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English Pages 286 Year 1901
THE GERMAN AND
SWISS
SETTLEMENTS OF COLONIAL A STUDY PENNSYLVANIA: OF THE SO-CALLED PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH
BY
OSCAR KUHNS Member of
the Pennsylvania
Society of the Sons of the
Revolution, of the Pennsylvania-German Society, the Lancaster County Historical Society
and of
NEW YORK
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY 1901
PUBLIC LIBilAiY
123 60 15 ASTOB. LENOX AND
TILDBN B-OLNUATIOXS L It 1039
Copyright, 1900,
BY
HENRY HOLT &
CO.
ROBERT DRUMMOND, PRINTER, NEW YORK.
THIS BOOK
IS
DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR
TO THE MEMORY OF HIS ANCESTORS
GEORGE KUNTZ AND
HANS HERR PIONEER SETTLERS OF
LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA "
Die Enkel gut thun an die Miihen ihrer Vorfahren zu denken."
— Freytag.
3i
PREFACE. The
object of this book
is
to give a
complete
yet concise view of a too-much-neglected phase of
American
origins.
The author has
especially
tried to be impartial, avoiding as far as possible
and allowing the facts to speak themselves. As a book of this kind can have
mere for
rhetoric,
no real value unless
it is
reliable, authorities
have
been freely quoted, even at the risk of making the number of foot-notes larger than is perhaps suited to the taste of the general public. Bern, Switzerland, October
i,
1900. iii
CONTENTS. PAGE
Preface
.
Chapter
iii
.
I
II
The Historic Background The Settling of the German Counties
i
OF Pennsylvania
30
HI.
Over Land and Sea
IV.
Manners and Customs of the Pennsylvania-German
62
Farmer
in
the
Eighteenth Century V. VI. VII. VIII.
Language, Literature, and Education. 115
The Religious Life In Peace and in
153
War
193
Conclusion
Appendix— Pennsylvania-German Family Names. Bibliography
Index
83
221 .
.
.
230 247
259
V
THE GERMAN AND SWISS SETTLEMENTS OF COLONIAL PENNSYLVANIA.
CHAPTER
I.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
Of
all
the great nations of
Western Europe
during the centuries immediately following the discovery of America, Germany alone took no official
Spain
part in the colonization of the in
New World.
Florida and South America, France in
Canada and Louisiana, Holland
in
New
York,
England in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and even Sweden in New Jersey, took formal possession of the territory settled by their subPrevious to the American Revolution it jects. is
estimated
that
over
100,000
Germans and
Swiss settled in Pennsylvania alone, to say nothing of
New
York, Maryland, Virginia, Georgia,
and the Carolinas.
And
yet this, for the times,
extremely large immigration was not recognized by the
home
officially
country, and the settlers
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
2
themselves, instead of founding a German empire in the West, became at once the subjects of
a foreign power. Nor does it follow necessarily that the German character is not adapted to the work of colonization
;
at the present
time
Germany
is
at least try-
ing to take her place in this kind of expansion, and the not-distant future may show her to be, in this as in other respects,
no inconsiderable
rival
of England.^
One
"
highly important cause of this emigration without a head," as it has been called, was un-
doubtedly the demoralized condition of Germany
consequence of the terrible civil and religious wars that again and again swept over that coun-
in
try.
As
a final result of these wars the
Roman Empire was broken
into fragments
Holy ;
one
German-speaking people were separated from their fellows and merged with Hun-
half of the
gary and Bohemia to form Austria Riehl, the great German ethnologist, colonizing power of his fellow countrymen, ^
is
;
while the
convinced of the
— the peasant classes
" Seine Ausdauer und Zahigkeit macht den deutschen Bauer zum geborenen Kolonisten. sie liat ihn zu dem grossat least
:
artigen weltgeschichtlichen Bcruf geweiht, der Bannertriiger deutschen Geistcs, deutschcr Gcsittung an alien Weltenden zu
werden."
(Die Biirgerliche Gesellschaft. p. 63.) JohnFiske, however, gives as the only cause of England's supremacy in colonization
Quaker
the principle of self-government.
Colonies, vol.
i.
p. 131.)
(Dutch and
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. other half was principalities,
split
up into
whose
little
chief efforts
3
kingdoms and for nearly two
hundred years were directed to recovering from the blighting effects of the Thirty Years' War.
But while the above-mentioned the lack of official
German
facts
explain
colonization, they also
account for the enormous and almost spontaneous movement of emigration to America, and especially to Pennsylvania, at the beginning of
The Pennsylvania German of to-day, who seeks to know why his ancestors came to this country some two centuries ago, the last century.
must
cast his eyes
backward to the Reformation
and the century and a
half following thereupon.
The Thirty Years' War was one of the most destructive wars in history.^ Not only were city, town, and village devastated in turn by the armies of friends as well as of foes; not only did poverty, hardship, murder, and rapine follow in the wake of these strange armies, with their multitudes of
camp-followers; but the whole intellectual, moral, and religious character of the German people received a shock that almost threatened it with annihilation.^ ^
Cf. Freytag "Dieser dreissigjahrige Krieg, seit derVolkerwanderung die argste Verwiistung eines menschenreichen :
Volkes."
(Bilder aus der deutschen Vergangenheit, vol. iv.
P-S-) 3
' '
Man mag
fragen, wie bei solchen Verlusten
und so griind-
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
4
Of
all
the classes which suffered the dire con-
sequences of the Thirty Years' War, none suffered more completely than the peasants, or farmBefore that event the yeomanry of Germany were in a state of great prosperity. Their houses ers.
were comfortable, their barns capacious, their stables well stocked with horses and cattle, their crops were plenteous, and many had considerable sums of money safely stored away against a rainy day
^ ;
some even boasted
The outbreak of was like the first
of silver plate.^
the religious wars in faint
Bohemia
rumble of the coming
tempest, and before long the
full
storm of war broke over Germany
of
the
The
suf-
fury
itself.
ferings of the countr\' folk during the thirty years
Freytag has which are drawn from
that followed are almost incredible.
furnished
many
details
documentary sources, and yet which seem too Not only were horses heart-rending to be true. and
cattle
which
carried
shifted
away by
the various armies
back and forth over the length and
lichem Verderb der Uberlebenden iiberhaupt noch ein deutsches Volk geblieben ist." (Freytag, vol. ni. p. 115.) Freytag says that three things, only, kept alive the German nationality: the love
t>f
the people for their own homes, the and especially the zeal of the clergy,
efforts of the magistrates,
(p. 116.) * ^
See Freytag, tii. pp. 103 ff. Illustrirte Geschichte von Wiirtemberg,
p. 473.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
5
not only were houses, barns, and even crops burned; but the master of the
breadth of the land
;
house was frequently subjected to fiendish tortures in order that he might thus be forced to discover the hiding-place of his gold
;
or, as often
happened, as a punishment for having nothing to give.
At
army
the
and would
live
the approach of a hostile
whole village would take for weeks in the midst
to flight, of forests
and marshes,
The enemy having
departed, the wretched survivors would return to their ruined
or in caves.^
homes, and carry on a painful existence with the few remains of their former property, until they
were forced
Many were away
to slain,
fly
again by
many
of the
new invasions^ young were lured
to swell the ranks of the armies,
many
fled
and never returned to their native villages. The country which had shortly before been so prosperous was now a wilderness to the cities for safety
«
For a vivid account of
this life see
W.
O. von Horn,
der Unterpfalz." "Johannes Scherer, der Wanderpfarrer in to the sufferings of the especial interest are the references ancestor of the wellwas the times made by Yillis Cassel, who Extracts are known family of that name.
Of
Pennsylvania
ff. given in Cassel's Geschichte der Mennoniten, p. 431 f tells us in his diary a Swabian peasant, Johannes Heberle,
that
he was
Dank wir
forced to
fly
thirty times:
" Gott
Lob und
sind diesmal noch gern geflohen, weil es die letzte
Flucht war, die 29. oder ungefahr 30." Neujahrsblatter, sechstes Blatt, 1889.)
(Wurtembergische
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
6
of uncultivated land,
marked here and there by
the blackened ruins which designated the site of
former farms and villages.
Freytag gives some most astonishing figures of the losses incurred.
Taking
as a sample the
county of Henneberg (which he says was more fortunate than the other parts of Germany), he states that in the course of the cent, of the inhabitants
war over 75 per
were destroyed; 66 per
cent, of the houses, 85 per cent, of the horses,
over 83 per cent, of the goats, and over 82 per cent, of the cattle.
It
is
a bloody story, says
Alore than Freytag, which these figures tell. three-quarters of the inhabitants, more than four-
worldly goods destroyed. So complete was the desolation that it took two hundred fifths of their
years to restore the same state of agricultural prosperity.^
These
facts are true to a
still
greater extent of
other parts of Germany, and more especially of the Palatinate, which from
its
position
was most
exposed to the ravages of the contending armies. ^
Following are some official statistics given by Freytag In nineteen villages of Henneberg there were in the years 1849 1634 1649 Families
1773
Houses
1717
316 627
1916
1558 Similar statistics arc given in regard to horses, cattle, (Vol.
III.
p. 2J4.)
:
etc.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
7
Palatinate has a history at once interestthe deing and important. Its inhabitants are scendants of the group of German tribes called
The
the Rheinfranken, with an admixture of the Alemanni, the latter of whom had occupied the land until
496
when Chlodwig, king
A.D.,
of
the
Franks, defeated them in a battle fought somewhere on the Upper Rhine.^ They were and are
among the best farmers in the world, in many districts having cultivated the soil for thirty still
Situated as they are along the are said, great water highway of Europe, they by those who know, to combine the best qualities "^
generations.!
North and South, being distinguished for indomitable industry, keen wit, independence, and a high degree of intelligence.^^ During the Midof
The Alemanni afterwards
9
settled in Svvabia (Wiirtemberg)
and Switzerland. u Kraft dieser angestammten Lebensklugheit hat sich der Franke in der Pfalz, am Mittelrhein iind Untermain den Boden 10
dienstbar gemacht wie kein anderer deutscher
Die
"
(Riehl,
Pfalzer, p. iii.) Cf. Riehl,
calls the
Die
Pfalzer,
and Hausser, Geschichte der Rhei-
"In journeying through it [what Middle Kingdom] all the way from Strasburg to Fiske says
nischen Pfalz.
he
Stamm."
Rotterdam, one
is
:
perpetually struck with the general diffusion
of intelligence and refinement, strength of character and perand there is reason for believing that at any sonal dignity time within the past four or five centuries our impression would have been relatively very much the same." (Dutch and ;
Quaker
Colonies,
I.
p. 10.)
THH HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
8 die
the Palatinate had
Ages
been
among the the German
most powerful and influential of states; it had rejoiced in great and enlightened rulers like Conrad von HohenstaufTen, Frederick the
Wise (who recognized
the tolerant
the Reformation),
and
and broad-minded Karl Ludwig, the
along the Rhine and the
The country Neckar was known as
the garden of
the University of Hei-
protector of the Swiss Mennonites.
Germany;
delberg was one of the oldest and most influential
seats of learning in
The
Europe.
terrible disorders of the religious
blow
a deadly
wars dealt
and glory.
at this prosperity
It
was the Elector Palatine Frederick V. himself who, by accepting the crown of Bohemia, precipitated the Thirty Years'
tracted to his
own country
The horrors
war.
here on a
still
related
larger scale.
War, and thus the
full
at-
fury of that
above were repeated Hausser tells how, at
the capture of Heidelberg by Tilly in 1622, the soldiers,
not
content
with
fire,
plunder,
and
rapine, pierced the feet of the wretched citizens
with
nails,
burned them with hot
irons,
and com-
mitted other similar barbarities.^^
" At
this time occurred the plunder of the celebrated library of Heidelberg when the priceless manuscripts and lx)oks were carried off to enrich the treasures of the Vatican. Napoleon
in his turn
robbed the Vatican library, and
books and manuscripts stolen were returned
in 1815 part of the to Heidelberg.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. So again
9
in 1634, after the defeat of the
at Nordling-en, different
in their retreat
Swedes
bands of soldiers swept
over the Palatinate, utterly disre-
mishandling persons and deHausser says that the destroying property. vastation of the land, just recovering from its garding
former
The
all
law,
cavalry of
behind them
was
beyond imagination. Horn and Bernard of Weimar left
destruction,
terrible traces of plunder, destruc-
and death; hunger, violence, and suffering were on all sides. The years 1635 and 1636 mark tion,
the period of the most terrible misery.
years 1636-38 famine and pestilence to the
suffering.
The people
came
tried
to
In the to
add
satisfy
hunger with roots, grass, and leaves even cannibalism became more or less frequent. The gal;
lows and the graveyards had to be guarded; the bodies of children were not safe from their moth-
So great was the desolation that where once were flourishing farms and vineyards, now ers.
whole bands
of wolves
roamed unmolested.
might seem as if the above statements were extravagant or were mere rhetorical exaggerations. It
Yet these
facts are
given almost in the very words
and judicious German historian.^^ For the North of Germany this state of affairs came
of a staid
practically to
" Ludwig
an end with the Peace of West-
Hausser, Geschichte der rheinischen Pfalz.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
lo
1649, by which the pohtical
phalia in
Europe was
finally
toleration, at least,
three confessions
—
For the
formed.
settled
the
Upper
title
and a condition of
Palatinate, however, the respite
of short duration.
Palatinate
Duke
of
was agreed upon between the Catholics, Lutherans, and Re-
was
to the
map
By
the terms of the peace
was taken away and given
of Bavaria,
of Elector, while a
who also received the new electoral title was
created for Karl Ludwig.
Under
the wise administration
of
the latter
prince the land began slowly to recover from its desolated condition the banks of the Neckar and ;
the Rhine had
become a
desert; the vineyards
were gone, the fields covered with thorns instead of the former flourishing villages a few ;
Yet
wretched huts were found here and there. so favored by
Heaven
is
the improvement was rapid.
returned
;
this
fertile
land that
Many who had
fled
lands were plenty, taxes were light.
Other colonists came from Switzerland, Holland, The town of France,^"* and even England. '*
Among
the founders of
Germantown were
certain
Dutch
families from Kriet^shcim, near Worms. (See Pennypacker.) So also a number of the Huguenot settlers of both Pennsylvania
and
New
New York were
from the Palatinate.
The
settlement of
was so called by the Frencli in memory of the land which had been their home for many years. (See Bainl, The Huguenot Emigration to America.) Paltz in the latter State
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. Frankeiithal was almost these foreigners.
entirely
discard
to
princes to
govern
be
of
the
his
inhabited by
Religion was free
wig was much more liberal than had been. He was one of the
ii
;
Karl Lud-
his predecessors first
of
German
the
idea
that
in
subjects
well
they
must
same confession
as
order all
The
himself.
Anabaptists, or Mennonites, who had lived for a number of years in the Palatinate, and
had often been oppressed, now received from Thus the Karl Ludwig freedom of worship. country in a short time began to prosper anew.
So great was the change that the French Fieldmarshal de Grammont, who in 1646 had passed through the devastated land, twelve years
later
"
was filled with amazement at the change, as if no war had ever been there." In the years 1674-75 the war between France and Holland, into which the Elector of Brandenburg and the Emperor Leopold had been drawn, brought destruction once more to the Palatinate
—lying
as
countries
it
did between the two contending
—and
years remained
the
painful
fruitless.
It
efforts
of
twenty
was the purpose
of
Louis XIV. to render the Palatinate useless to his enemies.
Turenne,
who had
received definite
orders from Versailles to devastate the Palatuiate, did his
work thoroughly.
Once more
the
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
12
monotonous
tale of
misery must be told
man, citizen, peasant plundered; cattle
noble-
:
fields laid
waste;
carried off; even the clothing torn from
the backs of the wretched victims.
What
could
not be carried away was destroyed; even the bells and organs were taken from the churches. At
one time seven
cities
and nineteen
villages
were
burning; starvation once more threatened the homeless peasant. This, however, was only the prelude to the famous, or rather infamous, destruction of 1689.
In
1685
the
Simmern-Zweibriicken dynasty
died out, and the
Neuburg
represented by Philip William, inherited the electoral title of the
was
line,
juncture that Louis
Palatinate.
It
XIV. made
his utterly unjust
at this
and unrighteous
claim to a large portion of the Palatinate in the name of the daughter ofthelate Elector, EHzabeth,
who had
married the
Duke
of Orleans, the disso-
French king. that Elizabeth had no
lute brother of the
of the fact
land,
and did not herself claim
All this in spite legal right to the it.
At
this ef-
on the part of Louis, all the princes of Northern Europe leagued themselves against
frontery
him
England, Holland, and Germany stood as a solid mass against the intrigues of France. ;
Louis
— feeling
his inability to
cope single-handed
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
13
with this mighty coaHtion, and determined that ' if the soil of the Palatinate was not to furnish supplies to the French it
would
mans
"
should be so wasted that
it
at least furnish
no supplies
— approved the famous
minister, Louvois, to
"
bruler
le
to the Ger-
order of his warPalatinat."
The
surpassed even the horrors of the Thirty Years' War. The recapitulation of such scenes only becomes monotonous scenes
and
that followed
finally
loses
its
effect
on the imagination.
Macaulay's description, however, is so vivid that we give a few extracts from it in this place. "The
commander announced to near half a million human beings that he granted them three days and that within that time they must themselves. Soon the roads and fields,
of grace, shift for
which then lay deep in snow, were blackened by innumerable multitudes of men, women, and children flying from their homes.
the
work
of destruction
.
went on.
.
.
Meanwhile
The
flames
went up from every market-place, every parishchurch, every country-seat, within the devoted The fields where the corn had been province.
sowed were ploughed up. The orchards were hewn down. No promise of a harvest was left on the fertile plains near what had been Frankenthal.
Not
a vine, not an almond-tree was to
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
14
be seen on the slopes of the sunny what had once been Heidelberg." ^^
During
this
;
round
Reformed
trying period, the
pecially suffered
hills
es-
were burned, or on both sides of
their churches
turned over to the Catholics
;
the Rhine Protestantism received a deadly blow. It
was the desire
of
Louis not only
to seize the
The country, but to crush out heresy there. Elector Philip William, Catholic though he was, promised to help his oppressed people, but died He was before he could accomplish anything. even forced by the poverty of the land to dismiss Protestant pastors, teachers, and
many and
to
combine or
to
number
a
dissolve
officials,
of
churches and schools.
And
time the religious condition of the Palatinate enters as an important here for the
first
factor in preparing the
German emigration
way
for the
movement
to Pennsylvania.
of
Hitherto
province had enjoyed religious freedom. After the Lutheran Elector Otto Heinrich the the
land had a succession of Calvinist rulers, until the accession of the
Neuburg
of Philip William in 1685.
ans and Reformed had had sion and the former at the
'^
It is
far
History of England,
person true that Luther-
many
had often
hands of their by
line in the
a bitter discus-
sufifered injustice
more numerous vol. in. p.
112.
rivals.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. But
was
all this
trifling
15
compared with the
sys-
tematic oppression begun by John William^ and continued by his successors for nearly a century. *5
Philip William, the
first
of the Catholic rulers
was a kind-hearted, well-meaning man, by no means intolerant in matters of His son and successor, however, was religion.
of the Palatinate,
by others. He had been educated by the Jesuits, and after be-
weak
in character,
coming the
and
easily led
ruler of an almost completely Prot-
estant land he
still
retained the Jesuits as his
political counsellors.
At the conclusion
of hostilities
between France
and Germany, the Protestant church in the PalaThe French had tinate was practically crushed. everywhere supported the Catholics
in their usur-
Reformed church-council was reduced to two men, and the Jesuits held full sway. In one place the Protestant inhabitants were pations
;
the
compelled to share their church property with the Catholics; in another they were deprived of everything; before the end of 1693 hundreds of Reformed and a number of Lutheran churches
hands of the Catholic orders, to say nothing of the parsonages and schoolhouses.^'''
were '*
in the
Son of Philip William, who died
" To add
in 1690.
to their trouble a contest
broke out at
this
between the Reformed and the Lutherans, much to the faction of the Catholics.
(See Hausser.)
time satis-
1
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
6
The Treaty
by which was ended the war between France and Germany, was of Httle benefit to the Protestants of the Palatinate.
of
Ryswick
in 1697,
They were compelled
to accept the status
quo of the Catholic usurpations.
On
the basis of
the clause to this effect in the treaty, colossal
made by
claims were
In 1699 the
the Catholics.
French diplomatist brought a list of 1922 places, mostly in the Palatinate, which he claimed for the Catholics;
if
he had succeeded
in
carrying
through his demands, Protestantism in the Palatinate would have received its death-blow. very probable that John William had conspired with France, Rome, and the Jesuits against his Protestant subjects, in introducing It is
into the Treaty of
Ryswick the clause concerning
the condition of the Protestants in his dominions,
and thus became, verrather forth
in
"
as
Hausser puts
instead of
all
that
"
" it,
Landesvater."
pertained
to
the
Landeslience-
Reformed
Church he followed the tactics of his Jesuit counsellors. He seemed to care more to restore Catholicism than to restore the prosperity of the " an inconceivable land. In 1697 he declared it as
mark
which they must ever keep sacred, that the electorates of the Palatinate and of Saxony had again fallen into Catholic hands." When John William in 1698 came back to his of divine favor,
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. dominion, the
first
time since
its
destruction,
i? it
was not to heal wounds, but to add new ones to The large majority of the Reformed Church.
Reformed or there were but few Catholics. Yet
the inhabitants of the land were
Lutherans;
1^
the Elector, with a
show
decree to the effect that
open
of tolerance, issued a all
churches should be
to the three confessions.
This tolerance,
however, was only apparent, inasmuch as, while the Protestants were obliged to give up part of their churches, the Catholics
remained in undis-
In this way turbed possession of their own. alone two hundred and forty churches were
opened to the Catholics. Other oppressive measThe Protestants were reures were enforced. quired to bend the knee at the passing of the Host, and to furnish flowers for the church festivals of their rivals; while the
work
qf proselyting
was carried on publicly by the Jesuits, who had been called in for that purpose. The Swiss Mennonites, the Walloons, and the Huguenots, who for many years had found a refuge in the Pawere now driven from the land; many went to Prussia, Holland, and America. latinate,
While no great oppression was publicly made, ^8
The Lutherans were
hitherto they the
had about
Reformed Church.
not nearly so numerous, however ; forty churches under the supervision of
1
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
8
was a constant system of nagging,— what would now be called a pin-pricking policy. yet there
Often they would be beaten for refusing to bend the knee in the presence of the Host, and for reTheir
fusing to share in Catholic ceremonies. pastors w'ere driven
By one
away or thrown
into prison.
single decree seventy-five schoolmasters
were rendered penniless. Hundreds of petty persecutions on person and property were made. It is a subject of legitimate pride on the part of the descendants of these people to
they
could
Church and
be
not
crushed.
of the Palatinate
know
that
The Reformed
showed
itself to
be bold
the various congregations
self-sacrificing;
held firm and would not change in spite of violence; the pastors were unyielding
—there
not
is
an example of one who was a coward or proved untrue to his office. Hausser pays the following tribute
to
the steadfastness "
those days of
trial
tion prevailed
among
:
of
the
Church
in
Earnestness and moderathe persecuted congrega-
and the petty persecutions that followed the peace, were excellent means for purifying the morals, and since tions; the terrible sufferings of war,
the days of Frederick IV., the Protestants of the
good a moral
Palatinate had not maintained so
conduct as
in the
reaction."
One
'
'
Leidenjahren
eflfect
of the Jesuit
of all this, however,
was
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
19
spread of pietism and mysticism, which manifested themselves in rehgious emotion. the
A
pastor of Heidelberg, sect
which looked
release out of
all
of the people,
deeply afifected religion.
Henry Horch, founded a
for the
end of the world as a
their sorrows.^^
The
great
body
however, although undoubtedly by pietism, remained true to sound
These conditions prevailed throughout
the whole of the eighteenth century. to time the Protestant rulers of
Europe
From
time
interfered,
and promises would be made, only to be broken. It would be a tedious repetition to give further what has already what went on for
instances of this persecution;
been given may stand for nearly one hundred years.
To
the above historical and religious condi-
which prepared the way America we must add the
tions
for emigration to
corruption,
the
tyranny, the extravagance and heartlessness of the rulers of the Palatinate; all through the
eighteenth century their chief efforts seemed to be directed to a base and slavish imitation of the life
of the
French court.
While the country was
this time that Kelpius came to Pennsylvania, It was also only a short await the coming of Christ. the sect of the Dunfounded time later that Alexander Mack '3 It
was about
there to
kards.
VI.
For other examples of the
pietistic spirit see
Chapter
20
THi;
HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
exhausted and on aces were built,
verge of ruin, costly palrivalling and even surpassing tlic
luxury those of France; enormous retinues were maintained; while pastors and teachers in
were starving, hundreds of court officers lived in luxury and idleness. The burden of feudalism still
lay heavy
chasm bebecame more
upon the peasants;
the
tween them and the upper classes and more widened. Down to the French Revolution the peasant
and
were forced
his children
to render body-service, to
pay taxes
in case of
sale or heritage, to suffer the inconveniences of
hunting, and, above prived of
Such a Hausser is
all
to see themselves de-
all,
justice.2o
state of things "
says,
In this
became
way a
intolerable.
As
part of the riddle
explained which seemed so mysterious to the
statisticians of that time,
i.e.,
why
precisely in
these years of peace the population of the Palat-
Schlozer was
inate diminished so surprisingly.
astonished at the fact that from no land in the
world relatively so many people emigrated as from this paradise of Germany, the Palatinate.
A glance
at the fatherly
dise will give us the
government
key to the
hundreds allowed themselves Spain
(in
1768),
" Cf.
of this para-
riddle.
to
be
Many
lured
where they were promised
Freytag,
vol. ni. pp.
