Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Monday, December 29, 2014
Johan Adam Dick, 1709 Germany - 1785 PA
This post is extracted from my book, The Mark Family Story; The Story of the Mark and
Other Related Families: Brown, Dick, Gruissy,
Heffelfinger, Keck, Ritter & Wolf.
Johan Adam Dick
1 April 1709 Germany – 29 Sept 1785 PA
My 6x Great Grandfather
Johan Adam Dick and his wife,
Anna Ottilla (Knack) Dick were born in Germany. They married in 1731. Three
daughters, Elisabeth Margretha Dick, Maria Christina (Dick) Brown and Maria Juliana Dick were born in Germany.[1] They
came to America on the ship Robert & Oliver from Rotterdam, arriving in
Philadelphia on 11 September 1738.[2]
Their daughter, Appollonia (Dick) Wolf, was born on board the ship during
the journey.[3]
They became part of the many Germans leaving their homes.
At
different periods, various causes and diverse motives induced them 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 for the
harassed and depressed sons and daughters of the relics of the Reformation,
whither William Penn himself invited the persecuted of every creed and
religious opinion.[4]
Germans landed at the port in Philadelphia and spread from there, venturing further west
as more new comers arrived.
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. … From 1735, settlements in Pennsylvania multiplied rapidly.[5]
The German Baptists, followers of
Alexander Mack, began to settle in the southwestern portion of York County as early as 1738. The Germans were “among the
first people to form church organizations in York County”[6]
This is precisely the time and location our Johan Adam Dick and family can be found.
They transported their families
and effects into the interior on rude wagons or ox-carts, the men going ahead
and alongside to protect them from surprise by the Indians or wild beasts, and
to remove the obstructions by trees and dense undergrowth. When they had
determined on a place of location – generally along streams or in valleys where
the soil was the richest – they built themselves cabins, with brushwood roofs,
or some old wagon-cover, and there they lived until a more comfortable home
could be provided.[7]
They
brought seeds of various kinds with them from the old country, and others were
supplied by the Proprietaries. Indian corn or mace was found almost everywhere
in the new country, on which they subsisted for a time. Not in the least,
however, were they in want of food … and an hour’s walk in the woods with rifle
and basket furnished sufficient game and fruit to supply the largest family for
a week, while a mess of fish could soon be secured in the streams, from the
luscious shad to the savory trout.[8]
Adam Dick is listed in the tax records
for York County in 1762 and
1772 in the town of Berwick.[9] In
York County, on 18 November 1768, Adam Dick became a citizen
of the Province of Pennsylvania.
At
a Nisi prius Court held at York, for the county of York, Before John Lawrence
& Thomas Willing, esquires, two of the Judges of the Supream [sic] Court of the Province of Pennsylvania, on
the eithteenth Day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven
hundred & sixty-eight, Between the Hours of nine & twelve of the Clock
in the Forenoon of the same Day, Jacob Lambert, Christian Ratfoun, Adam Dick
& Nicholas Yoner being Foreigners, & having
inhabited & resided for the space of seven years and upwards in his
Majesty’s Colonies in America, and not having been absent out of some of the
said Colonies, for a longer space than two months at any one time during the
said seven years, And being severally of the People who conscientiously scruple
and refuse the taking the oath, did take & subscribe the affirmations &
declarations.[10]
On
17 March 1770 Johan Adam Dick purchased 176 acres of land in Hamilton
Township, York County. He called his home “Pleasant Level”.[11]
Later that year Adam Dick sold his land to his daughter Appollonia (Dick) Wolf’s husband, Johann Jonas Wolf,
and his daughter Susanna (Dick) Horner’s husband, John Horner, both of Berwick Township. The transaction said Adam and his
wife would continue to live on the land for the rest of their lives. Jonas and
John would make payments to “certain heirs”.[12]
In 1770 they belonged to the German Baptist Church
in Abbottstown, York County, called Upper Conewago Church
of the Brethren, Mummert’s Meetinghouse. The German Baptists usually called
themselves ‘Brethren’.[13] Johann
Adam and Anna Ottilla (Knack) Dick are buried in the Upper Conewago Church of
the Brethren Cemetery there, along with other Dick and Wolf family
members.
