habitants of all positions to come to see him on the twelfth

*tr3ncss ox

the inhab- °^ November in order to give him their opinion about the hants of present situation of affairs and to join with him in making Philadelphia remonstrances to the Assembly. He proposed as a remedy îeîsbiy, " against the principles of the Tremblers to insist not only in imposing taxes, applicable to the defence of the colony, but also in urgently demanding the introduction of a military law. that the country should no longer be sacrificed to the interests of a party. In consequence of this, on the twelfth of November, the appointed day. they wrote a remon- « strance where the necessity of establishing a military power

In the colony was proved by arguments, without any fur- ther word. The chief inhabitants signed them and they were immediately delivered to the Assembly by the mayor in their name. Remote These representations were followed by very strong

strances of remonstrances, delivered some days after by the représen- tas represert- . ... ». . , - . r ,

tatives of the trit'ves °* tne town as a political body, in a word, every- body in the colony was irritated against the Assembly, and the dexterity of their members did not succeed in extin- guishing the flames which appeared from everywhere. The people whose sufferings were increasing demanded to be protected. They were not willing to listen to what they were insinuating to them about the danger to their liberty and their privileges at a time when the enemy was ready to thrust his sword into the breast of the citizens, would de- prive them of it as of their lives. This was a good oppor- tunity to purify our Assembly forever from the represen- tatives of the Tremblers: but as our constitution did not

The Bra J Jock Expedition. 27

give the Governor the power of dissolving the Assembly,

there was no possibility of diminishing it an J of proceeding 6S

to new elections.

Our Assembly saw very well that people were driven to

despair and were not to be trifled with. Every day there Tbe ^««a»- , , , it my h com-

were brought requests and remonstrances signed by a great .,cJ m en_

number of inhabitants. They all insisted on passing a law act a military

kttah

ng a militia, an absolutely necessary thing to re- la«"-

'■■;

estani

unite our natural forces and to be able to make use of them. It would have been a very dangerous decision to defer the answer to this justifiable request for a moment: but to yield to them was to destroy the party of the Tremblers. 1 here remained only one possibility to avert the danger which threatened it, which was to enact a military law so framed that the Governor was reduced to the following alternative :

Firstly, if he refused to pass it, such as it was, and if he intended to make some modifications, the representatives of the Tremblers in the Assembly were resolved not to con- sent to any, but to pick a quarrel over the bill hoping to put an end to the cries of the people against them. Then they would have said that they had been ready to pass a military law but that the Governor had not wished to accede to it.

Secondly, if he had given his assent to the bill, they would have blended into it their interests so well and made it such as to deprive the King of his most essential prerog- atives.

The Governor found out their intentions. But think- ing that this bill was only to last eleven months, he believed The Gover- that meanwhile périple, noticing the mistakes, would be the nor gsves h:s more convinced of its absurdity than by all the efforts made by him to reveal them at the present time. Therefore he 71 passed the bill immediately, which not a little mortified the members of the Assemblv, who would have liked better

28

The Pennsylvania-German Society.

The people complain of this law.

72

73

The most im- portant in- habitants of the borders come to Phil- adelphia.

They go to the Gover-

74

that debates should have arisen between him and them on account of it.

As soon as the law7 had been published, the people, see- ing in what spirit it had been made, was indignant at it. Nobody would act according to it and there has not yet been any citizen who has regarded it as a duty to conform to it. Some counties, on the contrary, have assembled already and dressed up remonstrances against this law, pro- testing that they would not consent to it nor cooperate in its execution. So we are in a worse situation than ever. We surely hope that by the intervention of his Majesty in consequence of our most respectful request we shall have a law establishing in our colony a militia such as our safety demands. This military law was passed on the twenty- fifth of November, in the evening. In the morning the representatives of the town had presented their remon- strances mentioned above; this finally determined the As- sembly.

The day before, about 400 inhabitants, mostly Dutch- men, and the most wealthy of those who live on the borders of the colony, seeing themselves too much exposed to re- main any longer in their habitations, came to Philadelphia to implore the protection of the Assembly and to pray it to interrupt every fruitless dispute. Deep sorrow was ex- pressed by their features and showed their misery.

First they called on the Governor, who spoke to them with kindness and with all possible consideration. He told them it was not his fault that they remained without any help or protection ; that he himself had ever been ready and was still so to give his consent to every reasonable law which would provide for their defence, if it was presented by the Assembly. At the same time he told them that two

7 There is to be found at the end of this book the translation of this law.

The Braddock Expedition. 29

days before he received a letter from the proprietors of the colony, who begged him to make in their name a gift of £5,000 (nearly 114,000 livres) and to employ it for assistance in the present state of affairs. He showed this letter to some of the chief personages of the people. This 75 happy news made them mad with joy and they left him, loading him with blessings.

From there they went to the Assembly, and having been They are ad- admitted after many difficulties they stated their griefs to *£**** the them. The members of the Assembly tried to lay the blame for what had happened on the Governor, and asked them if they were very happy at losing their liberty. The people replied that they did not wish to enter into the dis- 76 putes which occupied them; that they wanted to be de- fended, and that they did not understand what they were told about the danger to public liberty when the safety of the lives of the citizens was not provided for. The mem- bers of the Assembly, seeing how things went on, thought it necessary to appease these inhabitants, promising them that they should be helped immediately, and consequently a bill was passed by which £60,000 (1,360,000 livres) were accorded to them, in which were included the £5,000 Subsidy ac- of the present of the proprietors. This bill was sent to corded by the the Governor the next morning. He immediately gave his consent to it. Surely he would have consented four 77 months before if the members of the Assembly at that time had agreed to all that concerned the use of the employ- ment of this money, and once at least abandoned the unjust pretension of taxing the proprietors of the colony, whom they did not represent, two points on which they yielded at last, on seeing there was no more possibility of disputing them. 78

These are the misfortunes which have afflicted the poor

30 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

inhabitants of the borders of Pennsylvania, who, having committed no fault, have been cruelly plundered, tortured and massacred by a most terrible enemy. And all this without having any possibility of resisting them, or the advantage of being protected, as they had the right to de- mand to be by those who were established to watch over their safety. May we imagine their misfortunes or think of their misery without being moved by compassion? If

79 we consider the Tremblers as simple citizens, they merit the esteem which they gained by their modest exterior, the moderation of their conduct to all those with whom they have affairs, and by the honorable simplicity which accom- panies all their actions. But if we consider them as legis- lators, they will not appear to us to the same advantage. The maxims which have to regulate the actions of states- men are not the same as those according to which an indi- vidual should conduct himself.

The spirit of this sect is too inflexible to be adapted for

80 the circumstances of time, and for the rapid revolutions to which all society is exposed and to which every system must adapt itself.

Report

81 Containing the continuation of what happened in Pennsyl-

vania from the first incursions of the savages, Chnanons and Delawares, to the end of August, 1756.

'HE defeat of General Braddock having quite de- cided in the interests of France, the savages living on the banks of the Ohio, some bands of these made a few inroads on the borders of Pennsylvania where they knew that the Eng- lish were not on their guard. They tried to

82 win the Delawares who had their dwellings in the vicinity

The Braddock Expedition.

3i

§3

of this colony and on its borders. And when these savages hesitated before they took a part, the imprudence of the English determined them to declare themselves against them. Here is what gave rise to it.s

Some Englishmen had been sent out as scouts and had TheDela- come to Shamokin. Shortly after a small detachment of ^"gSthee^. Frenchmen and savages arrived from the banks of the selves against Ohio in the vicinity. Scarrogady, one of the chiefs of the the English. Iroquois tribes, warned the English to retire, and advised them to go back the eastern bank of the river. There- fore they decided to return, but, instead of taking the way by the eastern side of the river, they passed by the western side. This made them fall into ambuscade which the French band had laid them. Four of them were killed; the others fled away.

Immediately after the defeat of these Englishmen, a trader9 of the same nation came to Wyoming and told the the savages, the Delawares, of this village that it was well known that they had killed his countrymen and that the English would avenge themselves on their nation. These words moved a great number of Delawares to meet at Wyoming in order to make head against the English, if they came attacking them. This meeting of the savages was regarded by the English as the first step in declaring hostilities which they intended to begin against them. Ac- cordingly, without making any further inquiries and with- out waiting till the Delawares had attacked them, they seized all those who were settled in the colony and arrested 232 of them, of both sexes and all ages.

One of these prisoners escaped and gave his countrymen notice of what had just happened in Pennsylvania. Hear-

U

«S

8 Account of the conferences of Johnson with the Iroquois.

9 Those who trade with the savages in their villages are called traders.

32 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

ing this they were still more on their guard and sent out scouts to see if some bands of the English did not advance

86 to begin hostilities.

They put the Meanwhile four Englishmen arrived. They were dep-

resentativw" ut*ec* ^ut t0° ^ate to arrange with the savages about the dis- to death. sension. When they had given an account of their mission and made some proposition for an arrangement, the savage who had escaped out of prison, seeing that the Delawares were ready to negotiate with them, cried: " Do not believe in what these men tell you, they only intend to deceive you in order to take you prisoners or to put you to the edge of

87 the sword." At once the savages, interrupting the con- ference, rushed to their battle-axes and put the four repre- sentatives to death. So hostilities began. A part of the fatal consequences which they had for the English was already to be seen; the savages continued to attack them

They destroy with the same success. In the January of the present year Ninismks. ^y fejj Up0n t^e vii}age of Ninisinks, where they put to death 78 persons and burnt 43 habitations.10 One of the chiefs of the Delawares, called Captain Jacob, having dis- tinguished himself chiefly in these incursions, a price was set on his head at Philadelphia, just as on that of some other chiefs of the savages, which made them hate the English still more. 8S All these hostilities made arrangements in Pennsylvania

go more quickly. The law for the establishment of a militia in this colony was not very successful; nobody has- tened to enlist. In fact, this would have been a trick. As the Tremblers, the Anabaptists, and all those who on prin- ciple of conscience have declared against carrying arms, even as those of other religions who did not want to engage

10 Extract from a letter written in Virginia last February 4th.

The Br ad dock Expedition. 33

in it, were not on that account subjected to any charge or

special tax. The result of it was that those who would 89

have enlisted in the militia, had had as only compensation

the honor of serving their country at their own expenses

and of providing for the surety of those who had not the

same willingness.

But this law served at least as a plan of levying bodies Levyoftroops

of infantry maintained entirely on a war-footing; and the in ennsy~

1 ii vania.

subsidy of 1,365,000 livres (£60,000) awarded by the Assembly at the end of November was employed for their pay and equipment, and for the building of forts to protect the colony and to put an end to the incursions of the savages.

In the beginning of May there were already 1,500 men levied. They only thought of remaining on the defensive, these troops having little experience. Besides there was want of muskets in the colony to arm them conveniently. The arrival of a ship which brought two thousand guns for the government removed this inconvenience.

Towards the end of May the Assembly resolved that TheAssem- there once more a sum of £40,000 (910,000 livres tour- b,ygra"ts.,a

new subsidy.

nois) should be levied by a tax on estates, and ordered that it should be applied to the defence of the colony.11 All 91 this did not pass without debates. The disputes of the As- sembly with the Governor still continued and public affairs suffered much delay. The Tremblers did not desist from their system of non-resistance, in spite of the bad situation of the colony. Their fanatic and strange obstinacy, how- ever, discredited their party. Six members of this sect, ap- 93 parently fatigued of finding so much opposition to their opinions, resigned their place in the Assembly on June 3.

11 Letter from Philadelphia last May 31st.

34

The Pennsylvania-German Society.

The English try to recon- cile them- selves with the Dela- wares. 9'3

94

93

About the same time their most celebrated preachers, see- ing the hatred which their peaceful sermons attracted them from the other sects, came to the decision to leave the colony and to pass over to Ireland. At that time some deputies of the Tremblers from London were expected and there was hope they would appease these troubles.

Although war against the Delawares had been declared in due form, in the beginning of spring, in the meantime, they let the colony remain rather quiet for about six weeks. These advantages were owing to the negotiations of Sir William Johnson.12 He had exerted his influence over the Iroquois to engage them in bringing the Delawares and the Shawaneses or Chouanons to peace again. The Iroquois have a great ascendency over these savages ; they conquered and subjected them in earlier times. To-day they regard them as their allies and they call them cousins in their har- rangues. The proceedings of Johnson were highly as- sisted by the intervention of some of the most important Tremblers who persuaded a tribe of the Iroquois with whom they had held a conference to take part in bringing about the same end. The English profited by this time of tranquility to again take some places they had abandoned and to fortify themselves there. They even planned to build a considerable fort at Shamokin on the Susquehanna, an important passage near the Allegheny Mountains, about 150 miles (54 lienes communes) in the northwest of Phila- delphia. Four hundred men were to be sent there for this purpose. But the news of the taking of Fort Bigham spread consternation and depression among them.