427
ff.
to tol-
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. erance.
By way
of
21
England so many were
shipped to America that for a long time the name of Palatine was used as a general term for all
German
emigrants."
In the above pages we have gone somewhat into detail in regard to the condition of
inasmuch
in the Palatinate,
afifairs
as that province fur-
nished by far the largest contingent of the Ger-
man
emigration to Pennsylvania. Many of the statements made, however, apply equally to
Wiirtemberg, Zweibriicken, and others of the petty principalities in the neighborhood of the
The whole
Palatinate.-i
of
South
Germany
had suffered from the Thirty Years' War, hence the same conditions which led to emigration
—
poverty, tyranny, and religious intolerance isted everywhere,
tion
its
each province having
— ex-
in addi-
local causes.
There
is
one country, however, which
fur-
nished a very large contingent to the emigration
and which was
to Pennsylvania, ^^
One
free
from the
or two facts will illustrate the condition of Wiirtem-
berg after the Thirty Years'
had 8200 inhabitants
;
War.
in less than
Before that event Stuttgart two years 5370 had died ;
the total population of the land in 1634 was 414,536 ; in 1639 there were not 100,000. (Illust. Geschichte von Wiirtemberg,
For a graphic description of the destruction of Zweibriicken see Heintz, Pfalz-Zweibriicken wahrend des dreissigp. 512.)
jahrigen Kricges.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
12
Years'
horrors of the Thirty Switzerland.
To
War.
That
is
war was
a certain degree this
Untouched them-
for that country a blessing.
Swiss received thousands of fugitives from the neighboring lands. This influx of people
selves, the
raised the price of land and brought about a veri" table boom." The contrast between unhappy
Germany and
thus graphi" I then traveller:
peaceful Switzerland
by a German came to a land where there was no cally portrayed
is
fear of
enemies
or of being plundered, no thought of losing
life
and property; where every one lived in peace and joy under his own vine and fig-tree; so that I looked
upon
this land,
as an earthly paradise."
22
rough as
The
war, then, did not prepare the gration in Switzerland as
Germany; and
yet real
and
emigration existed.
this
it
it
seemed,
devastation of
way
for later emi-
had done
in
South
sufihcient causes for
While Switzerland has
ever been regarded as the ideal land of freedom, it was, after all, up to the present century, but little
of
more than an
office
were
in
in
such
aristocracy. cities
as
The emoluments
Berne and Zurich
the hands of a few patrician families,
generation after generation, held all The lower classes, those who tilled of^ces.23
which,
2'
Dandliker, Geschichte dcr Scliwciz, n. p. 694. especially true of the eighteenth century
" This was
;
cf.
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. and who labored with
the soil
23
their hands,
had
government and but little real freedom. The feudal system, which had existed for a thousand years in Switzerland, was not no share
abolished
in the
till
French Revolution swept
the
relics of the past.
away with many other the period which
we
tax, body-service,
and
ments
of the feudal
it
During
are studying, tithes, landall
the other accompani-
relations
between peasant
and lord flourished apparently as vigorously as Add to this the traffic in soldiers which ever.2-* forms so deep a blot on the fair name of Switzerland, and which was a constant source of discontent
some
among
the people,^^ and
we may have
idea of the secular causes of Swiss emigra-
tion during the last century. Dandliker, n. pp. 632 and 710; HI. p. 30: "Von freiem Verfugungsrecht der Gemeinden, vonfreierWahl der Gemeinde-
behorden war
iioch keine
Rede";
and again:
"Allgemein
der Zug zur Aristokratie. ferner jener Zeit eigen oder Verfassungstatsachlich AUerorten haufte sich die Gewalt,
war
:
Handen Weniger." "Das Feudal- oder Lehenswesen, "Dandliker, ni. p. 33
gemass, in den
:
Grundlage der Es beStaats- und Gesellschaftsordnung erhalten konnen. in wirtlischafthauptete noch immer seine voile Herrschaft Teil auch in der zum lichen und socialen Verhaltnissen,
.
.
.
voile tausend Jahre lang hatte es sich als
.
" Staatsorganisation. '5 At the end of the
fewer than
War of the Austrian
seventy to eighty
foreign service; and the
Years'
War
(1756-63).
.
.
Succession (1740) no
thousand Swiss soldiers were in
same number took part (Dandliker, in. p. 19.)
in the
Seven
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
24
The
chief cause, however, of the earhest Swiss
Pennsylvania was of a reWe shall have occasion later
to
emigration
ligious nature.
to ites,
the
of
speak
who form
religious
life
During the
of
so
striking
the
fifteenth
of
origin
a
]\Iennon-
the
feature
Pennsylvania
of
of
the
to-day.
and sixteenth centuries the
Berne and Zurich contain frequent references to the measures taken to root out
annals
of
this sect,
many
of
whose doctrines were
to the state churches founded by
ful
Zwingli,
especially their refusal to bear arms.^^ their first
appearance
distaste-
From
in Switzerland in the early
decades of the sixteenth century, the ]\Iennonites
were the victims of systematic persecution on the part of their Reformed brethren; even the death-penalty being inflicted on a number, while in others w-ere thrown into prison, exiled, or
—
the case of a few
— sold
to the
Turks
as galley-
slaves.
From
time to time single families and individuals had fled across the frontiers and sought '"
is frequently given as the reason for Berne's severity Thus the Bernese ambassador or Menonnites. the against the in Holland excused persecution of the Mennonites on agent
This
the ground that the only possibility of defending a state depended on the power of the sovereign to call the subjects to
arms
in case of need, etc.
Taufer, p. 260.)
(Miiller,
Geschichte der Bernischen
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
25
refuge in the Palatinate, where Mennonite communities had existed since 1527. In 1671 the considerable emigration took place, when a party of seven hundred persons left their native first
land and settled on the banks of the
These were afterwards the supporters compatriots,
who
willingly
Rhine. of their
or unwillingly
Switzerland in the following years. tine Swiss had to suffer the same
left
These Palatrials as their
neighbors, but were treated with even more intolerance.
Poverty, floods, failure of crops, the billeting of foreign soldiers, all contributed to
make large
their lot intolerable,
numbers
of
them
Switzerland in the the
settlement
on
and
finally
induced
to join their brethren in
movement which the
Pecjuea
in
resulted in
Lancaster
County.
The above-mentioned and
religious,
causes,
both
secular
produced a widespread discontent
and fostered the prevalent desire for emigration in Switzerland.^''' That it reached important dimensions may be inferred from the fact that Zurich passed decrees against it almost annually "Die Armut
manchen Gegenden und dazu die plotzlich eintretenden Notzeiten zwangen jetzt im achtzehnten Jahrhundert zuerst die Schweizer zur Auswanderung. Vereinzelt war diese zwar sclion im siebzehnten Jahrhundert vorgekommen, wurde aber erst jetzt haufiger und allgemeiner." (DUnd'^
liker, vol. Ul. p.
in
186.)
2
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
6
from 1734 to 1744; even Berne, which had previously sent Michel and Graffenricd to prepare the its
way
for a Swiss colony in Georgia,
policy,
and
in
changed
1736 and 1742 published decrees
forbidding emigration.^*^ In the preceding pages
we have endeavored
to
give the historical events and social conditions which form the background to German emigration to Pennsylvania,
and without which that
Of emigration would never have taken place. course in addition to these there were many other direct and indirect causes, such as Pcnn's
Germany ,2^ and the pamphlets descrip" his Holy Experiment," which he after-
travels to tive of
wards caused
to be published in English,
Dutch, and German, and which were scattered broadcast over South Germany. So, too, the efforts of
Queen Anne and her Golden
Book,
which
brought that flood of Palatines to London, in 1709, out of which were to come the settlements
on the Schoharie and the Mohawk, and later those on the Tulpehocken, in Berks County, **
See Good, The
German Reformed Church
in the United
States, p. 172. Speaking of the party which left Ziirich in 1732, Salomon Hess, one of tlie pastors of that city says "There was no good reason at that time for them to leave :
their fatherland, but they were seized
go
to
«»
America."
See Chapter
by an insane
(Dubbs, Ger. Ref. Ch. II.
p. 253.)
desire to
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND. Pa.
George
II. also
directly at the
As
27
published proposals aimed
Mennonites
in all other affairs of
in the Palatinate. life,
so in this matter
work undoubtedly when the Mennonites
of emigration, personal
We
much.
know
that
did set-
Lancaster County, their first care was to send one of their number back to the Old World, in order to bring over their friends and brethren. tled in
We
read in Christopher Sauer's letter to Governor Denny in 1755: "And when I came to
and found everything to the contrary from where I came from, I wrote largely to all my friends and acquaintances of the civil
this province,
and religious
liberty,
etc.,
and of
have heard and seen, and my were printed and reprinted, and provoked
the goodness letters
privileges,
I
many thousand people to come to this province, and many thanked the Lord for it and desired their friends also to come here." ^° Speculation, too, entered as a powerful stimulant to emigration. As soon as the ship-owners
saw the large sources of profit in thus transporting emigrants, they employed every means of attracting them. Thence arose the vicious class of "
Newlanders
Such 30
are
"
described in Chapter III.
some
Brumbaugh,
A
of the leading causes of preHistory of the Brethren,
p. 377.
2S
THE HISTORIC BACKGROUND.
Revolutionary German emigration to Pennsyl-
and
vania, general
But even
rect.
been
effective
sity to *'
German
native
their
character, that
combined
strangely
(so
with
country) that has been the disof German character from the
of their history
this trait
indi-
not for the innate propen-
it
"
trait
tinguishing
was
were
home and
love for
and
these causes might not have
emigration of the
Wanderlust
dawn
all
direct
particular,
down
to the present.^^
which has ever
when
country
led
them
scarcity
It
to leave
of
land,
and religious conditions, famine and war have furnished the immediate occasion. It was social
which
this
led
to
the
vast
movement
of
the
"
"
Volkerwanderung in the fourth and fifth centuries, and to the colonization of Prussia and Silesia ries
^;
it
and fourteenth centu-
the thirteenth
in
was
this that in
sent successive waves of
our own centur}' has
German immigrants
populate the Western States;
it
was
to
this that in
century sent the Palatines and Swiss to Pennsylvania, there to take root, and the eighteenth
to ^1
build
new homes
"Die Liebe
Wandertrieb."
""Seit
in
zur
for
themselves and their
Heimath und daneben dor
(Freytag,
vol.
i.
den Kreuzziigcn
unerhiJrte
p. 60.)
der
alte
Wandertrieb der
Deutschen wieder erwacht war, und Ilunderttausande von Landleuten mit Weib und Kind, mit Karren und Hunden nach
dem
goldencn Osten zogen."
(Ibid., vol. n. p. I57-)
THE HISTORIC BACKGHOUND. children
and
their
children's
well they succeeded in this in the following chapters.
we
children. shall try to
29
How show
CHAPTER
II.
THE SETTLING OF THE GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA. It would be an interesting and
valuable thing to study in detail
all
certainly
a
the facts con-
cerning the whole subject of German innnigration to America, or even such immigration in the eighteenth century.
New
York,
New
There were colonies
in
Maryland, Virginia, Georgia, Louisiana, North and South Carolina, and even so far north as Maine and Nova Jersey,
The German settlements in Pennsylvania, however, were more numerous and more important than those of all the other States combined. In the other States the Germans formed Scotia.^
but a small percentage of the population, and have influenced but little the character of the State development;
while those in Pennsylvania
have from the beginning down to the present day formed at least one-third of the population, and have undoubtedly exercised a profound in'
For bcK)ks on
this subject see Bibliography.
30
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA.
31
on the development of the Quaker Commonwealth and of the neighboring States, es-
fluence
pecially those to the south
and west.
Many
of
book apply equally well, the Germans of New York, Mary-
the facts cited in this
however, to
land, Virginia, etc.^
In the present chapter an efifort is made to give a general view of the streams of immigration which flowed into Pennsylvania between
We
the years 1683 and' 1775.
period into three parts:
first,
or from the founding of
coming 1
of the
may
divide this
from 1683 to 1710,
Germantown
to
the
Swiss Mennonites; second, from
710 to 1727, the year when the immigration
assumed large proportions and when tistics
to be published;
began
extends
to
outbreak
the
of
official sta-
the third period the
Revolution,
immigration for a numDuring the first of the above
which put an end ber of years.^
to all
periods the numbers were very small; the second period marks a considerable increase in 'Indeed
Dutch" Those
in
in
common
includes
the
New York
parlance the expression "Pennsylvania Germans of Maryland and Virginia. are often
confused with their Holland
others. neighbors, both by themselves and ' not does This book contemplate the discussion of
German
for this phase of the subject
immigration after the Revolution see Loher, Geschichte und Zustande der Deutschen in rika, and Eckhoff, In der neuen Heimath. ;
Ame-
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PBNNSYLy,4NU.
32
numbers, which during the
enormous
period swell to
tliird
size.
The Pennsylvania Germans may be
said
have a Mayflower, as well as the Puritans.
to
In
1683 the good ship Concord (surely an appropriate name when we consider the printhe year
of
ciples
Penn's
peace
and harmony which marked
"Holy Experiment"!) landed
at
Phila-
— then a straggling village of some fourdelphia, —having on board a score houses and cottages,'*
number
German and Dutch Mennonites from Crefeld and Kriegsheim. With this little group the story of the Pennsylvania Germans be-
small
gins.
of
In order to understand
they thus shall have to note
why
came to the Xcw World, we some important religious movements which
cliar-
acterized the seventeenth century.
The Reformation
many
sects
nent.
We
in
England gave rise to as and parties as it did on the Conti-
may
find
an analogy between the
Lutheran Church and the Church betw^een the
Reformed
(or
of
England; Calvinists) and the
Puritans (or Presbyterians);
and between the
Anabaptists or Mennonites and the Quakers and This analogy is no mere fancy; we Baptists. " Such as they are," adds Penn, who gives these figures in a letter to the Free Society of Traders in Lon"•
Proud,
don.
I.
263.
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA. know
Z?>
on Puritanism; the England were both Luth-
the influence of Calvin
Hanoverian kings of erans and Churchmen (the former
in their pri-
vate, the latter in their official capacity);
and
modern Church historians have declared that General it was from the Mennonites that the Baptist Church in England sprang; while Barclay
says of George Fox, the founder of the "
We are compelled to view him as Quakers, the unconscious exponent of the doctrines, practice, and discipline of the ancient and stricter party of the Dutch Mennonites."
words
^
Thus,
in the
"
Judge Pennypacker, to the spread of Mennonite teachings in England we therefore owe the origin of the Quakers and the settlement of
of Pennsylvania." ®
When
William Penn became a Quaker he was
with missionary fervor; among his other "labors in the field of missions he made two journeysto Holland and Germany. The second journey filled
was made
in
1677 and was fraught with moment-
ous consequences for the subjectwhichwe are discussing. On July 26th of the above year, Penn with several
friends
—among
whom
were
the
well-known George Fox, Robert Barclay, and George Keith landed at Briel in Holland, hav-
—
5
8
Religious Societies of the Commonwealth, p. 77. The Settlement of Germantown, p. 66.
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLl^ANU.
34
ing as their object
"
to
extend
tlie
principles
and
organization of the Quakers in IIoHand and Germany."' It was not the first time that such efforts
had been made; as far back as 1655 WilHam Ames had estabhshed a small Quaker community at Kriegsheim, near
and
nate;
later
\\'illiam
Worms,
in the Palati-
Caton, George Rolf,
Benjamin Furley," and others had
visited the
Palatinate.
Penn's
Germany coincided with the movement in that country.^ The movement are partly to be sought
visit
great pietistic
causes of this
to
wretchedness and sufferings of the times, and partly in the stiff formalism into which the in the
Church had tion
that
fallen.
The comfort and
satisfac-
could not be found in Church and
State were sought for in personal
communion
with the Holy Spirit. Men turned from the coldness of dogmatic theology to the ecstasies of religious emotion.
In the words of Spener, the
great apostle of pietism, religion was brought " from the head to the heart." This movement
spread
in
a great tidal
wave
excitement over
of
Furley afterwards became Penn's agent and played an important part in inducing German emigration to Pennsylvania. * Penn himself says: "And I must tell you that there is a '
breathing, hungering, seeking people, solitarily scattered up and down the great land of Germany, where the Lord hath sent
me."
(Works, I^ndon, 1726,
vol.
I.
p. 69.)
GERMAN COUNTIES OF
PENNSYLy/INIA.
35
Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, and
The
even England.
"
collegia pietatis," or the
—
meetings for the study of the Bible, 'One might call them adult Bible-classes, were held every-
—
where.^
was
It
Penn came.
to friends in the spirit, then, that
He
kindred souls,
was everywhere welcomed by and their meetings were deeply
marked by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.^ The places visited by Penn which are of in*^
terest to us in
our present discussion are Frank-
fort-on-the-Main, Kriegsheim, near Worms, on the Upper Rhine, and Miilheim-on-the-Ruhr;
have not been able to
I
—a Holland, — from
he visited Crefeld, tiers of
any evidence that not far from the fron-
find
city
which, as well as from
Miilheim, the earliest settlers of
Germantown
came,
Penn reached Frankfort on August 20th, and there met a number of pietists, among whom were Dr. Wilhelm Petersen, his wife Johanna ^
This was not a movement of secession from the established
churches
;
among
the pietists were Lutherans, Reformed, and
Spener was a Lutheran and opposed to secFor an interesting summary of pietism see Freytag.
even Catholics. tarianism.
One
of the well-known literary results of
it
is
Jung-Stilling's
Lebensgeschichte. ^^
He
how
at Frankfort
"people of considerable note, both of Calvinists and Lutherans," received them " with gladness of heart and embraced our testimony with a broken and reverent
tells
" spirit.
(Works,
vol.
i.
p. 64.)
GHRM^N COUNTIES OF PENNSYLV/iNIA.
36
Eleonora von Morlau," Daniel Behagel, Caspar Merian, Johann Lorentz, Jacob van de Wall, and
who
others,
afterwards became the founders of
the Frankfort
Company, and thus
German emigration
the fautors of
Their Pennsylvania. names certainly deserve to be remembered. After leaving Frankfort, Penn went to Kriegsto
heim, where, as before stated, a of
company
little
German Quakers had
held together since the
Ames and
Rolf,
some twenty years be-
tells
us in his Journal,^- he
visit of
Here, as he
fore.
found, to his great joy, a
and
"
meeting of tender
faithful people," and, after writing a letter to
Karl Ludwig on the danger of religious intolerance, he returned to Holland and England. In 1681
payment
Penn received from Charles H.,
of a debt of £16,000 sterling
government owed his grant of an immense between the king
" For
New
father.
in
which the
Admiral Penn, the
tract of territory, situated
Jersey and iMaryland,^^ to which
—against
Penn's
own
wishes,
however
the Lives interesting autobiographical extracts from and his wife see Frcytag, Bilder aus der
of both Petersen
deutschen Vergangenhcit,
vol. iv.
" Works, vol. I. p. 72. '* The indefinite language
pp. 29
ff.
which this grant was couched led afterwards to long disputes between Pennsylvania and Maryland, and was the occasion of the contest known as 01 Cresap's War. in wlii h thf Ciermans of the present county
York took a prominent
part.
in
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA.
—gave the name diately planned
ment
"
of Pennsylvania. " what he called a
37
Penn immeHoly Experi-
government, a State in which religious as well as political freedom should be granted to He went about at once to attract colonists all. in
new
colony, and soon after the formal confirmation of the king's grant there appeared in to his
"
Some pamphlet entitled Account of the Province of Pennsylvania in America," in which the advantages of the new London
slender
a
State were set forth in a favorable light. at the
same time a German
lished in
Amsterdam,
translation
entitled
"
Almost
was pub-
Eine Nachricht
wegen der Landschaft Pennsylvania
in
Amer-
ica." 14
who may be called the Bradford of the Germantown settlement, writes in an autobiographical memoir as follows: Francis Daniel Pastorius,
"
Upon my
return to Frankfort in
1682
"
(he
had been travelling extensively through Europe, " I was glad to enjoy the chiefly for pleasure), former acquaintances and Christian friends, Dr. Schiitz, Eleonora von Merlau, and others, who sometimes made mention of
company
of
my
William Penn of Pennsylvania, and showed letters from Benjamin Furley, also a printed 1*
The same
translation
was published
me re-
in praiikfoi-t in 1683,
as part of a larger work, " Diariuni Europaeum."
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANM.
38
concerning said province; finally the whole secret could not be withholden from mc lation
they had purchased twenty-five thousand
that
acres of land in this remote part of the world.
Some
of
them
themselves, families and
and with them life
in a
to
transport
This begat such soul to continue in the society,
my
a desire in
resolved
entirely
all.^^
to lead a quiet, godly,
and honest
howling wilderness, that by several
let-
requested of my father his consent." In the mean time the Quakers and Mennonites
ters I
Kriegsheim had heard of the wonderful possessions of the quiet and gentle Englishman who of
had
visited
them
a few years before,
and had read
how under his laws liberty of conscience was promised to all who should settle in the new colony. Comparing this prospect with their own unhappy condition, they immediately resolved to seek relief
in
Penn's
land.^*'
By
had received the consent of with a **
sum
of
this
time Pastorius
his father (together
money), and thereupon went
to
None
of tliem, however, did this. Their motives were undoubtedly identical with those thus "After I had sufficiently seen the expressed by Pastorius '*
:
European provinces and countries and the threatening movements of war, and had taken to heart the dire ciiaiiges and disturbances of the Fatherland. I was impelled, through a special
guidance from the Almighty,
to
go
to
(Pennypacker, Settlement of Gcrmantown.
Pennsylvania," p. 75.)
etc.
GERM/fN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANU.
39
Kriegsheim, where he saw the leaders of the intending
Peter Schumacher, Gerhard
settlers,
Hendricks, and others, and with them discussed the preparations necessary for the long journey.
He
then descended the Rhine to Crefeld, where
he conferred with Thones Kunders, Dirck Her-
den GraelT brothers, and others, who followed him across the ocean six weeks later.
Op
man, the
Pastorius thus became the agent of the Frankfort Company, of the Kriegsheimers and of the
He
Crefelders.
sailed
and arrived
ahead
of the others,
June
in
Philadelphia August 16, where he was heartily welcomed by Penn.^"
6, 1683,
'"
Francis Daniel Pastorius was no ordinary
man
;
indeed
it
probable that there were few men in America at that time He was born in Sommerhausen, equal to him in learning. is
Germany,
Sept. 26, 165
1,
studied at the Universities of Stras-
burg, Basel, Erfurt, Jena, and Altdorf, taking a degree in law at the latter place in 1675. Soon after he travelled in Holland, England, France, and Switzerland, bringing up at Frankfort in 1682, as noted above.
He was well
acquainted with Greek,
Latin, French, Dutch, English, Italian, and Spanish, as may be seen from his commonplace-book written macaronically in
these various languages tracts
from
this
Germanica.
and
entitled the
"Beehive."
See also Pennypacker, pp. 109-114. himself a small house, over the door of wrote: " Parva domus sed arnica bonis: procul este " Unser Gouverneur, als er mich Whereat, he says, built
for
einen Lachen frischete."
Ex-
book have been published in the Americana Pastorius
which he profani." besuchte,
aufschluge und mich ferner fortzubauen an-
(Beschreibung von Pennsylvanien, ed. by Kapp.
p.
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA.
4°
Pastorius was the advance courier of the prospective settlers of
men
teen
Germantown.
July 24th thir-
together with their families sailed for
New World
on board the Concord, reaching Philadelphia October 6, 1683, some two
the
months
after Pastorius himself.^**
thereafter
A
short time
hands were busy getting
all
the winter in
new
the
settled for
colony, then separated
from Philadelphia by a stretch of primeval est broken only by a narrow bridle-path. Whittier wrote what he considered his best poem, Pennsylvania Pilgrim," on Pastorius
23.)
for-
"The
:
"
Simply, as I
fits
my
theme, in homely rhyme
sing the blue-eyed
German Spener taught,"
(Works, *'
vol.
etc. I.
pp. 322
flf.)
One
single American poet has devoted a few lines to the In Whittier's of this band of German pilgrims. " " Hall the lines are found. Pennsylvania following
arrival
" Meek-hearted Woolman and
that brother-band.
The sorrowing exiles from their " Fatherland." Leaving their home in Krieslieim's bowers of vine, And the blue beauty of their glorious Rhine, To seek amidst our solemn depths of wood Ereedom from man and holy peace with God ;
Who
of all their testimonial gave Against tlie oppressor, for the outcast slave. Is it a dream that such as these look down
And
first
with their blessings our rejoicings crown
(Works,
v..].
?
"
III.
p. 58.)
The
reference in the eighth and niiitli lines is to the protest against slavery made to the monthly meeting of the Quakers, 18, 1688, by Pastorius, Gerhard Hendricks, and the two den Graeff brothers. Pennypacker (p. 197) has rojirinted
April
Op this
must interesting document.
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA.
41
Pastorius was no mere dreamer, but an active
and able man.
was soon
Under
his supervision the land
and a prosperous That they had many hard-
cleared, houses built,
community founded.
goes without saying. Arthe year, they had only time to
ships to suffer at
first
riving so late in
build cellars and huts in which
much
year with ple
made
calling
it
"
hardship."
they passed the Pastorius says peo-
pun on the name of Armentown," because
the settlement, of lack of sup-
could not be described," he continues, nor will it be believed by coming generations,
plies.
"
a "
"
It
what want and need and with what Christian contentment and persistent industry the German in
township started."
Yet
want soon gave way to one of On October 22, 1684, comparative comfort. William Streypers (who had written to his this state of
brother the year before for provisions), writes: " I have been busy and made a brave dwellinghouse, and under
it
a cellar
fit
to live in
;
and
T
have so much grain, such as Indian corn and buckwheat, that this winter I shall be better off than
I
was
last year."