Johann
Adam Dick died in 1785. In 1786 Christian Dick filed papers to settle the
estate of his father, Johann Adam Dick of Berwick Township, York County. A list
of payments against the estate included money for Jonas Wolff “for maintaining
a daughter of the deceased”.[14]
1 Johan Adam Dick b: 1
Apr 1709 Germany, d: 29 Sep 1785 in York, PA
.. + Anna Ottilla Knack
b: 4 Nov 1711 Germany, m: 12 Jun 1731 Germany, d: 20 Oct 1782 York, PA
....2 Elisabetha
Margretha Dick b: 1732 Germany, d: Unknown
....2 Maria Christina
Margretha Dick b: 1734 Germany, d: Unknown
.... + Jacob Brown
....2 Maria Juliana
Dick b: 1736 Germany, d: Unknown
....2 Appollonia Dick
b: 14 Aug 1738 at Sea, d: Abt. 1791 PA
.... + Johann Jonas
Wolf b: 27 Dec 1739 Lebanon, PA, m: 1761, d: 21 Sep 1787 Abbottstown, York, PA
......3 Jacob Wolf b:
05 Jun 1762 York, PA, d: 31 Mar 1810 York, PA
...... + Cornelia
Knight b: 27 Oct 1765, d: 6 Oct 1806
......3 Appollonia Wolf
b: 31 Dec 1763 York, PA, d: Aft. 1787
......3 John Wolf b: 18
Sep 1767 York, PA, d: 28 Aug 1851 Hamilton, Adams, PA
......3 Catherine Wolf
b: 21 Nov 1770 York, PA, d: Aft. 1787
...... + Henry Becker
......3 Adam Wolf b: 12
Feb 1773 York, PA, d: 13 Mar 1865
...... + Eva b: 1771,
d: 1839
......3 Johan Jonas
Wolf b: 08 Feb 1775 Abbottstown, Adams, PA, d: Unknown
......3 Christianna
Wolf b: 16 Nov 1776 York, PA, d: Unknown
......3 John Frederick
Wolf b: 30 Jun 1779 Berwick Twp, York Co, PA, d: 25 Apr 1872 York Springs,
Adams, PA
...... + Esther Barbara
Shaffer b: 29 Dec 1777 PA, m: 8 Apr 1800, d: 16 Oct 1866 York Springs, Adams, PA
......3 Maria Elizabeth
Wolf b: 27 Jun 1782 York, PA, d: Unknown
......3 Andrew Wolf b:
18 Mar 1787 York, PA, d: 28 Apr 1867 Berwick, York, PA
...... + Catherine Dick
b: 1795, m: 1829
....2 Christian Dick b:
02 Jan 1740 PA, d: 4 May 1800
.... + Catherine Naugle
b: 28 Jun 1743, d: 4 May 1800 York, PA
....2 Susanna Dick b:
1742 Berwick Twp., York Co., PA, d: Unknown
.... + John Horner
....2 Catherine Dick b:
1744 Berwick Twp., York Co., PA, d: Unknown
....
+ George Bittinger
[1] Bugert, Annette Kunselman. Eighteenth
Century Emigrants from German - Speaking Lands to North America. Volume II:
The Western Palatinate. Birdsboro, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania
German Society, 1985.
[2] Rupp, I. Daniel. A
Collection of Upwards of Thirty Thousand Names of German, Swiss, Dutch, French
and other Immigrants in Pennsylvania From 1727 - 1776. Second Edition.
Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1965.
[3] Wolfe, J. Arthur. Jonas
Wolf of Berwick Township, York County, Pennsylvania: A History and
Genealogy of a Colonial Ancestor and Some of His Descendants. Privately Published: 1987.
[4] Rupp, I. Daniel. A
Collection of Upwards of Thirty Thousand Names of German, Swiss, Dutch, French
and other Immigrants in Pennsylvania From 1727 - 1776. Second Edition.
Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1965.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Prowell, George R. History of
York County, Pennsylvania. Chicago: J. H.
Beers & Company, 1907.
[7]
Reilly, John T. History and Directory of the Boroughs of Gettysburg, Oxford,
York springs, Berwick and East Berlin, Adams County,
PA with Historical Collections. Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania: J. E. Wible Printer, 1880.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Tax Records
for Berwick, York County, Pennsylvania, 1762 & 1772,
York Heritage
Trust, 350 E Market Street, York, PA 18 November 2010. Adam Dick.
