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History of Palatine Immigration and Ship Passenger Lists of the Palatine Germans - German immigrant genealogy - immigratio... |
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History of the Palatine Immigration to America as written by Daniel Rupp, 1876
At
different periods, various causes and diverse motives induced Germans to
abandon their Vaterland. Since 1606, millions have left their homes, the
dearest spots on earth, whither the heart always turns. Religious
persecution, political oppression drove thousands to Pennsylvania - to the
asylum from the harrassed and depressed sons and daughters of the relics
of the Reformation, whither William Penn himself invited the persecuted of
every creed and religious opinion.
From 1682 to 1776, Pennsylvania
was the central point of emigration from Germany, France and
Switzerland. Penn's liberal views, and illiberal course of the
government of New York toward the Germans, induced many to come to this
Province
The period from 1702 - 1727 marks an era in the early
German emigration. Between forty and fifty thousand left their native
country "their hearths where soft affections dwell." The unparalleled
ravages and desolations by the troops of Louis XIV under Turenne, were the
stern prelude to bloody persecutions. To escape the dreadful sufferings
awaiting them, German and other Protestants emigrated to the English
colonies in America.
In 1705, a number of German Reformed residing
between Wolfenbuttel and Halberstadt, fled to Neuwied, a town of Rhenish
Prussia, where they remained some time, and then went to Holland - there
embarked, in 1707, for New York. Their frail ship was, by reason of
adverse winds, carried into the Delaware bay. Determined, however, to
reach the place for which they were destined - to have a home among the
Dutch, they took the overland route from Philadelphia to New York. On
entering the fertile, charming valley in New Jersey, which is drained by
the meandering Musconctcong, the Passaic and their tributaries, and having
reached a goodly land, they resolve to remain in what is now known as the
German Valley of Morrison county. From this point, the Germans have spread
into Somerset, Bergan and Essex couties.
At Elizabethtown, where
the first English settlement was made in New Jersey, 1664, there were many
Germans prior to 1730. There was also a German settlement at a place known
as Hall Mill, which is some thiry miles from Philadelphia.
In 1708
and 1709, thirty three thousand, on an invitation of Queen Anne, left
their homes in the Rhine country for London, where some twelve or thirteen
thousand arrived in the summer of 1708. There were books and papers
dispersed in the Palatinate, with the Queen's picture on the books, and
the title page in letters of gold, which, on that account, were called,
'The Golden Book', to encourage the Palatines to come to England, in order
to be sent to the Carolinas, or to other of Her Majesty's colonies, to be
settle there. These were, for some time, in a destitute condition - wholly
depending upon the charity of the inhabitants of the English
metropolis.
In the fall of 1709, one hundred and fifty families,
consisting of six hundred and fifty Palatines, were transported, under the
tutelar auspices of Christian De Grafferied and Ludwig Michell, natives of
Switzerland, to North Carolina. As in all new countries, the Palatines
were exposed to trials, privations and hardships incident to border life.
One hundred of them were massacred by the Tuskarora Indians, Sept 22,
1707. The descendants of these Germans reside in different parts of the
State.
At the time these Palatines left England for North
Carolina, the Rev. Joshua Kockerhal, with a small band of his persecuted
Lutheran brethren, embarked at London 1708, for New York, where they
arrived in December, and shortly therafter he, with his little flock,
settled on some lands up the Hudson river, which they had received from
the crown of England. Two thousand one hundred acres, granted a patent
Dec. 18, 1709. The Queen also bestowed upon Kocherthal five hundred acres
as a glebe (transcriber's note: glebe is a plot of land belonging or
yielding profit to an English parish church) for the Lutheran church.
Newburg is the place of this settlement.
In the meantime, while
those were transported to North Carolina, and to New York, three thousand
six hundred Germans were transfered to Ireland; seated upon unimproved
lands in the county of Limerick, near Arbela and Adair; others, in the
town of Rathkeale, where their descendants still reside, and are known to
this day, as German Palatines, preserving their true German character for
industry, thrift and honorable dealing. Persons who have lately visited
them say, "They are the most wealthy and prosperous farmers in the county
of Limerick." They still speak the German language.
Of the large
number that came to England, in 1708 and 1709, seven thousand, after
having suffered great privations, returned, half naked and in despondency,
to their native country. Ten thousand died for want of sustenance, medical
attendance, and from other causes. Some perished on ships. The survivors
were transported to English colonies in America. Several thousand had
embarked for the Silly Islands, a group south-west of England; but never
reached their intended destination.