October 12th of the same "
I year Cornelius Bom wrote to Rotterdam have here a shop of many kinds of goods and :
edibles.
Sometimes
I
ride out with merchandise,
and sometimes bring something back, mostly
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA.
42
from the Indians, and deal with them in many ways. ... I have no rent or tax or excise to pay. have a cow which gives plenty of milk, a horse to ride around my pigs increase rapidly, so that I
;
summer
had seventeen, where at first I had only two. I have many chickens and geese, and a garden, and shall next year have an orchard, if I remain well, so that my wife and I in the
are in
We of
good
I
spirits."
have dwelt thus
in detail
Germantown, on account
its
importance as
German settlements Moreover, we are fortunately in
the pioneer of ica.
of
on the settlement
owing
in
all
to the labors of Seidensticker
Amer-
condition,
and Penny-
packer, to follow the movement, step by step, from its first inception in the old Kaiserstadt on
the banks of the erly
Love
Main
in the
to the infant city of
New
World.
The
Broth-
rest of this
chapter must be given more briefly. Letters like the above undoubtedly influenced others to emigrate, for the settlement of
new
we read
in the
The however, which we
arrivals every year.
only considerable addition,
find in the last years of the century
when an
interesting
annals of
band
was
of mystics,
in 1694,
forty
in
number, settled on the banks of the Wissahickon, under the superintendence of Johann Kclpius, a
GERM/iN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA.
man
of great learning,
though
full
43
of vagaries. i''
Their object in coming to the New World was to await the coming of the Lord, which they firmly believed would occur at the turn of the century.
In their hermitage on the banks of the Wissa-
hickon they cultivated physical and spiritual per^^ fection, studied and taught; among other ''Arnold (Kirchen- und Ketzer-Historie,
vol.
n. p. 1104),
under the heading " Mehrere Zeugen der Wahrhcit," speaks '' as follows Heinrich Bernard Coster, Daniel Falckner, Joh. M. und Peter Schaffer samt andern die nach PensylKclpius vanien gezogen, Briefe und Schrifften aus America zu uns :
iibergesandt
samt ilirem tapffern Glaubens-Kampff, und wie Secten herdurch geschlagen urn die Frey-
sie sich durcli alle
heit in Clnisto zu erhalten."
The
real leader of this
colony, however,
was
Joh. Jacoo grundgelehrter Astrologus, Magus, Cabalista und Prediger aus dem Wiirtembergerlande," who had " and with wife resolved to forsake "das undankbare Europam
Zimmermann, — "ein
and family and forty companions to go to America, but who died at Rotterdam on the eve of his departure. (Arnold, vol.
II.
p.
1
105.)
Whittier (in hi^ "Pennsylvania Pilgrim") speaks of "
Paitifiil
Kelpius from his hermit den
By Wissaliickon, maddest of good men, Dreamed o'er the chiliast dreams of Petersen." 20
men
^Yg ggt a glimpse of the character and the ideals of these in the following
pleases
me
words written by
here [Pennsjdvania]
scholar, priest,
and nobleman
is
at the
(jne of
them
:
"What
can be peasant, same time," "To be a
that one
peasant and nothing else is a sort of cattle-life; to be a scholar and nnihing else, such as in Europe, is a morbid and selfindulgent existence." (Penn. Mag., vol. XI.) There
is
a singular
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYtyANM.
44
things they built an astronomical tower, from which they kept constant watch for the signs of the
coming
This community lasted
of Christ.^i
only a few years,
its
logical successor being the
Ephrata community.22 The second period begins with the advent of the
S^^•iss
Mennonites
without doubt
is
This movement
in 1710.
closely connected with the set-
The
tlement of Germantown.
relations
between
the ^lennonites of Holland and Switzerland had
always been very close. Twice had the former made formal protest to Berne and Zurich in re-
gard
to the persecution of their brethren;
they
resemblance between this community of scholars and the Pantisocracy dreamed of by Coleridge and Southey one hundred according to which "on the banks of the Susqueto be founded a brotherly community, where selfishness was to be extinguished and the virtues were to reign years
later,
hanna was
supreme."
He believed that lie was to be Kclpius died before 1709. taken up into heaven alive like Elijah, and was bitterly dis*'
appointed when he felt the approach of death, and the chariot At his fimeral, the body was buried fire did not appear.
of
as the sun
was
setting,
and a snow-white dove was released
Heavenward, while the Brethren, looking upward with uplifted
hands, repeated thrice,
Auferstehung."
"
It
(See Sachse,
" Gott gebc
German
was Conrad Mutthai, one of
ihm eine
Pietists, p. 248.)
the last survivors of the
Hermitage on the Ridge, who advised Conrad the
Conestoga,
solitude.
tliere
to
live
a
selige
life
of
go to contemplation and Beissel to
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA. had subscribed large sums
of
45
to alleviate
money
the sufferings of the exiled Swiss in the Palatinate,
and a society had been formed
for
the
purpose of affording systematic assistance to their suffering fellow believers.
It
all
was through
them, undoubtedly, that the stream of Swiss emigration was first turned to Pennsylvania, where the success of Germantown seemed to assure a similar prosperity to
all.^^
We
have seen above how widespread the Anabaptist movement had been in Switzerland, especially in the cantons of Zurich
and Berne.
their doctrines, that of refusing to bear
all
was the most obnoxious
Of
arms
which de-
to the state,
pended on
its
citizens for defence in time of ag-
gression.
It
must be confessed
that the Swiss
Mennonites were the most intractable
of people.
Exiled again and again, they persisted every time in returning to their native land.--* In 1710
" As
early as 1684 at least one of the inhabitants of Germantown was a Swiss, Joris Wertmuller from Berne see letter from him to his brother-in-law Benedict Kuntz in Pennypacker, ;
p.
152.
In 1694 George Gottschalk came from Lindau on
Lake Constance. **
The
condition and treatment of the Mennonites in Switzer-
Quakers in New England. were the same, while the Calvinistic theocracy of Massachusetts, in its union of Church and State, closely resembled the government of Berne and
land were very
The
doctrines
Zurich.
much
like that of the
of the
The Quakers,
two
like
sects
the
Mennonites,
were fond
01
GERMAN COUNTIES OF PENNSYLVANIA.
46 the
Canton
rid of its
Berne
of
itself
made an
effort to get
troublesome sectaries by sending under
number
escort a large
of
them
to Holland,
ing thence to deport them to America.
hopThis
through the refusal of Holland and England to be a party to such enforced emigra-
effort failed
tion.
In 171 1, however, the Mennonites of Berne
were offered
free transportation
down
the Rhine,
permission to sell their property, and to take their families with them on condition, however,
—
that they pledge themselves never to return to
Their friends in Holland urged
Switzerland.
them
to
do
and especially through the untirthe Dutch ambassador in Switzer-
this,
ing efforts of
Johann Ludwig Runckel, the exportation finallv occurred.25 About this verv time be^an land,
the settlement of Lancaster County by Swiss
Mennonites, and undoubtedly many of the above were among them.2 8s. per head.
ment made with Captain Osborne, given in Penn. Mag.,
vol.
xni.
of the
p. 485.)
(See the agree-
Pennsyvania Packet,
68
Ot^ER
LAND AND
SEA.
they would then be sent in ships to Rotterdam, and thence carried to \'irginia. First, however, in Holland one-half of the
and the necessary beer
fare
must be
cured
paid,
;
and additional provisions
24 pounds of dried
:
of butter.
pounds
cheese, 8^
to provide themselves
still
se-
pounds of They were advised more liberally with beef,
15
with garden-seeds, agricultural imple-
edibles,
ments, linen, bedding, table-goods, powder and earthenw^are,
furniture,
lead,
pecially
to
money
and
stoves,
es-
"
seeds, salt, horses, swine,
buy
and fowls."
We
may
take this as a type of what was a
outfit for the intending settler at that time.
full
In
actual fact, however, the majority were far from
being so well provided
on the charity the
*
Thus
that
of
1
tity
Indeed, so great was
the
who
those
Mennonites
the Schwenckfelders
family generously gave them of
often they had to depend
of others.^
destitution
Holland
;
tell
us
passed
through
of
country
that
how a wealthy Dutch
for ships' stores 16 loaves, 2 casks
4 casks of beer, 2 roasts, a quanof wheaten bread and biscuit, 2 cases French brandy. It
lollands, 2 pots of butter,
pleasing to add that the Schwenckfelders were not ungrate" returned after ful, and that this "bread cast upon the waters is
many days
;
for in 1790, hearing that business reverses
come upon the descendants
of those
fathers, they sent over a large
sum
Gencul. Kec. of SchwciickfcliJers.)
\
who had
of money.
had
helped their
(See Heebner,
OVER LAND /iND
SEA.
69
''
formed a committee on
Foreign Needs," the
purpose of which was to collect money for the assistance of their destitute brethren and others
who were
constantly arriving in Holland on their
way to America. Even in the best was
however, the food
of cases,
likely to give out or spoil,^ especially
journey was unusually long. This
in the
if
days of
Sometimes the
sailing frequently happened.
the
trip
was made in a few weeks, while at other times as many months would pass. Thus when Muhlenberg came over they were 102 days on board. In a letter written
1732, he says
" :
by Caspar Wistar December 4, In the past year one ship among
the others sailed about the sea 24 weeks, and of the 150 persons
who were
thereon,
more than 100
miserably languished and died of hunger; on account of lack of food they caught rats and mice
on the
and a mouse was sold
30 kreuHe mentions another ship which was 17 weeks on the voyage, during which about 60 ship,
for
zer." ^^
Unser Tractament an Speis undTranck war fast schlecht, denn 10 Personen bekamen wochendlicli 3 pfund Butter, tagAlle Mittage 2 lich 4 Kannten Biers und i Kanten Wassers. Schusseln vol! Erbsen und in der Woclien 4 Mittage Fleisch, und jedesmal von dem und 3 Mittage gesalzene Fisclie Mittagessen so viel aufsparen muss dass man zu Nacht zu ^
'•
.
essen liabe." ^^
Dotterer,
.
.
(Pastorius, Beschrcibung, p. 36.) vol. n. p. 120.
Perkiomen Region,
Ol^ER
70
LAND AND
SEA.
persons died. Many more similar details might be given. The discomforts of the journey were many; the boats were almost always over
The Schwenckfelders
crowded.
relate that their
ship of only 150 tons burden liad over 300 persons on board. Later, in the days of speculation,
overcrowding was the rule. Often the ship had to w^ait days or even weeki for favorable winds or the necessary escort. Pastor
Kunze,
Amerika,"
in
tells
"
his
how
July 20, 1770, but
it
they passed Land's
Reise von England nach he came on board his vessel
was the 6th
of
End and we ;
August before
learn from Pas-
although he embarked on his ship September 25, 1747, they did not finally sail till January 14, 1748; he arrived in Philadel-
tor
Handschuh
phia April it
5.^^
was necessary
The
that,
Surely under such circumstances to possess their souls in patience.
actual sea
voyage was invariably fraught
not with danger, although the latter was by no means seldom. Sickness did not fail to declare itself; the mortality was often exceswith fear
if
On
sively high.
the vessel in which
Penn came
over thirty-six people died of the small-pox; this was only an earnest of the terrible harvest of death
in
the
"
following
years.
Hall. Nacluichten,
1.
p.
Of 155.
the
three
OyER LAND AND thousand who came to
SEA,
New York
71
in
1709 nearly
one-sixth had died on the voyage, and Sauer says that in one year more than two thousand had
succumbed
hardship and disease.
to
Indeed,
when
speculation had taken possession of ocean transportation, sickness was so unfailing a concomitant of the journey that later in the
ship-fever "
century
was generally known
in
Philadelphia
Children especially suffered, those from one to seven years rarely sur-
as
Palatine
fever."
viving the voyage.i2 There is a world of pathos in such simple statements as those which we find
Naas:
"July 25th a little child the next day, about 8 o'clock, it was
in the diary of
died;
buried in the sea; August 7th a
and
in the
same hour
August 23d again
a
little
a child died,
little
child died,
boy was born; and was buried
on the nth again
at sea that evening;
child died, without anybody having noticed it
was
nearly stiff; the 13th a
in childbirth,
children,
left
now."
little
it
until
young woman died at sea,
with three
them before and now the third, born, so that the husband has no one
two
the one just
and was buried
a
of
13
The danger
of
shipwreck was always
"
at
hand,
He says he himself saw no less than Mittelberger, p. 23. sea. thirty two children thus die and thrown into the 1'
Brumbaugh, pp. 112
ft'.
OyER LAND AND
72
and the legend the
of Palatine
Light
of a vessel of
memory
SEA. still
preserves
German immigrants
Block Island, with the loss of almost every one on board.^^ During nearly the whole of the eighteenth century England was at
wrecked
off
Avar with
some one or other
of her neighbors;
added, of course, to the dangers as well as " the vexations of them that went down to the this
1702 she joined the Grand Alliance against France; in 1740 she was at war with Spain; from 1743-1748 and from 1756sea in ships."
In
France again; while ever on the horizon hovered the fear of the Turk.^'^
with
1763
political
During the early part of the century the x\merican coast swarmed with pirates and added a new terror to ocean travel.^ ^ vessel '*
all
as a strange
was excitement and
examples of shipwreck, Mittelljerger. pp. Wliittier has a poem on the Palatine Light.
See, for other
34-36.
"
was discovered,
As soon
It
was not mere
rhetoric
when
the Mennonites of German-
town, in their protest to the Quakers against sl.avery. wrote " How fearful! and faintliearted are many on sea when they see a strange vessel. l)eing afraid it should be a Turck, and :
they should be tacken and sold for slaves in Turckey." Watson says that Pastorius was chased by Turks in 1683. (Annals, p. 61.)
Fiske says that never in the world's history was piracy so thriving as in the seventeenth and the first part of the eighhe places its golden age from 1650-1720. teenth century '6
;
(Old Virginia and her Neighbors,
vol.
II.
p.
338.)
Ol^ER
LAND AND
SEA.
73
on board, until it could be ascertained whether it was friend or foe. We have a vivid
fear
glimpse of
this
excitement at such a
Muhlenberg's Journal: Shortly " a two-masted vessel Dover,
The
toward them.
moment
in
after
leaving
sailed
directly
captain, stating that occa-
sionally Spanish privateers
had taken ships by
pretending to be French fishing-vessels, made a display of both courage and strength, by com-
manding
the
drummer
to belabor his
drum, the
be loaded, and everything to be made ready for defensive action; then asked the foe,
guns
to
through the speaking-trumpet, what they wanted, and received the comforting answer that they were Frenchmen engaged in fishing." In the account given by a member of Kelpius's party in 1694, shots were actually fired by the enemy,
one of which broke a bottle which the ship's boy was carrying in his hand; fortunately, however,
no further damage was done. are
frequently
ments.
related
in
Similar scenes
contemporary docu-
i'''
In general, however, the days passed
much
do now, in alternation of storm and calm, sunshine and rain. The ordinary events of hu-
as they
'^ Cf. Handschuh's Diarium, in Hall. Nach., i. p. 163; also Narrative of Journey of .Schwenckfelders, in Penn. Mag., vol.
X. pp. 167
ff.
OVER LAND AND
74
man
went on
life
in
this
SEA.
little
floating world,
tossed about by the waves of the sea; poles of in close
human
the two
and death, were and even amid the hard-
existence, birth
proximity;
^'^
ships and sadness there was still room for courtship and marriagci** Various means were em-
ployed to pass away the time,
among
men-
those
tioned by Muhlenberg and others being boxing (by the sailors), singing worldly songs, disputations,
mock-trials, etc.
amusements
the
eral the
These were, however, In genof passing the
chiefly of the English.
Germans had other means
In practically every account we have they are shown to be deeply religious, holding divine time.
service daily,
and particularly fond
grand old hymns did not desert
of the Church.-"^
them
incidents which
of singing the
This piety
in times of danger, as
might be quoted show.
1*
On
^^
In the journey of Goetschi's party
almost every voyage children were born at
down
many
Muhlensea.
the Rhine, he
had appointed four marriage officials for his party. At Neuwied four couples went ashore to be married, among them Wirtz, who married Goetschi's daughter Anna. (Good, p. 176.) 20
"These
ptxjr people often long for consolation, and I and comforted them with singing, praying, entertained often and exhorting; and whenever it was pt)ssible, and the winds
and waves permitted tliem
on deck."
it,
I
kept daily prayer-meetings with
(Mittclljerger, p. 21.
Hallesche Nachrichtcii, vok
I.
pp. 156
Cf. also Ilandscliuli, in fT.
)
OFER LAND AND
SEA.
75
us that during the above-described excitement at the sight of what was feared might tells
berg
prove to be a Spanish war-vessel, he made
in-
quiry after a certain Salzburger family on board, and was pleased to find the mother with her chil-
dren engaged "
singing Luther's battle-hymn, Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott." ^i Wesley in
describes a similar incident which occurred dur-
A
terrible ing his voyage to Georgia in 1736. storm had arisen; "In the midst of the psalm wherewith their service began, the sea broke over,
mainsail in pieces, covered the ship, and poured in between the decks, as if the great deep split the
had already swallowed us up. ing began
among
A
the English.
terrible
scream-
The Germans
asked one of them afterward, 'Was l^sic'] you not afraid?' He answered, 'I thank God, no.' I asked, But were not your calmly sang on.
I
'
women and children afraid? He replied mildly, No our women and children are not afraid to '
'
;
die.'
" 22
The
earliest
groups
Germans came over un-
of
companies or organizations, mostly religious, such as the Frankfort Company, the party of mystics under Kelder the auspices
21
^^
of
special
Mann, Life and Times of John Wesley,
II.
Journal, vol.
I.
M. Miiblenberg, p. 17.
p. 45.
OyER
76 pius,
LyiiWD
AND
Schwenckfelders
the
Moravians
in
1742;
SEA.
in
1733,
and
often a clergyman
the
would
personally conduct his flock across the ocean, The Mennonites as in the case of Goetschi.
who came
1710 and the following years were helped by their brethren in Holland, where the Mennonites were not only to Lancaster
tolerated, but
nent.
Not
County
in
had become wealthy and promi-
forgetful in their prosperity of the
trials of their less
fortunate brothers, they had
formed a society for the aid of the Palatines and Swiss who were forced to leave their native lands;
with the
money
nished the
money
thus collected they furnot only with passage-
emigrants to America, but with provisions, tools,
seeds, etc.^^
During the greater part
of the eighteenth cen-
tury, however, especially the latter half, the Ger-
man and
Swiss emigrants were the victims of
fraud and oppression.
The English ship-owners,
seeing the profit of transporting the emigrants to be greater than carrying freight, employed every means to induce emigration, chief among
means being German adventurers who had themselves lived in Pennsylvania. They would
these
*'
See the interesting account of their services by Do Hoop by Judge Pennypackor in Penn. Mag., vol.
SchcfTer, translated
n, pp. 117
ff.
Ol^ER
LAND AND
SEA.
77
throughout Germany, induccountrymen, by the most exaggerated
travel luxuriously
ing their statements concerning the riches to be found in the
New
sea.
World, to try their fortunes beyond the " These agents, known as Newlanders,"
were generally men of the most unscrupulous character.
The
contemporaneous accounts of these abuses are given by Muhlenberg, Sauer, and best
Mittelberger.2^
According
Newlanders received
to
the
former the
passage and a certain
free
fee for every family or single
person
whom
they
could persuade to go to Holland, there to arrangements with the ship-owners for
make
how
they
transportation.
paraded
in
fine
Muhlenberg clothing,
tiously their watches, rich people do.
and
pulling out ostentain general
They spoke
were the Elysian
tells
their
of
acting as
America
as
if it
which the crops the mountains were of
Fields,
in
grew without labor, as if gold and silver, and as if the rivers ran with milk and honey. The victims of these blandishments, ^*
Muhlenberg is the most temperate, Sauer the most inThe book of the dignant, and INIittelberger the most lurid. latter must be read with a great deal of allowance. He was a and to leave forced evidently disappoiiited man, being and return home, he gives a picture of the sufPennsylvania ferings and disillusions of his countrymen in that province which does not accord with what we learn frcjm other sources.
OVER LAND AND
78
on arriving
in
SEA.
Holland, having often to wait a long
time before leaving, were frequently obliged to
borrow money from the contractors themselves, in order to buy provisions and pay their pasBefore leaving they had to sign an agreement in English, which they did not undersage.
"
If the
parents died during the passage, the captain and the Newlanders would act stand.25
as guardians of the children, take possession of their property, and,
children for their
arrival in port, sell the
own and
dead parents'
their
On
arriving at Philadelphia, the agreesigned by the emigrant in Holland, to-
freight.
ment
on
gether with the total amount of
money
loaned,
passage and freight, is produced; those who have money enough to pay the exorbitant de-
mands
are set free, after being
examined by the
doctor, and taking the usual oath of allegiance at the court-house. All others are sold to pay
the transportation charges." ^c berg,
who
So
far
Muhlen-
gives an exceedingly clear and inter-
esting account of this nefarious system.
topher Sauer,
at that
Chris-
time, through his news-
paper and almanac, perhaps the most influential
German " One
in
Pennsylvania,
of these agreements
xni. p. 485. ^* Hallesche Nachrichten,
is
vol.
is
moved
to indigna-
published in Ponn. Mag., vol. 11.
pp. 459
fi".,
note.
Ol^ER
LAND AND
SEA.
79
On March
tion at the state of affairs.
and
15
again May 12, 1755, he writes two letters to Governor Denny, remonstrating at the abuses. He tells
how
how
in
the emigrants are packed like herrings,
consequence of improper care two thousand died in one year. " This murdering trade made my heart ache, especially when I heard
that there
was more
by carrying them sels
profit " alive."
by
their death than
They
with passengers and as
much
chants' goods as they thought
the ves-
filled
fit,
of the
and
mer-
left
the
passengers' chests, etc., behind; and sometimes they loaded vessels with Palatines' chests. But the
poor people depended upon their chests, wherein was some provision such as they were used to, as dried apples, pears, plums, mustard, medicines,
vinegar,
brandy,
butter,
clothing,
and other necessary linens, money, and whatever they brought with them; and when shirts
behind, or shipped in some other vessel, they had lack of nourishment." their chests
Not
all
were
left
the victims of these unscrupulous ship-
pers were poor and of humble rank. pressly says that
Sauer ex-
many had been wealthy
people Germany, and had lost hundreds and even thousands of pounds' worth by leaving their in
obliged to live
"
and are by being robbed, poor with grief." These state-
chests behind, or
8o
Ol^ER
LAND AND
SEA.
ments are borne out by Mittelberger, who says that people of rank, skilled people,"
"
such as nobles, learned or
when they cannot pay
their pas-
sage and cannot give security are treated like ordinary poor people, and obliged to remain on
some one buys them.^'^ But enough has been said to show how great was the abuse, and to justify the indignation of
board
till
]\Iuhlenberg and Sauer.
These abuses contin-
ued long afterwards, even down to the
first
de-
cade of the nineteenth century; indeed, the worst cases occur after the Revolution, and hence after the period discussed in this
there
is
book.
no use dwelling on such
were undoubtedly, to a greater or
After
details;
all
they
less extent, the
necessary accompaniments of a great, unsupervised movement of emigration; a movement
which, although it had its dark side, was nevertheless fraught with untold blessing to thousands.
The custom
referred to above, of selling the
"
Mittelberger, p. 39. case of "a noble lady"
He who
gives an example of this in the in 1753
came
to Pliiladelphia
with two half-grown daughters and a young son. She entrusted all her fortune to a Newlander, who robbed her in ;
consequence of which both she and her daughters were compelled to serve. J"hn Wesley in his Journal, under date March 6,
1736,
tells
who came
to
the story of John Rcinier from Vevay, Switzerland,
America "well provided with money, Inx^ks, and being robbed by the captain, was forced to sell
drugs," but, himself for seven years.
OVER LAND AND passengers
known
as
to
their
pay
charges,
— redemptionism, was
the
Germans.
tom
existed
81
SEA.
—a
custom
not confined to
In the previous century the cus-
among
the French of the
West
the "engages," as they were called,
dies;
ing themselves to serve three years. the Huguenots were thus disposed
system was also in vogue colonies except
New
England.
to
—intended New Jersey, — urges
of
coming
Proposal of 1675,
it
to the
in
to
as a
New World
all
Insell-
Many of.^s
the
of
The
English
Fenwick,
in his
draw immigration reasonable means and obtaining a
Furley, Penn's agent, also urges the thing. In Pennsylvania it was entirely re-
plantation;
same
spectable, tinction
and many who afterwards grew
came over
this way.^^
servants seem not to have in the
The Germans
come over
eighteenth century;
to dis-
later,
until well
as
on
however, they
became very numerous.
The
condition of the redemptioners was not in general very hard. They were usually well ^* ^^
Huguenot Emigration to America. Among them are said to have been Matthew Thornton, Baird,
one of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence; the parents of General Sullivan; the wife of the famous Sir Will-
iam Johnson of Mohawk Valley; and Charles Thompson,
sec-
retary of the Continental Congress (see Watson, p. 544). Gordon (p. 556) writes that many of the German and Irish settlers this class, "
from whom have sprung some of the most reputable and wealthy inhabitants of the province."
were of
82
Oi^ER
treated, protected
LAND AND 1\\'
SEA.
the law, and at the end of
their service received a certain outfit.^^
for a single
man, or
for children,
it
Indeed,
was often
of de-
cided advantage, being a sort of apprenticeship in which the customs of the new land were learned. It is said that
some
voluntarily sold themselves
for the sake of the experience they
would
get.^^
The chief hardship was when a whole family became the victims of fraudulent merchants, and on arriving in a land of freedom, as they fondly hoped, saw themselves torn asunder, sold to different parts of the country, parents
and children
being thus separated for years, perhaps forever.^s '"
See Fenwick, Furley, Kalm,
etc.