[10] Pennsylvania Archives; Series 2; Volume II; Persons
Naturalized in the Province of Pennsylvania; pp. 403 – 4. Adam Dick naturalized
on 18 November 1768.
[11] Hively, Neal Otto. Original
Pennsylvania Land Record Series: Berwick, Oxford, Hamilton, Reading,
Tyrone, Huntington and Latimore Townships. Volume II. Gettysburg, Pennsylvania: The Adams
County Historical Society, 2009.
[12] Deeds
recorded in the period 1749 – 1850 inclusive; in the Office of Recorder of Deeds, Court House, York, Pennsylvania.
Taken from: Young, Henry James. Genealogical Reports for the Historical
Society of York County, evidences of
the Wolf Families of York County before the year 1950. Volume XX.
The Historical Society of York County, 1938. . Copy of book owned by
York County Heritage Trust, 250 East Market Street, York,
Pennsylvania.
[13] Prowell, George R. History of
York County, Pennsylvania. Chicago: J. H.
Beers & Company, 1907.
[14] Administration Bond of the
Estate of Adam Dick, deceased, 1786. York County Heritage Trust, York,
Pennsylvania.
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Forget Me Not: James Kilday, 1850 - 1899 CT
James
Kilday
c 1850 Ireland - 11 Nov 1899 CT
James
Kildea, who for a long time had resided on Cannon street, died at home at 8
o’clock Saturday night. He had been sick about four months and had a
complication of diseases, the most dangerous of which was Bright’s Disease. He
also suffered much from rheumatism. He was employed in the brass mill in
Ansonia for a number of years but was obliged to give up work on account of
failing health. He was a member of Derby [unreadable] Knights of Maccabees. A
wife and three children mourn his death. Mr. Kildea also had many friends in
the associated towns. The end was not unexpected to those near him, as his
condition had been such for more than a week [unreadable] of a few hours. Undertaker
Colwell took charge of the remains. The funeral took place from his late home
at 9 o’clock this morning Internment was made at Mount St. Peter cemetery and
was attended by relatives and friends.
1 James Kilday b: c
1850 Ireland, d: 11 Nov 1899 CT
... + Ann Brady b: c
1865 Ireland, m: 18 Aug 1881 CT, d: 27 Jul 1952 Milford, New Haven, CT
......2 Mary Kilday b:
12 Jun 1882 New Haven, CT
......2 Catherine
Kilday b: Feb 1884 CT
...... + Jack B
Thompson b: Ac 1883 OH, m: 26 Apr 1909 New Haven, CT
.........3 Gladys
Thompson b: c 1910 CT
......2 Annie M. Kilday
b: 3 Mar 1887 New Haven, CT
......2 Margaret E.
Kilday b: 8 Sep 1889 New Haven, CT
...... + John Coleman
.........3 Anna Mariah
Coleman b: 12 Jun 1918
......... + William
Frederick Miller
............4 Mary
Jayne Miller b: 17 Dec 1955
............4 Michael
Terrence Miller b: 23 May 1959, d: Ac 1991
............4 Beverly
Ann Miller b: 15 Aug 1947
............ + Ronald
William Kelly
......2 James Leo
Kilday b: 28 May 1892 CT
...... + Theresa
Guilfoyle b: Abt. 1897 CT
.........3 James Kilday
b: Abt. 1923 CT
.........3 Warren
Kilday b: Abt. 1925 CT
.........3 Patricia
Kilday b: Abt. 1932 CT
......2 Frances Kilday b: 14 Mar 1895 New Haven, CT
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas
May this Christmas season
fill your home with joy,
your heart with love
and your life with laughter.
Colleen
Monday, December 22, 2014
Johan Jonas Wolf, 1739 PA - 1787 PA
This post is extracted from my book, The Mark Family Story; The Story of the Mark and Other Related Families: Brown, Dick, Gruissy, Heffelfinger, Keck, Ritter & Wolf.
