360 65 22MB
English Pages 416 Year 1883
HISTORICAL
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES,
SAMUEL W. PENNYPACKER.
Dan solle
vnd leerend. dit- Oberkeit rnoge und * * vnd Gloubens sachen niit annehmen.
sy lialteiid styff das widerspyl,
sich
der
Religion
Es bednnckt die Toutfer vngebiii-lich syn, dass in der kircheu ein ander schwardt dan nun dess Gr6ttlichen worts solle gebruclit werden vnd noch vil Vngebiirlicher, dass man mensclien, das ist, denen die in der Oberkeit :
sind, solle die sachen der Religion oder
Gloubens hendel vnderwerfl'en.
Bullinger's Widertoufferen Vrsprnug, p. 165, printed
by Froschower, at Zurich, 1560.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
ROBERT
A.
:
TRIPPLE,
1883.
Entered 'according to Act
ol
By ROBERT
Congress, in the year 1883, A.
TRIPPLE.
In the Of&ce of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
PR EFACE. The
who
philologist,
of the primeval
man
Pyrenees, the Basques,
time the
seeks to
of
know something
of the language
Europe, finds amid the mountains of the
who have preserved down
tongue of these remote
to the present
The ethnologist
forefathers.
studies the habits of prehistoric races not by the uncertain light of
early legends, but by going to the Islands of the South
Pacific,
was before the dawn of
civiliza-
where savage
The
tion.
he can see
ways
hymn
the same methods of investi-
face to face with the Reformation,
Mennonites of Lancaster County,
visit the
the
it
who pursuing
historian,
would stand
gation,
as
still exists,
life
still
in
need only
Pennsylvania, where
rigorously preserved, the thought, the faith, the habits,
and even the dress of that important epoch. The
of living,
book
in
ordinary use by the Amish was written
the 16th
in
Century, and from
it
they
who was drowned
at
Zurich, in 1526, and Michael Sattler,
had
the
1527.
in
results of
interesting people
Whether we regard
who came
to
death because of his
trivial.
A
America. There
State,
is
history,
scaicely a family
theirs,
the
sufferings of
Pilgrim and
hundred years before the time Penn,
of
Roger
reformer
the Dutch
for
tlie
complete severance of Church
and the struggles
for
religious
Menno Simons contended and
personal
traced to some ancestor burned to
George Fox and William
"Williams,
who
death at Rot-
Their whole literature smacks of the
faith.
Beside a record like
Quaker seem
their
to
Mennonites were the most
their teachings, the
among them which cannot be
fire.
zealously sing about Felix Mantz,
tongue torn out and was then burned
his
tenburg or
still
and
political
liberty,
which convulsed England and led to the English colonization of
America doctrines
in
the
Seventeenth
Century,
advanced by the Dutch
and
the one which preceded.
:^7«217
were
results
of
German Anabaptists
in
logical
4
PRKFAOK. About
ten
ago
years
formed
I
history of the Mennonites in America.
a task of extrerue difficulty. of the
German and Dutch
had ever been made
It
It
required
No
languages.
was
many
for
the
reasons
preliminary knowledge
a
collection of their books
country, nothing of value had been
this
in
of writing
the design
published concerning them except some papers
in
Ihe
"
Pennsyl-
vania Dutch," which were descriptive rather than
liislorical,
and
the structure had to be erected from
More than
all,
the
conviction
vanities,
them
by them that fame
entertained
and the desire
foundation.
its
for it
is
only one of the
but a form of worldliness, has led
rather than to preserve, those materials
in the past to destroy,
•which are the ordinary souices of historical information.
book was written the name meeting house was
of the author did not appear
built, no tablet told the date
raised to his
and the exacting demands
of a professional
if
;
memory.
was buried, no stone wa?
life
;
When
a
when
a
and when a man These
have so
difficulties
far retarded,
not prevented, the completion of the design, and the results up to
the present time have been a
manuscripts, and
and
the
somewhat seven
first
full collection of their
books
papers gathered into this
volume.
Though
a torso,
thorough, and
if
work
believe the
I
so far as
has gone to be
it
should not progress to the end,
it
I shall at least
have the satisfaction of having contributed something to the tory of a people
study, and
who
who
way worthy
are in every
will sooner or later attract
The circumstances under
whicli
his-
of the most careful
wide attention.
the other papers were written
are for the most part explained in the notes accompanying them.
All of those which have heretofore appeared •Ihe
day are
•corrected
elsewhere
so described in tlip i^ub-titles,
made
for assistance
all
been here
and
of the labors of other investigalors.
It
ought, however, to be said, that
Stone
the magazines of
credit has been given in the notes
and enlarged. Full for the use
in
and they have
I
am much
and suggestions
upon David Rittenhouse. Pmr.ADKi.i'Hi.v. April nth,
1,9,^.^.
indebted to Mr. F. D.
in the prep;i ration of the article
CONTENTS. 1.