Ten sails of vessels were
freighted with upwards of four thousand Germans for New York. They
departed the 25th December, 1709 and after a six months' tedious voyage
reached New York in June, 1710. On the inward passage, and immediately on
landing, seventeen hundred died. The survivors were encamped in tents, the
had brought with them from England, on Nutting, now Governor's Island.
Here they remained til late in autumn, when about fourteen hundred were
removed, one hundred miles up the Hudson river, to Livingston Manor. The
widowed women, sickly men and orphaned children remained in New York. The
orphans were apprenticed by Governor Hunter, to citizens of New York and
of New Jersey.
Thee settled on Hudson river were under indenture to
serve Queen Anne as grateful subjects, to manufacture tar and raise hemp,
in order to repay the expenses of their transport and cost of subsistence,
to the amount of ten thousand pounds sterling, which had been advanced by
parliamentary grant. A supply of naval stores from this arrangement, had
been confidently anticipated. The experiment proved a complete failure.
There was mismanagement.
The Germans, being unjustly oppressed,
became dissatisfied both with their treatment, and with their situation.
Governor Hunter resorted to violent measures to secure obedience to his
demands. In this, too, he failed. One hundred and fifty families, to
escape the certainty of famishing, left, in the autumn of 1712, for
Schoharie Valley, some sixty miles, northwest of Livingston Manor. They
had no open road, no horses to carry or haul their luggage - this they
loaded on roughly constructed sleds, and did tug those themselves, through
a three feet deep snow, which greatly obstructed their progress - their
way was through an unbroken forest, where and when the wind was howling
its hibernal dirge through leaf-stripped trees, amid falling snow. It took
them three full weeks. Having reached Schoharie, they made improvements
upon the lands Queen Anne had granted them. Here they remained about ten
years, when owing to some defect in their titles, they were deprived of
both lands and improvements. In the spring of 1723, thirty-three families
removed and settled in Pennsylvania, in Tulpehocken, some fifteen miles
west of Reading. A few years afterward, others followed them.
The
other dissatisfied Germans at Schoharie, who did to choose to follow their
friends to Pennsylvania sought for and found a future home on the frontier
in Mohawk Valley.
Queen Anne, who well understood the policy of
England, to retain her own subjects at home, encouraged the emigration of
Germans, sent some of those whom she had invited in 1708 and 1709, to
Virginia; settled them above the falls of the Rappahannock, in
Spotsylvania county, where they commenced a town, called Germanna. The
locality was unpropitious. They moved some miles further up the river
where they soon drove well. From this settlement they spread into several
counties in Virginia, and into North Carolina.
Because of the
relentless persecution and oppression in Switzerland, a large body of
defenseless Mennonites fled from the Cantons of Zurich; of Bern and
Schaffhausen, about the year 1672, and took up their abode in Alsace,
above Strasbourg, on the Rhine, where they remained till they emigrated,
1708, to London, thence to Pennsylvania. They lived some time at German
town, and in the vicinity of Philadelphia. In 1712, they purchases a large
tract of land from Penn's agents in Pequae, then Chester, now Lancaster
county. Here this small colony erected some huts or long cabins, to serve
temporarily as shelters.
Here the time and again persecuted and
oppressed Swiss, separated from friends and much that makes life
agreeable, hoped to unmolested begin anew. Here, surrounded on all sides
by severed clans of Indians, they located in the gloomy silent shades of a
virgin forest, whose undisturbed solitude was yet uncheered by the murmurs
of the honey bee, or the twitterings of the swallow, those never-failing
attendants upon the woodman's axe. For the hum and warblings of those,
they had not only the shout and song of the tawny sons of the forest, but
also the nocturnal howlings of the over watchful dog baying at the sheeny
queen of the night, as she moves stately on, reflecting her burrowed
light. By way of variety, their ears were nightly greeted by the shrill,
startling whoop of the owl, from some stridulous branches overhanging
their cabins, and bending to the breeze of evening, or by the sinister
croakings of some doleful night songsters in the continuous
thickets.
This Swiss settlement formed the nucleus, or centre of a
rapidly increasing Swiss, French and German population, in the Eden of
Pennsylvania.
Hereafter, the influent accession from the European
continent steadily increased, so much so, as to excite attention, and
create no small degree of alarm of the "fearful of the day".
Scarcely had the Mennonites commenced making their lands arable,
when they sent a commissioner, Martin Kendig, to Germany and to
Switzerland, to induce others to come to Pennsylvania. He was successful.