Johann Jonas Wolf
27 December 1739 PA – 21 September
1787 PA
My 5x Great Grandfather
Johann Jonas
Wolf, born in Pennsylvania, was the youngest child of Johan Jacob and Anna Barbara
(Orth) Wolf. He married Appollonia (Dick) Wolf. Appollonia had been born at
sea when her parents emigrated from Germany to America.[1]
They lived in York County, Pennsylvania.[2]
Johann
Jonas Wolf was a Second Lieutenant during the American
Revolutionary War.[3],
[4]
At that time Adams County was still a part of York County. Although news was
slow to arrive in this remote area the people were in support of the steps
towards separation from the British Empire. As early as 1760 discontent was
openly spoken of at public meetings. In April 1775 they raised money to send to
the people of Boston. On 1 July 1775 the first company of soldiers marched from
Pennsylvania to Boston. Companies and regiments of soldiers were formed. In
1777 Congress fled from Philadelphia to safety in Lancaster. After a brief stay
they fled again. This time they settled in York where they remained for nine
months. In 1778 the number of men from York County in the militia was 4,621.[5]
In
1778 Johann Jonas Wolf was in the Sixth Battalion, Fifth Company with Peter
Ickes as his Captain and John Mullin as the First Lieutenant. Jonas was the Second
Lieutenant.[6]
In 1779 he was in the Seventh Battalion, Eighth Company. Peter Ickes was still
his Captain. Now Jonas was the First Lieutenant.[7],[8]
He was
“…in
a detachment of the York County Militia under command of Captain John Wampler,
in actual service guarding prisoners of war at Camp Security in York County,
D 7, 1781 – F 7, 1782.”[9]
Camp Security was a Prisoner of War Camp, just east of the
City of York. It housed over one thousand British and Canadian prisoners of war
between the summer of 1781 and the spring of 1783. Many of these were from the
surrender of General John Burgoyne to General Gates at Saratoga, New York, on October
18, 1777.
The site of
the Revolutionary prison camp was north of the York and East Prospect Road in
the Northeastern part of Windsor Township. For three – fourths of a century it
had been owned by Jacob Holtzinger. The prison, ‘pen’ as it had been called,
was built in the form of a circle. Posts, fifteen feet in length, were erected
in close proximity, so that the entire prison resembled an Indian fort; within
the enclosures prisoners built huts. The County Militia guarded the camp for
several years until the fall of 1782, when a congressional regiment was sent to
guard the prisoners in York, Lancaster and Berks Counties.[10]
During
the American Revolutionary War the Germans in Pennsylvania were strong
supporters of the war. Men like Johann Jonas Wolf fought to repel the British
troops. Many more families helped the fighting men by providing horses, wagons
and food. The Pennsylvania counties were the most prosperous agricultural areas
at that time. Even the non-combatant Mennonites never denied requests for
provisions. Lancaster, York, Berks and Northampton Counties led the way in
supplying the fighting troops.[11]
In
1778 Johann Jonas Wolf was the over seer of the poor for Berwick Township.[12]
Miller
and Pencak describe the average farm in late Colonial Pennsylvania. The average
farm was 125 acres.
There were seven head
of cattle, three or four horses, eight pigs, ten sheep, some chickens, and a
hive or two of bees.
Fifty-three acres were under plow, in hay
meadows, or in orchards. Another twenty acres were pastureland. Three acres
were devoted to the house, barns, springhouse, and corncribs, while the
remainder was woodlot, providing lumber, fuel, and foraging for cattle and
pigs. The family, often with the assistance of a slave, servant, tenant family,
or hired help, harvested 300 bushels of grains, dressed 450 pounds of pork and
beef, made cheese, butter, beer, and grew vegetables, fruit, flax, and tobacco
every year.[13]
Miller and Pencak continue to
describe the average farm’s products and its purchases.
This
average farm family sold about 55 bushels of wheat, 200 pounds of meat, plus
flaxseed, hay, and other products and purchased cloth, shoes, hats, salt and
spices, almanacs, Bibles and prayer books, hardware, tools, and more.[14]
Following the war, York County fell on hard times.
The
winter of 1783 is known as the “hard winter,” during which everything froze,
causing an entire failure of crops the following year. A contagious disease
breaking out among the cattle, carried hundreds away. The people, generally,
were in distressing circumstances. Collectors of taxes were unable to make
their collections, … For a number of years after the war, times were hard, on
account of the great depreciation of Continental money, and the waste of life
and property during the long struggle.[15]
The
Wolf family belonged to the Emmanuel Reformed
Church, Abbottstown.