Thk Settlement
of Germaxtowx,
causes which led to
it,
2.
David Kittenhouse,
tlie
S.
Christopher Dock,
the
.
.... A
Mennonite Emigration to Pennsylvania, Abraham and Dirck op den Graeff,
7.
ZiONITISCHER
^.
William Moore of Moore Hall,
9.
Samuel Richardson,
Germantown, 1739,
155
.
.
175
.
.
201
.... .... .... ....
11.
Samuel John Atlee, Musketry Battalion
in
.
223 229
13.
14.
Henry Armitt Brown. Charles Frederick Taylor,
15.
Six
Uniform, being Service
.
.
241
257
Pennsylvania
the Revolutionary
James Abram Garfield,
in
.
.
Colonel of the
12.
Military
.
.
a Councilor, Judge and Legis-
Olden Time,
Captain Joseph Richardson,
Weeks
.
WeYRAUCHS HcGEL ODER MyRRHEN
10.
the
89
Spie-
Noteworthy Book,
6.
lator of the
•
7 .')9
Pious Schoolmaster on the
Ephrata, Pa., 1748.
Berg.
the
.
Der Blutige Schau-platz, odek Martyrer gel.
5.
and
American Astronomer,
Skippack, and his AVorks, 4.
Pa., •
.
Army,
.
.
.
269 285
293 299
the record of a term in
of the United
Gettysburg Campaign of 1863,
.
States in the .
.
305
a?iiEj
Settlement of Germantown, Pa AND THE
CAUSES WHICH LED TO
From
IT.
the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. Vol. IV, p. 1.
THE SETTLEMENT OF GERMANTOWN,
Hail to posterity men of Germanopolis
PA.
!
Hail, future
Let the young
!
generations yet to be
Look kindly upon this. your fathers left their native land, how Think sacred hearths and homes Dear German land, !
A^nd where the wild beast roams
In patience planned
New
forest
homes beyond the mighty
sea,
There undisturbed and free To live as brothers of one family.
What What
pains and cares befell, trials
and what
fears,
Kemember, and wherein we have done well Follow our footsteps, men of coming years Where we havo failed to do Aright, or wisely live.
Be warned by us, the better way pursue. And knowing we were human, even as you, Pity us and forgive.
Farewell, Posterity;
Farewell, dear
Germany;
Forever more farewell
When
the
history
thoroughly understood,
man, as he 1
From
is
of it
!
Whittier.^
Pennsylvania will
comes
to
be
be found that the Dutch-
generally called, occupies
a position
by
the Latin of Francis Daniel Pastorius in the Germantown first published by Pi of. Oswald Seidensticker.
Records, 1688,
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
10
no means so inconspicuous as that which the most of us
apt
are
to
assign
to
admit that
to
him
him.
to is
perity for which this State
butter
his
fat,
barns
his
are
sweet,
is
capacious
is
is
is
willing
no noted, that his hogs are
his ;
lands are well
but
anything distinguished in his career,
Every one
due rnucb of the material pros-
the
claim
origin, or
tilled,
that
and
there is
brilliant in his
seldom made, and that he has approached his
English associates in knowledge of
politics, literature, or
who get our Saxon blood by way of Thames would quickly deny. The in his favor, however, are many and
science those of us
the Mersey and the
which
facts
tell
Pastorius possessed probably more literary at-
striking.
tainments, and produced more
literary
work than any
other of the early emigrants to this province, and alone, of a
of
New
literature
he
them all, through the appreciative delineation England poet, has a permanent place in the Willem Rittinghuysen, in of our own time.
1690, built on a branch of the Wissahickon Creek the
The Bible was printed America thirty-nine years before it appeared in English, and in the preface to his third edition in 1776, Saur was still able to say, " to the honor of the German first
paper-mill in the Colonies.-^
German
in
people
—
in
for
no other nation can assert that
been printed
'
in their
it
has ever
language in this part of the world.
Jones's notes to Thomas's History of Printing, vol.
i.
"^
p. 21.
knowledge concerning the Germans amounts at Dr. William Smith wrote in 1753 a letter, recently printed, in which he said they were in danger of " sinking into barbarian ignorance," while in another sentence he ^
The lack
of
times almost to obtuse ness.
complained with the utmost naivete that " they import many foreign books, and in Penna. have their printing houses and their newsThe editor of the Magazine of American History lately papers." gave space to a controversy as to whether Collin's Bible or Thomas's
THE SETTLEMENT OF GERMAISTTOWN.
No
other
known
literary
work undertaken
11
in tlie Colonies
equals in magnitude the Mennonite Martyrs' Mirror of Van
Braght, printed at Ephrata in 1748, whose publication re-
men
quired the labors of fifteen
Speaker
of the first
House
for three
years.