There were large accessions to this new colony in 1711 and 1717 and a few
years later. So great was the influx at this time of Swiss and German
immigrants, as to call forth, as already stated, public attention,
especially of those in office.
Governor Keith, says the record,
"observed to the Board - the Governor's council - that great numbers of
foreigners from Germany, strangers to our language and constitution,
having lately been imported into this Province, daily dispensed themselves
immediatly after landing, without producing certificates from whence they
came or what they are, and, as they seemed to have first landed in
Britain, and afterwards to have left without any license from government,
or as far as they know, so, in the same manner, they behaved here, without
making the least application to him or any of the magistrates. That, as
this practice might be of very dangerous consequence, since, by the same
method, any number of foreigners, from any nation whatever, enemies as
well as friends, might throw themselves upon us." This was in 1717.
In 1719, Jonathan Dickinson remarked; "We are daily expecting
ships from London, which bring over Palatines, in number about six or
seven thousand. We had a parcel that came over about five years ago, who
purchased land about sixty miles west of Philadelphia, and proved quiet
and industrious."
After 1716, Germans, a few French and Dutch,
began to penetrate the forest or wilderness - some twenty, thirty, forty,
others from sixty to seventy miles, west and north from the metropolis.
Large German settlements had sprung up at different points within the
present limits of Montgomery and Berks counties. At Goshenhoppen there was
a German Reformed church, organized as early as 1717. Some Mennonites
coming from the Netherlands, settled along the Pakilmomink (Perkioming)
and Schkipeck (Skippack) a few years later.
The Germans were
principally farmers. They depended more upon themselves than upon others.
They wielded the mattock, the axe and the maul, and by the power of brawny
arms rooted up the grubs, removed saplings, felled the majestic oaks, laid
low the towering hickory; prostrated, where they grew, the walnut, poplar,
chestnut - cleaved such as suited the purpose, into rails for fences -
persevered untiringly until the forest was changed into arable field. They
were those of whom Governor Thomas said, 1738: "This Province has been for
some years the asylum of the distressed Protestants of the Palatinate, and
other parts of Germany; and I believe, it may truthfully he said, that the
present flourishing condition of it is in a great measure owing to the
industry of those people; it is not altogether the fertility of the soil,
but the number and industry of the people, that makes a country
flourish.
England understood well the true policy to increase the
number of the people in her American colonies - she retained at home her
own subjects, encourage the emigration of Germans; by this England was the
gainer, without an diminution of her inhabitants.
Unreasonable as
it may seen, it was this class of Germans, that were so much feared,
"whose numbers from Germany at this rate, would soon produce a German
colony here, and perhaps such a one as Britain once received from Saxony
in the fifth century."
In 1719, some twenty families of
Selwartzenau Taufer arrived at Philadelphia. Some settle in German town,
others located on the Skippack, in Oley.
About 1728 and 1729, the
Germans crossed the Susquehanna, located within the present limits of York
and Adams county, and made improvements under discouraging circumstances.
The tide of emigration from the continent of Europe was strong.
Various influences were brought to bear upon the increase of the influx.
In Pennsylvania, the Newlander, tools in the hands of shipowners,
merchants and importers, contributed much to induce Germans to leave their
homes. There were, besides these, another class, who were active in
prevailing upon the inhabitants of Germany to abandon their country for
the new world. These two classes, Newlander and speculators, resorted to
diverse arts in order to effect their purposes. They gave these, whom they
desired to abandon their homes, assurances, endorsed by solemn promises,
that the Poet's Arcadia had at last been found in America. To posess this,
in Louisiana, on the banks of the Mississippi, several thousands left
Germany in 1715 and 1717, under the leadership of the notorious John Law,
who instead of bringing them immediately on their arrival in America, to
the promised Eden, on the banks of the Father of the Western Water, landed
them on the pontines (transcriber's note: land bridge) of Biloxi near the
Mobile. Here they were exposed, without protection against their many
foes, for five years Not one of them entered the promised paradise. Two
thousand were consigned to the grave. The pallid survivors - about three
hundred, finally seated on the banks of the Mississippi, 1722, some thirty
or forty miles above New Orleans. Law had, through his agents, engaged
twelve thousand Germans and Swiss. The sad fate of those of Biloxi was
spread abroad, which deterred other from coming to participate in the
promised blessings of the Elesyan fields, or to possess the
Eldorado.