Jonas Wolf was
the ancestor of the Wolf family that took an active part in the affairs of the
church for more than one hundred fifty years. Frederick Wolf, d. 1803, was a
highly respected citizen of the Township, as is evidenced by an uninterrupted
period of civil service covering a period of seventeen years.[16]
Johann Jonas Wolf died In September 1787 in Berwick Township. An
inventory was made of his “Estate, Goods, Chattles, Rights and Credits”. The
extensive listing included “The Dwelling Plantation, Consisting of 83 Acres and
Allowances of Land, Another Plantation and tract of land Consisting of 120
acres, more or less.” Reading through the inventory gives a clear view of life
in 1787, the time of his death.
A
Sermon Book; Two Hymn Books; 2 Old Spelling Books, and Primer; Great – Coat;
Four Coat, Jacket, Breeches and Hat; 4 pair of Trouzers [sic], & 1 pair of Leggins; 2 Shirts, and one pair of stockings; 1 pair
of old boots, 1 pair of Shoes, Buckles; A watch and 3 old Shirts; A wagon; A
Plough and Irons; 2 black horses; A Sorrel; A Black Mare; A Colt; A brindled
Cow; A Spotted Heiffer [sic]; A brown
Steer; A red Steer; A black Heiffer; 3 Heiffer Calves; 2 other Calves; 17 head
of Sheep; A Wind Mill; A Waggon Cloath [sic]; A Cutting Box and Knife; The Geers [sic] and Stones of an Oil Mill; A Quantity of Wheat at 4/6 Bushels; A
Quantity of Rye at 2/9 Bushels; A Quantity of Oats at 1/6 Bushels; Hay; 2 Dung
forks, and hook; A hay – fork, 2 Rakes and 2 flails; 2 old casks and trough; A
Quantity of Flax, unthreashed; A Quantity of Hemp, unwatered; 5 Cow Chains; A
Pair of Hay – Ladders; 8 Planks; An Old Wheel – barrow; A Log – Chain; One
Still – Door; A Harrow; Stretch Chains; A Sleigh; A sled; 4 Hogs; 2 Shovels; A
grindstone; A pair of Hobbles; A Man Saddle, and Saddlebags; An old Saddle, and
Saddlebags; A stallion chain; 2 Augers; A pair of Pincers, Chizzel [sic], Gouge, and Spike; A half – Bushel; A hand
saw, and draw knife; Two pieces of Iron & a door hinge; A whip; A Cake –
Iron; An old Sythe [sic] & piece
of Gin Barrel; A Pot Trammel; A quilling – Wheel and Swifts; A Sythe [sic] and Craddle [sic]; 2 Spinning Wheels; A warping Bar, Wouk, and 22 spools; A weavers
Loom; Reeds and Geers [sic]; 2 Gums
with some Salts; A covered Straw Basket and dried apples; An old cask with some
Sope [sic] and Fat; Riddles &
Straw; An Old cask with some Lime; 2 Baskets and old Iron; A Bag with feathers;
A pruning saw and Whip Stalk; Some Onions and old Sive [sic]; An empty Hogshead with straw cover; 2
straw baskets and some beans; A flour Barrel; An Axe and three rakes; A big
Wheel, Reel and Swifts; A hair – sifter and Rope; A Dough Trough; A Side –
saddle and Bridle; A pair of Steel yards; 9 Bags; A Chest and Box; A bed and
Bedstead; 2 Razors 7 Strap; Table Clothes; An old Half Bushel and 7 Bread
Baskets; A table; A Looking Glass; A Cupboard; Wool; Woolen Yarn; A Stone Jug;
2 little Tubs; 3 Pails; An Iron Pot; 2 pewter Basins, 4 Plates, 7 spoons & 8 Tea spoons; Tea
tin, Coffee pot, Funnel, 1 Quart, 2 Pint & half pint cups; 5 Delf [sic] Plates; 10 pairs of cups & saucers, 2
tea pots, and a Sugar Pot; A glass and earthen bowl & salt Box; 1 lamp and
Candlestick; A Coffee – Mill & Spice Box; 2 Bottles; 6 Knives and 10 Forks;
A Kitchen Dresser; A Shelf[17]
Appollonia (Dick) Wolf died about 1790. On 19 August 1790
another inventory was taken, this time of Appollonia’s Estate. Many of the same
items were listed. The following were some possessions unique to Appollonia
(Dick) Wolf:
A
Bed Case; 3 Callico [sic] Gowns; 3 lintsey [sic] Gowns and a long Gown; a Woman’s Cloke [sic]; 8 lintsey [sic] petticoats; one silk hankercheif [sic]; a pair stocking and a pair of Mitten; 2 knifes, 2 forks, 3 cups and
one apron; one bowl and a candlestick; blue and white woolen yarn; 3 yards of
flax linen; 14 yards of ton linen; hand sope [sic]; a feather bed and two blankets; a pair of spectacles; a pine Chest; a
wallet and a little bag[18]
The final resting place of
Johann Jonas and Appolonia (Dick) Wolf has yet to be discovered.