The
under the
of Representatives
Federal Constitution and seven of the Governors of Penn-
The statue selected to represent in the capitol at Washington the military reputation of Pennsylvania is that of a German. Said Thomas Jefferson of DaAnd Rittenhouse "He has not indeed made a world, but he has by imitation approached nearer its maker than any man who has lived sylvania were
men
of
German
descent.
:
from the creation to this day."^
There are no Pennsyl-
vania names more cherished at home, and more deservedly
known
abroad, than those of Wister, Shoemaker, Muhlen-
berg, Weiser, Hiester,
Keppele and Keim, and there are
few Pennsylvanians, not comparatively recent
who cannot be carried back along some tral
lines to the
country of the Rhine.
of the earliest settlement of the nia,
in
examination
Pennsylva-
and a study of the causes which produced
value of our State history. the
An
Germans
therefore, well be of interest to all
first
wave
of emigration
arrivals,
of their ances-
who
it
may,
appreciate the
The first impulse followed by came from Crefeld, a city of
the lower Rhine, within a few miles of the borders of
Holland.
On
the 10th of March, 1682, William
Penn
Jacob Telner, of Crefeld, doing business as a merchant in Amsterdam, Jan Streypers, a merchant of Kaldkirchen, a village in the vicinitv, still nearer to Hoi-
conveyed
to
was the " First great Quarto Bible in unaware that Saur was a half century
Bible, both printed in 1791,
America,"
apparently
earlier. '
Jefferson's
Notes on Virginia.
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
12
and Dirck Sipman,
land,
of Crefeld, each five thousand
As
acres of land to be laid out in Pennsylvania.
the
deeds were executed upon that day,^ the design must Mr. Lawrence Lewis has suggested that under the system of
^
double datinghetween Jan. 1st and March 25th, which then prevailed, The evidence it is probable that the date was March lOth, 1682-3. pro and con
is
The
strong and conflicting.
facts in favor of
1682-3
are mainly 1. It is manifest from an examination of the patents that the custom was, whenever a single date, as 1682, was mentioned within those limits, the latter date, 1682-3, was meant.
2.
A
deed to Telner, dated June 2d, 1683 (Ex. Rec. 8, p. 655), " Whereas the said William Penn by indentures
recites as follows of lease
and
:
release, bearing date the ninth
and tenth days
of the
month called March for the consideration therein mentioned, etc." The presumption is that the March referred to is the one immediately preceding.
and release to Telner March 9th and 10th, 1682, and several deeds of June, 1683, are all recited to have been in the 35th 3.
The
lease
year of the reign of Charles II.
It
evident that
is
March
10th,
1681-2, and June, 1683, could not both have been within the same year.
This would be enough to decide the matter of
if
the facts in favor
1681-2 were not equally conclusive. They are 1. It is probable, a priori, and from the German names of the
witnesses that the deeds to the Crefelders, except that to Telner,
were dated and delivered by Benj. Furly, Penn's agent at RotterIn both Holland and Germany the prefor the sale of lands.
dam
sent system of dating
A
2.
patent (Ex.
had been Rec.
in use for over a century.
vol.
i.
p.
462)
recites
as
follows
Whereas by my indentures of lease and release dated the 9 and and whereas by my in10 days of March Anno 1682 dentures dated the first day of April, and year aforesaid, I remised and released to the same Dirck Sipman the yearly rent. The year aforesaid was 1682, and if the quit rent was released April 1st, 1682, the conveyance to Sipman must have been earlier. If on the 25th of March another year, 1683, had intervened, the "
....
word tion
aforesaid could not have been correctly used.
is
strengthened by
This construc-
the fact that the release of quit rent to
THE SETTLEMENT OF GERMANTOWN. have been
in contemplation
some time
before.
io
and the arrangements made
Telner had been in America between
we may safely infer that country had much influence in
the years 1678 and 1681, and his acquaintance with the
bringing about the purchase.^
we
In November, 1682,
find the earliest reference to
the enterprise which subsequently resulted in the formation of the Frankfort
heard of
it for
the
Company.
first
time,
and
At
that date Pastorius
he, as agent,
bought the
London between the 8th of May and 6th The eight original purchasers were of June, 1683.^ Jacob Van de Walle, Dr. Johann Jacob Schutz, Johann Wilhelm Ueberfeldt, Daniel Behagel, Casper Merian, lands
when
in
George Strauss, Abraham Hasevoet, and Jan Laurens, an intimate friend of Telner, apparently living at RotBefore Nov. 12th, 1686, on which day, in the
terdam.
language of the Manatawny patent, they Streypers, which took place April 1st, 1683,
patent (Ex.
E,ec.
1, p. 686) as follows:
is
formed them-
recited in another
"Of which
said
sum
or
day of April for the year 1683 I remised and
yearly rent by an indenture bearing date the the consideration therein mentioned in
"
first
released."