' Kalm, vol. i. "Many of the Germans who p. 304, says come liither bring money enough with them to pay their pas:
sage, but rather suffer themselves to be sold, with a view that during their servitude they may get some knowledge of the
language and quality of the countrj- and the like, that they may the better be able to consider what they shall do when they have got their liberty."
Cf. also:
"For many young
very good that they cannot pay their own freight. These will sooner be provided for than those who have paid theirs, and they can have their broad with others and soon
people
it is
learn the waj-s of the country."
Brumbaugh,
p.
(Letter of John
Naas
;
see
123.)
"
See the pathetic account given by Muhlenberg, Hallesche Nachrichten, li. p. 461: "Weit und breit von einander, unter allerlei
selten
Nationen. Sprachen und Zungen zerstreuet, so dass
sie
ihre altcn Eltern, oder auch die Geschwister sich ein-
ander im Leben wieder zu sehen bekommen." Evangeline must have frequently repeated
The
itself in
story of
those days.
CHAPTER
IV.
MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE PENNSYLVANIAGERMAN FARMER IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
Although
Germans
of the early
of
many
Pennsylvania had been dis-
home; although Mittelberger
at
wealthy
Christopher Saner says that
"
tinctly tells us that
persons of rank, such as
nobles, learned or skilled people,"
were often
sold as redemptioners, yet the large majority of the eighteenth century settlers were poor. of course
was through no
fault of their
devastations of the Thirty Years' pecially the
own
This ;
War, and
the es-
wanton destruction ordered by Louis
XIV.
in the last
tury,
had reduced
decade of the seventeenth cento poverty
thousands
who had
been prosperous farmers and tradesmen; and not for two hundred years was this prosperity who remained in the fully restored to those
Whatever property they had been exgather together was used up in the
Fatherland.i able to
•
See p.
6.
83
THE PHNNSYLI^^NU-GERM^N FARMER.
84
penses of descending the Rhine and crossing the ocean, or was stolen by the unprincipled shipowners and their parasites, the Xewlanders.
was not long, however, before was transformed into prosperity and
this
It
was
poverty plenty. This
especially true of the JSIennonites,
when
the land was cheap, and
quantities thereof. diate
who bought
Later, property
neighborhood
who came
in the
of Philadelphia
large
imme-
and the ad-
became dearer and dearer, and be obtained at all. Those who came
jacent counties finally
not to
towards the middle of the century had to move further
and further
into the wilderness
beyond the
Blue Mountains or across the Susquehanna.^ After
the
Revolution,
however,
prosperity
reigned throughout the whole of the farming regions of the State. This prosperity was not entirely due to the peculiar conditions of Pennsylvania at that time; others, both of those who came before and of those
who
afterwards followed the same kind of
did not succeed.^
was
It
life,
largely due to the in-
domitable industry, the earnestness, the frugality, Dahero gehen sie immer weiter fort in das wilde Geund aus Noth weiter fortgelien milssen in die bllsche, »
.
.
.
noch unbebauten Einoden."
(Muhlenberg, Hall. Nach.,
I.
p.
342.') »
Pastoriiis says of the
Swedes and Dutch that they "are
have neither poor economists,
bams
nor
stalls. let
their grain
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER. and the consummate agricultural mans.^
When,
skill of
S5
the Ger-
they had been
in the Palatinate,
houses, barns, cattle, and crops, one thing they had still kept: the skill inherited from bereft of
all,
thirty generations of land-cultivators, a skill that "
had made the Palatinate "
literally
the
garden-
of
Germany.^ same skill, brought to Pennsylvania, soon changed the unbroken forest to an agriculspot
This
tural is
community
doubtful
adapted to
Germans
settlers as
its
any
in the world.
It
ever any colony was so perfectly
if
of
as rich as
Pennsylvania was to the
one hundred and
fifty
years ago.
The
though heavily timbered, was fertile and only needed the hand of the patient husbandman in order to blossom as the rose; when the Gersoil,
mans
arrived this condition was
fulfilled.
While
English and Scotch-Irish neighbors usually followed the course of rivers or larger streams,
their
thus lessening the labor of clearing, the Germans and Swiss would plunge boldly into an unlie
unthreshed,"
Irish likewise
etc.
were
(Pennypacker,
138.) inferior in this respect to the p.
The
Scotch-
Germans, wlio
soon had possession of the best farming land in the State. * " The Germans seem more adapted for agriculture and the improvement of a wilderness, and the Irish for trade," etc.
Penn told Pastorius " dass ihm der Eyffer der Hoch-Teutschen im Bauen sehr wohl gefalle." 5 So called by Schlozer one himdred and fifty years ago. (Proud,
II.
p. 274.)
86
THE PENNSYLI^ANIA-GERMAN FARMER.
broken wilderness, often the nearest habitation,
fifty
or sixty miles from
knowing
well that
where
the heaviest forest growth was, there the soil
must be good.^
could, in very truth, say
They
with the Swiss in Schiller's "
"
Wilhelm
Tell ":
Wir haben diesen Boden uns erschaflen Durch unserer Haii'le Fleiss, den alten Wald, Der soust der Biiren wilder Wolinung war, Zu einem Sitz fur Menschen umgewandelt." '
The
best soil in Pennsylvania for farming pur-
poses is limestone, and it is a singular fact that almost every acre of this soil is in possession of
German where
farmers.^ are
all
be said to skill
If
we may make
excellent,
Mcnnonites may
illustrate to the
highest degree the " Riehl says, der
Wo
agriculture; as
in
the
a distinction
Pflug durch goldene Auen geht da schliigt audi It is due to der Mennonite sein Bethaus auf." ^ the fact that Lancaster in limestone soil
and
is
County
is
especially rich
largely inhabited by
Men-
"the back lands being generally three tu one richer than those that lie by navigable rivers." (Proud, I. p. *
Penn
says,
247-) '
*
Schiller,
The
Bethlehem
"Wilhelm Tell,"
n. 2.
Coxe
said not long ago that a letter from written to his grandfather asserts that in Pennsyl-
late
Eckley B.
you are on limestone soil, you can open your mouth Pennsylvania Dutch and get a response every time. (Pro-
vania, if in
cecdings of Penn. Ger. Soc, »
Die
Pfiilzer, p. 374.
vol. v. p.
102.)
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER. nonites that
county '"
United States.^^
not
mere
any one
who
This
fact, as
has become the richest farming
it
in the
is
87
rhetoric, but a sober statement of actual
will take the trouble to look
cultural statistics of the country
up the
agri-
In the history find the statement
may
easily see.
of Lancaster County by Ellis and Evans we made that " within the memory of the oldest inhabitants there
had been no entire
failure of all its crops." Six-sevenths of the entire area, or 463,000 acres, are farm-lands. In 1890 the value of agricultural products in Lancaster County was
Lawrence County, N. Y., the next agricultural county had crops valued at $6,054,160, or while
$7,657,790, richest
St.
$1,603,630 less than Lancaster. As an instance of the rapidity with which the
new
settlers
became prosperous we may take the inventory of the goods " and chattels of Andrew Ferree of Lancaster County, who ' '
died in 1735, only twenty-five years after the that county
"
first
:
To wheat
^8 — wheat and
in the stack at
in the ground,
To a plow and two To two mauls and
rye
£^A- 0-0
£6
To great waggon, £12 —
little
waggon,
;^5...
pairs of irons three iron wedges, 9s.
.
—to
four old weeding hoes, 4s
To
a spade and shovel, 8s. three dung forks, los
To two
broad-axes, 12s.
—
adze, 7s
To sundry tools,
carpenter
tools,
—
a hand-saw,
hooks
matock and 18-O
to joyner's
axe and
^i — sundry joiner's
£2
—
19-0 3- S-o 12-0
;^2-5s
old iron
17- o-o i-io-o
13-0
to a
To seven duch sythes [sic'\ To four stock bands, two pair To
settlement in
hinges, sundry
14-0 to five sickles
and two old I
i-o
88
THE PENNSYLy/INIA-GERM^N FARMER. It is
surprising
how
rapidly agriculture pros-
In a letter on Bradpered Pennsylvania. dock's campaign, written by William Johnston, in
September 23, 1755, we find the following re" marks: Pennsylvania is much the best country oi any
I
have seen since
continent, and
To
I
have been upon the
much more
plenty of provisions
a cutting-box, twf) knives,
^aggs, ^2-ios
To two
—
To To
pair chains, 14s. to five bells, 12s
—
to
twenty-
— two hackles,
3-10-0
^I-IO 2-16-0
and other horse geers at.. other horse geers at _^i-ios. to a man's
four smal chains
saddle at
To
£i
—
;i{^i-io
—to two fowling
three falling axes at los.
pieces, £2 To a large Byble To twofether beds
2-10-0 at
£6 — to wearing
cloaths,
.
—
.
—
pot-racks, £1 four working horses. ;^24
two
To
colts,
£11
grown cows at ,^15 young cattle. ;^i3-io
six
—
—
to a
35- 0-0 to
ten
head of 28-10-0
—
T(j
two
a spinning-wheel,
To To
sley, 6s.
—
to
2-12-0 2- 6-0
mare and
eleven sheep, £'i~ij
—
13-0-0
2- 0-0
To
chests, 15s.
3- 0-0
2- 0-0
£7 To sundry pewter, £2-% — to a box iron, 4s. To sundry iron ware, £2 to a watering pot, 6s. To sundry wooden ware at £1 to two iron
To
i- 4-0
to swine,
^i-io.
.
.
Ss..
i- 3-0
2- 8-0
to cash
cash received for a servant girle's time.
5- 7-0
...
3- 0-0
7^2-
8-6-
THE PENNSYLf/ANIA-GERMAN FARMER. than Maryland or Virginia."
^^
89
Of Lancaster, "
the county town, Johnston says:
You
will
not
inland towns in
England so large as this, and none so regular; and yet this town, I am told, is not above twenty-five years' standsee
many
ing,^ is
2
and a most
delightful country
round
it.
It
mostly inhabited by Dutch people." That this prosperity was largely due to the
Germans is acknowledged by the English themselves. Thus Governor Thomas says in 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 be said that the present flour-
measure owing to the industry of these people." We have an interesting glimpse of the skill with which these ishing condition of
it
is
in great
^^
'^
Penn. Mag.,
vol.
xi. pp.
93
ff.
It
will be
remembered
was
the youngest of all the colonies except time of the Revolution it was second at the Georgia, although
that Pennsylvania in population. ^' ^'
Lancaster was laid out by James Hamilton in 1730. by the General Assembly
In the preamble of the act passed
of Pennsylvania in 1787 to incorporate a college in Lancaster are the words ''Whereas, the citizens of this State of Ger:
man
birth or extraction have eminently contributed
industry, economy, and public virtues present happiness and prosperity,"
by
their
to raise the State to its etc.
In
recent times
Bancroft has said that neither the Peimsylvania Germans nor others claim for them the credit due them.
THE PENNSYLy/INIA-GERM/1N FARMER.
90
farms were worked
made
He
b}'
in the description of a trip
Governor Thomas Pownall
visited
"
Lancaster,
a
pretty
in
1754.
considerable
town, encreasing fast and growing rich," and " I saw some of the finest then goes on to say :
farms one can conceive, and in the highest state of culture, particularly
of a Switzer.
Here
it
one that was the estate
was
I first
saw the method
watering a whole range of pastures and meadows on a hillside, by little troughs cut in the side of the hill, along which the water from of
springs was conducted, so as that when the outlets of these troughs were stopped at the end the
water ran over the sides and watered
all
the
ground between that and the other trough next below it. I dare say this method may be in use in England. I never saw it there, but saw it here
first." 1*
It is
no wonder
that, in
view of such extraordi-
nary prosperity on the part of many who a short time before had been destitute exiles from their
Benjamin Rush exclaims: "If it were possible to determine the amount of all the native land,
property brought into Pennsylvania by the present German inhabitants of the State and their an^*
Penn. Mag.,
culture
is
vol. xviii. p. 215.
seen likewise in the
This same
German
skill in agri-
settlements in
York, Maryland, Virginia, and even Ireland.
New
THE PENNSYLVANM-GERM^N FARMER. cestors,
and then compare
it
amount
of their property,
the
form such a monument
economy
of
with the present contrast
human
would
industry and
seldom been contemplated
as has
91
in
"
How different," he any age or country." " is their situation here from goes on to say, ^^
what
it
was
in
the princes of
Germany! Could the subjects of Germany, who now groan away
their lives in slavery
from an eminence
man
and unprofitable labor, view
month
in the
of
settlements of Strasburg or
June the Ger-
Mannheim
in
Lancaster County, or of Lebanon in Dauphin
County,
or
Bethlehem
of
Northampton they be accompanied on this venerable German farmer and be
— County, could eminence by a
by him that many
told of
grain,
in
full-fed
of these extensive fields
herds,
luxurious
meadows,
orchards promising loads of fruit, together with the spacious barns and commodious stone dwell-
ing-houses which compose the prospects which
have been mentioned, were all the product of a single family and of one generation, and were all secured to the owners of them by certain laws, I am persuaded that no chains would be able to deter
them from sharing
^5
the
Manners of
P- 55-
German
in the
freedom of their
Inhabitants of Pennsylvania,
THE PENNSYLy^NU-GERMAN FARMER.
92
friends
Pennsylvania jects."
and former fellow sub-
i«
Dr. Rush himself gives us
many
valuable hints
methods by which such striking results were obtained. His little pamphlet on "The Manas to the
ners of the
German
written in 1789,
is
Inhabitants of Pennsylvania," the most valuable of all the
eighteenth-century sources which throw light on the subject tails
we
are discussing.
He gives many de-
as to the thoroughness, far-sightedness,
attention to
little
man methods
and
marked the GerThus at the very out-
things which
of farming.
while the Scotch-Irish or English farmer would girdle or belt the trees, and leave them to set,
ground, their more far-sighted neighbors would cut them down and burn them, the rot in the
underwood and bushes being grubbed out of the ^ By this means a field was as fit for ground.^ cultivation the second year after it was cleared ^*
For further
Weld
glinipst-s of tliis pro.^perity see the
(1795) and
Travels of
An interesting detail (1825). the appellation "King" applied to a rich An old "Dutchman" once ?aid, speaking
Saxe-Weimar
in this connection
landed proprietor. " The of a
is
people call mc tlie king of the manor [townhim the king of the Octorara." In the and call they ship], MS. genealogy of the llcrr family, one sheet is marked friend,
"King"
Herr. "
halten niaiichtn sauren Tag, den Wald Mit weitversclilungenen Wurzehi aus/.utoden." (Schiller, "Wilhclm Toll,"
Und
ii.
2.)
THE PENNSYLV/iNIA-GERM/iN FARMER. as
was twenty years afterwards.
it
tended that
tlie
93
They con-
expense of repairing a plough,
which by the other method vvas often broken, was greater than the extra expense of grubbing the field in clearing. Their foresight and carefulness were also shown in their treatment of horses
and
cattle.
However economical they might be
with themselves, they were never so towards their
These were so well fed that the horses
live stock.
"
performed twice the labor of those horses, and the cattle yielded twice the quantity of milk of those cows, that are less plentifully fed." The Pennsylvania German's horses were well known "
over the State.
all
horse seems to
feel
the Indeed, says Rush, v.'ith his lord the pleasure and
pride of his extraordinary size and fat."^^ Not only were the horses well fed, but they were kept
warm
in winter
and spared
all
unnecessary labor, such as dragging heavy loads of wood for winter fires, or driving about the country for mere In this way they were able to pleasure.
^8
when
feats of strength
perform prodigious
the
This love for animals
is an inherited trait cf. Freytag, Freude des Landmanns war die Zucht seiner grosste ;
"Die
Rosse."
(I.
a
p.
307.)
proverb another form is applied repeats
sterbe
isch
Schrecke."
Meyer (Deutsche Volkskunde,
still
to
ka Verderbe
p. 212) near Heidelberg wliich in " Weiber the Pennsylvania farmer
current
:
!
Aber Gaulverrecke, des
isch
e
THE PENNSYLV/INI/i-GERMAN F/IRMFR.
94
time came, dragging the immense loads of produce over rough roads to Philadelphia, sixty miles or
The
more away.
farmer's
first
was
well cleared
care after getting his field
to build
an immense barn,
in
which no expense was spared to make it comfortable and ample. This was invariably done
any thought was taken of building a permanent home for himself. These great
before "
Swisser
"
barns, as they are called,^^ are
one
to the present day
down
of the characteristic fea-
tures of the landscape in the eastern counties of
Pennsylvania, and have often attracted the attention of travellers, not only in the past,-*^ but in these days
of
railroads,
when
the
traveller
is
whirled through Lancaster and other counties
on
his
way
West.
A
detailed description " not be out of place here. They
to the
them may are two stories high, with pitched roof, sufficiently large and strong to enable heavy farm-
of
teams to drive into the upper story, to load or unload grain. During the first period they were built
mostly of logs, afterwards of stone, frame,
'*
Either on account of the chalet-like projection of the upper stories, or because many of the farmers were Swiss. '"
The Duke
of
Saxe-Weimar says he was
struck with these barns,
many
of tluia
churches.
ii.
175 ami 177.)
(Travels, vol.
jip.
particularly
looking like large
THE PENNSYL^^ANIA-GERMAN FARMER.
95
or brick, from 60 to 120 feet long, and from 50 to 60 feet wide, the lower story, containing- the stables, front.
with feeding-passages opening on the The upper story was made to project 8 or
10 feet over the lower in front, or with a fore-
bay attached, to shelter the entries to the stables and passageways. It contained the threshing-
mows, and lofts for the storing of hay and grain. The most complete barns of the present day have in addition a granary on the upper floors,
under the driving-way, a wagonshed, with corn-crib and horse-power shed atfloor, a celler
tached."
21
The houses built of logs.
at first
were temporary structures
The preparation
for the
permanent
number
of years, dwelling was before the actual building operations were begun. Stones had to be quarried, lumber sawed and al-
the business of a
lowed
to
season;
two generations
frequently
and Evans, Hist. Lane. Co., p. 348. This same architectural pride of the farmer may be seen likewise in the *'
Ellis
Palatinate to-day; cf. Riehl, "Seine Oekonomiegebaude legt der reiche Gutsbesitzer mit einer fast monumentalen SchOnheit
und Dauerhaftigkeit an und schmUckt seinen Garten
lieber als
den Kirchhof."
calls the stables
Pfeilern
"wahre
Meyer (Deutsche Volkskunde, empfindet '
Vor
in
Elsewhere he
Prachthallen, massiv aus Stein, mit
und Kreuzgewolben."
man
155.)
p.
(Pfiilzer,
Bayem
(Ibid.,
p. 33)
:
vor einem
einer Ainet (Einodhof) soil
p.
190.)
Cf.
also
" Formliche Ehrfurcht stattlichen
Einzelhof:
man den Hut herabthun.'"
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER.
9^>
assisted
in
erecting
the
homestead.
family
"
These houses were generally built of stone (some of them with dressed corners), two stories high, with pitched roof and with cornices run across the gables and aiound the
German
if
if
built after the
Many were imposing
idea.
arched
cellars
with easy
rooms,
hung
open
oak-panelled
in
One
underneath,
stairs,
weights." of the
stone
story.
modelled
A
after the
or with a chimney at either
pattern,
gable-end,
old
in the middle,
chimney
large
first
English or Scotch structures having
spacious
most
fireplaces in partitions,
and
of the
windows
22
most interesting features
houses
hallways
are
the
quaint
of these
inscriptions
which adorn most of them, usually high up on the gable wall.2^ ]\Iany inscriptions consist simply of the initials or
" Weld,
names
of
man and
wife, with the
says the houses were mostly built of stone and as good as those usually met with on an arable farm of 50 acres in a well-cultivated part of England. (Travels, p. in 1795,
For pictures and descriptions of some of these old houses see Croll, Ancient and Historic Landmarks in the 115.)
Lebanon Valley. " This was a common custom
in the Palatinate; the religious
sentiments expressed are only seen on Protestant houses, and, significantly enough, date chiefly from the years of trial in tlie One of the earliest of seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
such inscriptions was
made by
the wife of the
Count Palatine
Johaim Kasimir of Zweibriicken, over the portal of
tlie
Castle
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER.
97
date of building.
Others, however, are proverbs or quotations from Bible and hymn-book, and thus throw a good deal of light on the practical
and pious character the Weidman house
of the builders.
Thus on
Clay Township, Lancaster County, are the following words: in
''Wer will baueii an die Strassen Muss ein jeder reden lassen." ^*
On
Peter Bricker's
Township,
in
house, in
West Cocalico
Lancaster County, built of sand-
stone in 1759 and ten these words:
still
as
good
as new, are writ-
"Gott gesegne dieses Haus, Und alle was da gehet ein und aus; Gott gesegne alle sampt, Und dazu das ganze Land."
more pious is the inscription on a log-house Albany Township, Berks County, built by
Still
in
Cornelius Frees in 1743.
On
Katharinenburg, consisting of her
a large iron plate
initials,
the year (1622),
and beneath, "Wer Gott vertraut, hat wohl gebaut." (Riehl, Die Pfalzer, p. 198.) Tn Switzerland, also, such inscriptions were common, as we may see from Schiller's "Wilhelm Tell" (i.
2),
where, speaking of Stauffer's house, he says " Mit bunten Wappenschildern
:
ist's beraalt,
Und
weisen Spriichen, die der Wandersmann Verweileud liest und ihren Sinn bevvundert."
2*
Riehl (Die Familie,
of this verse
p.
199) gives the following variation
:
"Wer
da bauet an Markt und Strassen, Muss Neider und Narren reden lassen."
THE PENNSYLy^NlA-GBRMAN FARMER.
98
which had been walled
in
on the side of the build-
ing are the following lines:
"Was Alls
nicht zu Gottes Elir'
Glauben
Merck
auf,
gelit ist
O
Sunde;
theures Hertz,
Verliere keine Stunde.
Die iiberkluge Welt Versteht doch keine Waaren, Sie sucht und fiiidet Kotli
Und
Next
to barn
last die Perle
fahren."
"
and dwelling-house the most im-
portant architectural product of the Pennsylvania Germans is the great Conestoga wagon, which
Rush
called the
"
ship of inland commerce." Be-
fore the advent of railroads these
means towns
of of
between
transport
vegetables,
fruit,
and.
chief
farms
and
the
them the wheat, whiskey, which
In
Pennsylvania.
were the
—
alas!
often formed a side industry of
many
a farmer,
—
were carried for miles to Philadelphia. Says " Rush: In this wagon, drawn by four or five horses of a peculiar breed, they convey to market, over the roughest roads, 2000 and 3000 pounds' In the weight of the produce of their farms. months of September and October it is no un-
common
thing on the Lancaster and Reading
roads to meet in one day of these
wagons on **
their
Montgomery,
fifty
or one hundred
way
to
Hist., of
Philadelphia,
Berks Co.
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER. most
of
These
which
teams
belong-
were
to
stately
German
99
farmers." in
objects
those
owner and driver alike took pride in them and kept them neat and trim. They con-
times;
heavy horses, well fed and curried, wearing good harness, and sometimes adorned with bows of bells, fitted so as to form sisted of five or six
an arch above the fully selected to
collar.
These
bells
were care-
harmonize or chime, from the
small treble of the leaders to the larger bass upon the wheel-horses. The wagon-body was neces-
and strong, but by no means them the wheelwright and black-
sarily built stanch
clumsy. Upon smith expended their utmost
skill
and good
taste,
and oftentimes produced masterpieces of work, both in shape and durability. The running-gear
was invariably painted red, and the body blue. The cover was of stout white linen or hempen material,
drawn
tightly over, shapely, fitted to
the body, lower near the middle and projecting like a bonnet in front and at the back, the whole
having a graceful and sightly outline.^^ In addition to the labor in the
fields
and the
larger interests of the farm, the cultivation of the garden, which was the invariable adjunct of each and Evans, Hist. Lancaster Co., p. 350. The railroads put an end to these wagons. Tliey reappeared latter in the well-known "prairie schooners." '5
Ellis
^^C,t\ i^p
lOO
THE PENNSYLl^/INIA-GERMAN FARMER. was
lioiise,
no small
of
A
itiiportance.
ilowers has always been
tlic
love for
characteristic of the
natives of the I\-ilatinate,2' and this love
is
as noticeable in Pennsylvania as in the at
country;
house
the present day there
quite
home-
not a farm-
is
country, or even a small dwelling in town, that is not adorned with flowers of many in the
kinds, often rare.
They form
the one bright
touch of poetry in the otherwise hard routine of farm-Iife.28
More
important, however,
from a practical
point of view, was the cultivation of garden vegetables, in
which the Germans soon reached the
foremost rank
;
Rush
says definitely that
"
Penn-
indebted to the Germans for the prin^9 cipal part of her knowledge in horticulture." " " of a number Since the settlement," he says, sylvania
of
is
German gardeners
the neighborhood
in
Philadelphia, the tables of
all
of
classes of citizens
"Im
ubrigen Rheinland erfreut sich wohl auch der gemeine Mann am Blumenschmuck seines Hauses, aber so allgemein wie auf dem linken Ufer der Pfalz nirgends." (Riehl, *'
Pfalzer, p. 192.)
Richl traces this love for flowers back to the
days of Roman occupation of the Rhine. *8 See Ritter's History of the MoravianChurch inPluladelpliia, parsonage in addition to peach, pear, and plum trees there were various kinds of roses,
for description of the
garden of
lilacs, heart's-ease, lilies, etc.