The fort situated in the valley of the Tuscorara protected

12 He is the one that commanded the English in the battle fought last autumn near Lake Holy Sacrement.

The Braddock Expedition.

35

awares con- tinue.

97

the colony on that side. On June 1 1 it was assailed, car- ried by storm and burnt down by the savages; all those who were in were put to death or led away as prisoners. After the retreat of the enemies there was no whole body to be found except that of a pregnant woman who had been murdered and scalped13 near the fort.

This new loss did not stop the negotiations with the 96 savages. Mr. Morris proclaimed on the sixteenth at Phil- The Pefce adelphia that the hostilities against the Delawares should with the Del. cease for thirty days or at least till the result of the meas- ures taken to reconcile them firmly with the English had been published. Sir Johnson who had left his estate above Albany14 on June 3 to continue his negotiations with the savages passed several villages of the Iroquois. Having assembled their most important chiefs at Onondago, he made them such fine promises that several assured him not only to remain faithful to the English but even to make all their efforts to reconcile them with those of their brethren and their friends who had taken their battle-axes against them. The Tremblers of Pennsylvania15 encouraged by these hopes exerted themselves again to obtain a conference with the chiefs of the Delawares, and got the permission to send a deputation into the village where their chiefs generally assemble when treating on questions interesting 98 the people. This deputation was rather kindly received They receive and many speeches were made on both sides. William a deputation. Penn, when establishing the first settlements of Pennsyl- vania, had had the policy of obtaining influence with the savages and attaching them by presents. His memory is

13 Letters of Philadelphia, June 17.

14 Letters of Albany, June 11.

15 Letters of Philadelphia, July 22, and account of the conferences of Sir Johnson.

99

with the Del awares. ioo

36 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

still held in veneration by them. When they speak of him they call him " Onas," a surname for a friendship given him during his lifetime. The deputies of the Tremblers announced themselves as his descendents, having the same peaceful feelings as he and the same faithfulness in keeping their word. The Delawares showed much grief at all that had happened. Presents were given them. A project of a treaty was agreed upon and it was resolved to meet at Bethlehem, a village twenty-five miles to the northeast of The English Philadelphia, in order to sign it. Therefore, in the middle make peace of July, two deputies of the Council and three deputies of the Assembly set out to go to Bethlehem, taking with them about fifty of the chief Tremblers, as the savages had de- clared they would not sign any treaty without them. Sev- eral chiefs of the Delawares with a hundred warriors went to the same place. We are assured that peace was signed with them and that they promised to show themselves op- posed to all those of their nation who would trouble the children of Onas and that they would treat them as their own enemies. Taking of The treaty for which Captain Jacob, on whose head a

Fort Gran- price had been set at Philadelphia, surely had not been called did not detach him from France. In the beginning of August he again spread terror in the colony.16 He was one of the principal chiefs of a party of savages near the Ohio and the Delaware, at the head of whom some French- men of the garrison of the forts of these parts were. This body, having left their baggage and horses about five days' journey from the inhabitated places in Pennsylvania, di- vided in order to make incursions into this colony. The 102 most considerable detachment, consisting of about a hun-

16 Private letters of Philadelphia, August 19'.

The Br ad dock Expedition. 37

dred men, amongst whom there was Jacob, entered the county of Cumberland and marched towards Fort Gran- ville, which protects the valley of Sheerman. Captain Ward had just left this fort with his ensign and the strong- est part of his company; he had only left his lieutenant with twenty-three men to protect some reapers who worked in the valley. The detachment of the Frenchmen and sav- ages first harassed Captain Ward on his retreat. But their leader, judging by this meeting that the garrison of Fort io3 Granville could not be considerable, came to the decision to attack it at once. The Frenchmen and the savages, having passed the night in the forests, marched the next day along the river Juniata, and having arrived quite near the fort, they picked up combustible materials and set the palisades enclosing it on fire. Armstrong, lieutenant of Ward, who commanded there, came running up to put this fire out; he himself and an English soldier were killed and three were wounded. The French then offering to give the English quarter if they surrendered themselves, they 104 at once opened the gates of the fort. There was only one savage slightly wounded during this attack; twenty-two soldiers, three women, and six children were taken pris- oners. The French, after having raised their standard on the fort, shared their prisoners with the savages. They loaded them with sugar and the very best they found in the fort and went away. When at some distance, the troops made a halt and the French commander sent back Captain Jacob with his savages to burn and destroy the fort, which he did. The French, arriving at the place where they had ios left their baggage, found there ten savages and some Eng- lish prisoners, who told them that other savages having come back from their incursions, had already returned to- wards the Ohio with a great number of prisoners.

38 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

During the expedition against Fort Granville some small bodies of savages appeared in the other districts of the county of Cumberland. Two soldiers were killed and one wounded near Fort Dowell, August 5 ; on the seventh, one

106 inhabitant was killed in the same district, on the eighth,

another was put to death, and four of his children were carried away. All the inhabitants of the valleys of Juniata and Sheerman were abandoned on account of these incur- sions, and there was general consternation in the colony. But it is astonishing that all these troubles and alarms were the work of two tribes of savages, the Chouanons and the Delawares, who have scarcely eight hundred warriors altogether. What, therefore, have not the English to fear now, as the taking of Oswego or Choueguen opens their colonies to the incursions of all the tricks of savages who are allied to us? The destruction of the forts they

io7 had erected there, is all the more important as, through

this station, in the center of Canada, they kept the whole colony in check. It will not be necessary now to have strong garrisons in the Forts Frontenac, Niagara and others on Lake Ontario. A great many of the troops and the savages, who had to be there for their safety, may now be employed to attack the English. I shall not add here any idea of my own. I leave to those who read this book the pleasure of making speculations on the new successes

108 which we are expecting from the courage and the willing-

ness of our troops, of our Canadians, and of the savages who are our allies. If, in addition, the English have be- gun hostilities in southern America, with the most resolute audacity, they have supported the but little favorable idea which people had of their bravery.

COMPILED AND EDITED BY

JOHN EDGAR BURNETT BUCKENHAM, A.M., M.D.

TREASURER

PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY October 15, 191S

PRESS OF

THE NEW ERA PRINTING COMPANY

LANCASTER, PA.

TLhe

pem$ylvnnin*(5evrnnn Society

CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS, FOUNDERS,

ANNUAL MEETINGS, OFFICERS AND

MEMBERS DURING THE FIRST

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF

ITS EXISTENCE

Narrative and Critical History and Church Records Published in the First Twenty-Five Volumes of its Proceedings

LANCASTER, PA. 1917

Zbe penns\>lpama*(Serman Society

CONSTITUTION ADOPTED APRIL ij, 1891 WITH AMENDMENTS

CONSTITUTION

ARTICLE I— Name

The name of this organization shall be " The Pennsylvania-German Society."

ARTICLE II— Object

The object of the Society shall be :

First: To perpetuate the memory and foster the principles and virtues of the German ancestors of its members, and to promote social intercourse among the latter.

Secondly: To discover, collect and preserve all still existing documents, monuments, etc., relating to the genealogy and history of the Pennsylvania- Germans, and from time to time publish them, particularly such as shall set forth the part belonging to this people in the growth and development of American character, institutions and progress.

Thirdly: To gather by degrees a library for the use of the Society, com- posed of all obtainable books, monographs, pamphlets, manuscripts, etc., relat- ing to the Pennsylvania-Germans.

Fourthly: -To cause statedly to be prepared and read before the Society, papers, essays, etc., on questions in the history or genealogy of the Pennsylvania- Germans.

4 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

ARTICLE III— Membership

Section I. First: The members of the Society shall consist of three classes, viz.: Regular, Associate and Honorary.

Secondly : No one shall be eligible as a regular member unless he be of full age, of good moral character, and a direct descendant of early German or Swiss emigrants to Pennsylvania.

Thirdly: No one shall be eligible as an associate member unless he be of full age, good moral character, and of German descent not native in this State, or a foreign-born German naturalized and resident in this State not less than ten years. The rights and privileges of an associate member shall be the same as those of a regular member, except that he shall be ineligible to office, and shall have no vote on questions of property or location.

Fourthly: Persons who have made the history, genealogy, principles, etc., of the Pennsylvania-Germans a special subject of study and research, and any other persons eminent in their profession or calling, to whatever nationality they may belong, who have shown themselves in sympathy with the Pennsyl- vania-Germans, shall be eligible to honorary membership.

Sec. 2. The mode of electing members shall be as follows: Candidates may be proposed in writing to the Executive Committee. Such nominations, with a written statement of the name, address, occupation and descent of each candidate, shall be considered at the next meeting of said Committee after the nomination has been made, who shall pass thereon. If no objection be made the said committee shall report favorably upon the nomination, and the candidates shall be considered as duly elected; but if any member of the Executive Committee demand a ballot, the election shall be by ballot, and a two-thirds vote of the members of the Committee present shall be necessary to elect.

Sec. j. The annual dues of regular and associate members shall be two dollars.1 In both cases payment must be made in advance. The payment of twenty-five dollars constitutes any regular a life member.2

1 At the Bethlehem meeting October 16, 1895, the following was offered as an amend- ment to the by-laws, and adopted:

That the annual dues of the members be increased from $2.00 to $3.00, beginning with

Constitution. 5

Regular and associate members must pay their first annual dues and sign this Constitution, before entering upon the enjoyment of the rights and priv- ileges of membership.

ARTICLE IV— Officers

Section 1. First: The officers of the Society shall consist of a President, two Vice Presidents, a Secretary, a Treasurer and an Executive Committee of eleven members.

Secondly: The President, Vice Presidents and Treasurer shall be elected at each annual meeting; and the President shall be ineligible for re-election.

Thirdly: The Secretary shall be elected for a term of three years and shall be ex-officio a member of the Executive Committee.

Fourthly: The Executive Committee elected at the first election shall divide itself into five classes. The first class of two members shall hold office for five years; the second class of two for four years; the third class of two for three years ; the fourth class of two for two years, and the fifth class of two for one year. At each annual meeting thereafter successors shall be chosen to the class whose terms shall then expire.

Sec. 2. All elections shall be by ballot, under the direction of inspectors, to be appointed by the President, and a majority of votes shall elect.

the close of the present meeting, and that each member, who has fully paid up all his dues in accordance with the rules of the Society, shall receive gratis, a copy of the printed "Proceedings," beginning with Volume VI, of 1896, or with the volume of the year for which he made his first payment of annual dues, at the increased rate.

2 At the Philadelphia meeting October 15, 1896, the following was offered as an amendment to the by-laws, and adopted:

Resolved, That the Life Membership fee be increased from $25 to $50, and that Section 3 of Article III of the By-Laws be amended accordingly.

Sec. 4. Should any member neglect to pay his annual dues for one year after the same shall become due, he shall ipso facto cease to be a member of the Society, unless, upon a satisfactory excuse being given, and the payment of all arrearages, the Executive Committee shall see fit to remit the penalty.

Sec. 5. The Executive Committee shall have power, by a vote of a majority of its members, to suspend or forfeit the membership of any member of the Society for conduct likely to endanger the welfare and interests of the Society, an opportunity being first given such member to be heard before the Executive Committee in his defense.

Sec. 6. Any person who shall cease to be a member of the Society shall forfeit all right or interest in the property of the Society.

6 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

ARTICLE V— Duties of Officers

First: The duties of the President shall be those usually pertaining to that office; and also to deliver an address at the annual meeting.

Secondly: The duties of the Vice President shall be the same as those or- dinarily belonging to that office.

Thirdly: The duties of the Secretary shall be to keep an accurate record of all the proceedings of the Society; to conduct the correspondence of the Society; to notify members of the meetings of the Society; to inform officers and new members of their election ; to countersign all drafts made on the Treas- urer; and to call and arrange for all writings of the Society, under the direction of the Executive Committee; he shall also act as Librarian and Curator, and have the keeping of all books, pamphlets, manuscripts, and personal articles per- taining to the Society.

Fourthly: The duties of the Treasurer shall be to collect, and under the direction of the Executive Committee disburse the funds of the Society and to keep regular accounts thereof, which shall be subject to the examination of the President and the Executive Committee. He shall submit a statement thereof to the Executive Committee at each regular meeting, and his accounts shall be audited once every year.3

Fifthly: The Duties of the Executive Committee shall be to examine and pass upon the credentials of candidates; to engage suitable persons to deliver the addresses and prepare the papers contemplated in this Constitution; to make all other arrangements necessary for the meetings of the Society, and to transact all business of the Society not otherwise provided for in the Constitu- tion. It shall also have power to fill any vacancy which may occur from death or resignation among the officers of the Society, for' the unexpired term of the office so vacated.