The
3.
and release
lease
to
Telner on March 9th and 10th, 1682, are
signed by William Penn, witnessed by Herbert Springett,
Thomas
Coxe, and Seth Craske, and purport to have been executed in Eng-
An Op
den Graeff deed in Germantown book recites that Now in March, 1681-2, Penn was they were executed at London. in England, but in March, 1682-3, he was in Philadelphia. 4. Pastorius says that Penn at first declined to give the Frankfort Co. city lots, because they had made their purchase after he (Penn) had left England and the books had been closed, and that land.
Penn left Enga special arrangement was made to satisfy them. The deeds show that the Crefelders received land Sept. 1st, 1682. their city lots. ^
Hazard's Register, vol.
^
Pastorius
MS.
vi. p.
183.
in the Historical Society of
Pa.
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
14
selves into a
company," the
last
nanied four bad with-
drawn, and their interests had been taken by Francis
Von
Daniel Pastorius, the celebrated Johanna Eleanora
Merlau, wife of Dr. Johann Wilhelm Peterson, Dr. Ger-
hard
Von
Mastricht, Dr.
Thomas Von Wylich, Johannes Johannes Kemler.
Lebrun, Balthasar Jawert, and Dr.
That pany
this
was the date
dp
executed in 1700.^
seem
of the organization of the
to
power
Com-
of attorney
which they
to the 8th of June,
1683, they
also recited in the
is
have bought 15,000 acres of land, which were
increased to 25,000 acres. Of the eleven members nearh^ all were followers of the pietist Spener, and five of them lived at Frankfort, two in Wesel, two in Lubeck, and one in Duisberg. Though to this company has generally been ascribed the settlement of Ger-
afterwards
niantown, and with of
German
the credit of being the originators
it
emigration,
came
no one of
its
members except
and of still more significance is the fact that, so far as known, no one of the early emigrants to Pennsylvania came from Frankfort. On the 11th of June, 1683, Penn convej^ed to Govert Kemke, Lenart Arets, and Jacob Isaacs Van Bebber, a Pastorius ever
baker,
all
to Pennsylvania,
of Crefeld,
one thousand acres of land each,
and they, together with Telner, Btreypers, and Sipman, constituted the original Crefeld
purchasers.
It
is
evi-
dent that their purpose was colonization, and not specu-
The arrangement between Penn and Sipman provided that a certain number of families should go to lation.
Pennsylvania within a specified time, and probably the
^ The power of attorney says, "and desswegen in Kraffts dess den 12 Novembris, 1G86, beliebten brieffes eiiie Societat geschlossen." Both the original agreement and the letter of attorney,
with their autographs and
seals, are in
my
possession.
THE SETTLEMENT OF GERMANTOWN.
15
How-
other purchasers entered into similar stipulations.^ ever that
may
be, ere long thirteen
were
relatives,
their fami-
all of
whom
were ready to embark to seek new homes
across the ocean.
Op
men with
comprising thirty-three persons, nearly
lies,
They were Lenart
den Graeif, Dirck
Op den
Graeff,
Arets, Abraham Hermann Op den
Willem Streypers, Thones Kunders, Reynier Tyson, Jan Seimens, Jan Lensen, Peter Keurlis, Johannes The three Bleikers, Jan Lucken, and Abraham Tunes. Op den Graeffs were brothers, Hermann was a son-inlaw of Van Bebber, they were accompanied by their sister Margaretha, and they were cousins of Jan and Willem Streypers, who were also brothers. The wives of Thones Kunders and Lenart Arets were sisters of the Streypers, and the wife of Jan was the sister of Reynier Tyson. Peter Keurlis was also a near relative, and the location of the signatures of Jan Lucken and Abraham Tunes on the certificate of the marriage of a son of Thones Kunders with a daughter of Willem Streypers in 1710 indicates that they too were connected with the group by Graeff,
On the 7th of June, 1683, Jan Streypers and Jan Lensen entered into an agreement at Crefeld by the terms of which Streypers was to let Lensen have fifty acres of land at a rent of a rix dollar and half a stuyver, and to lend him fifty rix dollars for eight years at the infamily
ties.^
terest of six rix dollars annually.
port himself and wife to
Lensen was
Pennsylvania, to
to trans-
clear eight
work for him twelve days The agreement proceeds, " I
acres of Streyper's land and to
each year for eight years.
in
further promise to lend
him a Linnen-weaving
Dutch deed from Sipman to Peter Schumacher town Book in the Recorder's office. ^
^
Streper
MSS.
in the Historical Society.
cate belongs to Dr. J. H. Conrad.
stool
in the
with
German-
The marriage
certifi-
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
16
3 combs, and he years
.
.
Leonard
in
and
shall
have said weaving;
for this
Jan Lensen
two
stool for
my
shall teach
son
one year the art of weaving, and Leonard
bound to weave faithfully duiing said year." On the 18th of June the little colony were in Rotterdam, whither they were accompanied by Jacob Telner, Dirck Sipman, and Jan Streypers, and there many of their business arrangements were completed. Telner conshall be
veyed 2000 acres of land
to the brothers
Op den
GraefF,
his attorney. and Sipman made Hermann Op Jan Streypers conveyed 100 acres to his brother Willem, and to Seimens and Keurlis each 200 acres. Bleikers and Lucken each bought 200 acres from Benjamin
den Graeff
Furly, agent for the purchasers at
Frankfort.