"
Rush,
p. 23.
tlie
;
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER.
loi
have been covered with a variety of vegetables in every season of the year." days was a profession and a hard and laborious one, although one sure of
Farming
in those
The whole
profitable returns.
his labor, his thoughts, his
volved about
of the farmer,
hopes and
fears, re-
one thing.^^ Industry was the idleness and sin went hand in
this
highest virtue, " When hand.21 "
life
a
young man," says Rush,
asks the consent of his father to marry a
his choice, the latter
does not so
much
girl of
inquire
whether she be rich or poor, but whether she is industrious and acquainted with the duties of a "^
good housewife." Even the superstitions vania Germans largely agricultural ***
In the
life.
to see
It is interesting
do with farming "
life
of the early Pennsylclustered about their
last century,
how many
and
in
of their proverbs
some had
to
:
Im kleinsten Raum Und pflege sein, er
pflanz einen
Baum
bringt dir's ein ";
" Eine gute Kuh sucht man imStalle"; "Gut gewetzt ist halb gemaht"; "Ein kleines Schaf ist gleich geschoren"; " Futter macht die etc. Giiule,"
31
" Arbeite treu und glaub es
Dass Faulheit
Der Mussiggang
Und *'
Hence
alle
the proverb,
Sparbiichse."
fest
iirger ist als Pest,
viel
Boses
lehrt,
Art von SUnden mehrt.'
"Eine
fleissige
Hausfrau
ist
die beste
THE PENNSYLy/tNM-GERMAN F/1RMER.
I02
places well
strange
on
had many and curious practices. These
in the nineteenth, they
belief?
which
superstitions
they
brought
from
the
Fatherland run back their roots to the early It seems to be twilight of German history.
another phase of that deep touch of poetry so characteristic
of
German
character and which
has so powerfully influenced the
ment
in
more recent
times.
pietistic
of the
Many
of the eighteenth century, both in
move-
customs
Germany and
Pennsylvania, are survivals of heathen customs that have
come
floating
down
the centuries, the
flotsam and jetsam of the religious beliefs of our
pagan ancestors. One of the most widely spread the
influence
of these be-
heavenly bodies. When Shakespeare makes Cassius say, "The fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings," liefs
is
he alludes to a
of
belief that
the
was well-nigh universal
the Middle Ages, that the peculiar juxtaposi-
in
and planets at the birth of any have a lasting influence on the
tion of the stars
individual will life
of the
new-born
child.
Among
the Pennsyl-
vania Germans the signs of the heavens were always noted and recorded at the birth of the child,'3
"
and we are
told that the hermits
This was an old German custom.
on the
Goethe begins his
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER..
103
by the In the old German alma-
Wissahickon partly gained casting of horoscopes.
their living
nacs certain days were marked as lucky or un-
lucky ;2-* any one born on these days was
engagements or poverty tracted then were sure to be to
doomed
marriages
;
failures,
con-
and the
man would
wise
business.
begin no legal or other kind of Ascension-day there should be no
On
Of
letting of blood.^5
was a knowledge
especial interest to farmers
of the times
different phases of the
moon had
observed from the almanac, for in the
waxing
of the
to
be carefully
cereals planted
all
moon grew more
rapidly
Things planted when
than in the waning. "Wahrheit und Dichtung
The
and seasons.
"
with these words
:
"
Am
28.
the Au-
dem Glockenschlage zwolf, kam ich in auf die Welt. Die Constellation war gliick-
gust 1749, Mittags mit
Frankfurt lich
:
nirte '*
Die Sonne stand im Zeichen der Jungfrau, und culmifijr den Tag," etc.
These were Jan.
March 21
;
am Main
14, 16;
Aug.
10, 15.
nal of
April
20, 21
2,
3,
17, 18;
4,
6,
May
11,
8
7,
Sept. 10, 18; Oct. 6
;
12; Feb.
i,
17,
18;
June 17; July 17, Nov. 6, 10 Dec. 6, ;
;
(See Owen, Folk-Lore from Buffalo Valley, Pa., Jour-
American Folk-Lore
The custom middle ages, was '5
;
i,
10,
Society, vol. iv. ) of blood-letting, universal throughout the still in full sway in Pennsylvania a hundred
In the Journal of Christopher Marshall, under the years ago. date May 13, 1780 (at Lancaster) we find this entry: "This was a remarkable day for the German men and women,
So many came that I bleeding at (Dr.) Chrisley Neff's. he must work hard to bleed the whole. presume Strange infatuation." (Papers of Lane. Co. Hist. Soc, vol. ni. p. 156.)
THE PENNSYLy/INM'GERMAN FARMER.
I04
moon was
in the
sign of the
abundant.
When
the horns of the
Twins would be
moon were
down onions must be planted; beans, and early potatoes, however, when the horns were up. Apples should be picked in the dark of the else they
would
during the
moon,
Hogs should be
rot.
slaughtered otherwise the moon,
of the
waxing
meat would shrink and be poor. Even the thatching of houses should be done when the horns of
moon were down,
and when
or the shingles would curl; fences were built, the first or lower rail
should be
laid
the
when
the horns were up, while the
stakes should be put in and the fence finished
when
the horns were down.
the affairs of
done
life
" literally
Omens were
which were supposed
by the book." It
frequent.
a bird entered the room,
if
Such are a few
if
was
a sign of death
a horse neighed or
a looking-glass were
at night, or
broken
same thing was supposed
;
the
to be true
dreaming of having teeth pulled, or ing some one dressed in black. of
As water was one for every house,
"
it
of the is
be
^e
dog barked
if
to
of
of see-
most important things
not surprising that super
-
This view of the influence of the moon's phases is as old itself: "Aus demselben Grund, aus welzu Ariovist's Zeit den Gernianen gclin'en,
German history chem weise Frauen
as
dass sie nicht vor etc.
Neumond
die Schlacht Ijeginnen soUten,"
(Riehl, Kulturstudien, p. 47.)
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER. natural
means were employed
to discover
it.
105
The
following device of "smelling" for water was once common " Hold a forked willow or peach limb :
with the prongs down, and move over the spot where water is desired. If water is present, the
down in spite of all you can do; it has been known to twist off the bark. The depth of water may be known by the number and stick will turn
Ore can be found the
strength of the dips made.
same way." Also curious signs.
If
in
their
way were
the weather
the ears of corn burst, a mild winter
will follow;
but
will
be cold
they are plump. If the spleen of a hog be short and thick, the winter will be short, and vice versa. If on Febit
if
ruary 2d the ground-hog comes out and sees his shadow, he will retire to his hole and six weeks of cold weather will follow. is
on the ground,
So,
when
the
snow
turkeys go to the field or the If guinea-hens halloo, there will be a thaw. cocks crow at 10 p.m., it will rain before morning. if
Witches were believed
in
to
a
more or
and not only human beings, but inanimate objects, and even operations extent,
as
butter-making,
were
more
or
less
less
cattle,
such sub-
Horseshoes or malign influence. broomsticks laid across the door were supposed ject to their
to
keep them out.
Silver bullets shot at a pic-
io6
THE PENNSYLV/1NM-GERMAN FARMER.
ture of a supposed witch
or her
would bring about
his
death.-"'"
The use of amulets and incantations was more or less common. By means of the former it was " believed that one could make himself kugelfest," i.e., proof against bullets.^^ As was natural when doctors were few and far between, suwas largely predominant in medicine. Especially were old women endowed with curaperstition
tive
powers.
Those who were born on Sunday
were supposed to have power to cure headache. Among the strange methods of healing may be mentioned the following: To remove warts cut an apple, a turnip, or an onion into halves and rub the wart with the pieces and then bury them under the eaves of the house. A buckwheat cake placed on the head will remove pain; and breathing the breath of a fish will cure whooping
To cure " falling away " in a child make bag of new muslin, fill with new things of any
cough. a
''
There was, however, none of the fanatic cruelty once so prevalent in Germany and which has given to Salem, Mass., such a baleful notorietj^ in American history. '* This superstition was once wide-spread
Luther believed in " Der Glaube, dass Feinde verfesten .
it
man .
.
in
Germany
;
See Freytag, vol. ni. p. 73 den Leib gegen das Geschoss der
firmly.
kOime,
:
ist iilter als
"
das geschichtliclic
II was said of Captain Lcben der germanischen Vrilker. " and in the French Indian Wettcrholt, War, that he was kugel-
fest."
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FARMER. kind, and place it
ting
it
on the breast
107
of the child, let-
In the mean-
remain there nine days.
while feed the child only with the milk of a young heifer. After nine days carry the bag by the
little
finger to a brook that flows towards the
west and throw
it
over the shoulder.
As
the
contents of the bag waste away the child will recover. Perhaps one of the strangest and yet
most interesting that of
of all these quaint
powwowing, or
the use of magic formulas
for the cure of certain diseases.
esting to see this survival
ago
in
our
own
certain parts of
customs was
down
country, and
Germany,
of a
very interto a short time
It is
still
flourishing in
custom which
is
as
German language itself. Some of the remains of Old High German and Old
old as the earliest
Saxon poetry are
the so-called
"
Segensformen,"
not very different from powwowing.^^ The latter
was once believed in by many of the Pennsylvania Germans. It was supposed to be especially efBcacious in nose-bleed or blood-flow; in re-
moving pain from cuts, bruises, burns; and also in skin-diseases. Thus the goitre was cured by looking at the Avaxing moon, passing the hand over the diseased part, and saying, "What I sec
must ^^
"
Cf. Cf.
increase,
what
I
feel
must decrease."
^°
Braune, Althochdeutsches Lesebuch, p. 81. Meyer, Deutsche Volkskunde, p. 116: "Hat es [a
io8
THE PENNSYLV/iNIA-GERMAN FARMER.
more curious
Still
described by Dr. in
existing
words were
is
W.
Lehigh
cure for snake-bite,
the
Hoffman as formerly The following County. J.
recited:
" Gott hot
alles arschaflfen
und
alles
war gut
;
Als du alle [alter] Schlang, bislit ferflucht, Fcrflucht solsht du sei' und dei' Gift."
The speaker then with
the
index-finger
made
the sign of the cross three times over the wound, each time pronouncing the onomatope tsing.-^^
Even
in religion these superstitions
had
their
opening of the Bible at random and taking the verse which fell under the finger as the direct word of God a custom which, more
place, and the
—
or less changed, has lasted for nearly fifteen hundred years "*- was once employed by the Mora-
—
vians in
all
the affairs of
life,
including marriage,
child] ein Muttermal, so blickt die Mutter, das
Kind im Arm,
auf einem Kreuzweg in den zunehmenden Mond und spricht, indem sie das Mai mit der Hand bestreicht Alles, was ich :
sehe,
nimmt
zu, Alles,
was
ich streiche,
nimmt ab."
*'
Proceedings of Penn. Ger. Society, vol. v. p. 78. ** "Der uralte Aberglaube, weklier schon im Jahre 506 auf von dem Concilium Agde den Christen verboten wurde, kam
wieder in Aufnahme
man
schlug die Bibel oder das Gesangzufiillis^eni Wortlaut die EntscheiduTig bei innerer Unsicherheit zu finden, der Sprucli, auf welchen der
buch
auf,
um
aus
Daumen
;
—
war der Ijedeutsame ein Brauch, der unserm Volke haftet, und von den Gegnern '' Stillen im Lande "] schon um 1700 als ^le is speakinc; of the 'Diiumehi' verhohnt wurde." (I'Veytag, vol. iv. p. 18.)
rechte
noch heute
traf,
fest in
;
THE PENNSYLy^lNM-GERM/IN FARMER. and
is
109
actually used to-day by the Mennonites in
choosing their bishops.
The
unremitting-
toil
;
the monotony.
soon
was one of few recreations came to break
of the Pennsylvania farmer
life
Up
before sunrise and to bed
such was the ordinary routine, day after day, year after year. Later in the cenafter sunset,
tury
came more and more the usual
ties,
quilting and husking parties, country fairs,
rural festivi-
Very common were the
markets, and vctidus.
butcherings
—when
would help
in the killing of
the
friends
of
the
family
hogs and the preparation of the many kinds of sausages; and es" " frohcs in which the pecially common were the various kinds of fruit-butters, of which the Pennsylvania
Germans were so
huge ketdes, tended
to
and
fond, were boiled in stirred
by friends and
neighbors invited for the purpose.^^ In general, however, life was uneventful, " one
common round events in
of daily task."
all lives
—
The
birth, marriage,
were the occasion of more or
three great
and death
—
less celebration, the
weddings and funerals being attended by large concourses of people, who came in wagons from far and near. The custom of providing food for *'
Cf.
Riehl
(Pfjilzer, p.
267) for a description of a similar
combination of business and pleasure in the preparation of Obstlatwerge in the Palatinate.
no THE
PENNSYLV/tNIA-GERMAN FARMER.
long distance many had to come, soon grew to be conventional and too
visitors, due at first to the
often excessive. plains
of
this
Muhlenberg frequently comexcess at both weddings and
funerals.
An
interesting
funerals
one
of
description
" is
given by Mittelberger:
known more than
fifty
Enghsh
these
In this man-
an invitation to a funeral
ner such
of
is
made
miles around in
twenty-four hours. If it is possible, one or more persons from each house appear on horseback at the appointed time to attend the funeral. While the people are pieces
is
coming
good cake cut
in,
handed around on a large
into
tin platter to
those present; each person receives then, in a goblet, a hot West India rum punch, into which
lemon, sugar, and juniper-berries are put, which After this, hot and give it a delicious taste.
sweetened cider ple
have nearly
is
all
served.
.
.
.
When
the peo-
assembled and the time for
come, the dead body is carried to the general burial-place, or, where that is too far away, the deceased is buried in his own
the burial
field.'*-*
**
is
The assembled people
ride
all
in silence
of these old private graveyards are now utterly neirlected and overgrown with weeds Riehl's description of
Many
;
the neglected graveyards in the Palatinate is almost word for word true of many in Pennsylvania "Eine verwilderte Ilccke :
THE PENNSYLVAhllA-GERMAN FARMER,
m
and sometimes one can count from one hundred The to five hundred persons on horseback. coffins are ah made of fine walnut wood and
brown with a shining varnish." ^^ It must not be inferred from the above references to rum and cider that the Pennsylvania Germans as a people were especially addicted to stained
drank
;
in
years ago every one " were a England the settlers
One hundred
strong drink.
New
beer-drinking and ale-drinking race
—as
Shake-
speare said, they were 'potent in potting' ;"^^ and no public ceremony, civil or religious, occurred
which great quantities of liquor were not drunk.^^ The custom of drinking at funerals, in
Regellose mit Gras und Gestriipp verwachsene Erhuhungen zeigen die Griiber an." (Pfalzer, p. 407.) He attributes this neglect to the traditional dislike of the Reformed
umzaunt
sie.
people to all pomp and ceremony even in death it is still more true of the Mennonites, who seek the utmost simplicity in all ;
things temporal or spiritual,
—in
life
"Ein
and death.
Mit-
glied der Gemeinschaft im Bemer Jura ausserte mir gelegenman soUte nicht genotigt sein. die Toten auf
tlich die Ansicht,
den Friedhofen zu beerdigen ein jeder Grundbesitz thun diirfen." (Muller, p. ;
^5
up
In
all
fcr if
sollte dies
auf seinem
62.)
was careful to gather making the shavings and sawdust and place them in the coffin, any portion thereof should be brought into a house, these coffins the carpenter
death was sure to follow. *8
Alice Morse Earle, Customs
and Fashions
in
Old
New
England, p. 163. *^ In the record of the ordination of Rev. Joseph McKean,
112
THE PENNSYLy/fNIA-GERMy4N FARMER.
which Muhlenberg reprehends so
stoutly,
was
observed by the Scotch-Irish and the the Puritans of New England.*** Indeed we have equally
the authority of Benjamin Rush,
who has been
in Beverly, Mass., in 1785, these items are found in the tavernbill
keeper's
:
30 Bowles of Punch before
tlie
people went to meet/"3
ing
6 80 people eating in the morning at i6d i 10 10 liottles of wine before they went to meeting .... 10 4 68 dinners at 3s
44 bowles of punch while 18 bottles of wine
at dinner
8 bowles of brandy
cherry Rum 6 people drank tea
4
8
2 1
14 2
i
10 gd.
^
Mrs. Earle gives the following bill for the mortuary exin 1678: penses of David Porter of Hartford, who was drowned
£0 By a pint of liquor for those who dived for him By a (juart of liquor for those who bro't him home ... By two quarts of wine & i gallon of cyder to jury of inquest 8 gallons
By By I
is.
2
5
&
3 qts. wine for funeral
£1
15
16
barrel cyder for funeral
12
coffin
Windeing
With
this
feast of
18
sheet
we may compare
the
Johannes Gunire and
bill
his
for the
double funeral-
wife of Germantown,
1738:
&
Cakes at sd Burialls Gamons Cheese & Butter
Bread
Mol.\sses
&
Sugar
....
£1 i
10 152 143
in
THE PENNSYLl^ANM-GERMAN FARMER. 113 called the father of the
Temperance movement
Pennsylvania Germans were not addicted to drunkenness.^^
United
in the
States, that the
In this chapter we have endeavored to give a brief sketch of the Pennsylvania farmer a hun-
would be
some value
dred years ago.
It
more
into detail
concerning the routine of daily
life.
The
to
go
book, however, will not
nor perhaps would these the same interest as those which
permit fer
limits of this
of
this,
details oftell
of ele-
gant mansions, stately equipages, and all the pomp and circumstance of colonial Virginia and New England. The houses of the simple folk
whom we
are discussing, their furniture, cloth-
ing,^^ food,^i
and
all
the accessories of
were
life
marked by plainness and comfort rather than by Hard work, good health, an easy conelegance. science, independence begotten of possession of
a comfortable
home, and land enough
to provide
*^
This notwithstanding the fact that hard drinking has ever been and is to-day a national failing of the Germans. The
deep religious movement in Pennsylvania one hundred years ago tended to keep the people moderate in drinking. 5° This was at first homespun and very simple. The Moravians, Mennonites,
Amish, and Ephrata Brethren had a spe-
cial garb. ^1
Typical Pennsylvania-German dishes are Sauerkraut, fruitNudels, Schnitz und Knep, many kinds of sausages, Schmierkind of '-Fasnachts" coldslaw, butters," cruller), (a '
kas, etc.
'
114
THE PENNSYl.y/INIA-GERM/iN FARMER.
for all their cestors, a
life
depreciation
ground
of
wants
—
this
was the
life
of our an-
not altogether to be looked at with
even
from
the
present
vantage-
modern comforts and conveniences.
CHAPTER
V.
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND EDUCATION.
Among
the
phenomena conPennsylvania Germans none is
many
nected with the
more
interesting
striking than their persistence in chnging
Here we have a group
to their dialect.
of people
living in the very heart of the United States, sur-
rounded on
all
sides
by English-speaking people,
almost every family having some of
its
branches
thoroughly mixed by intermarriage with these people, yet still after the lapse of nearly two hundred years retaining to a considerable degree the
Even
language of their ancestors.
in large
and
flourishing cities like Allentown, Reading, and
Bethlehem much and home-life
is
of the intercourse in business
carried
persistence of language
on is
in this patois.
one
evidences of the conservative
This
of the strongest
spirit
so character-
Pennsylvania-German farmer. This love for their language, which to-day may be regarded as a really striking phenomenon, istic
of the
was only natural one hundred and
fifty
years ago. 115
Ii6
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND EDUCATION.
was then new, the Germans formed a compact mass by themselves, the means of communication with their Enghsh neighbors were rare it would have been surprising- if they
Tlic country
;
had not clung was precisely
to the this
language of their
same love
for
fathers.
the
It
mother
tongue which led the Puritans to leave Holland, where they were in many respects comfortable enough.
And
1
was regarded a stubborn and
yet this very natural desire
by some
at least as evidence of
ignorant nature.^ The very efforts English the motives of many of
—
more or ^
less
mixed
"They wished
English traditions," p. 74.)
Winslow
to etc.
—
to
made by
whom
the
were
do away with the use of
preserve their English speech and (Fiske, Beginnings of New England,
(in his Brief Narrative,
quoted by Palfrey,
Hist, of N. Eng. i. p. 147) says the Puritans did not like to tliink of losing their language and tlieir name of English,"
and longed that God might be pleased, "to discover some where they might place unto them, though in America, live and comfortably subsist," and at the same time "keep their names and nation." "Jede Provinz," says Goethe. .
'•
in
liebt ihren Dialekt,
welchem
denn
er
die Secle ihren
ist
.
.
doch eigentlich das Element,
Atem
schopft."
(Meyer, Volks-
kunde, p. 279.) * In 1755 Samuel Wharton proposed, "in order to incline them to become English in education and feeling quicker," that the English language should ht used in all bonds and legal
and that no newspaper should be circulated them unless among accompanied by an English translation.
instruments,
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND EDUCATION,
German only tended
n?
to strengthen the stubborn
love for their language in which their Bible and hymn-books were written and in which their services were held.
Indeed, the following prayer, which was introduced into the litany of the Lu-
theran Church, in 1786, smacks of what many would now call real fanaticism " And since it :
has pleased Thee chiefly, by means of the Germans, to transform this State into a blooming garden, and the desert into a pleasant pasturage, help us not to deny our nation, but to endeavor that our youth
may
be so educated that
schools and churches
but
may
a
attain
may
still
German
not only be sustained,
more
flourishing condi-
tion."
The vernacular thus
religiously preserved
was
not the literary language of Germany, but a distinct dialect. We have seen that the vast majority of emigrants to
Pennsylvania during the last century came from the various States of South Germany the three principal ones which ;
furnished settlers being the Palatinate, Wiirtemberg, and Switzerland. The inhabitants of these three form two ethnical entities which are
more
or less closely allied, Wiirtemberg and Switzerland being practically pure Alemannic, while the Palatinate is Prankish with a strong infusion of
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND EDUCATION.
Ii8
blood
Alemannic
in
certain
thereof.^
parts
Hence
it
follows that the Pennsylvania-German
dialect
is
a mixture of Prankish
Of course
and Alemannic.
there are subdivisions in these dialects,
the Swabian of Wiirtemberg being different from that of Switzerland, and the mixed speech of the
Palatinate different from both.^
The Pennsyl-
vania German, then, has as a basis certain characteristics derived fied
from
these dialects, modi-
all
and harmonized, many
of the original dif-
ferences having in course of time been so transformed that to-day the dialect is in general
homogeneous.
The
accurate study of any dialect
is
one of
great difficulty, and should only be undertaken by a specialist who has been thoroughly trained in the subject of phonetics
and who has made a
long and careful personal study of the facts on the spot. This is not the place, nor is the writer competent, to give a esting dialect.
full
treatment of this inter-
There are some
however, which are easily understood and which at the same time form the most striking characteristics. *
.See Riehl. p.
*
See Paul's Grundriss
105
facts,
ff.
der Germanischen Philologie.
also Riehl, Pfalzer, p. 273
The
vol.
variations
pp. 538-540 the dialect of the Palatinate may be studied in the four " Volksdichter " Kobell, Nadler, Schandein, and Lennig.
I.
in
;
fT.
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND EDUCATION. 119 Such are the takes
open)
and
as
aa,
following
the in
schlof
woge (waagen),
German
used
for
hem
(heiin),
e
hem
coming
and
ei
Jie
iibcr, etc.).
del
is
(thcil),
Germaji dia-
in all
becom-
simplified,
= hdhe,
bes=bdse), and ii bebrick briickc, ivvcr
=
— biiclicr, (bichcr
i
c
(zsjahr);
as
ciu,
As
(bdiimc).^
(here=hdrcn,
zvor
(jahr),
a
frogc (frogcn),
(schlaf),
mixed vowels are
lects, the
ing
jor
less
German
the
of
place
or
(more
:
=
The above vowel changes
are exten-
frequent are the changes of en in a few words to ci (fcicr fciicr, scheier= sively
used;
less
=
and of
schcucr),
ci
= weihe). A zvoy
and
ai to
oy (moy
very interesting
= inai,
zzvarch = zzvcrg,
Even
kirche.)
=
phenomenon
the influence of r on the preceding
= erbc,
oy
i
or
::ay'kcl = zirkcJ,
c
ci,
is
{arve
karch
=
some words under-
the vowel u in
= — goes a similar change {dazvrsch durst fazvrch In some cases an inorfurcht, kazvrz-=knr::). ,
ganic vowel is developed between a liquid and the following consonant {milich milch, marikt
=
=markt,
starick
= stork,
barik
= berg).
In regard to the consonant-system the following peculiarities may be noted: g between two 6
we
In
many words
find both
JHed
a wavering in this use of and JHa'd; and especially are the
there
is
w Dutch as we did in English. sweet and delightful it is to a New-Born Soul!" (Dotterer, Of Antes Whitefield says he "seemed to Hist. Notes, p. 84.) have drunk deeply into the consnlations of the Holy Spirit."
farther,
.
6
Among
.
.
I
the rare bibliographical treasures in Pennsylvania
THE RELIGIOUS
LIFE.
confusion and dishonesty which
I57 so
often
ac-
companied an ocean voyage then, made every to get possession of the precious book.
efifort
how even redemptioners saved their chance earnings to buy copies. One of the first things a man did on getting married Muhlenberg
was
to
us
buy a family
universal
demand
his
lish
tells
Bible.
It
was
to supply this
that Sauer undertook to pub-
famous
Quarto.
Nor
were
these
Bibles mere ornaments of the centre-table; they formed the daily food of those who possessed
them.
The people
fest," their
of those days
were
"
Bibel-
memories were stored with the best
passages; and this is true not only of adults, but of little children as well.
The same statements apply which was held the Bible.