Sixthly : The Executive Committee shall, from time to time, make by-laws, rules and regulations, and appoint standing committees and sub-committees on matters not herein determined.4

3 October n, 1893, at the York meeting, an amendment was offered, which was ap- proved at the Reading meeting, Oct. 3, 1894, making the Treasurer an ex-officio mem- ber of the Executive Committee.

4 The minute-book of the Executive Committee shows the appointment of the follow-

Constitution. 7

ARTICLE VI— Meetings

i. The Society shall hold one regular meeting each year, to be known as the anniversary meeting, which shall be characterized by special exercises, including a banquet, to be arranged for by the Executive Committee.

2. The Executive Committee shall have authority to call three additional meetings of the Society each year, time and place to be designated by the Executive Committee, at each of which the current business of the Society may be transacted, and one or more papers or essays shall be read on questions in the genealogy or history of the Pennsylvania-Germans.

3. The Executive Committee shall hold its regular meetings on the same dates as the regular meetings of the Society, and special meetings, whenever called by its chairman, notice of which must be given to each member of the Committee not less than ten days prior to the meeting.6

ARTICLE VII— Headquarters The Headquarters of the Society shall be located in

ARTICLE VIII Amendments to the Constitution

1. To amend the Constitution an affirmative vote of two-thirds of the mem- bers present at the annual meeting shall be requisite.

2. Amendments to the Constitution can be offered only at the annual meeting, and no amendment shall be voted upon at the same meeting at which it is offered.

ing sub-committees: Membership, Dues and Deliveries, Editorial, Proof and Indexing, Printing and Illustrating, Genealogy, History and Tradition, Finance, Insignia5 and Stationery, Pennsylvania-German Dialect Literature, and Pennsylvania-German Anthology.

5 The following resolution was adopted at the Bethlehem meeting October 16, 1895: That the Executive Committee be directed and empowered to get up a suitable insignia for the Society, the details of same to be left to its judgment.

6 February 26, 189 1, the Executive Committee passed a resolution, to hold its meetings quarterly on the second Wednesday of January, April, July and October in each year.

8 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

BY-LAWS7 I Order of Business At all meetings of the Society the order of business shall be as follows:

1. Reading and Adoption of the Minutes of the Previous Meeting.

2. Reports of Officers and Committees.

3. Miscellaneous Business.

4. Reading of Papers or Delivery of Addresses.

5. Adjournment.

II Annual Meeting

The annual meeting of the Society shall be held on the second Wednesday of October at such place and hour as the Executive Committee shall appoint,8 and at least ten days' notice of the same shall be sent to each member by the Secretary.

Ill Appointment of Committees

All committees except the Executive Committee and its sub-committees shall be appointed by the President or the Chairman of the meeting, unless specially named in the resolution creating the committee; and the person first named shall be chairman of each committee.

IV The Executive Committee

The Executive Committee shall each year divide itself into the follow- ing sub-committees : A Committee of Three on Finance ; a Committee of Three on Genealogy; and a Committee of Five on History and Tradition. These committees to be appointed by the Chairman.

V The Committee on Finance

The Committee on Finance shall, at least once in each year, and oftener, if they choose, audit the accounts and vouchers of the Treasurer of the Society, and report upon the same at the annual meeting of the Society, and oftener to the Executive Committee, as they may see fit, or as the latter may order.

7 Adopted by the Executive Committee, July 8>, 1891.

8 Resolution offered at the Bethlehem meeting, October 16, 1895, and adopted: That the matter of fixing upon a time for the annual meetings be left in the hands of the Executive Committee.

By-Laws. 9

VI The Committee on Genealogy

It shall be the duty of the Committee on Genealogy to collect and preserve, in accordance with the Constitution, information and documents relating to the Genealogy of the members of the Society, and of the German and Swiss Settlers of Pennsylvania and of the American colonies. The Committee may expend the funds of the Society for this purpose, subject to the subsequent ap- proval of the Executive Committee.

VII The Committee on History and Tradition

It shall be the duty of the Committee on History and Tradition to collect and preserve, in accordance with the Constitution, information, documents, books, and monuments relating to the history and traditions of the members of the Society, and of the German and Swiss settlers and their descendants in Pennsylvania and the rest of the United States, and to print and publish the same; and papers and essays relating to the same, copyrighting original publications for the benefit of the Society. The Committee may expend the funds of the Society for this purpose, subject to the subsequent approval of the Executive Committee.

VIII Attendance of Members of the Executive Committee

Neglect on the part of any member of the Executive Committee to attend the meeting of said Committee for three consecutive meetings, shall be a tender of his resignation from that Committee. But the Committee may ex- cuse any member for such absence if good and sufficient reasons therefor be given.

IX Amendments

These By-Laws can be altered, amended or abrogated only at a regular meeting of the Executive Committee, by the affirmative vote of six members of the said Executive Committee.

THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN SOCIETY Twenty-Five Years of History

After an agitation of the subject, in the early winter of 1891, by the editors of papers in Lebanon, Lancaster, Berks and Carbon Counties, and the formal issuance of a Call, a Convention for the purpose of organizing a Penn- sylvania-German Society met in Lancaster on April 15, 1891. It adopted a constitution, and effected a permanent organization, with officers and an Executive Committee.

The First Annual Meeting was held on October 14, 1891, in Harrisburg. Similar historical, festive and social meetings have followed without a break, and have included pilgrimages to the Ephrata Cloister, the institutions at Bethlehem, Washington's Headquarters at Valley Forge, the historical sites at Germantown and on the Wissahickon, and last, but not least, through Inde- pendence Hall, Philadelphia.

The Society at present numbers 396 members, residing in different States. The treasury always has shown a large balance to its credit. The Society has published annually a volume of Proceedings, in which are treated the history and influence of the early German settlements, with many interesting and delightful papers. The work of the Society, usually, is planned by its Execu- tive Committee, whose meetings are held regularly four times a year. The Society has published various old church records, and has made its influence felt in the careful preservation of documents in the Archives of the State of Pennsylvania.

In this quarter of a century the Society has become strongly rooted, and is in a very healthful condition. It looks forward to enlarge usefulness, and advises its members to make sure that their children have taken their places in this work that it may be continued into future generations.

10

FOUNDERS

^onorabb TEùwin Albright9 SUtirrrna Ifn-matt A. î£rïrk?ruîîrtn

î&absrt Kurij ^ns^tU, $$3.

Jfaank ÎSirï» IHfltettïirrffrr, 3Giil.IL

î^nflrahU? Maurus (&. iEbg10

William ^enru îtglp, IHJL11

3E?? 3Gigb,î (Srumbin?, îcsq.12

Emrpnïi 3. Mnx îfark, SU.

î^flttnrabb Srrrmiab, ££. liras

î&rumnà Abraham S. ifantr, S.S.13

Hrnprrnîï Franklin ICidn îQsvnn, B3.u

E. WitraHo §>roii parii??mnr?15

(Eaptain îttuaara H^itru Eaurh,16

SiîliuB jFrirbrirb. S'arb.sr, ïiitS.

ISfurrrnîï Sijniitar? lEmatmrl #d?mauk, B.ÎL, SOL

j&evmnh Paul to^rhmmtfi, HJ§.

Sl?îî?r?srâ 3a§n §>immn'a S'îaijr, |»*jJL, ILS., KÎI.S.

Cirant f atmg17

s Died December 13, 1902. 14 Died November 13, 1&94.

«Died April +, 1914. 15 Died April 25, 1909.

"Died February 19, 1901. 16 Deceased.

12 Died August 18, 1904. 1T Died July 13, 1905.

13 Deceased.

11

12 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

ANNUAL MEETINGS

1891-1915

Lancaster, County Court House April 15, 1891

Harrisburg, Young Men's Christian Association October 14, 1891

Lebanon, County Court House October 12, 1892

York, County Court House October n, 1893

Reading, Hall of McLean Post, No. 16, G. A. R October 3, 1894

Bethlehem, Young Women's Christian Association October 16, 1895

Philadelphia, Historical Society of Pennsylvania October 15, 1896

Lancaster, Orange Street Opera House October 22, 1897

Allentown, Euterpean Club October 14, 1898

Ephrata, Bethany Reformed Church October 20, 1899

Easton, First Reformed Church October 26, 1900

Harrisburg, Board of Trade Building October 25, 1901

Norristown, Young Men's Christian Association Hall. .. .October 3, 1902

Lebanon, Salem Memorial Lutheran Chapel October 22, 1903

Germantown, Market Square Presbyterian Church October 25, 1904

Reading, Chapel of St. Paul's Memorial Reformed Church October 27, 1905

Allentown, Chapel of Muhlenberg College November 2, 1906

Philadelphia, Historical Society of Pennsylvania November 8, 1907

Lancaster, Chapel of Franklin and Marshall College November 6, 1908

Bethlehem, Moravian Sunday School Building, October 29, 1909

York, Parish House of Christ Lutheran Church October 14, 1910

Harrisburg, Senate Chamber of the State Capitol October 20, 191 1

Riegelsville, St. John's Reformed Church October 4, 19 12

Philadelphia, Auditorium, Houston Hall, Univ. of Penn. .October 17, 1913

Lancaster, First Reformed Church November 13, 19 14

Reading, Young Men's Christian Association Hall. . . October 15, 1915

Officers. 13

OFFICERS 1915-1916

President Prof. George Taylor Ettinger, Ph.D.

Vice-Presidents Colonel Harry C. Trexler Frank Shalter Livingood, A.B. (Harvard)

Secretary

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D.

(P. O. Box 468, Reading, Pa.)

Treasurer

John Edgar Burnett Buckenham, M.D.

{Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.)

Executive Committee

Reverend Theodore Emanuel Schmauk, D.D., LL.D., Chairman

John Edgar Burnett Buckenham, M.D., Ex-Officio

Reverend L. Kryder Evans, D.D.

Benjamin Franklin Fackenthal, Jr., Sc.D.

Harry Winslow Fegley

George Albert Gorgas, Ph.G.

Naaman Henry Keyser, D.D.S.

Ulysses Sidney Koons, LL.B.

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D., Ex-Officio

Prof. Albert George Rau, Ph.D.

Charles Rhoads Roberts

Julius Friedrich Sachse, Litt.D.

William Kopp Tritle Sahm, M.D.

Reverend Nathan C. Schaeffer, D.D., LL.D.

Abraham S. Schropp

Porter William Shimer, Ph.D.

Reverend John Baer Stoudt

14 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

OFFICERS OF THE SOCIETY DURING THE FIRST TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF ITS EXISTENCE.

PRESIDENTS

1 891 Hon. George F. Baer, LL.D. Pro Temp.18

1891-1892 William Henry Egle, M.D.19

1 892-1 893 Henry L. Fisher, Esq.

1 893-1 894 Reverend George Crider Heckman, D.D., LL.D.

1 894-1 895 Hon. Samuel Whitaker Pennypacker, LL.D.

1 895-1 896 Frank Ried Diffenderffer, Litt.D.

1896-1897 Reverend Theodore Emanuel Schmauk, D.D., LL.D.

1 897-1 898 Reverend Nathan C. Schaeffer, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D.

1 898-1 899 E. Winfield Scott Parthemore.20

1 899-1 900 Reverend Franklin Jacob Fogel Schantz, D.D.

1900-1901 Reverend Thomas Conrad Porter, D.D., LL.D.21

1901-1902 Professor Charles Francis Himes, Ph.D., LL.D.22

1901-1902 Reverend Joseph Henry Dubbs, D.D., LL.D.

1902-1903 Reverend Joseph Augustus Seiss, D.D., LL.D., L.H.D.

1 903-1 904 Reverend John Summers Stahr, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D.

1 904-1 905 Hon. James Addams Beaver, LL.D.

1905-1906 Hon. Gustav Adolph Endlich, LL.D.

1 906-1 907 Benjamin Matthias Nead, Esq.

1 907-1908 Hon. John Wanamaker, LL.D.

1 908-1 909 Thomas C. Zimmerman, Litt.D.

1 909-1 9 10 General John Edwin Roller

18 At the organization meeting held on April 151, 1891, Hon. George F. Baer, LL.D., President of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company, presided until the elec- tion of officers and a permanent organization was effected.

19 At the organization meeting Dr. Egle, Librarian of the State of Pennsylvania, was elected president and at the annual meeting held on October 14, at Harrisburg, was reelected.

20 Advanced to the office of President to fill the vacancy caused by Judge Albright, who was elected but declined to serve as President.

21 Elected October 26, 1900; died April 27, 1901.

22 Elected Vice-President October 26, 1900, and appointed President July 19, 1901, by the Executive Committee.

Officers. 15

1910-1911 Reverend Henry Eyster Jacobs, D.D., LL.D., S.T.D.

1911-1912 Lieut. Henry Melchior Muhlenberg Richards, Litt.D.

19 12-19 1 3 Benjamin Franklin Fackenthal, Jr., Sc.D.

1913-1914 Julius Friedrich Sachse, Litt.D.