At
this
time James Claypoole, a Quaker merchant in London,
who had
previously had business relations of some kind
with Telner, was about
to
Pennsylvania, intending to
remove with sail
in
the
his
family to
Concord,
Wm.
master, a vessel of 500 tons burthen.
Through him a passage from London was engaged for them in the same vessel, which was expected to leave Gravesend on the 6th of July, and the money was paid in advance.^ It is Jeffries,
now
ascertained definitely that eleven of these thirteen
emigrants were from Crefeld, and the presumption that their
two companions, Jan Lucken and Abraham Tunes,
came from the same presumption ship,
is
and the
increased fact
is
consequently strong.
by the
that the
Mercken Williamsen
we
city
wife of Jan Seimens
Lucken.
This
indications of relation-
Fortunately,
was
however,,
are not wanting in evidence of a general character.
Pastorius,^ after having an interview with Telner at Rot-
*
Letter-book cf James Claypoole in the Historical Society.
^
Christian Pastorius, a citizen of Warburg,
was the father of
THE SETTLEMENT OF GERMANTOWN. terdam a few weeks
who seem
earlier,
17
accompanied by four
ser-
have been Jacob Schumacher, Isaac Dilbeeck, George Wertmuller, and Koenradt Rutters, had gone to America representing both the purchasers at Frankvants,
to
Martin Pastorius, assessor of the court gitta,
at Erfurt,
who married
daughter of Christian Flinsberger of Muhlhausen.
son, Melchior
Adam, was born
at Erfurt, Sept. 21st, 1624,
cated at the University of Wuertzburg.
He
Bri-
Their
and edu-
studied both law and
theology, and having married Magdalena, daughter of Stephen Dietz
Margaretha Fischer, and having been converted to the proWindsheim, where he held several offices, and finally became elder burgomaster and judge. Francis Daniel Pastorius, the son of Melchior and Magdalena, was born at Somer-
and
of
testant faith, he settled at
When he was seven years old his father Windsheim, and there he was sent to school. Later he
hausen, Sept. 26th, 1651.
removed
to
spent two years at the University of Strasburg, in 1672 went to the high school at Basle, and afterwards studied law at Jena.
He
was thoroughly familiar with the Greek, Latin, German, French, Dutch, English, and Italian tongues, and at the age of twenty-two publicly disputed in different languages upon law and philosophy. On the 24th of April, 1679, he went to Frankfort, and there began the practice of law but in June, 1680, he started with Johan Bonaventura Von Rodeck, " a noble young spark," on a tour through Holland, England, France, Switzerland, and Germany, which occupied over two years. On his return to Frankfort in November, ;
1682, he heard from his friends the Pietists of the contemplated
emigration to Pennsylvania, and with a sudden enthusiasm he deto join them, or in his own words, "a strong desire came upon me to cross the seas with them, and there, after having sseen and experienced too much of European idlenes^s, to lead with them a quiet and Christian life." He immediately began his prepara-
termined
by writing to his father to ask his consent and obtain some and by sending his books to his brother. He sailed from London June 10th, 1683, and arrived in Philadelphia August 20th. His great learning and social position at home made him the most conspicuous person at Germantown. He married Nov. 26th, 1688, Ennecke Klosterman, and had two sons, John Samuel and Henry. He describes himself as " of a Melancholy Cholerick Complexion, tions
funds,
and, therefore (juxta Culpepper,
p. 194), gentle,
given
to Sobriety,
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
18
In bis references to the places at which
and Crefeld.
fort
he stopped on his journey down the Rhine he nowhere
mentions emigrants except at Crefeld, where he says
"I
:
talked with Times Kunders and bis wife, Dirck, Her-
mann, and Abraham Op den GraefF and many others, who six weeks later followed me."^ For some reason Shamefaced, timorous, pensive, con-
Solitary, Studious, doubtful,
stant
and true
in actions, of a
slow wit, with, obliviousness, &c..
any does him wrong. He can't remember't long." If
From his father and other relations he received altogether 1263 Eeichsthaler, of which he says, " Tot pereunt cum tempore Nummi."
He
wrote punning poems in various languages, and a host of books,
of which a few were printed, and
lowing letter "
is
characteristic
many have been
The
lost.
fol-
:
Dear Children John Samuel and Henry Pastorius: Though you
are (^Gennano sangaine naii) of high Dutch Parents, yet
remem-
ber that your father was Naturalized, and y* born in an English
Colony, Consequently each of you Anglus Natus an Englishman
by
Therefore,
Birth.
it
would be a shame
for
you
if
you should be
ignorant of the English Tongue, the Tongue of your Countrymen
;
may learn the better I have left a Book for you both, and commend the same to your reiterated perusal. If you should not get much of y® Latin, nevertheless read y" the English part oftentimes OVER AND OVER AND OVER. And I assure you that Seynper alibut that you
quid
hcerehit.