It
in
to the
hymn-book,
almost the same reverence as
was not
left in
the
pew
at church,
but shared with the Holy Book the honor of being read constantly and learned by heart.'^ They to-day are the copies of the Bible published by Froschauer of Zurich, and brought over by the early Swiss Mennonites. '
are given by Muhlenberg in Hall. Nach.
Many examples
Take
as a single instance the pathetic story of the death of a
When too weak himself to sing the hymns, six-year-old boy. "deren er eine schone Anzahl gelemet, " he would ask his " Als sein parents to sing. Verlangen erfuUt war, gab er seinem Vater einen liebreichen Kuss zum Abschiede, begehrte
hemach wieder auf den Vers sungen:
'
sein Bette,
und indeni
beiderseits Eltern
Breit aus die Flijgel beide,
O Jesu
meine
THE RELIGIOUS
158
LIFE.
"
"
were not only Bibel-fest," but Gesangbuchfest," and in times of danger, sickness, and death comfort and strength were drawn from the grand old hymns of the Church. Many touching and inspiring stories might be told in this connection, like that of
Barbara Hartman, who
years' captivity
among
the Indians
after
was restored
whom
she only recognized the latter sang to her the hymn,
to her mother,
many when
" Allein und doch nicht ganz allein, Bin ich in meiner Einsamkeit.'"^
with which she had often or that
daughter to sleep;
cradled her
more
still
John Christian Schell and four sons, who kept at bay a band
story of
Indians and Tories
all
infant
inspiring
his wife
and
of sixty-four
night long, shooting at
them from the windows, and keeping up
their
courage by singing lustily Luther's old battle" Ein feste Burg ist Unser Gott," emhymn, phasizing,
we
well
may
believe,
especially the
lines:
"
Und wenn die Welt voll Teufel wUr' Und woUt' uns gar verschlingen, So fiirchten wir uns nicht so sehr, Es muss uns doch gelingen."'
Freude,
Und nimm
dein Kiichlein ein,' entschlief er sanft und
seinem Erlciser." This interesting story
stille in ^
(vol. is
11.
p. 468.)
given in detail in Hall. Nach.,
vol. H. p. ®
479 ff. Kapp, p. 262
ff.
It is
family was rescued on
a satisfaction to
tlie
following day.
know
that this brave
THE RELIGIOUS
What
LIFE.
has been stated above
IS9
is
perhaps only another way of saying that the whole religious
Pennsylvania Germans was This movement, strongly marked by pietism. which we have spoken of before, was not a of
life
the
early
propagation of dogma or a new ecclesiastical polity, but the immediate application of the teaching of Christ to the heart and conduct, a revolt against the formalism of the orthodox church; it
was
Germany what Methodism became
to
later
to England. It
is
interesting to note the development of
pietism in Pennsylvania. Almost all those who came over in the early part of the century were afifected
by
it;
Company was
nay, the Frankfort
formed by the members of one of the socalled Collegia Pietatis founded by Spener; hence Germantown owes its foundation to this movement.
Zinzendorf
Schwarzenau
and
the
the
Baptists,
Moravians,
the
Schwenckfelders,
who founded the United Brethren, and Muhlenberg, who had been educated at Halle, then the centre of the movement
Otterbein and Boehm,
in
the spirit to excess
—
were thoroughly imbued with of pietism. The same tendency, carried
Germany,
all
and manifesting
seen in the Society of the
itself in
Woman
mysticism, in the
is
Wilder-
i6o
THE RELIGIOUS
LlhE.
ness founded by Kelpius, and in the Ephrata
Community.
The stream
of emotional religion, thus having
source in Germany, gained new strength in Pennsylvania, where all conditions were favor-
its
development. While in Germany it practically died out as a force before the end of the century, in the New World it flowed on in
able to
new
its
channels,
and
finally
culminated
in
the
founding of several new denominations, which ^° to-day are strong in numbers and influence.
The
great majority of
Germans in colonial the two principal con-
Pennsylvania belonged to fessions, Lutheran and Reformed, the latter coming chiefly from Switzerland and the Palat-
former from Wiirtemberg and other parts of Germany. Their numbers in the Quaker colony were nearly equal. inate, the
One phenomenon which
a
centurv'
ago
at-
was the perfect harwhich existed between
tracted widespread attention
mony and good the two.^i '"
feeling
There had been
The United Brethren,
Dunkards. n 'I Which violate,
...
harmony
a time in the Father-
the Evangelical Association, the
fellowship has also been preserved sacred and inso that one may well desire that such traces of
mi^jht also be found in
Germany." (Life of Schlatter, Rayiial, Burke, and others speak in hisjh terms of the harmony existing between all the sects and churches of p.
139.)
THE RELIGIOUS
l6i
LIFE.
when jealousy had existed between them and when petty quarrels had divided them. The common sufferings and persecutions in more reland
cent times had tended to
From
ences.i2
the
smooth over
moment
their differ-
they arrived in Pennevidence of hostility.
we see but little The members of both denominations being poor sylvania
and dwelling in sparsely settled communities, they were unable to build separate churches, and in the majority of cases they founded Union churches,
^^
in
which they worshipped on
alter-
In some cases this arrangement has been continued down to the present day.^* nate Sundays.
In view of this community of interest, members of one congregation often worshipped with
Reformed frequently intermarried, baptisms, marriages, and funerals the other, Lutherans and
Pennsylvania,
—overlooking, however, the numerous petty quar-
Between the Moravians on the one side and the Lutherans and Reformed on the other there was a very strong feeling. 1' Bei aller Zerstiickelung der Glaubensparteien haben die Pfalzer nach langen Kampfen sich endlich vertragen gelernt." rels.
' '
(Riehl, Pfalzer, p. 379.) 1* Such a church had been built in the seventeenth century Karl by Ludwig in Mannheim, common to the three confes sions
and
" zur
dedicated
heiligen
Eintracht."
(Riehl.
Pfalzer, p. 386.) ^*
Some
of these union churches are
nominations also Cocalico
;
common
to other de-
is Mellinger's meeting-house, in West Lancaster County, in which worship
such
Township,
Lutherans, Reformed, Mennonites, and Dimkards.
1
THE RELIGIOUS
62
were performed by ministers
LIFE.
denomina-
of either
tion, and, in general, lines of
demarcation were
very loosely drawn. Indeed, it would probably have been difficult for many of the people to say
what were the
essential difTerences
between the
Lutheran and Reformed churches, and a story is
man who
told of a
said that the only difiference " Lutherans said Vater Unser,"
was that the
while the Reformed said this dulled the
"
Unser Vater."
All
edge of denominational feeling. pass from one church to another,
was easy to and throughout the eighteenth century Lutheranism was looked upon as closely allied to the It
Church the
of Englandj^-"^ while in a similar
manner
Reformed Church was classed with the Pres-
byterians.^^
A
crying need of both churches before the fourth decade of the last century was the supply of regular ministers, of
any,
while
the
^*
See p. 146, note.
'*
Thus in which
into
whom
number
of
the constitution of the the
Reformed
delphia Co.) was merged gregation being
satisfied
there were scarcely
church
members
new Presbyterian
church
of
we read: "And that the shade
churcli
Frankford of
the
(Philasaid con-
difference
be-
principles of the German Reformed Church and those of the Presbyterians of the United States are scarcely discernible and unimportant," etc. (Dotterer, Hist. Notes,
tween
p. 27.)
tlie
In colonial documents the Reformed are frequently Dutch Presbyterians, or Calvinists.
spoken of as
THE RELIGIOUS
LIFE.
163
amounted to many thousands. Often the schoolmaster would read sermons and conduct serThere had been some distinguished men vices. who in an unofficial way had tried to introduce some order; among the Reformed there were John Philip Boehm and George Michael Weiss, the former of
whom
founded the churches
in
Conestoga Valley and perhaps in Lancaster. The earliest Lutheran church was founded in Falkner's
Swamp
in
especially active,
1720.
and
The two Stoevers were
at every cross-road
founded
a Lutheran congregation and opened a church ^'^ record; most of these churches still exist. It
was
official
not, however,
and systematic
till
the fourth decade that
efiforts
were made to or-
" One
of the early churches with which the name of John Caspar Stoever is connected is the well-known Reed chur ch, in Tulpehocken, founded in 1727 by the settlers from Schoharie,
Like the cathedral of Durham, it was "half house of God, half castle" and served as a fort against the Indians. Mr. L. A. WoUenweber alludes to this double function in the
N. Y.
following lines: "
Do Do
droben uf dem runde Berg, steht die alte Riethe- Kerch Drin hot der Parre Stoever schon ;
Vor hunnert Jahr manch Predigt thun Gepredigt zu de arme, deitsche Leit In seller, ach so harten Zeit. !
Audi wor die Kerch 'n gute Fort Gegen der Indianer wilde Hort — Un schliefen drin gar manch Nacht, Die arme Settlers wo lien bewacht."
;
1
THE RELIGIOUS
64
LIFE.
ganize the scattered congregations of Lutherans
and Reformed
in
Michael Schlat-
Pennsylvania.
a native of St. Gall, Switzerland,
ter,
America
in
came
to
1746 for the purpose of studying the
church situation, and of devising some means of
Through
help.
the aid of the
Reformed Synod
and the generous contribution of friends in Germany, Holland, Switzerland, and even England, he was enabled to bring over in of Holland,
1752 six young men, regularly ordained ministers,
and
settled
them
in Philadelphia, Falkner's
Lancaster, Reading, and other places. 1792 the German Reformed Church in
Swamp, Until
Pennsylvania was under the general supervision
Holland Synod; since that date its affairs have been administered by its own organiza-
of the
tion.i^
Henry Melchior Muhlenberg occupies same
relation to the
Lutheran Church
in
Penn-
sylvania as Schlatter does to the Reformed.
was a man feeling, if
of learning, energy,
and administrative
a better adapted
all
Germany
man
talent.
the
He
deep religious It is
doubtful
could have been found in
to undertake the peculiarly difficult
task he was called to do.
The
story of his
life,
his travels, his labors, his tact in dealing with the '8
At the end of the year 1899 there were 240, 130 members German Reformed Church in the United States.
of the
THE RELIGIOUS
LIFE.
165
problems connected with the loose relations then prevailing among churches and sects, difficult
—
•
these, as
all
he relates them
the Hallesche Nachrichten,i^
in his diary
and
in
must inspire every
reader with profound respect for this pioneer of the Lutheran Church in America, and the father of a distinguished
line
of preachers,
warriors,
statesmen, and patriots.^*^
Through
his efforts order
members
was soon introduced
Lutheran Church; new congregations were started, and those already in existence were strengthened. The sub-
among
the
of the
sequent history of the Lutherans
is
different
from
Reformed Church, which to-day is almost entirely composed of the descendants of the early Pennsylvania Germans, whereas the Luththat of the
erans have received exceedingly large additions from the vast immigration from Germany in our
own
In the country at large there are the Pennseparate bodies of Lutherans,
century.
many
—
'5
Muhlenberg came to Pennsylvania under the auspices of Orphan House founded at Halle by August Hermann Francke, and for many years wrote back detailed accounts of
the
his labors, which,
with the reports of other ministers, have title of "Hallesche Nachrichten."
been published under the They are of extreme value customs, the religious '"'
Among
and
for the student of the
manners and
social condition of the times.
his descendants
were General Peter Muhlenberg
Frederick Augustus, Speaker of the House of Representatives William Augustus, founder of St. Johnland.
;
;
1
THE RELIGIOUS
66
sylvania
LIFE.
Germans being members
of the
"
INIinis-
terium of Pennsylvania and Adjacent States." problem of capital importance to both Re-
A
formed and Lutherans came into prominence during the
first
decades of the nineteenth cen-
tury and gradually
assumed wide
significance.
The question whether the services should be held exclusively in German began to be agitated at
As
the English influence was strong. 1803,
was
where
in the larger cities, especially those
first
when
the Rev.
called to Trinity
early as
Henry A. ^Nluhlenberg^i Church in Reading, it was
understood that he should often preach
in
Evidently the time was not ripe
lish.
Eng-
for so
we soon find the experiment abandoned and German exclusively used. The great a change, for
movement, however, could not be kept down; the natural order of things brought it more and
more sult
to the front, so that in
was the
splitting
part of which
up
many
cases the re-
of congregations,
would continue
one
to hold services
German, while the other would introduce English.22 The change, however, came slowly and
in
was stubbornly opposed by the conservative ''
ele-
Grandson of the patriarch Henry Melchior. Such was the origin of llie St. Paul's Reformed Churcli in Lancaster, built almost next dwjr to the First Church; English *'
is
used exclusively in both
at the present time.
THE RELIGIOUS ment.
It
LIFE.
was undoubtedly owing
servatism that so
many
of the
167 to this con-
younger generation
and joined other churches. Feeling ran so high that the Reformed Synod of Frederick, Md., left
1826 publicly rebuked a young minister for giving an address in English.^^ in
It is
claimed that the Moravians are the oldest
Protestant denomination in the world, dating back to the days of Huss.
reformer,
the worship of
secret
own
many
After the death of the great of his followers continued in
God according
to
their
while openly professing to be of the Catholic Church. Their secret
doctrines,
members
heresy being discovered, they were forced to
from
their native land,
and
in
flee
1722 settled in
Count Zinzendorf, where they founded the now historic town of Herrnhut. Zinzendorf, who was a Lutheran, became much interested in their peculiar views, and finally
Saxony on the
estate of
Missions joined them and was made bishop. from the beginning were one of the chief func-
Moravians, and they already had sent missionaries to Greenland and other places tions
before
of the
coming
to
America.
It
was
natural, then,
that they should cast their eyes to the heathen
In 1735 a number of missionaries came to Georgia with the intention of
across the Atlantic.
2'
Life of rhilip Schaff, p. 153.
i68
THE RELIGIOUS
LIFE.
and preaching the Gospel to the Indians; but the war with Spain interfered with their plans, and in 1740 they came to Pennsyl-
settling there
where they bought
vania,
a large tract of land
and founded Bethlehem. 741 Zinzendorf came and took charge of the new settlement. He was inspired with the
In
1
laudable desire to unite
all
the
German
Protest-
ants in the colony, and organized, or rather took
charge of, the movement already started, and which was known as the Pennsylvania Synod.
John Gruber, Henry Antes, and John Bechtel had met in 1740 to talk over the unsettled condition of religion in Pennsylvania,
German sects and denominaOn December 26, 1741, he published a
vised a union of tions.
and Antes ad-
all
circular inviting representatives of the different
communions mantown, in
"
to attend a general
meeting
at
Ger-
not for the purpose of disputing, but
order to treat peaceably concerning the most
important articles of
faith
and ascertain how
far
they might agree on the most essential points."
A
met January 12, 1742, at the house of Theobald Endt, where the above-mentioned Pennsylvania Synod was organized. Dur-
number
of people
ing the next ten months seven of these Synods
were held
in different places, at
which Lutherans,
Reformed, Schwenckfelders, Mennonites, Dunk-
THE RELIGIOUS
LIFE.
and Separatists were present.
ards,
169
The
project
through denominational jealousy. Bechtel, Antes, and others joined the Moravians, being attracted by Zinzendorf. It was the actions and failed
success of the Moravians which hastened the
coming of Schlatter and Muhlenberg, whose aim was to care for the long-neglected interests of the Reformed and Lutheran churches.^-* The missionary efforts of the Moravians
among
Indians
the
greatly
prospered;
many
converts were made and the settlements of Gnadenhiitten, Friedenthal,
The
labors of such
and others were founded.
men
as Post,
Nitschman, and Zeisberger, calls
the
"
John
Spangenberg,
whom Thompson
Eliot of the West," present a
picture of piety, self-denial, and patient endurance rarely equalled in the annals of missions.
The French and Indian War wath
its
intensified
At one time the existence of the Lutheran Church in Lancaster was threatened by Nyberg, its pastor, who himself went over to the Moravians and wished to carry the congre'*
The gentle Muhlenberg frequently indulges harsh language concerning what he calls the machinations No doubt Zinzendorf was ambitious and of the Moravians. gation with him. in
John Wesley, who ardently admired him at first, came to see this later. (See Tyerman's Life of Wesley, vol. I. Yet the Moravians in Pennsylvania were inspired by p. 207.) true evangelical zeal; Schaff calls them a "small but most imperious
lovely
;
and thoroughly evangelical denomination."
THE RELIGIOUS
I70
LIFE.
race-hatred interfered with and practically put an end to the mission-work on a large scale.
The
doctrines of the Moravians were not very
different
from those
of the Lutherans; ^^
they
were only marked by a greater depth of religious Their feeling and the spirit of self-sacrifice.
manners and customs were peculiar to themAt selves and are picturesque and interesting. first
the settlement at Bethlehem was communis-
but
tic,
erty
in
took
1760
a the
place,
division
the
of
community
prop-
retaining,
however, a tavern and a tanyard, 2000 acres near Bethlehem and 5000 near Nazareth. The profits on the property sold were devoted to the cause of missions.
In the olden times there was
a sharp distinction
made not only between
sexes, but between the different ages tions of the
same
sex.
Each
class
the
and condi-
had
its
own
place in church, often lived together, and had its
own
peculiar
festivals.
The women were
outwardly marked by means of ribbons, children wearing light-red, girls dark-red, the unmarried sisters pink, the '*
ing,
married
The Moravians do
women
blue,
and widows
not indulge in the habit of dogmatiz-
and refuse controversy.
lated creed of their own, yet
forth no formuon the Continent they declare
They have put
Augsburg Confession with its twenty-one The great theme of tlicir preaching is doctrinal articles. Christ. Jesus (See Thompson, Moravian Missions, p. 9. ) their adhesion to the
THE RELIGIOUS
Even
white.26
LIFE.
ijl
in death these distinctions
were
kept up, and in the graveyard at Lititz the bodies were buried according to age.^" There was and a deep touch of poetry over the religious
is still
of the Moravians.
life
Not only were head and
heart cultivated in religion, but also the aesthetic nature. This was largely done by means of
music, in which they excelled and which from the earliest times they have cultivated. Music, often very elaborate,
marked
all
their services
and added a refining influence to the emotions excited by religious worship. Bethlehem is still thoroughly Moravian in many of its features, and few towns in the United States ofifer more objects of interest to the traveller than are to be seen
here in the
way
of schools, old buildings, church,
and graveyard.
The Roman
Catholics had
little
influence in
Although toward the middle of last century their numbers were greatly exaggerated, yet they were actually very small, in 1757 being less than fourteen hundred in all. Of provincial Pennsylvania.
^6
Henry, Sketches of Moravian Life. For description Moravian dress (with picture) see Ritter, p. 145. *'
"No
ornaments were allowed
of
to disturb the
simple uniformity of the tokens of remembrance the marble slab was even limited in its length and breadth to 12 X 18 inches, and ;
these
all
1820 an
flat
on the grave-mound."
offer of
$7500
(Ritter.)
for the privilege of a vault
As late as was refused.
THE RELIGIOUS
172
German Catholics most
few
llie
Protestants, and to-day lic
LIFE.
it is
afterwards became
rare to find a Catho-
of
Pennsylvania-German ancestry. There is no more interesting or picturesque
sect in the countr)', or indeed in the world, than
As
the Mennonites. in the first
they played so large a part settlements of Pennsylvania, and as
many thousands
so
from them,
it
Americans are descended
of
worth while
is
To
space to their history .^s
we
origin
shall
through
them
church.
While
to
them to their the Waldenses and
days of the primitive connection between the
the
the
Mennonites and Waldenses proved
trace
have to go back to twelfth and thirteenth centuries,
the
of
to devote a little
is
not
absolutely
historically, yet there is a fair
argument
made out by is
the supporters cf this theory.20 It proved that in those places where the Men-
nonites, or Anabaptists,
first
arose there had been
long periods of time communities of Waldenses and related sects. The doctrines were the for
*8 It is
singular
Mennonites, — due effort
on
how
little
is
undoubtedly
known to
in this
the desire
country of the
and consistent
their part to be "
little and iinkno\vn, Loved and prized by God alone."
*'
In recent years the arguments have been strongly
up by teien.
Keller,
summed
Die Reformation und die alteren Reformpar-
THE RELIGIOUS
LIFE.
173
same: refusal to take oath, non-resistance, rejection of a paid ministry and infant baptism,
and of religious worthese things the Mennonites are
simplicity of dress
In
ship.
all
the logical
if
and
life
not the actual successors of the
Waldenses. historical connection
If this
would indeed be an inspiring thought,
it
proof,
were capable of
and one fraught with profound
belief in the
on-
working of Providence, that through the Dark and the Middle Ages, in the days of ignorance, corruption, sin, tyranny, and persecution, the true God, composed of those who worshipped Him in spirit and in truth, should be car-
Church
of
openly, then in secret for long centuries, then finally, at the outbreak of the Reried along,
first
formation, once
more boldly coming
forth
and
proclaiming that true religion and undefiled consists not in form or ceremony, not in magnificent cathedrals built by man, but in the heart and in the
life
Jesus.
of the followers of the
The Mennonites,
no theology, cared not
like the
Waldenses, had
for intricate discussions
of philosophy, but took the
His teachings as
meek and lowly
life
of Christ
and
only rule of conduct. They did not believe in the union of Church and their
putting pressure on any one in mat" " ters of religious belief; Believe and let believe State,
nor
in
THE RELIGIOUS
174
was
out
hear
to
but
him;
make them
the truth as
If
the
of
sword, prison nor or
any one could persuade Bible, they were willing
their motto.^°
them
LIFE.
neither
exile,
persecution,
fire,
could bend their
wills,
recant what they believed to be
it is
in Christ Jesus.
Not only were
they steadfast in the faith, but they rejoiced dying- the death of martyrs.^^
The Mennonites have
often
in
been confused
with the Anabaptists of the Munster rebellion, was almost identical with that of J
it
The
ofifice
till
Baker as
Mack
1729
;
till
in 1735.
that year
THE RELIGIOUS Settlements were
ferent
later in Virginia
and
es-
where the Dunkards are
still
Their doctrines are not very
dif-
pecially in Ohio,
numeroLis.^i
made
i8i
LIFE.
from those of the Mennonites;
like
them
they disbelieve in infant baptism, refuse to take oath or to bear arms. They differ from them in the
mode
of baptizing,
which they perform by
dipping (tunkcn), hence the
name
of
Tunker or
Dunkard. Perhaps the most interesting phenomenon of religious
life in
early Pennsylvania
was the
rise
and progress of the German Seventh-Day Baptists and the establishment of the monastic community at Ephrata, in Lancaster County. We have seen that Beissel with a few others left
the Conestoga church and
came
to Cocalico
Creek, where they settled down. Beissel was a man of unusual abilities, though of only limited education. He was born in 1690 at Eberbach in the Palatinate, where his father
was a baker, a
trade which he followed himself.
verted to pietism, however, he
came
Being conto Pennsyl-
vania in 1720, intending to spend his life in soliAfter leaving the tary communion with God.
Conestoga church he
lived for a time the
life
of
There are in all 108,694 Dunkards, divided into Conservatives, Old Order, Progressive, and German Seventh-Day Baptists, the latter of whom amount to only 194. *^
1
THE RELIGIOUS
82
LIFE.
a hermit on the Cocalico, surrounded by many who built themselves cottages and imitated his ascetic
tracted
life.
those
Among
whom
he thus
was a German Reformed minister
at-
of Tul-
pehocken, John Peter Miller, and Conrad Weiser, a Lutheran (who afterwards left), and later
some
of the leaders of the
Dunkards, Kalkloser,
Valentine Mack, and John Hildebrand. As the numbers increased it became necessary provide accommodations for them, and in 1735 a convent for sisters was erected called Kedar;
to
1738 a corresponding monastery for the breth^ren, and later many other buildings were built. in
In 1740 there were thirty-six single brethren and At one time the society, inthirty-five sisters. cluding the married members, amounted to nearly three hundred.
The
ruler or prior of this
—
com-
munity, Conrad Beissel, called by his followers Gottrecht Friedsam, seems to have been a
—
man loyal
of great personal
affection
of all
magnetism and drew the who met him. He was
looked on with mystic affection and even wor*^
A number
of these old buildings are still standing, and the curious visitor can see the rotjms in which the inmates the chapel in which they worshipped, and even the utensils which they used one hundred and sacramental very fifty years ago. Interesting descriptions of Eiihrata have been lived,
given by Seidensticker and Sachse.
THE RELIGIOUS ship,
some going so
second
LIFE.
far as to
183
regard him as a
Christ.-*-^
would be a pleasant task to give a detailed account of this strange community, its poetic It
midnight religious services, often lasting till daybreak, its weird music, its exaggerated mystic piety, its monastic garb and cloisits
customs,
ter
names;
**
but
would lead us too
all this
The community gradually
far.
died out, until at pres-
remnant remains, who still meet however, from time to time, and worship in the ent only a small
manner Still
of their ancestors.
another interesting sect
Schwenckfelders,
so
named
Schwenckfeld of Ossing
that
is
of
the
Casper von
after
who was
in Silesia,
a
This was the evident meaning of a verse in one of the hymns v^^hich Sauer published for Beissel *'
:
"
Sehet,
seliet,
sehet an,
Sehet, sehet an den
Mann
!
Der von Gott erhiihet ist, Der ist unser Herr und Christ,"
and which was the cause of a quarrel between the two. Penn. Mag., **
Some
vol.