1914-1915 Hon. William Uhler Hensel, LL.D., Litt.D.23

1914-1915 William Frederick Muhlenberg, M.D., LL.D.24

1914-1915 Hon. Harman Yerkes

1 91 5-1 91 6 Prof. George Taylor Ettinger, Ph.D.

VICE-PRESIDENTS

1891-1892 Henry Augustus Muhlenberg, Esq.

Hon. Edwin Albright 1 892-1 893 Hon. Edwin Albright

Jacob H. Redsecker, Ph.M. 1 893-1 894 Hon. John B. Warfel

Captain Edward Henry Rauch 1 894-1 895 General John Peter Shindel Gobin

Reverend Nathan C. Schaeffer, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. 1 895-1 896 Reverend Franklin Jacob Fogel Schantz, D.D.

Right Reverend Joseph Mortimer Levering, D.D. 1 896-1 897 Hon. James Addams Beaver, LL.D.

Reverend Matthias Henry Richards, D.D. 1897-1898 Reverend Thomas Conrad Porter, D.D., LL.D.

Hon. John Bayard McPherson, LL.D. 1 898-1 899 Reverend Joseph Henry Dubbs, D.D., LL.D.

E. Winfield Scott Parthemore25 1 899-1900 Hon. Gustav Adolph Endlich, LL.D.

Hon. Christopher Heydrick, LL.D.

23 Elected November 13, 1914, died February 27, 1915.

24 Elected Vice-President November 13, 1914; appointed President by the Ex- ecutive Committee; died August 25, 1915.

25 Advanced to the Office of President to fill the vacancy caused by Judge Albright declining to serve as President.

i6 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

1 900-1901 Reverend Joseph Henry Dubbs, D.D., LL.D.

Professor Charles Francis Himes, Ph.D., LL.D.26

Reverend Joseph Augustus Seiss, D.D., LL.D., L.H.D.27 1901-1902 Reverend Joseph Augustus Seiss, D.D., LL.D., L.H.D.

John Peter Keller, D.D.S. 1 902-1 903 Hon. Irving P. Wanger

Reverend Paul deSchweinitz, D.D. 1 903-1 904 Henry Clay Grittinger, Esq.

Ira Christian Schock 1 904-1 905 Benjamin Matthias Nead, Esq.

Ethan Allen Weaver, CE., M.S. 1905-1906 Isaac Hiester

Bishop Nathaniel Bertolet Grubb 1 906-1 907 George Taylor Ettinger, Ph.D.

Professor John Eyerman, F.Z.S. (London), F.G.S.A., F.A.G.S., M.LM.E. 1 907-1 908 James McCormick Lamberton, Esq.

Carl Hess Niemeyer, CE. 1 908-1 909 Hon. William Uhler Hensel, LL.D., Litt.D.

Reverend Philip C. Croll, D.D. 1909-1910 Lieut. Henry Melchior Muhlenberg Richards, Litt.D.

John Franklin Mentzer, M.D. 1910-1911 Robert Cabeen Bair, Esq.

Benjamin Franklin Fackenthal, Jr., Sc.D. 1911-1912 Hon. Frank M. Trexler, LL.D.

George Albert Gorgas, Ph.G. 1912-1913 Alfred Percival Smith, A.B. (Haverford and Harvard) LL.B.

Reverend George Washington Sandt, D.D. 1913-1914 Edgar Dubs Shimer, Ph.D., LL.D.

Hon. Christopher Heydrick, LL.D.28

26 Appointed to the office of President July 19, 1901, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Reverend Thomas Conrad Porter, D.D., LL.D., who died April 27, 1901.

27 Appointed July 19, 1901, to fill the vacancy caused by the election of Professor Himes to the office of President, caused by the death of Dr. Porter.

23 Died October 91, 191+.

Officers.

17

1914-1915 William Frederick Muhlenberg, M.D., LL.D.29

Hon. Harman Yerkes30

Albert K. Hostetter, Esq.31 1915-1916 Colonel Harry C. Trexler

Frank Shalter Livingood, A.B. (Harvard)

Elected.

Apr. 15, 1891

Oct. 3, 1894

Oct. 29, 1909

Oct. 15, 1915

SECRETARIES

Frank Ried Diffenderffer, Litt.D. . . . Oct. Lieut. Henry M. M. Richards, Litt.D. Oct.

George Taylor Ettinger, Ph.D Oct.

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D.

Retired. 3, 1894 29, 1909

15. I9I5

TREASURERS

Elected. Retired.

Apr. 15, 1891 Julius Friedrich Sachse, Litt.D Oct. 17, 1913

Oct. 17, 1913 John Edgar Burnett Buckenham, AM., M.D.

MEMBERS OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE32

Elected. Retired.

Apr. 15, 1 89 1 Reverend J. Max Hark, D.D., Chairman Oct. 3, 1 894

Apr. 15, 1891 Lee Light Grumbine, Esq Oct. 15, 1896

Apr. 15, 1891 Henry Augustus Muhlenberg, Esq Oct. 12, 1892

Apr. 15, 1891 Captain Edward Henry Rauch Oct. 3, 1894

Apr. 15, 1891 Hon. Jeremiah S. Hess Oct. 11, 1893

Apr. 15, 1891 E. Winfleld Scott Parthemore Oct. II, 1893

Apr. 15, 1891 Hon. Samuel Whitaker Pennypacker, LL.D. Oct. 3. 1894

Apr. 15, 1891 Clement Zwingli Weiser, D.D July 18, 1895

Apr. 15, 1891 Christian Philip Humrich Apr. 23, 1895

29 Advanced to the office of President on the death of Hon. William Uhler Hensel, LL.D., Litt.D. Died August z$, 1915.

30 Advanced to the office of President on the death of William Frederick Muhlen- berg, M.D., LL.D.

31 Appointed Vice-President to fill the vacancy caused by the advancement of Judge Yerkes to the Presidency.

32 The members of the first Executive Committee were elected on April 15, 1891, and reelected on October 14, 1891.

i8

The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Apr.

15.

[891

Apr.

15,

[891

Oct.

12, I

892

Oct.

12,

[892

Oct.

III

[893

Oct.

II,

1893

Oct.

3,

1894

Oct.

3,

1894

Oct.

3,

[894

Oct.

3,

1890

Jan.

9,

1895

Oct.

16,

1895

Oct.

16,

1895

Oct.

16,

1895

Apr.

14,

1896

Oct.

15,

1896

Oct.

15,

1896

Oct.

15,

1896

Oct.

15,

1896

Oct.

22,

1897

Oct.

22,

1897

Oct.

22,

1897

Oct.

14,

1898

Oct.

14,

1898

Jan.

17,

1899

Oct.

20,

1897

Oct.

20,

1899

Oct.

20,

[899

Oct.

26,

1900

Hon. A. Hiestand Glatz Oct.

Frank Ried Diffenderffer, ex-officio Oct.

Reverend Theodore Emanuel Schmauk, D.D. Oct.

Thomas C. Zimmerman Oct.

E. Winfield Scott Parthemore Oct.

Samuel Miller Sener Apr.

Reverend J. Max Hark, D.D Oct.

Captain Edward Henry Rauch Oct.

Lieutenant Henry M. M. Richards, ex-officio Oct. Julius Friedrich Sachse, Litt.D., ex-officio33 Oct.

Frank Ried Diffenderffer, Litt.D Oct.

Reverend Matthias Henry Richards, D.D. Dec.

Morton L. Montgomery, Esq Oct.

Henry Edwin Slaymaker Oct.

Reverend Nathan C. Schaeffer, Ph.D., D.D. Oct.

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D Oct.

Frank Ried Diffenderffer, Litt.D Oct.

Lee Light Grumbine, Esq Oct.

Rev. Franklin Jacob Fogel Schantz, D.D. Oct. Rev. Theo. E. Schmauk, D.D., Chairman3^ Oct. Rev. Franklin Jacob Fogel Schantz, D.D. Oct.

Thomas C. Zimmerman Oct.

Rev. Theodore Emanuel Schmauk, D.D. Oct. Rev. Nathan C. Schaeffer, Ph.D., D.D. . . Oct.

Reverend L. Kryder Evans, D.D Apr.

Abraham Sebastian Schropp Oct.

Hon. Maurice C. Eby Oct.

John Franklin Mentzer, M.D Oct.

Hon. Maurice C. Eby Oct.

12, 1892

3, 1894

15, 1896

22, 1897

14, 1898

14, 1896 20, 1899 20, 1899 29, 1909

17, I9I3

15, 1896

12, 1898 26, 1900 15, 1896 22, 1897 26, 1900 25, 1901

25, 1901 22, 1897 14, 1898 20, 1899

3, 1902

22, 1903

22, 1903

13, l899

3, 1902

26, 1900 25, I904

27, I905

33 By an amendment to the constitution, adopted October 3, 18194, the Treasurer is now a member, ex-officio, of the Executive Committee.

34 In 18197, Dr. Schmauk, then President of the Society, was Acting Chairman of the Executive Committee from April 20th to January 18th, 1898, on which date he became Chairman of the Executive Committee and has held that office, by annual reelection, to the present time.

Oct.

26,

1900

Oct.

25>

I90I

Oct.

25,

1 90I

Oct.

3,

I902

Oct.

3,

I902

Oct.

22,

I903

Oct.

22,

I9O3

Oct.

25,

1904

Oct.

25,

I9O4

Oct.

25»

1904

Oct.

27.

1905

Oct.

27,

I905

Oct.

27>

I905

Nov.

2

>

I906

Nov.

2,

I906

Nov.

8,

I907

Nov.

8,

I907

Nov.

6,

I908

Nov.

6,

I908

Nov.

6,

I908

Oct.

29.

I9O9

Oct.

29,

I9O9

Oct.

29,

I909

Oct.

14,

I9I0

Oct.

14,

I9I0

Oct.

14,

I9IO

Oct.

20,

I9II

Oct.

20,

I9II

Oct.

20,

I9II

Oct.

20,

I9II

Oct.

20,

I9II

Oct.

20,

I9II

Oct.

20,

I9II

Oct.

4,

I9I2

Officers. 19

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D. ........ Oct.

Frank Ried Diffenderffer, Litt.D. Oct.

Lee Light Grumbine, Esq Aug.

Thomas C. Zimmerman Nov.

Abraham Sebastian Schropp Nov.

Rev. Theodore Emmanuel Schmauk, D.D. Nov. Rev. Nathan C. Schaeffer, Ph.D., D.D. . . Nov.

Reverend L. Kryder Evans, D.D Oct.

John Franklin Mentzer, M.D Oct.

William Kopp Tritle Sahm, M.D Nov.

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D Oct.

Hon. Maurice C. Eby Oct.

Ethan Allan Weaver, M.S., CE. ........ Nov.

Naaman Henry Keyser, D.D. S Oct.

William Kopp Tritle Sahm, M.D Oct.

Thomas C. Zimmerman, Litt.D Nov.

Abraham Sebastian Schropp Oct.

Rev. Theodore E. Schmauk, D.D., LL.D. Oct. Rev. N. C. Schaeffer, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. Oct.

Prof. George Taylor Ettinger, Ph.D Oct.

Reverend L. Kryder Evans, D.D Nov.

John Edgar Burnett Buckenham, A.M. . . Nov. George Taylor Ettinger, Ph.D., ex-offlcio . . Oct.

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D. Oct.

Hon. Maurice C. Eby Jan.

Reverend John Baer Stoudt Oct.

Albert George Rau, Ph.D Oct.

Reverend Ammon Stapleton, D.D Oct.

Charles Rhoads Roberts Nov.

Reverend John Baer Stoudt Oct.

Naaman Henry Keyser, D.D. S Nov.

William Kopp Tritle Sahm, M.D . Nov.

Benjamin Franklin Fackenthal, Jr., Sc.D. Nov. Abraham Sebastian Schropp

27,

1905

27,

1905

18,

1904

8,

1907

8,

1907

6,

1908

6,

1908

29,

1909

29,

1909

2,

1906

1910

14,

1910

2,

1906

20,

1911

20,

1911

6,

1908

4,

1912

17,

I9I3

17,

I9I3

4,

1912

13,

1914

13,

1914

15,

1915

15,

I9I5

17,

I9I3

15,

1 91 5

4,

1912

17,

1913

13,

1914

15,

1915

2,

1916

2,

1916

2,

1916

1917

20

Oct.

4.

1912

Oct.

4,

1912

Oct.

17,

I9I3

Oct.

17,

I9I3

Oct.

17,

I9I3

Oct.

17,

I9I3

Nov.

13,

1914

Nov.

13,

1914

Nov.

13,

1914

Oct.

15,

1915

Oct.

15,

1915

Oct.

15,

I9I5

Oct.