For the Dripping of the house-eaves in Time maketh
Non vi sed scepe cadendo, and bad Cloath that by often dipping will take no Colour. a hole in an hard stone.
it
is
very
Lectio lecta placet, decies repetita p)lacebit
Quod Natura
negat vobis Indastria prccstet.
— F. D. P."
whom
Pemberton, a pupil fourteen years old, on
Israel
first
time
I
saw him
an angry master. his nose, for
He ^
vol.
I
He
told
my
asked
which he called
he had
" The would prove thought so by
used the rod, wrote concerning him 13th of 6th mo. 1698
:
father that I thought he
me why so I me a prating :
told
him
I
boy."
died Sept. 27th, 1719.
Pastorius ii.,
MS.
p. 142.
cited
by Seidensticker
in the Deutsche Pionier,
THE SETTLEMENT OF GEEMANTOWN.
19
the emigrants were delayed between Rotterdam and London, and Claypoole
was
in great uneasiness for fear the
vessel should be compelled
without them, and
to sail
He
they should lose their passage money.
them
eral letters about
Benjamin Furly
to
wrote sev-
Rotterdam.
at
are coming."
am glad to hear the Crevill fPriends July 3d he says, " before I goe away wch
now
be longer than
June 19th he is
says, " I
like to
we expected by reason of we are fain to loyter and Black wall upon one pretence or an-
the Crevill friends not coming
keep the ship other
;"
still
at
and July 10th he
says, " It troubles
me much
that
As he had
the friends from Crevillt are not yet c6me."-^
the names of the thirty-three persons, this contemporary
evidence
is
clude that
very strong, and
all of this
it
would seem
founded Germantown, came from Crefeld. chior
Muhlenberg says the
first
Despite the forebod-
London
ings of Claypoole the emigrants reached
of July.
and they
While they are
Henry Mel-
comers were platt-deutch
from the neighborhood of Oleves.^ for the Concord,
safe to con-
pioneer band, which, with Pastorius,
set sail
in
time
westward on the 24th
for the first
time experiencing
the dangers and trials of a voyage across the ocean, doubtless
sometimes looking back with
fully
who
and wonderingly forward, these people were
who were
regret, let us
but oftener wistreturn to inquire
willing to abandon for-
ever the old homes and old friends along the Rhine, and
commence new
lives with the
wolf and the savage in the
upon the shores of the Delaware. The origin of the sect of Mennonites
forests
involved in obscurity.
is
somewhat
Their opponents, following Sleid-
anus and other writers of the 16th
Book
century,
James Claypoole.
^
Letter
^
Hallesche Nachrichten, p. 665.
of
have
re-
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
20
proached them with being an outgrowth of the Anabap-
On
Munster.
tists of
Van
Mehrning,
the contrary, their
own
historians,
Braght, Schynn, Maatschoen, and Roosen,
and lineal descent from the Walwhose communities are said to have exfrom the earliest Christian times, and who were
trace tlieir theological
some
denses, isted
of
able to maintain themselves in obscure parts of Europe,
against the power of
Rome,
numbers from the
in large
The
12th century downward.
subject
has of
recent
years received thorough and philosophical treatment at
Ten
the hands of S. Blaupot
The theory
of the-
Dutch
Gate, a
Waldensian origin
is
historian.*
based mainly on
a certain similarity in creed and church observances fact that the
Waldenses are known
;
the
have been numer-
to
ous in those portions of Holland and Flanders where the
Mennonites arose and throve, and to have afterward appeared
families from
Waldenses
habits and occupations. estino;
in
;
carried
of
This last fact
our investio-ation, as
The Waldenses
dis-
some Mennouite and a marked similarity in
the ascertained descent
;
will
is
especially inter-
be hereafter seen.
the art of weaving from Flan-
ders into Holland, and so generally followed that trade as in
many
localities to
have gone by the name of Tisser-
Geschiedkundig Onderzoek naar den Waldenzischen oorsprong van de Nederlandsche Doopsgezinden. Amsterdam, 1844. A nearly contemporary authority, which seems to have escaped the observation of European investigators, is '' De vitis, sectis, et dogmatibus omnium Ilnereticorum, &c., per Gabrielem Prateolum ^
Marcossium,'' published
at
Cologne in 1583, which says,
p.