(See
XU.)
of these
names were genuinely
poetical,
such as
Genoveva, Eusebia, Petronella, Blandina, Euphrosina, Zenobia. Whittier, who alone of American poets has felt the Sisters
poetry of Pennsylvania-German ards, beginning "
life,
has a
Hymn
;
Wake, sisters, wake, the day-star shines Above Ephrata's eastern pines The day is breaking cool and calm. Wake, sisters, wake to prayer and psalm." ;
of the
Dunk-
THE RELIGIOUS
184
LIf-E.
contemporary of Liilher, and who incurred the wrath of the latter, because of his pecuHar tenets, chiefly
concerning the Eucharist, the efficacy of
the divine
and
Word,
On
infant ]:)aptism.
followers
were
Anabaptists.
human
the
nature of Christ,
account of the
frequently
confused
Many clergymen and
latter his
with
the
nobles in
and elsewhere espoused his doctrines, especially in Licgnitz and Jauer, where almost the
Silesia
whole population were his adherents. Later they were persecuted first by the Lutherans, then
by the Jesuit missionaries sent to convert them in 1 In these troubles only one thing was left 719.
them
—
flight.
In 1726
more than one hundred
and seventy families escaped from Harpersdorf, Armenruh, and Hockenau, and making their way on foot to L^pper Lusatia, then a part of Saxony, found shelter near Greisenberg, Gorlitz, Hennersdorf, Berthelsdorf, and Hcrrnhut, where they
were hospitably received by Zinzendorf
and the Senate of Gorlitz.
They
lived in
Saxony eight years, but in 1734 were forced once more In 1732 two to take up the life of exiles. families
went
and the advice
to Pennsylvania,
and
their report
of certain benefactors in
Holland
induced forty families to follow. They arrived Sep-
tember 24, 1734, settled,
in
I'hiladclphia,
where some
while others went to Montgomery, Berks,
THE RELIGIOUS and Lehigh counties.
LIFE.
185
They now form two con-
gregations, with three hundred famihes and five churches or schoolhouses.'*'^
We
have already discussed the strong pietistic tendency in Pennsylvania, and how it manifested itself
not only
in the sects,
but
among
the regular
This deep, personal religion was It is especially cultivated by the Moravians. confessions.
well
known
John Wesley was first brought the defects of a mere formal or-
that
to a sense of
thodoxy and the need
of a heart-religion
through the Moravians. On his journey to Georgia, he came into close contact with David Nitschman,
and, after landing, with Spangenberg, and learnt from them the power of God as manifested in the
was through Peter Boehler in London that he finally became convinced of the possibility of a saving faith, instant conversion, and the
heart.
It
joy and peace of believing.'*^ This early connection with German emotional religion had far-
reaching consequences. that *5
Methodism
Among
in
It
is
a
singular fact
America was founded by Ger-
the well-known Scliwenckfelder
names
are
Wieg-
Hiibner, Heydrich, Anders. Hartranft, Schultze, Weiss, Meschter. *6 See Tyerman's Life of Wesley; also Wesley's Journal. In
ner,
Kriebel, Jiickel (Yeakel),
He writes: ''I 1738 he spent nearly two weeks in Herrnhut. shall this Chriswould gladly spend my life here. Oh, when " tianity cover the earth, as the waters cover the sea ?
86
1
THE RELIGIOUS
LIFE.
mans who had been converted by Wesley, who himself had received from the Moravians some of peculiar doctrines
his
—doctrines
which he
in
turn passed on to his fellow countrymen and which were destined to exert so extraordinary an influence on the religious
of the
life
New
W'e have seen that of the Palatines ran
London
in 1709,
some
World.
who
over-
three thousand were
sent to Ireland.
In 1756 Wesley visited the town
of Ballygarrane
and preached
of
whom
tain
own
to the
Germans,
says in his Journal:'*" "They reof the temper and manners of their
lie
much
country, having no resemblance to those
among whom they live. among this plain, artless, whole town came together praised
God
I
found much
serious people. in the
for the consolation."
ber were Barbara
Heck and
life
The
evening, and
Of
this
num-
Embury, who, on account of difficulties in the way of getting a living in Ireland, with many others came to New York. This was in 1760, and six years later Philip
Embury
held the
Philip
first
Methodist meeting
in this country, in the historic sail-loft in
John
Street.48
Methodism was introduced a
little later
into Pennsylvania
by Captain Webb, one of Embury's
*'
June
*8
Buckley, Mist, of Methodists in the United States, p. loi.
16, 1756.
THE RELIGIOUS
Boehm
Martin
of
187
who welcomed it was Lancaster County, who had
Among
assistants.'*^
LIEE.
those
been a Mennonite and
was one
later
fluence
in
Methodist
of
Asbury
Pennsylvania.
the
The Boehm
founders of the United Brethren.
homestead became a centre
of
in-
frequently
many powerful revivals were held, the German and Swiss farmers in the
stopped here,
numbers
of
neighborhood were converted, most famous of son of Marall being Father Henry Boehm,
—
tin,
—who
was
Asbury's
travelling-companion
many years. Methodism spread more slowly through the cities, and it was only after the be-
for
ginning of the present century that churches were founded in Lancaster, Reading, and other cities.
of the
To-day a large proportion
and ministers
German
in the State are of
members
Pennsylvania-
descent. ^°
not the only way in which Methodism has influenced the German inhabiThis, however,
tants of the
nied *'•'
that
is
commonwealth. Although it is dethe United Brethren Church was
See Penn. Mag.,
vol. xii.
Philadelphia as well as in ing was held in a sail-loft. '•'^
Among
It is
New York
the bishops are
a
little
curious that in
the
first
Methodist meet-
Bowman,
A
Hartzell.
and Keener
glance at tlie minutes of tlie Pennsylvania (Church South). conferences will show how large a percentage of the ministers ai-e
of Pennsylvania-German descent.
1
88
THE RHUGIOUS
founded
LIFE.
in imitation of
Methodism, yet the latter certainly exerted a vast deal of influence on the former. The two founders of this denomination were Martin Boehm and Philip William Otterbein, the former a Alennonite, the latter a pecu-
spiritually-minded
liarly
Reformed
minister.
Both Boehm and Otterbein experienced convergenuine Methodistic sense of that
sion, in the
word, and both, moved by the Spirit, began to preach a heart-religion. Great success attended their efiforts,
and thousands crowded
In 1768,^^ at one of these meet-
vival services. ings, they
their re-
met
for the first time,
each other's neck cried out,
'"
Wir
and
falling
on
sind Briider."
Some
years after a regular church organization was formed, and received from the above inci-
dent the
name
of
For many relation between
United Brethren.
years there was a close fraternal the newly founded church and the ]\Icthodists;
they adopted
many
features of the Discipline,
and prayer-meetings, the itinerant system, annual and general conferences, and other details. For many years fraternal delegates
had
class-
were sent to the respective conferences, and letters were written bearing friendly greetings. Otterbein was the intimate friend of Asbury, and it *'
The
date
is
Brethren, p. 78.
not sure.
See Berger, Hist, of the United
THE RELIGIOUS was on the advice
LIFE.
1S9
he went to
of the latter that
Bahimore, to the German Reformed Church, which later became the first church of the United Brethren. It
seemed
to
early years in gelical
work
English,
be the policy of Methodism in its America to discourage all evan-
carried
—apparently
on
were convinced that out.
in other
because all
languages than the
authorities
others would soon die
Hence they welcomed
made by work among
the efforts
the United Brethren in evangelistic
Germans, and consequently both were on and without denominational friendly terms the
jealousy.
Some
propositions were
Nothing came
indeed did desire a union and
made looking toward
of them, however,
and
this end.
after
some
years both denominations ceased sending delegates and friendly messages to the respective conferences.
The United Brethren Church was almost
exclusively
Germans and
is
of
composed
now
largely
originally
Pennsylvania
made up
of their
descendants.^^ Still is
more
closely connected with
Methodism
the Evangelical Association, founded by Jacob
Albright,
who had been brought up "
264,980 members in
all.
a Lutheran,
THE RELIGIOUS
I90
and who of
his
in
1796,
LIFE.
"yearning
salvation
for the
neglected Gemian-speaking brethren, started out as a humble layman to spiritually
preach to them the Gospel of Christ. His labors extended over large portions of Pennsylvania
and into parts
of
Maryland and Virginia and
sulted in the saving of
many
re-
souls." ^^
Albright had originally no thought of founding a new religious organization, but finally, in 1800, he yielded to the oft-repeated and urgent requests of those whom he had led to the Lord and began the
work
of
organization.
Their
Discipline,
largely taken from that of the Methodists,
published
in
1809.
how thorough was: — they
A
was
glance therein will show
the influence of the latter
Church
have quarterly, annual, and general
conferences; bishops, presiding elders, the itinerancy, class-meetings, and other Methodist characteristics.^^ *^
See Discipline of the United Evangelical Church.
**
Albright had
knowledge of English and preached in If Asbury had cared to form a German ministry within Methodism, this separate body of German Methodists probably would not have been formed. The original conference in 1807 called itself
German
the
little
to the people of Eastern Pennsylvania.
'Newly formed Methodist Conference.' Albright had and was such still in his heart, faitli, and
l)een a Methodist,
practice. p. 193.)
(See Berger, Hist, of the United Brethren in Christ, In 1899 there were 117,613 members in the Evan-
gelical Association.
THE RELIGIOUS
The
LIFE.
191
schism which seems ever present in reHgious bodies, manifested itself in the EvangeHcal Association. Some dozen or fifteen years ago,
spirit of
certain
questions
arose
the
concerning
General Conference and especially the episcopacy, and gradually the differences of opinion grew so widespread, that in 1891 two General
Conferences were held each claiming to be the legal representative of the Church. Hence arose the
body known
Church, the
was held
first
in 1894.
were made
as
United
Evangelical General Conference of which
In their Discipline no changes the
in
the
accepted
doctrines
the
of
Church, but several new articles were added and the language of all was changed.^^
Another body
of Christians widely spread in
Pennsylvania is the Church of God, sometimes called Winebrennerians from the founder, John
Winebrenner.
He
was a minister
of the
Re-
formed Church, and settled in Harrisburg 1820, where a revival soon broke out under
in
his
preaching. This being regarded as an innovation in the customs of the Reformed Church,
Winebrenner met so strong an opposition that the doors of his church were closed against him, and about the year 1825 he was forced to sepa'*
The United Evangelical Church now has 59,830 members.
THE RELIGIOUS
192 rate
LIFE.
His preaching was Germans, and in 1829
from his denomination.
heard by great numbers of
a regular organization was established. to their doctrine of
with the Baptists.
God, however,
is
Owing
immersion they are classed
The
polity of the
Church
of
Methodistic in some respects;
Annual Eldership corresponds to the Annual Conference, and the General Eldership to the
the
General Conference.^^
We
have only space here for a word or two on the influence of other English denominations on the Pennsylvania Germans.
In
many
cases the
Presbyterian, Episcopalian, Baptist, and Sweden-
borgian churches, especially in large cities, are swelled in numbers by the descendants of these people. ^^
The membership amounts
at present to 38,000.
CHAPTER IN PEACE
AND IN WAR.
Mr. Fiske has estimated
who
lish
settled in
have increased
VII.
that the 20,000 Eng--
New England
before 1640
to fifteen millions.
Considering
the large families of the old-fashioned Pennsylvania Germans it would seem probable that the
100,000 or
more who came over before 1775 have
multiplied at least as rapidly as their Puritan It would be a moderate statement, neighbors. then, to say that to-day there are
between four
people in the United States who in some line or other can trace their ancestry to
and
five million
German and Swiss settlers Of these not far from two
the early
of Pennsyl-
vania.
million
still
inhabit the State founded by their ancestors. This
mass
of people
must have had more or
less in-
fluence on the development of the United States,
and they themselves must have been largely moulded by their new surroundings. As Frey" In dem unaufhorlichen Einwirken tag says, des Einzelnen auf das
Volk und des Volkes auf 193
IN
194
IN IVA R.
PEACE AND
den Einzelnen
liiuft
das Leben ciner Nation."
*
In the present chapter we shall endeavor to
show some
of the
fluence manifests
the
new
tics
and
in
ways
itself;
which
how
this
mutual
the people have
in-
met
conditions in which they were placed; what has been their attitude to the State in poli-
various wars through which the
in the
country has passed since they came; in short, to tell,
in brief outline, the share that the
have had
Germans
in the
development of Pennsylvania particular and the United States in general.
in
we are struck by the fact Pennsylvania Germans have not stamped
In regard to politics that the
themselves so strongly on the country as their numbers would warrant. Great statesmen and
men
of national reputation are not
not so
much
—
so proportionately, for instance,
as in the case of
In
numerous
Huguenots and
Pennsylvania down
to
the
Scotch-Irish.
middle of the
eighteenth century the public offices were almost entirely in the hands of English-speaking people, In'the city of Lancaster the office of burgess had
always been held by an Englishman
till
1750,
Cf. also, "von solchem StandFreytag, vol. iv. p. i. das Lebcn cincr Nation in einer unauflx'irverlauft punkte ^
Wechselwirkung des Ganzen auf den Einzelnen und des Manues auf das Ganze. Jedcs Menschenleben, auch das Kleine, giebt einen Thcil seines Inhalts ab an die Nation."
lichen
{^lOiJ.,
vol
1,
p. 24.)
PEACE AND IN IVAR.
IN
when Dr. Adam
S.
Kuhn was
that time, however, the
ipS
From
elected.^
German element
is
more
and more represented, and since the Revolution their proportion of local officers in the towns and Berks, Lancaster, and the other counties
cities of
Up
has been very large.^
however, the
was
to the
Revolution,
Germans Nor is this
activity of the
political
largely confined to local affairs.
wondered
to be
Hitherto they had formed a
at.
compact body of their own, pre-eminently a rural population, whose chief occupation was to found
homes
for themselves
World.
Then,
and children
too, they
where there was
little
in the
had come from
chance for
New
a land
political
ac-
where the government was despotic, and where the country-folk had little or no voice in tivity,
the affairs of state.
This
is
true not only of the
The Lutheran
pastor in Lancaster, Rev. Joh. Fr. Handschuh, gives expression to his joy over this event in his diary ^
;
"Den
20. Sept.
kamen
einige Kirchenrathe
und
erzalilten
mir
mit Bewegung und Freude ihres Herzens, wie unsern Kirchenrath Dr. Adam Kuhn hiitte man zum Oberbiirgermeister At the erv/ahlet." (Hall. Nach., I. p. 542.) .
.
.
.
.
.
also a Lutheran, was elected while of four other Lutherans elected one Unterbiirgermeister,
same time Jacob Schlauch,
was High Constable, and three others were assessors. ' For instance, in Reading all the chief burgesses (ten in number) and twelve of the seventeen mayors have been Ger-
man
(1883); a similar proportion prevails for justices of peace, \i\ the aldermen, etc. borough of Kutztown all the burgesses
except one have been German.
1
IN PE/ICB
9^
^ND
IN H^AR.
Palatinate and W'iirtemberg-, but also of Switzerland, for even in that land of freedom, the proto-
type of our
own
whatever
political rights
the
land,
peasantry had no
until nearly
one hundred
years after the emigration to Pennsylvania began.^ It must also be remembered that a considerable
number
Dunkards, Mennonites, and Moravians, refused on religious
grounds to hold
of the people,
political ofifice.^
Can we wonder then
that
Pennsylvania were a long time active in
and enthusiastic exercise
in
Germans coming
We
of
to an
of their privileges
the matter of political intrigues and
hokling? all
the
ofifice-
do not mean to say that they were
indifferent to the political questions of the
day, or that they had
no
interest in public afifairs,
but only that in the eighteenth century, at least, * "Die Bewohner der Landschaften waren bis Ende des achtzehnten Jahrhunderts thatsachlich von der Staatsleitung ausgeschlossen." (Dandliker, n. p. 632.) Freytag, speaking of the Thirty Years' Wan says: "Noch hundert Jahre Sf)llten die
Nachkommen
der Uberlebenden die mannlichste Empfin-
dung entbehren, politische Begeisterung." (Vol. lu. p. * Germantown was incorporated as a borough town in but about 1704 lost accept the various
its
charter because no one
was
13.)
1689,
willincj to
offices. The records of this short-lived read like an extract from "Diedrich Knickermunicipality bocker." In 1795 the Moravian Bishop Ettwein deplored the
dereliction of
"some
of the bretliren in Lancaster
who had
joined a political body called the Democrats and even accepted office therein." (Ritter, p. 98.)
IN
PEACE AND IN
IVAR.
197
eagerness for office was not a marked
trait
of
their character.
Since the Revolution, however, they have been
more and more prominent poHtics. tional
in State
Dr. Egle says that
Convention of 1789-90
it
that insured the passage of the
Not only was from
in
and county
tlie
was
new
Constitu-
their votes
Constitution.
the local magistracy largely drav/n
their ranks/' but in the larger field of State
politics they
have furnished a number of
The names
guished men.
lenberg, Hiester, Graff,
of
etc.,
Kuhl, Antes,
distin-
Muh-
are familiar to the
student of early Pennsylvania history, while no fewer than nme of the governors of the common-
German descent." It was Governor George Wolf who finally introduced the wealth were of
public-school system, and Joseph Ritner's manly protest against the usurpations of the slave States called forth from Whittier a tribute to the
sturdiness of Pennsylvania-German character.^ ^
In 1777
all
but one of the officers of Lancaster were Ger-
mans. ^
Snyder, Hiester, Schulze, Wolf, Ritner, Shunk, Hartranft, In this connection may be mentioned GovBigler, Beaver.
New
—
York, Ramsey of Minnesota, Lebanon County German on the maternal side, Schley of Georgia, John Bigler of California, and Geo. L. Shoup of Idaho.
ernors
"
Bouck
of
—
Thank God for the token one lip is still free, One spirit untrammelled, unbending one knee," I
(Works,
etc.
vol. III. p. 47.)
IN
10^
PEACE AND
IN IVAR.
In national politics their prominence is not so apparent, since here they come in competition with
all
the rest of the country.
Yet we must
record the names of Frederick A. Muhlenberg, president of the convention which ratified the Constitution of the United States,^ i\Iichael Hillegass,
Treasurer of the
Continental
Con-
and such men as Simon Cameron, Colonel John W. Forney, John Wanamaker, and others. Of course it would be inappropriate here to give gress,
a catalogue of men in public life, or even a statisYet I have carefully gone tical view of the same.
over the first
files
issue
of the Congressional Record
down
to the present,
and
from
its
find in every
Congress from five to ten typical PennsylvaniaGerman names, representing the Keystone State ^^
other States, especially in th.c Washington; West, have often been represented by men who
at
trace their origin to the early
German
settlements
of Pennsylvania.
Mie was also first Speaker of the House of Representatives under Washington's administration. 1" Among these names arc Hiester, Muhlenberg, Krebs, Wolf, Bucher, Wagener, Fry, Uublcy, Sheffer. Kcim, Yost, Ritter, Erdman, Leib, Strohm, Everhart, Kuhns, Trout. Kurtz, Kunkel, Leidy, Longnecker, Lehman, Coftroth, Glassbrenner,
Frick,
Koontz, Hakleman, Albright, Neglej-, Shoemaker. ShellenIn Berks berger, Yocum, Klutz. Beltzhoover, Ermentrout.
County out of twenty United States congressmen from 17891885, fifteen were of German descent.
PEACE AND IN
!N
Such
a brief glance at the
is
Germans
sylvania
IVAR.
in
pubHc politics and
i99 Hfe of in
Penn-
times of
remains to give a similar brief view of their services in the various wars through which peace.
It
the country has passed during the last turies.
Here
it
may
two cen-
be stated without fear of
contradiction that they have shown themselves as ready as any of their fellow countrymen to sacrifice life
When
and fortune the
for their country's good.
Germans began
to
come
vania the troubles with the Indians in
to Pennsyl-
land and
New York
were over.
New Eng-
In the former
colony the terrible prowess of the Puritan warriors had crushed the Pequots and Narragansetts
;
Dutch and English had permanently attached the Five Na-
in
New York
the wise conduct of the
England, in spite of all the intrigues of the French to win them over. The attitude of Pennsylvania toward the Intions to the interests of
dians from the
first
had been one of conciliation
and kindness; the example set by Penn, of dealin ing with them with strict honesty, had been
The relageneral followed by his successors. tions between the Germans and the Indians had always been friendly, and the former had shown a deep Interest in the spiritual welfare of the latAs early as 1694 Kelpius declared his deter. sire
to preach
the Gospel to them, while the
IN PBACF. /IND IN IVA R.
200
Indian missions of the Moravians form one of the noblest chapters of State history.
For man}' years Pennsylvania was entirely free from the dread and terror that had been the inseparable companion of the early settlers of
New
England.
that part of the
The Delawares, who occupied country before the coming of
Penn, gradually and peaceably receded before the onward march of white settlers, till about the middle of the century they had retired be-
yond
Mountains and
the Blue
left
all
practically
the territory to the east and south to the whites.
Soon
after,
an end.
however,
this state of affairs
came
—
and discontent, " largely on account of the famous Walking the of the French, and esPurchase," intrigues to
Dissatisfaction
—
the
pecially
I755>
disastrous
loose
let
Pennsylvania
upon the
all
defeat
of
Braddock
frontier settlements of
the horrors of Indian warfare.
the greatest sufferers were the
Among
in
German
Berks and Northampton Hundreds were slain and scalped,
especially in
settlers,
counties.
houses, barns, and crops went up in flames, chil-
dren and letters
women were
of
others give
Conrad
carried into captivity.
The
Muhlenberg,
and
^^'"eiser,
many harrowing
details
of scenes
which were then of almost daily occurrence.^ ^*
Some
of these descriptions are very dramatic,
^
— sucli
as
PEACE AND IN IVA R.
IN
The what
attitude of the
Germans was
201
at first
some-
owing chiefly to the non-combatant doctrines of Mennonites and Moravians, and to the fact that in poHtics they in general followed the lead of the Quakers. Yet when the danger became more acute many ofrered their lives indifferent,
commonwealth.
in the service of the
says:
"Much
unanimity prevailed
Franklin
in all ranks;
eight hundred persons signed at the outset.
Dutch were
as hearty
and one
lish,
Dutch."
The
m this
measure as the Engcompany was formed of
entire
12
man with his two daughters, who had loaded their and were wagon prepared to escape the next day, and the prethe ceding night girls, being '-angst und bange urns Herz, sie sagten zum Vater es ware ihnen so traurig zu Muthe, als ob sie bald sterben sollten, und verlangten das Lied zu singen: Wer weiss, wie nahe mir mein Ende,' etc., sungen es audi that of the
'
vom Anfange bis ans Ende, thaten ihr Abendund The next day the Indians gebet, legten sich zur Ruhe." came and both the girls were killed. (See Muhlenberg, in mit einandor
Hall. Nach., vol. n. p. 465.) 12
Watson,
(Penn. Mag.,
273.
p.
Cf. p. 11
vol. in.
also ff.)
:
letter
of
Daniel Dulaney
'-The Germans complained
had been taken to avert the calamity, demanded arms, and signed an application for a militia law." It was not strange that they should be willing thus to fight to save their homes. Many had been soldiers in Germany and Switzerland. In the forces mustered in Albany in that no measures
.
.
be sent
.
.
.
.
to Canada, one thousand were Palatines. (GorOut of a whole population of 356 Palatines in don, p. 163.) Queensbury, N. Y., 40 men joined the expedition against
17H
to
202
Ihl
As
PEACE AND
IN IVA R.
numbers engaged
to actual
in hostilities
it
hard to give complete figures. In the Pennsylvania Archives we find a list of provincial officers in 1754; out of 33, 8 are German. In 1756, is
in
Conrad Weiser's
battalion, 22 out of 38 are
German.
The
we have
other reasons for believing that they
rolls of privates are
were practically
all
of the
same
not given, but
nationality.
Thus
chaplain was appointed; Gordon says (p. 342) that Weiser's battalion consisted of Germans, and in the list of Captain Nicholas Wetter-
a
German
regiment every name
holt's
the other
two battalions
Even in many Germans were is
German.
enlisted.
So much for actual warfare. The services of the Germans in other respects are just as imMost distinguished of all was Conrad portant. Weiser, who for many years was the official Indian interpreter and agent of Pennsylvania. Before the war he did all he could to pacify the Indians;
he was frequently sent by the govern-
and successfully carried out many dangerous missions. When war broke t)ut he raised a battalion and was everywhere active. His name occurs in these events more frequently
ment
to them,
Canada; ami lation of 250.
pp. 571, 2.)
in Amesliury 52 volunteered out of a total popu(See O'Callaghan, Doc. Ilist. ofN. V., vol. ni.
IN
PEACE AND
IN JVAR..
203
than that of ahiiost any other at this time,
—he was
constantly making reports, indorsing petitions, explaining the condition of the inhabitants, giving
orders and suggestions.
It
was he more than
man who
kept the Five Nations faithful to the English at that time. The value of that service can hardly be overestimated.^^ The spirit
any other
of this heroic
man may
words written by him " 4,
1757:
my
family
be seen in the following
to Richard Peters,
I
think meselfe unhappy; to
I
can't do.
I
must
stay
if
October fly
with
they
all
In the very forefront of the French and Indian War were the Moravians. No group of people suffered more, did
more
service, or
showed more
heroism than these messengers of the gospel of peace.
came
At the
first
mutterings of war they be-
objects of suspicion to their fellow country-
men.
Their intimate relations with the Indians, their settlements at Gnadenhiitten and elsewhere, their frequent journeys
through the wilderness,
often extending as far as
New
York,
—
all
this
tended to raise suspicions. peculiar customs, their
Then, too, their early communistic life,
1^
Weiser says liimself that the council of the Six Nations always looked on him as a friend and as one of their own nation, 1*
(See Penn. Arch., ist Series, Penn. Arch., ist Sen, vol. in.
vol.
I.
p. 283.
p. 672.)
2 04
IN
PEACE AND IN
IVA R.
elaborate ritual, and peculiar dress seemed es-
smack
how tics,
the
to
pecially
Scotch-Irish
Romanism.
of
Presbyterians to \\q have already seen
the fear of the Catholics, together with polihad led to the establishment of English
schools for the Germans.
suspicion of the
only another symptom of the same Even the French themselves seemed to be-
Moravians fear.