15,

1915

The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Albert George Rau, Ph.D 191 7

Porter W. Shimer, Ph.D 1917

Rev. Theodore E. Schmauk, D.D., LL.D. 19 18

Rev. N. C. Schaeffer, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. 1918

Ulysses Sidney Koons, LL.B 1918

John Edgar Burnett Buckenham, A.M., M.D., ex-officio33

Julius F. Sachse, Litt.D 1919

Rev. L. Kryder Evans, D.D 19 19

Charles Rhoads Roberts 1919

George A. Gorgas, Ph.G 1920

Rev. John Baer Stoudt 1920

Harry Winslow Fegley 1920

Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D., ex-officio

MEMBERS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN SOCIETY

OCTOBER 15, 1915

Honorary

Elected Rosengarten, Joseph G., LL.D April 12, 1898

1704 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Life

Buckenham, John Edgar Burnett, A.M., M.D October 25, 1900

Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.

Capp, Seth Bunker January 17, 1913

P. O. Box 2054, Philadelphia, Pa. Gorgas, William Luther April 13, 1892

Harrisburg, Pa. Krick, Reverend Thomas Henry January 21, 1903

Coplay, Lehigh Co., Pa. Schmauk, Reverend Theodore Emanuel, D.D., LL.D. April 15, 1891

Lebanon, Pa. deSchweinitz, Reverend Paul, D.D April 15, 1891

Bethlehem, Pa. Smith, Alfred Percival July 21, 1896

6391 Overbrook Avenue, Overbrook, Pa. Weaver, Ethan Allen, C.E., M.Sc January 9, 1895

251 Harvey Street, Germantown, Pa.

Regular Achey, Frederick Augustus January 15, 1897

Lancaster, Pa. Acker, A. Lincoln April 28, 1903

1843 Venango Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Adams, Joseph Weaver January 17, 1899

South Bethlehem, Pa. Amer, William M Ju]y gt j3gr

Lititz, Pa. Anewalt, Lewis Lincoln November 1, 1906

8114 Walnut Street, Allentown, Pa. Anspach, Paul B January 10, 1901

61 North Fourth Street, Easton, Pa.

22 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Appel, William Nevin January iS, 1898

33 North Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa. Arndt, John Stover April 20, 1897

Ardmore, Pa. Atlee, John June 24, 1915

Parkton, Md. Bachert, Augustus Ellsworth, CE., M.E October 28, 1909

1260 Lincoln Avenue, Tyrone, Fa. Bachman, John A October 25, 1900

Phillipsburg, New Jersey. Baer, Samuel Adams, Ph.D April 15, 1891

Frostburg, Md. Bair, Robert Cabeen October 26, 1905

30 South Beaver Street, York, Pa. Bartholomew, Reverend Allen R., D.D April 20, 1897

4527 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Basehore, Samuel E October 19, 191 1

Mechanicsburg, Pa. Bausman, John Watts Baer April 15, 1891

Lancaster, Pa. Beckel, Clarence E May 1, 1912

112 Market Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Bechtel, John Clemmer October 26, 1905

103 West Nippon Street, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Bechtel, Joseph B November 1, 1906

4912 Knox Street, Germantown, Pa. Behm, John William July 19, 1904

420 Reading Terminal, Philadelphia, Pa. Benze, Reverend C. Theodore, D.D November 1, 1906

Lutheran Theological Seminary, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Bernd, Reverend Franklin K October 21, 1907

Kutztown, Pa. Bertolet, Benjamin October 2, 1902

2113 Columbia Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Bertolet, Ira D October 24, 1904

3546 North Eighteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Bieber, Reverend Milton James January 17, 1899

Mount Joy, Pa. Bittenger, Hon. John Wierman October 11, 1893

York, Pa. Bittner, Frank D January 17, 1899

1101 Walnut Street, Allentown, Pa.

Members. 23

Blanck, Joseph E., M.D April 30, 1915

P. 0. box 28, Green Lane, Pa. Bobb, Henry, M.D November 5, 1908

East Greenville, Pa. Body, Frederick Rapp October 3, 1912

First Avenue and Chestnut Street, Lebanon, Pa. Borhek, Morris Augustus October 26, 1 905

211 North Main Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Borneman, Henry Stauffer .January 15, 1897

801 Franklin Bank Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Bower, John Lincoln, M.D January 17, 1899

Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, Pa. Boyer, Reverend Charles Clinton, Ph.D January 9, 1895

Kutztown, Pa. Brandt, Jacob Luther April 24, 1906

Trenton, Missouri. Brecht, Prof. Samuel K October 19, 1911

205 East McKinley Avenue, Lansdowne, Pa. Brendlinger, Peter Franklin, C.E October 2, 1902

1009 Commercial Trust Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Bricker, Luther Jackson October 26, 1905

i'i8i Hague Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. Brillhart, Jacob Herbst October 28, 1909

1433 North Beckley Avenue, Station A, Dallas, Texas. Brodhead, Albert January 16, iSg-6

131 Centre Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Brower, William, M.D January 11, 1893

Spring City, Pa. Brownback, Garrett Elwood October 14, 191 5

Linfield, Pa. Brumbaugh, Gaius Marcus, M.S., M.D April 25, 1907

908 Massachusetts Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C. Brumbaugh, Hon. Martin Grove, Ph.D., LL.D October 21, 1897

254 West Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Bruner, Alfred Cookman October 24, 1901

Columbia, Pa. Bruner, Owen M June 26, 1912

150S Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Brunner, Franklin Henry January 16, 1896

108 West Broad Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Buckenham, John Edgar Burnett, A.M., M.D., Life Member October 25, 1900

Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.

24 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Burgess, Reverend Ellis Beaver November 7, 1907

501 Vine Street, Connellsville, Pa. Burgin, George Horace, M.D October 24, 1901

613 West Chelten Avenue, Germantown, Pa. Burkholder, Albert North October 26, 1905

1340 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. Butterwick, Reverend Robert Reuben October 24, 1901

Mountville, Pa. Capp, Seth Bunker, Life Member January 17, 1913

P. O. box 2054, Philadelphia, Pa. Closson, James Harwood, M.D October 24, 1904

53 West Chelten Avenue, Germantown, Pa. Conrad, Hon. Henry C, LL.D October 17, 1913

Georgetown, Delaware. Conyngham, Redmond April 30, 1915

134 Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa. Cooper, Reverend Charles Jacob, D.D. July 13, 1898

28 South Thirteenth Street, Allentown, Pa. Croll, Edward Everett October 19, 1911

5403 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Croll, Reverend Philip C, D.D October 3, 1894

Beardstown, Illinois. Croll, Sylvester Edward July 18, 1895

40 Fifteenth Street, Buffalo, New York. Crone, Hon. Frank L April 30, 1915

Manila, P. I. Dannehower, William F April 16, 1891

8'28 West Marshall Street, Norristown, Pa. Dapp, Reverend Charles Frederick, Ph.D October 20, 1914

232. Yost Avenue, Spring City, Pa. Deatrick, Reverend William Wilberforce, Sc.D January 9, 1895

Kutztown, Pa. Dechert, Hon. Henry Martyn November 7, 1907

3930 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Deisher, Henry K January 18, 1898

Kutztown Pa. Dempwolf, J. A October 13, 1910

York, Pa. Derr, Andrew Fein July 18, 1892

Miners Bank Building, Wilkes-Barré, Pa. Detwiler, Thomas Craig, M.D July 17, 1906

346 West Chestnut Street, Lancaster, Pa.

Members. 25

Dickenshied, Eugene Henry, M.D July *7i 1906

in North Eighth Street, Allentown, Pa. Diefenderfer, Walter Benneville, M.D April 14, 1896

Tyrone, Pa. Dietrich, William Joseph November 7, 1907

Allentown, Pa. Diffenderfer, Reverend George Michael July 20, 1900

229 West Pomfret Street, Carlisle, Pa. Diffenderffer, Frank Ried, Litt.D .Founder

5412 North Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa. Dubbs, Henry Alfred January 18, 1898

716 Foster Building, Denver, Colorado. Dumn, Harry Jacob October 26, 1905

136 North Eleventh Street, Reading, Pa. Edelman, William October 28, 1909

18 Charlotte Street, Pottstown, Pa.

Edelman, Reverend Willis J October 14, 1915

342 North Tenth Street, Lebanon, Pa. Eggert, Henry Benjamin October 28, 1909

151 Church Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Emhardt, William Henry November 5, 1908

5521 Germantown Avenue, Germantown, Pa. Endlich, Hon. Gustav Adolph, LL.D. January 12, 1894

1537 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. Eshelman, Edgar Moyer July 14, 1903 '

Takoma Park, D. C. Ettinger, George Taylor, Ph.D October 15, 1896

Allentown, Pa. Evans, Reverend L. Kryder, D.D January 18, 1898

221 King Street, Pottstown, Pa. Everhart, Villias H October 17, 1913

203 Monroe Street, Easton, Pa. Fackenthal, B. F., Jr., Sc.D July 13, 1898

Riegelsville, Pa. Falkenstein, Reverend George N October 21, 1907

Elizabethtown, Lancaster Co., Pa. Fegley, Harry Winslow July 15, 1902

952 North Fifth Street, Reading, Pa. Fegley, William January 18, 1898

921 North Third Street, Reading, Pa. Fehr, Oliver Lewis October 29, 1900

19 South Fifth Street, Easton, Pa.

20 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Fritsch, D.D., M.D October 20, 1911

Macungie, Pa. Flory, Prof. John S June 29, 1911

Bridgewater, Va. Fogel, Edwin Miller, Ph.D January i6> 18*96

College Hall, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Forney, Joseph Gochnawer, April 13, 1899

Lancaster, Pa. Fortenbaugh, Abraham October 19, 1911

1713 North Second Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Foster, William Davis, M.D April 16, 1891

522 Airman Building, Kansas City, Mo. Fretz, Henry Augustus October 21, 1903

Doylestown, Pa. Fretz, John Edgar, M.D January 17, 1899

Easton, Pa. Fretz John Stover October 24, 1901

Doylestown, Pa. Fretz, Thomas J November 11, 1906

525 Chew Street, Allentown, Pa. Fry, Reverend Jacob, D.D., LL.D January 9, 1895

Lutheran Theological Seminary, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Funk, Hon. Henry S October 13, 1910

Springtown, Pa. Gerdsen, Reverend Herman Augustus, D.D November 5, 1908

316 West Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. Glander, Herman C May 6, 1908

West Alexandria, Ohio. Gleim, John Stambaugh January 19, 1909

31 North Shippen Street, Lancaster, Pa. Glessner, James Graham January 12, 1894

York, Pa. Gobrecht, Neander Augustus .January 15, 1902

309 East Grant Avenue, Altoona, Pa. Gorgas, George Albert, Ph.G April 13, 1892

Harrisburg, Pa. Gorgas, William Luther, Life Member , April 13, 1892

Harrisburg, Pa. Gotwald, Reverend Frederick Gebhart .January 21, 1903

York, Pa. Graff, William Knapp July 15, 1902

1775 North Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn.

Members. 27

Green, Edgar Moore, M.D .October 21, 1897

222 Spring Garden Street, Easton, Pa. Grimm, Daniel April H, 1909

1311 Buffalo Street, Franklin, Pa. Grittinger, Henry Clay, Esq April 12, 1899

Lebanon, Pa. Grossart, Lewis J. H April 17, 1913

Allentown, Pa. Grosscup, Hon. Peter Stenger January 27, 1910

Congress Hall, Chicago, Illinois. Grubb, Reverend Nathaniel Bertolet .October 2, 1902

715 Berks Street, Philadelphia Pa. Gruber, Reverend L. Franklin October 28, 1909

1213 Hague Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. Gruber, Michael Alvin May 6, 1 908

932 O Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. Guthrie, Harry Jones October 17, 1913

612 Harrison Street, Wilmington, Delaware. Haak, Isaac Benjamin April 19, 1900

Myerstown, Pa. Haldeman, Horace L July 18, 1895

Marietta, Lancaster Co., Pa. Harper, Benjamin Franklin November 5, 1908

234 East Penn Street, Germantown, Pa. Hartman, Edwin M., A.M April 1^ i9or

Franklin and Marshall Academy, Lancaster, Pa. Hassler, Hon. Aaron Bilyeu November 1, 1906

50 East Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. Hauser, James J November 1, 1906

Macungie, Pa. Hayden, Reverend Horace Edwin .January 11, 1893

33 Mallery Place, Wilkes-Barré, Pa. Heckman, Frederic Creider January 9, 1895

P. O. Box 16, Wernersville, Pa. Heckman, Prof. Samuel B., Ph.D October 21, 1903

College of the City of New York, New York City. Heilman, Samuel Phillips, M.D April 15, 1891

Hathaway Park, Lebanon, Pa. Heilman, 17. Henry April 16, 1901

920 Walnut Street, Lebanon, Pa. Heller, Llewellyn J ; October 28, 1909

220 East Broad Street, Bethlehem, Pa.

28 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Heller, William Jacob January 18, 1898

Easton, Pa. Heller, William John July 15, 1908

156 South New Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Herbst, George Edwin M., M.D October 26, 1905

Oley, Berks Co., Pa. Hershey, Andrew Hiestand January 11, 1893

4147 West Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. Hess, Hon. Abraham .April 15, 1891

Lebanon, Pa. Hess, Hon. Jeremiah S Founder

Hellertown, Pa. Hess, Reverend Warren Carpenter October 14, 1915

130 East Cumberland Street, Lebanon, Pa. Hiester, Isaac January 9, 1895

530 Washington Street, Reading, Pa. Hilliard, Clinton October 25, 1900

214 North Third Street, Easton, Pa. Himes, Prof. Charles Francis, Ph.D., LL.D .January 15, 1897

Carlisle, Pa. Himmelwright, Howard April, 20, 1911

1143 Lincoln Avenue, Tyrone, Pa. Hinke, Reverend William John, Ph.D., D.D., Associate Member July 13, 1S99

1561 North Street, Auburn, New York. Hodge, Hugh Bayard October 17, 1913

420 West Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Hoffman, Charles Griffith November 1, 1906

222 E Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. Holstein, Otto October 19, 19-11

P. O. box 1216, San Antonio, Texas. Horn, Frank Melchior April 12, 1898

Catasauqua, Pa. Hostetter, Albert Keller January 18, 1898

715 North Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa. Hostetter, Harry B January 29, 1915

715 North Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa. Hottenstein, Hon. Marcus S June 24, 1915

Department of Justice, Washington, D. C. Houck, Hon.. Henry April 13, 1892

Lebanon, Pa. Huntsinger, Emanuel M October 26, 1905

Hegins, Schuylkill Co., Pa.