25
:
" Est perniciosior etiam tertia qua;
baptizatos rebaptizat,
quoniam a Catholocis legitime Anabaptistorum secta vocatur. De quo genere Vualdenses quos et ipsos non ita quamuis eorum nonnulli, nuper adeo,
videntur etiam fuisse fratres
pridom rebaptizasse
;
Apologia sua testantur, iterare Baptismum desierint tamen eos cum Anabaptistis conuenire certum est."
sicut ipsi in in multis
constat,
THE SETTLEMENT OF GERMANTOWN. ands, or weavers.^
It
is
21
not improbable that the truth,
between the two theories of friend and foe, and that the Baptist movement which swept through Germany and the Netherlands in the early part of the 16tli cen-
lies
tury gathered into
its
embrace many of these communi-
At the one extreme of this moveThomas Munzer, Bernhard Rothman, Jean ment were Matthys. and John of Leyden at the other were Menno of
ties
Waldenses,
;
Between them stood BattenDelft. The common ground of
Simons, and Dirck Philips.
burg and David Joris of them all, and about the only ground which they had in
common, was opposition to the baptism of infants. The first party became entangled in the politics of the time, and ran into the wildest excesses. They preached to the peasantry of Europe, trodden beneath the despotic heels of
Church and
State, that the
earth was at hand, that resisted
all
and overthrown, and
After fighting
many
battles
kingdom
human all
of Christ
upon
authority ought to be
property be divided.
and causing uotold commo-
they took possession of the
city of Munster, and Leyden a king. The pseudo-kingdom endured for more than a year of siege and riot, and then was crushed by the power of the State, and John of Leyden was torn to pieces with red hot pincers, and his bones tion,
made John
of
set aloft in an iron cage for a warning.^
Menno Simons was born
at the village of
Witmarsum
1492, and was educated for the whose duties early in life he entered. The beheading of Sicke Snyder for rebaptism in the year 1531 in his near neighborhood called his attention to the in Friesland, in the year
priesthood, upon
subject of infant baptism, and after a careful examination
^
Ten
^
Catrou's Histoire des Anabaptistes, p. 462.
Gate's Onderzoek, p. 42.
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
22
and the writings
of the Bible
he came
of
Luther and Zwinglius,
was no foundation for it little community views he began to preach to them,
to the conclusion there
At
in the Scriptures.
near him holding like
the request of a
1536 formally severed his connection with the Church of Rome. Ere long he began to be recognized as the leader of the Doopsgezinde or Taufgesinnte, and gradually the sect assumed from him the name of MenHis first book was a dissertation against the nonites. errors and delusions in the teachings of John of Leyden, and after a convention held at Buckhold in Westphalia in 1538, at which Battenburg and David Joris were present, and Menno and Dirck Philips were represented, the influence of the fanatical Anabaptists seems to have waned.-^ His entire works, published at Amsterdam in Luther and 1681, make a folio volume of 642 pages. Calvin stayed their hands at a point where power and inand
in
fluence
would have been
Menno,
advance of
far in
but the Datcli reformer,
lost,
his time, taught the
complete
severance of Church and State, and the principles of re-
which have been embodied in our own federal constitution were first worked out in Holland.^ The Mennonites believed that no baptism was efficacious ligious liberty
by repentance, and that the ceremony They took not the sword and were entirely non-resistant.^ They swore hey practiced the washing of the feet of not at all.'^ the brethren,^ and made use of the ban or the avoidance
unless accompanied
administered to infants was vain.
'1
^
Nippold's Life of David Joris. Roosen's
^
Barclay's Religious Societies
Menno's 676 Funk's edition,
"
;
^
Matthew
^
John
Exhortation to
vol.
i.
p.
75
;
vol.
xxvi. 52.
xiii. 4,
17
;
I.
of the all ii. ^
Timothy
Menno Simons,
Commonwealth, pp.
in Authority," in p.
803.
Matthew
v. 10.
p. 3:2.
v.
32
to 37.
78,
his works.
THE SETTLEMENT OF GERMAN TOWN. of those
who were
pertinaciously
23
In dress and
derelict.-^
speech they were plain, and in manners simple.
Their
enemies, even while burning them for their
ecclesiastical
heresies, bore testimony to the purity of their lives, their
They were genmany of them erally husbandmen and were weavers that, we are told by Roosen, certain woven and knit fabrics were known as Mennonite goods.^ The shadow of John of Leyden, however, hung over them, the name of Anabaptist clung to them, and no sect, not even the early Christians, was ever more bitterly thrift,
and homely
frugality,
virtues.^
artisans,
persecuted.
or persistently
and
so
There were put
death
to
Rotterdam 7 persons, Haarlem 10, 20, Brugge 23, Amsterdam 26, Ghent 103, and Antwerp 229, and in the last-named city there were 37 in 1571 and 37 in 1574, the last by fire."* It was usual to burn the men and drown the cause
for
this
the
Hague
women.
at
Cortrijk
13,
Occasionally some were buried alive, and the
rack and like preliminary tortures were used to extort confessions, sect.
and get information concerning others of the gives, in a letter written to his brother
Ydse Gaukes
from prison, a graphic description of his own treatment. After telling; that his hands were tied behind his back, he continues
:
"
Then they drew me up about a
foot
from
the ground and let
me
tried to be quiet.