The three hundred on the Mississippi were very poor for
some years. They had been reduced to the most extreme poverty. From these
poor but honorable Germans, have spring says Gayarre, some of the most
respectable citizens of Louisiana, and some of the wealthiest sugar
planters in the State. Their descendants forgot the German language, and
have adopted the French; but the name of many clearly indicate the blood
coursing in their veins; nevertheless more than one name has been so
frenchified as to appear of Gallic parentage. The coast, so poor and
beggarly at first, and once known as the German coast, has since become
the producer and the receptacle of such wealth, so as to be now know by
the appropriate name of Coast of Gold.
In the spring of 1734, some
Lutherans, known in history as Saltzburgers, from Saltzburg, a city of
Upper Austria, arrived in Georgia. In Europe, they too had been the
victims of bloody persecution. They had been driven from their country and
their homes, on account of their unswerving attachment to the principles
of the Gospel.
This devotedly pious band of Christians was
accompanied by their attached pastors, the Rev'd John Martin Boltzius and
Israel Christian Gronau, and an excellent schoolmaster, Christian Ortman.
The Saltzburgers located in Effingham county and styled their first
settlement Ebenezer, to express their unfeigned gratitude to the Lord, who
had been to them a storing rock, a house of defence, to save
them.
This German colony received accessions from time to time
until they reached, prior to 1745, several hundred families. There were
also many Germans residing in Savannah; besides some forty of fifty
Moravians in the same state under the pastoral care for the Rev. David
Nitschliman.
The Moravians made no permanent settlement in Georgia.
When the Spanish War broke out, they removed, almost to a man, to the
State of Pennsylvania, because it was contrary to their religious faith to
take up arms in any cause.
In 1738, some arrived in Pennsylvania
and located at Bethlehem. In 1740, those who had remained, left Georgia
and joined their brethren in Pennsylvania. This, the mission among the
Indians in Georgia, after a promising beginning, was at once
suspended.
Before the Moravians came to Pennsylvania, a respectable
number of Schwenckfelders and arrived, settling in Bucks and Philadelphia
county, now Montgomery, Berks and Lehigh. The Schwenckfelders had
intended, before leaving their homes in Europe, to embark for Georgia.
They however, changed their minds and established themselves in the asylum
for the oppressed, Pennsylvania.
In 1732, Monsieur Jean Pierre Pury
of Neuchatel, Switzerland visited Carolina. Being encouraged by the
government both of England and Carolina, he undertook to settle a colony
of Swiss there. In 1732 one hundred and seventy persons were transported.
These were soon followed by others. In a short time the colony consisted
of three hundred persons. They settled on the north bank of the Savannah,
built a town called Purysburgh, about thirty-six miles above the mouth of
the river. The colony still continued to increase. In 1734, Pury brought
two hundred and seventy persons more from Switzerland. All those were
brought from Switzerland at the expense of Pury and several of his
friends, who advanced him money for that purpose, he having spent the
greatest part of his fortune in the prosecution of that design before he
could bring it to execution. Thee were now nearly six hundred souls in
this settlement.
This was done in pursuance of a scheme, proposed
by Mr. Pury to the Assembly of South Carolina; his scheme was to propel
the southern frontier of Carolina with brave and laborious people, such as
the Swiss are known to be. The assembly highly approved of this scheme; to
assist him in the execution of it, they passed an act, August 20, 1731,
which secured to him a reward of £400, upon his bringing over to Carolina
a hundred effective men. In this act the Assembly promised also to find
provisions, tools, etc, for three hundred persons for one year. Purysburgh
in 1747, contained more than one hundred houses tolerably well
built.
In Colleton county, on the north bank of North Ediston
river, 12 miles from its mouth, stands Wilton, or New London, consisting
of 80 houses built by Swiss under the direction of Zuberbhuler, with leave
from the Assembly. This town proved detrimental to Purysburgh, being in
the heart of the county and near the capital; it drew people thither, who
did not care to go to Purysburgh.
From 1740-1755, a great many
Palatines were sent to South Carolina, They settled Orangeburg, Cougaree
and Wateree. In 1765, upwards of six hundred from the Palatine and Swabia
were sent over from London and had a township of land set apart for them.