Members. 29

Illick, Prof. Joseph S .April 17, 1913

Mont Alto, Pa. Jacobs, Reverend Henry Eyster, D.D., LL.D., S.T.D .October 15, 189^

Lutheran Theological Seminary, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Jacobs, Michael William January 18, 1898

P. O. box 37, Harrisburg, Pa. Johnson, Elmer Ellsworth Schultz January 10, 1901

Neuerweg 19, Wolfenbiittel, Germany. Jones, George Miller January 18, 1898

52 North Fourth Street, Reading, Pa. Keck, Winfield Scott January 16, 1896

129 South Second Avenue, Bethlehem, Pa. Keim George deBenneville .May 6, 1908

Edgewater Park, New Jersey. Keiser, Henry P October 14, 19 15

1530 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. Keiter, Reverend William D. C, D.D .October 28, 1909

414 Walnut Street, Allentown, Pa. Kelker, Luther R October 19, 1899

128 Walnut Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Keller, Reverend Eli, D.D January 9, 1895

1312 Chew Street, Allentown, Pa. Keller, William Huestis July 19, 1900

Lancaster, Pa. Kepner, W. Clinton October 24, 1901

Orwigsburg, Pa. Keppelman, John A .October 13, 1910

540 Court Street, Reading, Pa. Kern, Reverend Robert M October 3, 1912

Allentown, Pa. Keyser, Naaman Henry, D.D. S April 10, 1902

33 High Street, Germantown, Pa. Klahr, Lewis W April 11, 1904

644 Drexel Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Klick, Reverend Ira Werner October 21, 1903

Marietta, Pa. Klein, H. M. J., Ph.D October 19, 1911

Franklin & Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa. Klein, Hon. Theodore Berghaus January 17, 1899

264 Boas Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Klein, Warren Frantz, M.D October 21, 1903

801 Walnut Street, Lebanon, Pa.

30 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Kline, Hon. Charles Howard November j, 1907

1002 Frick Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. Kline, Clarence Winfield January 9, 1895

141 West Diamond Avenue, Hazleton, Pa. Kline, Reverend Harry Charles October ax, 1903

27 South High Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Kline, James Nourse January 19, 1904

5119 West Fourth Street, Williamsport, Pa. Kline, Reverend John Jacob, Ph.D July 20, 1900

Pottstown, Pa. Kline, Reverend William H. .October 13, 19 10

West Hazleton, Pa. Klopp, Eli Leinbach, M.D January 18^ 1898

Eighth Street, and Oak Lane, Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Knappenberger, Reverend J. William, A.M January 16, 1902

Niantic, Conn. Knauss, James Owen January 18, 1906

Department of Public Instruction, Harrisburg, Pa. Knipe, Irvin P .April 16, 1901

50 East Chestnut Street, Norristown, Pa. Kolb, Reuben October 25, 1900

Easton, Pa. Koons, Ulysses Sidney, LL.B .July 13, 1899

4707 Cedar Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Kotz, Adam L., M.D October 25, 1 900

32 South Fourth Street, Easton, Pa. Krause, Edward John October 21, 1903

67 Lehigh Avenue, Bethlehem, Pa. Krause, John Samuel October 28, 1909

Bethlehem, Pa. Kreider, Reverend Charles Daniel ' pril 13, 1899

Lititz, Pa. Krick, Reverend Thomas Henry, Life Member .January 21, 1903

Coplay, Pa. Kriebel, Howard Wiegner July 20, 1894

Lititz, Pa. Kriebel, Reverend Oscar Schultz, D.D January 16, 1896

Pennsburg, Pa. Krout, Jacob Henry ,T'-.1V 19, 1904

Glenolden, Pa. Kuebler, Harry J u gj% 1910

Easton, Pa.

Members. 31

Kuhns, John April 30, 19-15

Haverford, Pa. Kuhns, Prof. Levi Oscar July x8, 1892

Middletown, Conn. Lambert, Reverend James Franklin April 25, 1907

Catasauqua, Pa. Lambert, Prof. Marcus Bachman . .April 16, 1901

1816 Fairmont Street, Allentown, Pa. Landes, Gared C April 17, 1913

2026 Wallace Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Landis, Hon. Charles Israel July 14, 1903

140 North Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa. Landis, David Bachman November I, 1906

381 East Chestnut Street, Lancaster, Pa. Landis, Harrison October 28, 1900

Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Landis, James Miller July 18, 1899

Room 509, 1001 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Laubach, George Abraham October 25, 1900

Easton, Pa. Laubach, John R October 17, 1913

341 South Broad Street, Nazareth, Pa. Leibensperger, Reverend Ambrose William April 19, 1899

Lebanon, Pa. Leinbach, Reverend Paul Seibert, D.D October 20, 1911

Easton, Pa. Leinbach, Reverend Thomas Hoch July 13, 1899

136 Clymer Street, Reading, Pa. Lemberger, Joseph Lyon January 11, 1893

Lebanon, Pa. Leopold, Reve" . '. Elmer 0 October 11, 1911

Allento ., Pa. Lesher, Pierce July 13, 1899

226 West Chestnut Street, Lancaster, Pa. Lessig, Othniel Bliem April 28, 1903

Pottstown, Pa. Light, Arville Gelbach .October 24, 1904

425 North Eighth Street, Lebanon, Pa. Light, Simor r January 11, 1893

I Lightfoot, itgomery, Ph.D January 17, 1905

593 3 reet, Germantown, Pa.

32 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Livingood, Frank Shaker January 9, 1895

536 Court Street, Reading, Pa. McClintock, Andrew Hamilton April 20, 1897

34 South River Street, Wilkes-Barré, Pa.

McMinn, Joseph Henderson October 13, 1910

425 Locust Street, Williamsport, Pa. March, Matthias Levengood October 25, 1900

Bridgeport, Montgomery Co., Pa. Martin, George Castor May 1, 1912

" Allardyce," Asbury Park, New Jersey. Mechling, Benjamin Franklin October 15, l«9>6

Seventh & Glenwood Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Mechling, Benjamin Schreiber October 15, 1896

Riverton, New Jersey. Mechling, William Harrison October 15, 1896

Wingohocking Heights, Germantown, Pa. Meily, George E October 19, 1911

38 North Ninth Street, Lebanon, Pa. Mentzer, John Franklin, M.D October 11, 1893

Ephrata, Pa. Metzler, Christian Eby April 21, 1904

67 Commercial Wharf, Boston, Mass. Meyers, Hon. Benjamin Franklin April 25, 1891

Harrisburg, Pa. Miller, David A April 28, 1903

2i'8 North Fifth Street, Allentown, Pa. Miller, David Willoughby November 5, 1908

617 West Race Street, Pottsville, Pa. Miller, E. Augustus July 20, 1900

1604 North Seventeenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Miller, James Alfred July 20, 1900

New Tripoli, Lehigh Co., Pa. Miller, J. Henry October 21, 1903

Lebanon, Pa. Miller, Lemon E July 13» 1899

Lincoln, Lancaster Co., Pa. Minnich, Reverend Michael Reed January 9, 1895

4935 Larchwood Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Monnette, Orra Eugene January 17, 1913

308 South Broadway, Los Angeles, California. More, Reverend Wilson Franklin, D.D October 24, 1901

Bethany Orphans Home, Womelsdorf, Pa.

Members. 33

Mull, Prof. George Fulmer, Litt.D April 1-5, 1891

Lancaster, Pa. Mylin, Samuel M July 13, 1899

Herrville, Lancaster Co., Pa. Nead, Benjamin Frank .October 19, 1911

254 Boas Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Nead, Benjamin Matthias . . . .April 15, 1891

Harrisburg, Pa. Nead, Daniel Wunderlich, M.D April 15, 1891

P. O. Box 468, Reading, Pa. Neifert, William Washington July 17, 1906

United States Weather Bureau, Hartford, Conn. Niemeyer, Carl Hess, CE October 24, 1901

505 South Negley Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. Ohl, Reverend Jeremiah Franklin, Mus.D October 24, 1901

826 South St. Bernard Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Opp, Charles Benjamin January 16, 1896

1522 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Orth, Henry C. January 11, 1893

223 State Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Oswald, Amandus January 21, 1903

Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Parsons, Hon. John Fribley October 24, 1901

Emporium, Pa. Pastorius, Daniel Berkley November 5, 1908

51603 Greene Street, Germantown, Pa. Pastorius, Samuel Nice October 17, 1913

6305 Germantown Avenue, Germantown, Pa. Pennypacker, Hon. Samuel Whitaker, LL.D April 15, 1891

Pennypacker's Mills, Pa. Plitt, Prof. George Lewis January 19, 1904

921 Farragut Terrace, Philadelphia, Pa. Rath, Reverend Myron O. January 16, 1896

211 North Sixth Street, Allentown, Pa. Rau, Prof. Albert George, Ph.D November 1, 1906

63 Broad Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Reed, Willoughby H., M.D. October 15, 1896

Jeffersonville, Montgomery Co., Pa. Reichard, Prof. Harry Hess October 13, 1910

16 North Sovereign Avenue, Atlantic City, New Jersey. Reider, W. A. Herbert October 14, 191 5

340 Chestnut Street, Reading, Pa.

34 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Reinhard, Osman Franklin October 28, 1909

5115 North Linden Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Reist, Henry Gerber, M.E October 2, 1902

no Avon Road, Schenectady, New York. Reninger, Edward Henry January 17, 1899

41 South Fifth Street, Allentown, Pa. Renninger, Reverend Josiah S October 19, 1911

R. F. D. No. 3, Allentown, Pa. Richards, Reverend H. Branson January 18, 1898

Lebanon, Pa. Richards, Henry Melchior Muhlenberg, Litt.D. (late Lieut. U. S. N.) July 8, 1891

Lebanon, Pa. Richardson, Edgar Snyder October 14, 1915

Reading, Pa. Richardson, William H July 21, 1896

250 Union Street, Jersey City, New Jersey. Rick, James January 9, 1895

632 Centre Avenue, Reading, Pa. Riegel, William George October 28, 1909

Bethlehem, Pa. Rhoads, Thomas Jefferson Boyer, M.D January 9, 1895

Boyertown, Pa. Ritter, Francis O., M.D January 16, 1900

1430 Hamilton Street, Allentown, Pa. Roberts, Charles Rhoads July 15, 1902

5120 North Sixth Street, Allentown, Pa. Rogers, George Hippee April 20, 1897

Lincoln, Nebraska. Rohr, George January 19, 1909

154 South Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa. Rohrer, Samuel Ashmead October 24, 1904

" Wallingford," Easton, Md. Roller, General John Edwin January 16, 1896

Harrisonburg, Va. Rosenberger, Randle C, M.D September 15, 1908

2330 North Thirteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Rosenberger, Seward M November 7, 1907

4451 North Twentieth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Ross, George May 6, 1908

Doylestown, Pa. Rothermel, Abraham Heckman January 9, 1895

538 Court Street, Reading, Pa.

Members. 35

Rothermel, Prof. John Jacob January 18, 1898

1450 Girard Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. Rothtrock, Reverend Jacob Jonathan October 24, 1904

Lansdale, Pa. Ruebush, Joseph K October 3, 1912

Dayton, Virginia. Rupp, Henry Wilson October 10, 1895

1220 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sachse, Julius Friedrich, Litt.D Founder

4428 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sahrn, William Kopp Tritle, M.D October 15, 1896

124 Union Station, Pittsburgh, Pa. Sandt, Reverend Charles Milton October 10, 1901

34181 North Nineteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sandt, Reverend George Washington, D.D January 18, 1898

1904 Tioga Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sauber, Charles Alvin January 29, 1915

221 South Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa. Schaadt, Hon. James L January 9, 1895

536 Hamilton Street, Allentown, Pa. Schadt, Thomas A. J January 21, 1903

Cementon, Pa. Schaeffer, D. Nicholas January 9, 1895

1532 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. Schaeffer, Reverend Nathan C, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D July 20, 1894

Lancaster, Pa. Scheffer, Reverend John Ames November 1, 1906

245 North Sixth Street, Allentown, Pa. Scheidy, Reverend George M January 27, 19 10

Allentown, Pa. Schmauk, Reverend Theodore Emanuel, D.D., LL.D., Life Member Founder

Lebanon, Pa. Schmidt, Reverend Ambrose Matthias October 2, 1902

.Bellefonte, Pa. Schmoyer, Reverend Melville Benjamin Charles July 9, 1901

Macungie, Pa. Schneder, Reverend Charles Bowman, D.D April 16, 1901

129 North Eighth Street, Shamokin, Pa. Schnerer, Franklin Elser October 24, 1904

R. F. D. No. 5, Lititz, Pa. Schnure, Howard Davis October 19, 1899

Selinsgrove, Pa.