Nevertheless, I cried out three times,
^
Matthew
xviii.
17
;
I.
hang.
I
was
in great pain, but I
Conntliians v. 9, 11
;
Thes.
11.
iii.
14.
On ne peut disconvenir que des sectes de Says la sorte n'ayent ete remplies d'assez bonnes gens et assez reglees pour les moeurs." And page 103, " Leurs invectives contre le ^
Catrou, p. 259, "
luxe, contre I'y vrognerie, et contre incontinence avoient je
ne scai
quoi de pathetique." ^
Life of Gerhard Roosen, p. 9.
*
Geschiedenis der Doopsgezinden in Holland,
etc.
,
Ten Gate,
p. 72.
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
24
and then was and
letting rae
me
asked
They
silent.
said that is only child's "play,
down again they put me on
fastened an iron bar to
my
a stool, but
They and hung
said nothing to me.
and
no questions,
feet with
two chains,
When
on the bar three heavy weights.
they drew
me up
again a Spaniard tried to hit rae in the face with a chain,
but he could not reach
while I was hanging I struggled
;
hard, and got one foot through the chain, but then
weight was on one but I fought with laugh, but I
burned 1571.
to
my
all
was
They
leg.
tried
death by a slow
at
fire
fasten
it
all
the
again,
That made them all He was afterward
strength.
great pain."
in
to
May,
Deventer, in
Their meetings were held in secret places, often
^
middle of the night, and in ojder to prevent possible exposure under the pressure of pain, they purposely avoided knowing the names of the brethren whom they in the
met, and of the preachers
ward
of
who
100 gold guilders was
factors were promised pardon
Tjaert Ryndertz
if
A
baptized thera.^ offered for
re-
Menno, male-
they should capture him,^
was put on the wheel
in
1539
for
hav-
ing given him shelter, and a house in which his wife and children had rested,
He
cated.
unknown
to its owner,
was
confis-
was, as his followers fondly thought, m.iracu-
lously protected however,
died peacefully in 1559, and
own cabbage garden. The natural reThe prosthis persecution was much dispersion. communities at Hamburg and Altona were founded
was buried in his sult of
perous
by
'
refugees, the first
Van
Braght's Blutige
Ephrata, 1748, vol. "
Van
'
A
ii.
Braght, vol.
Mennonites
in
Prussia fled there
Schauplatz oder Martyrer Spiegel.
p. 632.
ii.
p. 468.
copy of the proclamation
may
be seen in Ten Gate's Gescbie-
denis der Doopsgezinden in Friesland,
etc., p.
63.
THE SETTLEMENT OF GKRMANTOWN.
25
from the Netherlands, and others found their way up the Rhine.^
Orefeld
silk, linen,
is
chiefly noted for
its
manufactures of
and other woven goods, and these manufac-
tures were first established
by persons
fleeing from re-
ligious intolerance.
From
the
Mennonites sprang
churches of England, the
of
general
Baptist
them having an
eccle-
connection with the parent societies in Holland,
siastical
and
first
the
their organizers being
Englishmen who, as has been
members of the Mennonite church for the benefit of these Englishwas at Amsterdam.^ It men that the well-known Confession of Faith of Hans de Ries and Lubbert Gerritz was written,^ and according to the late Robert Barclay, whose valuable work bears every evidence of the most thorough and careful research, it was
discovered, were actual
from association with these early Baptist teachers that
George Fox, the founder of the Quakers, imbibed his
We
him and discipline of the ancient and stricter party of the Dutch M-r-nnonites."^ If this be correct, to the spread of Mennonite teachings we owe the origin of the Quakers, and
views.
Says Barclay
:
"
are compelled to view
as the unconscious exponent of the doctrine., practice,
Gerhard Roosen,
Reiswitz unci Waldzeck, p. 19.
^
Life of
*
Barclay's Religious Societies, pp. 72, 73, 95.
*
The preface
p. 5.
to that Confession,
Amsterdam, 1686, says " Ter Engeland gevlncht ware, om :
cause, also daer eenige Engelsche uyt
de vryheyd der Religie alhier te genieten, en alsoo sy een schriftelijcke confessie
(van de voornoemde) hebben begeert, want veele
van hare gheselschap inde Duytsche Tale onervaren zijnde, het selfde niet en konde verstaen, ende als dan konde de ghene die de Tale beyde verstonde de andere onderrechten, het welche oock niet is ghebleven, want na overlegh der saecke met de voernoemde Gemeente vereenight."
onvruchtbaer en
*
P. 77.
2
zijn
sy
HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
26
the settlement of Pennsylvania.
The
doctrine of the inner
was by no means a new one in Holland and Germany, and the dead letter of the Scriptures is a thought common to David Joris, Caspar Schwenckfeldt, and the modern Quaker. The similarity between the two sects has been manifest to all observers, and recognized by light
William Penn, writin