1 Johann Jonas Wolf b:
27 Dec 1739 Lebanon, PA, d: 21 Sep 1787 Abbottstown, York, PA
.. + Appollonia Dick b:
14 Aug 1738 at Sea, m: 1761, d: Abt. 1791 PA
....2 Jacob Wolf b: 05
Jun 1762 York, PA, d: 31 Mar 1810 York, PA
.... + Cornelia Knight
b: 27 Oct 1765, d: 6 Oct 1806
......3 Margaret Wolf
b: 1803
...... + John Straw m:
1830
....2 Appollonia Wolf
b: 31 Dec 1763 York, PA, d: Aft. 1787
....2 John Wolf b: 18
Sep 1767 York, PA, d: 28 Aug 1851 Hamilton, Adams, PA
....2 Catherine Wolf b:
21 Nov 1770 York, PA, d: Aft. 1787
.... + Henry Becker
....2 Adam Wolf b: 12
Feb 1773 York, PA, d: 13 Mar 1865
.... + Eva b: 1771, d:
1839
......3 Jonas Wolf b:
23 Jul 1794 Abbottstown, Adams, PA, d: Unknown
......3 Maria Wolf b:
26 Sep 1796, d: 24 Nov 1873 Abbottstown, Adams, PA
......3 Jacob Wolf b:
19 Apr 1798 in Abbottstown, Adams, Pennsylvania, USA, d: Unknown
......3 John Wolf b: 24
Jan 1802
......3 Elizabeth Wolf
b: 19 Mar 1804
......3 Adam Wolf b: 05
Dec 1810
....2 Johan Jonas Wolf
b: 8 Feb 1775 Abbottstown, Adams, PA, d: Unknown
....2 Christianna Wolf
b: 16 Nov 1776 York, PA, d: Unknown
....2 John Frederick
Wolf b: 30 Jun 1779 Berwick Twp, York Co., PA, d: 25 Apr 1872 York Springs,
Adams, PA
.... + Esther Barbara
Shaffer b: 29 Dec 1777 PA, m: 8 Apr 1800, d: 16 Oct 1866 York Springs, Adams,
PA
......3 John Adam Wolf
b: 28 Aug 1800 Berwick, Adams, PA, d: 14 Aug 1825 Adams, PA
......3 Louisa Wolf b:
14 Aug 1802 in Berwick, Adams, PA, d: Unknown
...... + Hanes
......3 Frederick Wolf
b: 9 Sep 1804 Berwick, Adams, PA, d: 29 Oct 1891 Adams, PA
...... + Louisa C Goetz
m: 13 Feb 1825 PA, d: 3 Oct 1861
......3 Jacob Wolf b:
21 Dec 1806 Berwick, Adams, PA, d: 11 Jun 1891 Anderson, KS
...... + Matilda Kinert
......3 John Franklin
Wolf b: 11 Apr 1809 Berwick, Adams, PA, d: 10 Mar 1883 Hinckley, Medina, OH
...... + Elisabeth
Burkholder b: 24 May 1814 York, PA, d: 22 Jun 1856 OH
...... + Caroline Orwig
b: Abt. 1820, m: 6 Nov 1856 Wayne, OH, d: 1888
......3 John Jonas Wolf
b: 29 Jun 1811 Adams, PA, d: 16 Feb 1895 York Springs, Adams, PA
...... + Sarah Ann
Chronister b: 14 Apr 1824, d: 1891
......3 Esther Barbara
Wolf b: 27 Jan 1814 Adams, PA, d: 12 Dec 1903 Adams, PA
...... + Isaac Meyers
......3 Ninetta Wolf b:
18 May 1817 Adams, PA, d: 18 Jul 1890 New Chester, Adams, PA
...... + George H
Spangler
......3 Henry H Wolf b:
20 Nov 1820 Adams, PA, d: 1860
...... + Maria
Magdalena d: 1852
......3 William Wolf b:
20 Apr 1824 Abbottstown, Adams, PA, d: 2 Apr 1888 Conway Springs, Sumner, KS
...... + Sarah Jane
Wilson
....2 Maria Elizabeth
Wolf b: 27 Jun 1782 York, PA, d: Unknown
....2 Andrew Wolf b: 18
Mar 1787 York, PA, d: 28 Apr 1867 Berwick, York, PA
.... + Catherine Dick
b: 1795, m: 1829
......3 Christian Wolf
b: 7 Apr 1819, d: 12 Jan 1880
......3 Andrew
Alexander Wolf b: 31 Jan 1821, d: 24 Oct 1885
......3 George Wolf b:
14 Aug 1823
......3 Josiah Wolf b:
1828, d: 1 Sep 1874
......3 Jeremiah Wolf
b: 22 Aug 1829 Berwick, York, PA, d: 27 Feb 1877 Abbottstown, Adams, PA
...... + Eliza Ann
Reigle d: 7 Sep 1906