36 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Schnure, William M October 17; 1913

Selinsgrove, Pa. Schoch, Ira Christian January 18, 1898

Selinsgrove, Pa. Scholl, Charles R., D.D.S October 26, 1905

Second National Bank Building, Reading, Pa. Schropp, Abraham Sebastian July 20, 1894

107 East Market Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Schwab, Prof. John Christopher, Ph.D., LL.D November 7, 1907

New Haven, Conn. Schwartz, John Loeser October 25, 1900

Hillcrest, Port Hope, Ontario, Canada. Schwartz, Leon David October 20, 1914

Siegfrieds, Pa. deSchweinitz, Reverend Paul, D.D., Life Member Founder

Bethlehem, Pa. Seibert, William A., M.D July 13, 1899

43 North Fourth Street, Easton, Pa. Seiler, Felix G July X4, 1903

30 East Lincoln Street, Shamokin, Pa. Seip, Asher October 25, 1900

1309 Washington Street, Easton, Pa. Seltzer, A. Frank, Esq July 18, 1893

Lebanon, Pa. Shea, Joseph Bernard July 9, 1901

c/o Joseph Home Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sheip, Henry H November 7, 1907

Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Shenk, Christian April 15, 1891

Fourth and Cumberland Streets, Lebanon, Pa. Shenk, Harry Jacob October 21, 1903

314 Cumberland Street, Lebanon, Pa. Shenk, Jacob M January 11, 1893

Lebanon, Pa. Sherk, Charles Penrose November 7, 1907

602 Cumberland Street, Lebanon, Pa. Shick, Robert Porter April 20, 1897

320 South Forty-third Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Shimer, Edgar Dubs, Ph.D., LL.D .October 15, 1896

104 Union Avenue, Jamaica, New York. Shimer, Joseph Rosenbery October 15, 1896

Phillipsburg, New Jersey.

Members. 37

Shimer, Prof. Porter William, E.M., Ph.D October 15, 1896

Easton, Pa. Shindel, William L., M.D April 24, 1906

28. North Front Street, Sunbury, Pa. Shoemaker, Samuel June 26, 1912

Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Shull, John Dolen, M.D. October 25, 1900

Union Station, Baltimore, Md. Siegrist, Henry Warren July 15, 1897

842 Walnut Street, Lebanon, Pa. Small, Samuel, Jr January 18, 1898

York, Pa. Smith, Alfred Percival, Life Member July 21, 1896

6391 Overbrook Avenue, Overbrook, Pa. Smith, Edgar Fahs, Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D. October 17, 1913

University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Smoll, Reverend Edwin Harrison .January 21, 1903

Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Snyder, Henry Steinman .October 19, 1899

150 Church Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Snyder, Reverend Howard Elias .January 29, 1915

104 Wurts Street, Kingston, New York. Spangler, Adam Franklin October 19, 1899

Ephrata, Pa. Spangler, Reverend Henry Thomas, D.D October 11, 1893

Collegeville, Pa. Sperry, Henry Muhlenberg October 24, 1904

P. O. box 1052, Rochester, New York. Stahr, Reverend John Summers, D.D., LL.D Founder

Lancaster, Pa. Stapleton, Reverend Ammon, M.S., D.D October 19, 1899

1429 Erie Avenue, Williamsport, Pa. Stein Reverend James Rauch January 21, 1903

Bethlehem, Pa. Stein, Reverend Samuel H January 26, 1911

119 South Duke Street, York, Pa. Steinman, Andrew Jackson April 12, 1898

301 East Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. Steinman, George April 15, 1891

Lancaster, Pa. Steinmetz, Hiram Erb, A.M July !§^

Zion Home, Lititz, Pa.

2 8 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Stem, Reverend George P October 3) 191a

Siegfrieds, Pa.

Stevens, Hon. William Kerper October 26, 1905

1220 Perkiomen Avenue, Reading, Pa.

Stickler, Franklin Adam October 2, 1902

709 Haws Avenue, Norristown, Pa.

Stocker, Reverend Harry C October 3, 1912

456 Elm Street, South Bethlehem, Pa.

Stoever, William Caspar, Esq January 18', 1898

727 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Stonecipher, Reverend John Franklin, D.D .October 25, 1900

25 North Second Street, Easton, Pa.

Stopp, Reverend S. A. Bridges June 28, 1914

Allentown, Pa.

Stoudt, Reverend John Baer July *9i ^«S

Northampton, Pa.

Stout, John Kennedy July xSi 1897

"The Garland," Washington, D. C.

Strassburger, Perry B January 8, 191+

New Stock Exchange Building, Philadelphia, Pa.

Summers, William July 20, 1900

Conshohocken, Pa.

Trexler, Edwin G -October 28, 1909

927 Hamilton Street, Allentown, Pa.

Trexler, Hon. Frank M., LL.D November 1, 1906

n 1 5: Walnut Street, Allentown, Pa.

Trexler, Col. Harry C January 16, 1896

Allentown, Pa.

Tyson, James, M.D., LL.D October 17, 1913

1506 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa.

Ulrich, Henry Heilman October 17, 1913

152 North Eighth Street, Lebanon, Pa.

Umbenhen, Reverend J. H., Ph.D October 19, 1899

Pottsville, Pa.

linger, Prof. Maurice Simon Henry November 1, 1906

216 West Seventy-second Street, New York City.

Updegrove, Jacob Davidheiser, M.D January :6, 1900

Monroe & Wagner Streets, Easton, Pa.

Vanderslice, Charles Mussina .November r, 1906

602 South Main Street, Phoenixville, Pa.

Wagner, Jacob Alvin January 17', 19*3

Des Moines, Iowa.

Members. 39

Walter, Frank K January 10, 1901

New York State Library, Albany, New York. Wanamaker, Hon. John January 10, 1901

Philadelphia, Pa. Wanger, George F. P., CE January 17, 1899

Pottstown, Pa. Wanger, Hon. Irving P April 16, 1901

827 West Main Street, Norristown, Pa. Waring, Reverend Luther Hess January 8, 1914

1503 Thirtieth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. Wayland, Prof. John Walter January 17, 1907

Harrisonburg, Va. Weaver, Ethan Allen, CE., M.S., Life Member January 9, 1895

251 West Harvey Street, Germantown, Pa. Weber, Reverend Adam Monroe January 18, 1898

Boyertown, Pa. Weidman, Grant, Esq October 21, 1903

Lebanon, Pa. Weidman, Martin L July 13, 1859

Ephrata, Pa. Weiser, George U October 20, 191 1

York, Pa. Weller, Reverend Harvey A., D.D April 19, 1900

Orwigsburg, Pa. Weirick, Charles Donges October 23, 1903

517 Chestnut Street, Lebanon, Pa. Wenner, Thomas P November 1, 1906

540 North Sixth Street, Allentown, Pa. Wenrich, Reuben David, M.D October 21, 1903

Wernersville, Pa. Wentz, Prof. Abdel Ross, Ph.D June 4, 1913

Gettysburg, Pa. Wetzel, John Wise July 15, 1902

20 South Hanover Street, Carlisle, Pa. Wieand, Reverend Charles Samuel October 2, 1902

209 Chestnut Street, Pottstown, Pa. Wissler, Samuel H July 13, 1899

Lincoln, Lancaster Co., Pa. Witmeyer, Daniel P. October 24, 1901

Lebanon, Pa. Wolle, Clarence A October 28, 1909

803 Prospect Avenue, Bethlehem, Pa.

The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Wolle, Reverend Edward Samuel October 2'6 1905

601 North Eighth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wonsetler, Franklin Bean October 28, 1909

1348 DeKalb Street, Norristown, Pa. Wuchter, Reverend Aston Clinton January 21 1903

Toledo, Ohio. Wurts, John S January 26, 191 1

1224 Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Yeager, Reverend James Martin, D.D july I5> l8o_

Lewistown, Pa. Yehl, Reverend E. A , October 19, 1911

Bangor, Pa. Yerkes, Hon. Harman January 17, 1899

Doylestown, Pa. Young, R. I October 24, 1901

Middletown, Pa. Zern, Jacob G., M.D April 12> rf94

203 South Third Street, Lehighton, Pa. Zerbey, Joseph Henry October 26, 1905

Pottsville, Pa. Zimmerman, Henry S April 2S> 19<)3

135 North Eighth Street, Shamokin, Pa.

TOTAL 396.

DECEASED MEMBERS

Honorary

Died.

Coxe, Hon. Eckley Brinton May 13, 1895

Kell, James June 4, 1899

Latimer, Hon. James W July 22, 1899

Stillé, Charles Janeway, M.D., LL.D August 11, 1899

Life

Eby, Hon. Maurice C April 4, 1914

Schwartz, James Ernest May 16, 1900

Smith, Alfred October 10, 1902

Regular

Albright, Hon. Edwin December 13, 1902

Artman, Col. Enos Reeser September 3, 1912

Baer, George F., LL.D April 26, 1914

Beaver, Daniel Benjamin DeWalt, M.D March 6, 19 10

Beaver, Hon. James Addams, LL.D January 31, 1914

Borhek, Ashton Christian March 6, 1 898

Boyd, Peter Keller November 27, 1901

Boyer, Benjamin Franklin January 3, 1908

Bricker, Major John Randolph October 15, 1906

Bruner, Daniel Pastorius August 29, 1901

Brunner, Frank Riegner, M.D January 13, 1908

Burkert, Oliver Christian .October 29, 1908

Clymer, Hon. William Heister .June 5, 1914

Darmstaetter, Reverend J. July 2, 1909

Davis, Captain Samuel T., M.D October 23, 1908

Diehl, Tilghman H May 10, 191 3

Dotterer, Henry Sassaman January 10, 1903

Dreher, Hon. Samuel S June 26, 1893

Dubbs, Reverend Joseph Henry, D.D., LL.D April 1, 1910

41

42 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Dunmire, George Benson, M.D November 2