In 1739, a number of Lutherans and German Reformed purchased a
tract of land from General Waldo, and laid out the town Waldoborough, in
Lincoln county, Maine. Bremen, a village in the same county, and
Frankfort, in Waldo county, were undoubtedly laid out, or settled by
Germans, as the names would indicate. During the Spanish and French War,
in 1746, Waldoborough was laid in ashes by some Canadian Indians. Some of
the inhabitants were massacred, others abducted. Not a few died from the
ill-treatment received at the hands of the savages - some made their
escape, and were dispersed in Canada. Waldoborough remained in ruins until
1750. In 1751, invited by those in authority, thirty German families, and
in 1752, fifteen hundred individuals from Europe, persons of means,
settled in Maine.
King George II of Great Britain, held out strong
inducements, through very liberal promises, to all who would emigrate
into, and settle Nova Scotia, when a considerable body of German,
principally Hanoverians, left their country, embarked for America, landed
at Chebucto Bay, near Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, where fourteen
hundred and fifty-three re-embarked and landed at Marliguish, on the 7th
of june, 1753. Here they laid out the flourishing town of Lundenburg. Here
they were doomed to experience the same resistance from the natives which
the colonists at Halifax had met with, in settling the Peninsula; and the
early history of the place contains little else than a constant succession
of struggles with the savages in which, notwithstanding the powerful
protection they received from the government, they lost many lives. Their
attempts at agriculture were therefore restricted within a very narrow
compass, and the settlement of the adjoining country was retarded until
the French power and influence in Nova Scotia were subdued.
From
1735, settlements in Pennsylvania multiplied rapidly; extended over vast
regions, west of the Susquehanna, whither the Scotch-Irish had led the
way. The German settlement kept pace with the native.
The
Kau-ta-tn-chunk (Kittatiny or Blue Mountain) extending from the Delaware
hundreds of miles westwards, was not an insurmountable barrier - that they
crossed and laid out farms where shortly afterwards they, their wives and
children, were exposed to the torch, hatchet and scalping knife of the
savages, and their midnight assault and slaughter. Hundreds fell victims
to the relentlessly cruel savage, along the Blue Mountains, south and
north of them and along the Susquehanna, as far north as Penn's Creek,
from 1754-1763 and even at a later period. Among the massacred were many
Germans - more than 300 in all.
Germans massacred, north of the
Blue Mountain, within Monroe county, among other were: Guldin, Hoth or
Huth, Bomper, Vanaken, Vanflor, Schnell, Hartman, Hage, Brundich, Hellman,
Gonderman, Schleich, Muller, Vandelap, Decker, Van Gondie, Brinker. South
and north of the same mountain, within the present limits of Northampton,
Carbon and Lehigh - more than one hundred were killed. Among them were:
Sohn, Klein, Bittenbender, Roth, Schaffer, Ancers, Nitschman, Senseman,
Gattermyer, Fabricuius, Schwigert, Leslie, Presser, Depu. Along the same
mountain, within the limits of Berks, Lebanon and Dauphin county -
Reichelsdorfer, Gerhart, Neidung, Klug, or Kluck, Linderman, Schott,
Craushar, Zeissloff, Wunch, Dieppel, Henly, Spitler, Nocker, Maurer,
Boshar, Fell, Kuhlmer, Lang, Trump, Yager, Sechler, Schetterly, Sauter,
Geiger, Ditzler, Franz, Schnebele, Mosser, Fincher, Hubler, Marloff, Wolf,
Handsche, Weisser, Miess, Lebenguth, Motz, Noah, Windelblech, Zeuchmacher,
etc.
Prior to 1770, the wilderness of Pennsylvania was penetrated
beyond the Allegheny Mountains. Settlements were effected within the
present bounds of Westmoreland and other eastern counties of this state. A
number of German families had located on the Monongahela as far up as
Redstone, Brownsville, Fayette county. Here settled the Weismans,
Pressers, Vervalsons, Delongs, Jungs, Martins, Shutts, Peters, Schwartz,
Hutters, Cackeys, Abrahams, and others (the first Germans in Western
Pennsylvania, located in Greene county. These were two brothers, the
Eckerleins of Ephrata, who left there and settle in the depths of the
wilderness in 1745. Prior to 1754, Wendel Braun, and his two sons, and
Frederik Waltser, located four miles west of Uniontown.), whom that
devoted minister of the cross, the Rev. John Conrad Bucher, visited in Nov
1768.
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Printed
as originally written in 1876. Source: A Collection of upwards of
Thirty Thousand Names of German, Swiss, Dutch, French and other Immigrants
in Pennsylvania From 1727 to 1776; Prof. I. Daniel Rupp, Second Revised
Edition, 1876, Philadelphia. |
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