......3 Richard Wolf b:
7 Jul 1831
......3 Benjamin
Franklin Wolf b: 16 Feb 1833
......3 Jonas Wolf b: 6
Aug 1836
......3 Anna Maria
Catherine Wolf b: 09 Mar 1839
......3 Adam Wolf b: 9
Mar 1839, d: 29 Nov 1924
...... + Elenora
......3 Catherine Wolf b: 1846
Related Post:
Related Post:
[1] Wolfe, J. Arthur. Jonas
Wolf of Berwick Township, York County, Pennsylvania: A History and
Genealogy of a Colonial Ancestor and Some of His Descendants. Privately Published: 1987.
[2] Wolf family papers and charts
from Christine Ann (Klessins) Zengler, Wisconsin. Wife of great grandson of
Joseph W. Wolf.
[3] Young, Henry James. Genealogical Reports for The
Historical Society of York County: Evidences of the Wolf Families of York
County before the Year
1850, 1938. From York County Heritage Trust,
250 East Market Street, York, Pennsylvania. Revolutionary Records; Jonas Wolf.
[4] Second Lieutenant Jonas Wolfe,
Ancestor #A127487, National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution
Research Database.
[5] 1886
History of Adams County, Pennsylvania. 1977 Reprint. Chicago: Warner, Beers
and Company, 1886.
[6] Pennsylvania Archives; Sixth
Series, Volume II, page 540.
[7] Pennsylvania archives; Sixth
Series, Volume II, page 565.
[8] Prowell, George R. History of
York County, Pennsylvania. Chicago: J. H.
Beers & Company, 1907. Print.
[9] Young, Henry James. Genealogical Reports for The
Historical Society of York County: Evidences of the Wolf Families of York
County before the Year
1850, 1938. From York County Heritage Trust,
250 East Market Street, York, Pennsylvania. Revolutionary Records; Jonas Wolf.
[10] Wolfe, J. Arthur. Jonas
Wolf of Berwick Township, York County, Pennsylvania: A History and
Genealogy of a Colonial Ancestor and Some of His Descendants. Privately Published: 1987.
[11] Kuhns, Oscar.
The German and Swiss Settlements of Colonial Pennsylvania. Reprint. New
York: Eaton &
Mains, 1979. Original Printing, 1901.
[12] Young, Henry
James. Genealogical Reports for the Historical Society of York County, Evidences of
the Wolf Families of York County before the year 1950. Volume XX.
The Historical Society of York
County, 1938. . Copy of book owned by
York County Heritage Trust, 250 East Market Street, York,
Pennsylvania.
[13] Miller, Randall M., and
William Pencak. Pennsylvania: A History of the Commonwealth. Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2002.
[14] Ibid.
[15] History and
Directory of the Boroughs of Gettysburg, Oxford, York springs, Berwick and East Berlin, Adams County, PA with
Historical Collections.
[16]
Eisenhart, Willis
W. A History of Abbottstown. 1953.
[17]
Estate Files for Johann Jonas Wolf and Appollona Wolf of Berwick Township, Pennsylvania; Held at the York
County Archives, 150 Pleasant Acres Road, York,
Pennsylvania.
[18] Estate Files for Johann Jonas
Wolf and Appollona Wolf of Berwick Township, Pennsylvania; Held at the York
County Archives, 150 Pleasant Acres Road, York,
Pennsylvania.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)