Eberly, Adam John August 5

Eby, Hon. Maurice C April 4

Egle, William Henry, M.D February 19

Ermentrout, Hon. Daniel September 17

Ermentrout, Hon. James Nevin August 19

Fisher, Reverend Charles Gutzlafï, D.D February 25

Flores, Lieutenant Philip Wetzel February 27

Fon Dersmith, Charles Allen April 12

Franklin, Walter Mayer June 27

Funck, Captain Josiah July 17

Gilbert, Reverend David McConaughy, D.D October 16

Glatz, General A. Hiestand December 28

Gobin, General John Peter Shindel May 1

Gretzinger, William Christian February 19

Grumbine, Lee Light, Esq August 18

Hanold, Frank Wildbahn January 7

Hanold, Hiester Muhlenberg May 23

Hartman, John Markley, M.E. September 4

Heckman, Reverend George Crider, D.D., LL.D March 5

Heilman, Henry Snavely January 20

Heinitsch, Charles Augustus, M.D December 29

Hensel, Hon. William Uhler, LL.D., Litt.D .February 27

Herr, Martin Luther, M.D February 8

Hertz, Daniel Rhine D.D. S October 1

Heydrick, Hon. Christopher, LL.D October 9

Hobson, Freeland Gotwalts January 1 1

Holls, Hon. George Frederick William, D.C.L July 23

Hostetter, Abraham F June 15

Huff, Hon. George Franklin April 18

Humrich, Christian Philip January 5

Kaufrrnan, Andrew John May 19

Kelker, Rudolph Frederick ■-. October 3

Kelker, William Anthony February 15

Keller, Christian Kunkel, M.D December 7

Deceased Members. 43

Keller, John Peter, D.D.S December 23

Klock, Henry Albright, M.D February I

Klotz, Hon. Robert May 1

Koch, Thomas J February 10

Konigmacher, Jacob November 6

Kulp, George Brubaker February 15

Krotel, Reverend Gottlob Frederick, D.D., LL.D May 17

Lamberton, James McCormick March 28

Landis, Henry, M.D October 1

Lanius, Captain William H January 21

Laubach, William July 30

Lehman, Samuel Kaufman June 4

Levan, Reverend Franklin Klein, D.D November 13

Levan, Louis Sebastian December 26

Levering, Rt. Reverend Joseph Mortimer, D.D April 4

McKnight, Milton Brayton July 9

Marks, Prof. Clement A October 23

Marr, Addison Graham July 4

Maurer, Daniel C December 3 1

Mauser, Jacob B December 28

Meily, James April 20

Meily, Hon. John April 3

Meily, Richard March 3 1

Miller, Daniel August 1

Miller, Prof. Franklin Pierce January 2

Miller, Henry Grant May 1 1

Mish, John Weidman June 14

Muhlenberg, Francis, M.D September 8

Muhlenberg, William Frederick, M.D., LL.D. August 25

Mumma, Hon. David June 20

Nichols, Henry Kuhl, C.E November 22

Oberholtzer, George Rieger February 8

Ott, Charles Henry, M.D November I

Parthemore, E. Winfield Scott April 25

Pflueger, Reverend Oscar Erwin July 22

1907 1908

i895 1915 1912 1915 1907 1915 1898

I9I3 1914 1893 1894 1896 1908 1910 1912 1909 1901 1906

1905 1902 1906

I9I3 1909 1907 1906

1894 1915

1893 1904

I9I3 1909 1909 1912

44 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Porter, Reverend Thomas Conrad, D.D., LL.D April 27

Rau, Robert July 30

Reeder, General Frank December 7

Reeder, Colonel Wilbur Fisk August 28

Redsecker, Jacob H., Ph.M April 20

Reinhold, Lieut. Henry Sherk August 7

Reinoehl, Major Adam Cyrus December 13

Reinoehl, Hon. Adolphus September 29

Reist, Levi Sheaffer May 29

Richards, George Henry December 23

Richards, Reverend Matthias Henry, D.D December 12

Rohrer, Major Jeremiah October 23

Rutter, Amos August 15

Saeger, Thomas William November 19

Santee, Eugene Irving, M.D June 15

Sandt, Charles Albert May 5

Schaeffer, Reverend William Ashmead, D.D July 27

Schantz, Charles Oscar .July 26

Schantz, Reverend Franklin Jacob Fogel, D.D January 19

Sheeleigh, Reverend Matthias, D.D July 15

Schuler, Henry A January 13

Schwab, Gustav Henry November 12

Seidensticker, Oswald, M.D January 10

Seiss, Reverend Joseph Augustus, D.D., LL.D., L.H.D June 20

Shea, Christian Bernard November 18

Shimer, Jacob Schantz, M.D July 27

Shimmel, Lewis Slifer, Ph.D March 9

Shindel, Colonel Jacob Andrew February 16

Shonk, Hon. George Washington April 14

Slaymaker, Henry Edwin September 1

Slaymaker, Colonel Samuel Cochran .February 2

Smith, Reverend Oliver Peter, D.D October 15

Stauffer, David McNeely, C.E February 5

Steinmetz, Hon. Jacob Lieber February 15

Stichter, Franklin Goodhart .August 6

1901 1906 1912 1904 1909 1891 1900

i893 1892

1894 1898 1910 1902 I9I3 I9I5 1909 1907 1911 1907 1900 1908 1912

1894 1904 1900 1898 1914 1895 1900 1905 1894 1911 I9I3 1904 1907

Deceased Members. 45

Stober, Hon. Jeremiah Albert January 17, 1910

Sùtter, Daniel November 23, 1900

Titzel, Christian Edgar March 30, 1913

Unger, John Frederick, C.E April II, 1908

Urner, Isaac Newton, LL.D July 9, 1904

Warfel, Hon. John B April 19, 1908

Weidler, Prof. Albert Green February 17, 1 907

Weidman, Major Grant November 11, 1895

Weiser, William Franklin April I, 1906

Weiss, Hon. John H November 22, 1905

Welles, Edward March 8, 1914

Weygandt, Cornelius Nolen February 17, 1907

Yohe, Samuel Straub October 21, 1902

Young, Colonel James May 4, 1895

Zahm, Samuel Hensel February 5, 1893

Zieber, Eugene B June 6, 1897

Zimmerman, Thomas C, Litt.D. November 3, 1914

NARRATIVE AND CRITICAL HISTORY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Among the objects of the Society as set forth in the Constitution are " To discover, collect and preserve all still existing documents, monuments, etc., relating to the genealogy and history of the Pennsylvania-Germans, and from time to time publish them, particularly such as shall set forth the part belonging to this people in the growth and development of American character, institu- tions and progress."

The purpose set forth in the last part of the above extract from the con- stitution is being carried out under the title " Pennsylvania: The German In- fluence in its Settlement and Development. A Narrative and Critical History."

The work has been planned to extend over a number of years and has been divided into important subjects, each of which will be treated in an exhaustive manner by some writer whose studies and researches have qualified him as an authority on his particular subject.

The first two parts of this series of history appeared in volume VII of the Proceedings, published in 1897, anà" up to the present time twenty-five parts have been published in the succeeding volumes.

The following parts have appeared in the volumes of Proceedings* so far published :

Part I. The Fatherland: (1450-1750) showing the part it bore in the Discovery, Exploration and Development of the Western Continent, with special reference to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania By Julius Friedrich Sachse, pp. 224, plates 19, maps 2.

Part II. The German Exodus to England in 1709. (/Iftasscn=auswanôerung Der pfal3Cr) . By Frank Ried Diffenderffer, pp. 157, plates 16.

Part III. The German Emigration to America 1709-1740. By Rev. Henry Eyster Jacobs, D.D., LL.D., pp. 124, plates 12.

Part IV. The Settlement of Germantown Pennsylvania and the Beginning of German Immigration to North America By Hon. Samuel Whitaker Penny- packer, LL.D., pp. 300, plates z&, map 1.

* A complete detailed descriptive list of the Proceedings may be had on application to the Treasurer.

46

Narrati-ve and Critical History of Pennsylvania. 47

Part V. The German Emigration from New York Province into Pennsylvania By Rev. Matthias Henry Richards, D.D., pp. 102, plates 8.

Part VI. The Domestic Life and Characteristics of the Pennsylvania-German Pioneer By Rev. F. J. F. Schantz, D.D., pp. 97, plates 10, facsimile 1.

Part VII. The German Immigration into Pennsylvania through the Port of Philadelphia, from 1700 to 1775. Part II. The Redemptioners. By Frank Ried Diffenderffer, pp. 348, plates 22.

Part VIII. The German Baptist Brethren or Dunkers. By George N. Falken- stein, pp. 1481, plates 11.

Part IX. The Lutheran Church in Pennsylvania (1638^-1800) By Theodore Emanuel Schmauk, D.D. Vol. I., pp. 366, plates 20.

Part IX. A History of The Lutheran Church in Pennsylvania (1638-1820) By Theodore Emanuel Schmauk, D.D., pp. 256, plates 18. (Continued from volume XI.)

Part X. The Reformed Church in Pennsylvania By Joseph Henry Dubbs, D.D., LL.D., pp. 37T, plates 19.

Part XL The Music of the Ephrata Cloister Also Conrad Beissel's Treatise on Music as set forth in a preface to The Turteltaube of 1747 By Julius Friedrich Sachse, Litt.D., pp. 108, plates 5.

Part XII. The Schwenkfelders in Pennsylvania, a Historical Sketch. By Howard Wiegner Kriebel, pp. 246, plates 17.

Part XIII. American History from German Archives with Reference to the Ger- man Soldiers in the Revolution and Franklin's Visit to Germany By J. G. Rosengarten, pp. 101, plates 14, facsimile 1.

Part XIV. Daniel Falckner's Curieuse Nachricht from Pennsylvania The book that stimulated the great German Immigration to Pennsylvania in the early years of the XVIII Century translated and annotated by Julius Friedrich Sachse, Litt.D., pp. 264, plates 13, facsimiles 2.

Part XV. The Pennsylvania-German in the French and Indian War By Henry Melchoir Muhlenberg Richards Late U. S. N., pp. 559, plates 17, facsimile 1.

Part XVI. The Wreck of the Ship New Era upon the New Jersey Coast No- vember 13, 1854 By Julius Friedrich Sachse, Litt.D., pp. 61, plates 6.

Part XVII. Governor Joseph Hiester A Historical Sketch By Henry Melchior Muhlenberg Richards, pp. 53, plates 2.

Part XVIII. The Pennsylvania-German in the Revolutionary War 1775-1783 By Henry Melchior Muhlenberg Richards Late U. S. N., pp. 554, plates 15.

Part XIX. Diary of a Voyage from Rotterdam to Philadelphia in 1728 Translated by Julius F. Sachse, pp. 25, plates 3.

48 The Pennsylvania-German Society.

Part XX. A Brief History of the Colony of New Sweden by Carolus David Arfwedson, 1825, pp. 44, plates 8', map 1.

Part XXI. An Account of the Manners of the German Inhabitants of Penn- sylvania by Benjamin Rush, M.D. with an introduction and annotations by Theodore E. Schmauk, and with the notes of I. D. Rupp revised pp. 130, plates 11.

Part XXII. Early German American Newspapers By Daniel Miller, pp. 107, plates 2.

Part XXIII. The Lutheran Church in New Hanover, (Falckner Swamp) Mont- gomery County, Penna. By Rev. J. J. Kline, Ph.D., pp. 44161, plates &, facsimiles 2.

Part XXIV. The Wayside Inns on the Lancaster Roadside between Phila- delphia and Lancaster. By Julius F. Sachse, pp. 77, plates 19. (to be continued.)

Part XXIV. The Wayside Inns on the Lancaster Roadside between Phila- delphia and Lancaster (concluded.) By Julius F. Sachse, pp. in, plates 7.

Part XXV. The Pennsylvania-German in the Settlement of Maryland By Daniel Wunderlich Nead, M.D., pp. 312, plates 17/, maps 2.

Part XXVI. The Beginnings of the German Element in York County Penn- sylvania By Abdel Ross Wentz, B.D., Ph.D., pp. 217, plate z.

Part XXVII. The Diarium of Magister Johannes Kelpius with annotations by Julius Friedrich Sachse, pp.

CHURCH RECORDS

The following Church Records, containing births, deaths and marriages, have been published in different volumes of the Proceedings:

Birth and Baptismal Register of Trinity Lutheran Church, Lancaster, Pa., pp. 104.

Birth and Baptismal Register of Trinity Lutheran Church, Lancaster, Pa. (con- tinued.), pp. 61.

Birth and Baptismal Register of The First Reformed Church, Lancaster, Pa., pp. 44.

Births and Baptismal Register of Trinity Lutheran Church, Lancaster, Pa. (con- tinued.), pp. 95;

Kirchen-Matricul: der Evangelisch Lutherischen Gemeinde in Neu Providenz, Penn- sylvania, (Augustus Ev. Luth. Congregation, Trappe, Pa.) translated, collated and ar- ranged by Julius Friedrich Sachse, pp. 90, plates 2.

Births and Baptismal Register of Trinity Lutheran Church, Lancaster, Pa. (con- cluded.), pp. 34.

Augustus Ev. Lutheran Church Trappe, Pa. Record of Marriages Confirmations and Burials with a list of the Contributors to Pastor's Salary Nov. 27, 1760, pp. 58.

Narrative and Critical History of Pennsylvania.

49

The Records of St. Michaelis and Zion Congregation of Philadelphia, pp. 43.

Church Register of the United Reformed and Lutheran Church, Called Blimyers, in Hopewell Township, York County, Pa., Commenced March 19, 17167, by Rev. Geo. Bager (Lutheran), and William Otterbein (Reformed), pp. 42.

The Records of St. Michaelis and Zion Congregation of Philadelphia. (Continued from Vol. VII.), pp. 26,

The Records of St. Michaelis and Zion Congregation of Philadelphia. (Continued from Vol. VIII.), pp. 20.

Record of the Marriages in the Evangelical Lutheran Congregation in Philadelphia Commenced Anno 1745 (Continued from Volume IX.), pp. 141, plates 3.

Church Records of the Williams Township Congregation, pp. 102.

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