The
is
Moravians would go over
lieve that the
to their
whenever they should approach. This suspicion was unfounded, and the whole country' awoke from their error when, on November 24,
side
1756, the massacre of Gnadenhiitten occurred, in
which not only the Indian converts, but Martin Nitschman, his wife, and several other Moravians perished.
Although non-combatants, the Moravians were reasonable; they fortified Bethlehem, brought together a large quantity of provisions, and even armed themselves in case of last extremity;
in
many ways
they
assistance to the cause. ^^
manifest
in
wnv^X
Vv'ere
of invaluable
Their heroism was
and deed.
"The
country,"
In 1755 Timfjthy Ilorsfield writes: "At moderate computation the Brethren liave lost ^1500. and tlie expense they are daily at in victualling the people, witli their horses, who '^
pass and repass through Bethlehem, and supply them with
powder and
ball."
(renn. Arch., 1st Series, vol. n. p. 523.)
IN
PEACE AND
IN IVAR.
205 "
is full of wrote Spangenberg to Zinzendorf, In our churches there is fear and tribulation.
We
light.
live in
the Saviour."
The
peace and
feel
the presence of
8th of September, 1755, which
witnessed the defeat of Count Dieskau, was distinguished at Bethlehem "by an enthusiastic missionary conference, composed of four bishops, sixteen missionaries, and eighteen female assistants,
who covenanted anew
to be faithful to the
Lord, and to press forward into the Indian country as long as it was possible, in spite of wars and
rumors
The
of wars." ^^
services in general of the
Moravians
to
the country were great.
Missionaries like Spangenberg and Post were of the utmost value in keeping the Indians quiet for many years, and
many important embassies were
intrusted
to
their care.^" ^®
"
De
Schweinitz, Life of Zeisberger, p. 222. "During the late bloody war, all commerce between the
white people and Indians being suspended, he [Post] was intrusted first by this government, and then by Brig. -Gen. Forbes, with negotiations to secure the Indian nations ; and although such commission might seem out of the way of a
minister of the Gospel, yet he yielded thereto on its being argued that the bringing of peace with the Indians would open the
way
for future harvests," etc.
vol. III. p. 579.)
(Penn. Arch., 1st Series, set on the head
Although a large price was
was fearless. "I am not afraid," he wrote, '-of the Indians nor the devil himself; I fear my great Creator of Post, he
God."
{/dici., p.
542.)
2o6
PEACE AND
IN
However in the
IN IVAR.
Germans may have been French and Indian War, there can be no active the
doubt about their enthusiasm and patriotism during the Revolution. Those who have traced
banks
their history to the
mountains of Switzerland
Rhine and the
of the will
not be surprised
during these trying times, A love for independence and a hatred of tyranny at their patriotism
has ever been a distinguishing
and Swiss.i^
Palatine
trait of
faithful to the
Although
English crown before the war, they had no reason to be particularly attached to it. As far back as 1748 the Swedish traveller Professor
distinctly
they had no particular feeling for
that
states
Kalm
England, and
tells,
words that seem
in
to
be
prophetic in the light of subsequent events, how one of them declared that the colonies would be within thirty or
in condition
a state for *8
fifty
independent of England.^
itself
make
years to '^
When
" Die Freiheit
ment
in
dem
ist die Luft in dcr Ihr geboren, das EleIhr erwachsen, der Lebensgeist der den Ilelve-
tischen Kiirper uiiterhalt."
(Dandliker, vol.
I.
p. i8.)
same "Drang nach personlicher Unabhangiglceit teristic
andem Knecht
soil is
mannic blood. " Montcalm letter to
is
The
charac-
;
the motto of every native in
said to have
a "cousin in France."
XV. p. 128.)
is
Riehl says that the words. •' Eines Niemand sein, der fur sich selbst kann
of the Palatinate
bleiben allein,"
"
made
whom
is
Ale.
a similar prophecy in a (See Eng. Hist. Review, vol.
IN
PEACE AND IN
IVAR.
207
the Strain on the relations between the colonies
and the mother country came, none were more ardent in expressing their sympathies than the Germans. On February 25, 1775, Pastor Hel-
muth, of the Lutheran church in Lancaster, writes that the whole land was preparing for war, nearly every
man was armed, and
was indescribable.
If
the enthusiasm
one hundred men were
he says, far more offered themselves and were angry if they were not taken. Even the
asked
for,
Quakers and Mennonites took part in the exercises, and in large numbers renounced their religious principles.-^ of this testimony for our pres-
The importance ent discussion
lies,
of course, in the fact that
Lan-
County was almost entirely inhabited by Germans. The same spirit manifested itself in Berks County, where practically the entire population was German. When news of the Tea Duty came to Reading there was great excitement, and caster
meetings were held condemning the English. After the battle of Lexington in
township resolved to raise and
drill
1775,
every
a company.21
A
Mennonite preacher, Henry Funck, took oath to the and did good military service in consequence of which vol. he was read out of the Church. (Penn. Arch., 2d Ser., ''°
State
;
ni. p. 463.)
"
Montgomery says
panies
were ready
that
for
by
July, 1775, at least forty
active
warfare.
com-
In a letter from a
2o8
At
IM PE/fCE
AND
IN IVAR.
the various conventions held in Philadelphia
from 1775 on, a large proportion of delegates from Berks, Lancaster, York, Northampton, and other counties were Germans.
We may
take as
example the convention of 1776, of which Franklin was president. Out of 96 delegates 22 were Germans 4 of the 8 sent by Lana
single
;
and 3
caster
of the 8 sent
by Berks were Ger-
mans.
Northampton sent 6.^2 Such was the spirit among tliem. With the exception of the Mennonites and Moravians, who were opposed to war on religious grounds, the feeling
patriotic
Even
was
unanimous.
practically
the sects rendered assistance;
nonites gladly furnished
money and
the
Men-
provisions,
while the Moravians were of service in
many
ways.23
member read
:
of Congress to Gen. Lee,
"The
militia of Pennsylvania
dated July 23, 1776, we seem to be actuated with
a spirit more than Roman,'' and again, "the Spirit of reigns triumphant
in
Pennsylvania.
5th Ser.. I. p. 532.) In Richard Penn's Examination before the
mons, Nov. to bear
10, 1775,
arms
lilierty
(Force's Amor. Arch.,
House of Com-
he said that there were 60,000 men fit and that he believed all would
in Pennsylvania,
willingly take part in the present contest,
{/bid., 4th
Sen,
VI. p. 126.)
" Among them were Muhlenberg, ley.
lion.
Hub-
Hartzell. Levan. Hiestand, William Ellery of Rhode Island writes in his
Kuhn, Arndt.
" The
Ilillegass, Slagle, etc.
PEACE AND
IN
These
facts
tend to show the
who were equahy
mans,
IN IVAR.
209
spirit of the
Ger-
earnest in putting their
We
have seen above patriotism in operation. how companies of mihtia were formed at the
news from Lexington. the
first
It is a significant fact that
force to arrive at
Cambridge
in
1775 was
company from York County, under Lieut. Henry Miller,"-* which had marched five hundred
a
miles
to
reach
destination.
its
Colonel Wil-
liam Thompson's battalion of rifiemen, so styled
Washington's general orders, was enlisted
in
the latter part of June, 1775
;
eight of these
in
com-
panies of expert riflemen were raised in Pennsylvania. Among the captains were Michael DouDiary
in 1777 that the Moravians,
"like the Quakers, are
but are unlike them in this principled against bearing arms taxes as the Govrespect, they are not against paying such ernment may order them to pay toward carrying on the war," etc. (Penn. Mag., vol. xi. p. 318 ff.) In a petition to Congress the Moravians themselves say: ;
('We hold no
anyway dangerous
principle
or
inconsistent
We
willingly help and assist to good government. bear public burdens and never had any distress made for witli
.
.
.
taxes," etc.
Reed
of Philadelphia in a letter to Zeisberger thanked him, in the name of tlie whole country, for his services among the Indians, and particularly for his Christian
President
humanity to
in turning
back so many war parties on
rapine and massacre.
(De
p. 481.) 2*
Judge Pennypacker,
their
way
Schweinitz, Life of Zeisberger,
in Penn.
Mag.,
vol. xxil.
2IO
AND
IN PE/iCE
IN lVy4R.
York County, George Nagel of Berks, and Abraham ]\Iiller of Northampton; the com-
del of
panies of Captains Ross and Smith of Lancaster were also largely made up of Germans. As the editors of the Pennsylvania Archives say,
"
The
patriotism of Pennsylvania was evinced in the haste
which
with
companies of Colonel Thompson's battalion were filled to overflowing, and the promptitude with which they took uj) tlieir
march
the
^^'
for Boston."
All three companies of
Baron von Ottendorf's
corps were raised in Pennsylvania;
man Regiment formed
in
Sullivan's
in
of the
Ger-
— 1776 which took part — against the Indians
campaign five companies were raised in the same State; among the captains were George and Bernard ^^ of
In
other regiments enlisted in Lancaster, Berks, York, and other
Hubley
counties the
Lancaster.
all
Germans formed
a
good proportion.
These companies attracted much attention in the country Thacher in his "Military Jourthrougli which they passed. nal of the Revolution," under date of August, 1775, ^ays " They are remarkably stout and hardy men many of them '^
:
;
exceeding
six feet in height.
They
or rifle-shirts and round hats. the accuracy of their tainty at
aim
;
are dressed in white frocks
These men are remarkable striking a
mark with
two hundred yards' distance."
(Penn.
for
great cer-
Arch., 2d
Ser., vol. X. p. 5.)
" Author
of one of the earliest histories
t>f
the Revolution.
PEACE AND
IN
Even
211
IN IVAR.
in the city of Philadelphia the oldest
Ger-
formed a company of armed veterans, whose commander was over one hundred
man
colonists
Unfortunately many of the rolls of Pennsylvania in the Revolution have been lost, old.^'^
years
and
impossible to give complete statistics. know, however, that the Quaker colony ocis
We
it
cupied a front rank
Any one who
v/ar.28
Archives
will
War
of
carefully goes over the ex-
the
in
Pennsylvania
share of soldiers to the
fair
Independence.
Naturally enough
German
ofificers
we
find a smaller proportion
than men, especially
in
the
from captain the companies formed of Germans were
higher ranks.
down
that pertains to the
convince himself that the Germans
contributed their
27
all
records as recorded
tant
of
in
in
]\Iost of the officers
Hist, of the United States, vol. n. p. 531.
Graham,
'• We In 1779 President Reed wrote to Washington have twelve We line. hold a respectable place in the military regiments equally filled with any other State and much superior
28
:
to
some
;
we have
a greater proportion raised for the
.
.
.
war than
have been by far the greatest sufferers on the any other frontiers, have had more killed, more country desolated," etc. (Penn. Arch., 1st Sen, vol. VII. p. 378.) Alexander Graydon .
.
.
(Memoirs of a Life Chiefly Passed
in
Pennsylvania, p. 128)
"Against the expected hostilities Pennsylvania had Had all the other provinces done made immense exertions. as much in proportion to their ability, and the men been enlisted for the war. we might have avoided the hairbreadth says:
.
escapes which ensued."
.
.
212
IN
PEACE AND same
of course of the
IN IVAR.
nalionalily,
rising afterwards in the ranks.-'^
many
This
is
of
them
true, for
instance, of thefour Hiester brothers, their cousin
]\Iajor-General Joseph
Hiester,
Colonels Lutz,
Kichlein, Hubley, Spyker, Nagle, Eckert, Gloningcr, Antes, Weitzel, Zantzinger, and l"hc
others.
the
only
most
two
distinguished
great
of
many
all,
furnished
generals
and by
Germans, were Gen. Nicholas Herkimer ^^ and Gen. Peter Muhlenberg, the friend of Washy\t tlie outbreak of the war the latter ington. the
was pastor of the German church at Blue Ridge, Va., and the story is well known how one Sunday he preached on the wrongs
of the colonies,
then putting off his gown, showing his uniform beneath, ordered the drums beat at the church
door for
recruits.^^
" According
Troceedings of the Penn. Ger. Soc, vol. V. p. i8, in Northampton County 26 c:ipt.iins and 26 lieutenout of 2357 volunteers 2000 were Gerants were German to the
;
mans.
The hero of Oriskany was a descendant of the New York Berks Palatines, a number of whom went to Tulpehocken. of De here made is mention no course Of County, in 1723. Pennot Kalb and Steuben, who do not come under the rubric so
sylvania Germans. ^' This stf)ry has been rendered into verse by arian
Read
:
" Then from his patriot tongue of flame The startling words of freedom came,"
etc.
Thomas Buch-
IN
Not only
PEACE AND
IN IVA R.
213
in actual fighting did the
Germans
help the cause, but likewise in furnishing the
necessary material of war, provisions, horses, wagons, etc. Lancaster, Berks, and other coun-
were
ties
time the most prosperous agri-
at that
cultural districts in the country.
passed through them
all
Travellers
who
speak of the comfortable
houses, the stately barns, and the rich fields of It
grain.
starving
had
was
would be
army
of
difficult to
conceive what the
Washington would have done
not been for these flourishing farms. It especially here that the non-combatant
it
Mennonites proved
their loyalty;
they never de-
nied requests for provisions. It is interesting to note how uniformly the committees appointed by
Congress
to look after these things
were com-
posed largely of Germans. Lancaster County seems to have done the most in this respect, then
York, Berks, Northampton, and finally the English counties of Chester and Bucks.-^^ \Ye find '-
We
give one extract out of many which could be given In the call for troops on August i,
from the Penn. Archives. 1780,
York furnished
500, Lancaster 1200, Berks 600, North-
ampton 500, Chester 800, Bucks 500, Philadelphia County 200, and City 300 of wagons Cumberland furnished 25, York 25, Lancaster 50, Berks 20, Northampton 15, Bucks 15, Philadelphia County 20, and Chester 45. (See Penn. Arch., 2d Ser., ;
vol. in. p. 371.
317, 605; vol
Cf. also Archives, ist Ser., vol. VI. p.
327;
vol. VII. p. 567.)
v.
pp. 301,
2
IN
14
PEACE AND
ample recognition
IN
WAR.
of these services in the records
In Morse's American Geography pubHshed at Elizabethtown, N. J., in 1789,23 we " It was from farms cultivated by these read of the time.
:
men
that the
American and French armies were
chiefly fed with
bread during the
late rebellion,
was from the produce of these farms that those millions of dollars were obtained which and
it
foundation of the
laid the
and which
ica,
army '^
New ^*
till
fed
Bank
of
North Amer-
and clothed the x^merican
the glorious Peace of Paris." ^^
Quoted by Barber, History of New England, New York, Jersey, and Pennsylvania, p. 551. Cf. also Letter of Prcs. Reed to Col. Brodhead in 1779 :
"The erous
gratitude of the officers of Pennsylvania for the gensupplies afforded by the State does themselves and
State great honor." (Penn. Arch., ist Sen, vol. vn. p. 570.) One of the well-known characters of Philadelphia during the
Revolution was Christopher Ludwig, Baker-General of the Continental army. At one of the provincial conventions to
which he was delegate. General
Mifflin
proposed
to
open
pri-
vate subscriptions for the purchase of firearms. There was much opposition to this, when Ludwig thus addressed the
chair: "Mr. President, I am but a poor gingerbread-baker, but you may put my name down for 200 pounds." When in
l;e
1777
was appointed by Congress Baker-General
of the
army, the proposition was that of bread for a pound of flour.
"I do
not wish to
enough.
I
grow
135 pounds of bread for every 100 put into my hands." (See Penn. Mag., vol.
will furnish
pounds of flour you XVI. pp. 343 ff.)
rich
he should furnish a pound "No, gentlemen," he said, by the war; I have money
IN
Such
PEACE AND
IN IVA R.
215
a
meagre outline of the part played by the Pennsylvania Germans in the Revolution. The same spirit manifests itself in all subsequent is
wars down to the
main discussion
last
As
great rebellion.
of this
book
is
the
confined to the
eighteenth century, we must content ourselves here with a few brief remarks. It is an interest-
ing fact that just as we have already said, the first company to reach Washington at Cambridge
was
from
York
County,
Pennsylvania,
so,
nearly one hundred years later, the first force to reach Lincoln at Washington in 1861 was a regi-
ment composed Allentown, entirely
of five
Pottsville,
composed
companies from Reading, and Lewiston, almost
of the descendants of the Ger-
man patriots of Revolutionary As to the numbers engaged it is
—
days. in the Civil
not necessary here to go into
facts
will
suffice.
details.
The population
of
War,
A
few
Berks
County in the sixties was about nine-tenths German; the rolls of the eight thousand soldiers furnished by this county to the Rebellion show by actual calculation about the same proportion, or,
more
German names; this leaves out of account English names, many of which are variations of a German A original. accurately, 80 per cent of
similar computation of the rolls given in Evans' History of Lancaster County show the
proportion
2i6
IN
to be
IN IVA R.
PEACE AND
somewhat
about 60 per cent; the ex-
less,
planation of which, of course,
lies in
the fact that
a larger proportion of English-speaking people
inhabit that county.
Although
I
have not ex-
tended this somewhat laborious method of ascertaining such facts to Lehigh, York, and other counties, a casual inspection of the rolls given in
the various county histories leads
would be found
a similar percentage
When we
me
to believe
there.^'^"
turn from the scenes of war and ask
what have the Pennsylvania Germans done for the business, artistic, scientific, and literary development of the country, we ^'
Following are some
captain in the Civil
German and
of
the
officers
War who were
.Swiss settlers
find ourselves con-
above the rank of
descendants of the
of Pennsylvania
and,
in
early-
a few
Marjland and Virginia Generals Beaver, Dechert, Gobin, Halderman, Hartranft, Heckman, Heintzelman, Keifer, Pennypacker, Raum, Wister, Zook, Custer, Rodenbough, cases, of
:
Small, Sweitzer, Zeilin
;
Colonels Frederick, Ilaiipt. Levering,
Shoup, Spangler, Barnitz,
Runkle, Schwenk Majors Appel, Rittenhouse Sur;
Kress. Wilhelm,
Diller, Reinoehl, Yoder, geons Egle, Kemper. Foltz, Oberly, Sternberg; Rear- Admirals Ammen, Schley Chaplain Ritner Chief Engineer Schock. For short biographies of the above see " Officers of the Army and Navy who served in the Civil War," ed. by Powell and ;
;
Sliijipen.
;
Mention ought perhaps
— the Frietchic,
to
bo
made
here of Barbara
—
who heroine of Whittier's legendary poem, was born at Lancaster, Pa., Dec. 3, 1766, and died at Frederick,
Md., Dec.
18, 1862.
lor the true
see White's National Cyclopedia
(if
facts
concerning her,
American Biography.
fji '3
PEACE AND
IN
IN IVAR.
217
more difficult task. In the poHtics and war we have more or less
fronted with a far case of
complete
and the
statistics as to the
difficulty
men engaged
therein,
chiefly that of selecting
is
such In
facts as will give a fair picture of the truth.
we can only note who have made a national
names
the present case
the
those
reputation in
the various departments of
life,
of
leaving out of
account the vast body of the middle
class,
makes up the national life. have seen that the Germans were
which
after all
We
farmers, and their
dustry have
Yet even certain
skill,
thoroughness, and in-
made them pre-eminent
in the eighteenth
number
of
chiefly iofj^ ^k>iuJcmJ{'
in this line.
century there was a
mechanics
among
them, and
these carried on their trade after reaching the
New World; country, before
—
for
1750,
most part in the there were few towns and villages living for the
—and
carrying on farming at the
Benjamin Rush says that the first object of the German mechanic was to become a freeholder, and that few Hved in rented houses.
same time
He
soon acquired the knowledge of mechanical arts which were more immediately necessary and useful to a new counalso says that they
try.^^ S6
This adaptability has shown who
the
a surprising fact that young were born in this land are very clever, docile, and
Cf. also Mittelberger
people
"It
itself in
:
is
2i8
PEACE AND IN
IN
IVAR.
development of those manufactures and inventions which have made Pennsylvania so famous.
One hundred and
fifty
years ago a glass-foundry
was established by the eccentric Baron
who
also
Stiegel,
manufactured the once almost univer-
used ten-plate stoves; 3" the first papermill in the United States was built in 1690 by
sally
William Rittenhouse, a Mennonite preacher; and we already have seen how early the Germantown weavers became famous.
many
At the present time and
of the vast iron-foundries
which are found
steel plants
Reading, Bedilchem, Allentown, and elsewhere have been established and arc to-day
of
in
owned and operated
largely by
men
Swiss-German descent.^^
The Germans
in the last
century and up to
comparatively recent times seem to have had ^^ little interest in trade; yet they have given to skilful; for
many
a one looks at a work of
few times and imitates
skill
or art only a
etc.
it
immediately," were jamb-stoves, walled into the jamb of the kitchen fireplace, with the back projecting into the adjoin^'
The
first
ing room.
stoves
They bore
the naive inscription
:
" Baron Stiegel ist der Mann, Der die Ofengiessen kann." '^
"
may be mentioned II. C. Frick, Hon. John Fritz of Bethlehem, Hon. C. C. Kauft'maa of Lan-
Among these
''iron kings
caster Co. '*
Proud says
:
"
The Germans seem more adapted for agri-
PEACE AND
IN
who
the world one
is
IN IVAR.
219
known
the most widely
merchant-prince in the country to-day. In the field of learning, the Pennsylvania Ger-
mans have produced
number of men of wideand the names of David Rita
spread reputation, tenhouse in astronomy, Joseph Leidy and Caspar Wistar in medicine, Muhlenberg in botany, Hal-
deman
and zoology, show that they have not been entirely unfruitful in the domain in philology
of scientific investigation.^^
jg
mention here the
inappropriate to
two
]^qj-
largest telescopes in the world
jj-
perhaps
fact that the
were given by
James Lick, of a prominent family of Lebanon County, and Charles Yerkes, whose ancestors were among the
first
German
settlers of
Mont-
gomery County.
we have not much to chronicle we note a number of Pennsyl-
In the fine arts in recent times
vania names tors,
may
;
among well-known
book-illustra-
but no one great name. So, too, in what be called national literature, in contradis-
—
tinction to that of a purely local nature, discussed
elsewhere, culture
in recent times the
names
of several
and the improvement of a wilderness, and the
trade," etc. *"
—
(Vol.
II.
Irish for
p. 274.)
The well-known naturalist and secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, the late Spencer F. Baird, who was born in Reading, Berks Co., was of English. Scotch, and German descent.
220
IN
of the
PEACE AND
younger American writers should
place in the present
discussion.-*^
however, Bayard Taylor claimed, being
German *'
IN IVA R.
About
in
two
find a
In poetry,
may
be
at least partly
lines
of
Pennsylvania-
blood. tlie
only writer
who
has touched the
field
for fic-
by life among the Pennsylvania farmers is John Luther Long, who, in the Century Magazine for March, 1898, published a short story entitled "Ein Nix-Nutz." The young
tion presented
Canadian
poet.
of Pennsylvania
Archibald
German
Lampman, who
ancestry.
recently died,
was
CHAPTER
VIII.
CONCLUSION.
The
Pennsylvania Germans and their descendants have in round numbers been in Amer-
two hundred years; they have shared in prosperity, have borne their part in peace and
ica for its
war, and have contributed in no shght degree to its
success.
They
American in them are com-
are thoroughly
thought, word, and deed. Most of
Anglo-Saxon element and are scattered far and
pletely assimilated to the
American stock, wide over the whole country. And yet in those communities where they are massed together they of the
still
form a more or
less distinct ethnical entity,
—
a wedge, so to speak, thrust into the very heart of the United States, having their their
own
peculiar
cases, like the
where
in
even their
Dunkards, not
the world,
own
religious
—
their
own
language,
forms, —
to be
own
in
found
some else-
customs, and
type of figure and countenance.^
In reading the present chapter we must bear in mind that the descendants of the early Swiss and German settlers of ^
221
CONCLUSION.
222
Of course
the
German
not so striking
traits are
to-day as they were one hundred years ago; most of the superstitions and unfortunately
some
of the earnest piety of our grandfathers
have passed away, while various
traits of
in their place
have come
American character, some good,
Yet even to-day the type is a distinct one and strikes at once every observant traveller
some bad.
who
visits the State.
When we come people,
we
to analyze the origin of these
find that they are
great ethnical stems.
composed
As we have
of
two
already seen,
they came almost entirely from South Germany, especially
from
and Switzerland.
the
Palatinate,
The two
Wiirtemberg,
latter countries are
Alcmannic, while the Palatinate is of Prankish basis with a more or less strong ad-
purely
mixture of Alemannic, especially in those parts nearest the French frontiers. The Pennsylvania
Germans, then, are composed
of almost equal
parts of both these great stems.
Many
of the
—
Pennsylvania form two distinct groups, those who have remained on the ancestral farms, and those who have gone to the the larger cities and to the States to the South and West ;
two groups are probably equal in numbers. The latter group has been far more completely assimilated by tlieir English neighbors, they have intermarried, Anglicized their names, and there are probably thousands who are unaware of their Pennsylvania-German descent.
CONCLUSION.
223
—
given by Riehl and Dandliker, the Prankish spirit of independence, the Schwabentrotz of the Alemanni, the indomitable industry traits
and
their joy in labor, their extraordi-
skill in
agriculture, their frugality, honesty,
of both
nary
and serious view of the
responsibilities of
life,
these are not only cited in the works of
all
—
men
Rush, Muhlenberg, and others, but are observable even to this day in the rural districts of like
Pennsylvania.
compare the character, traits, habits, customs, and ideals of the early settlers of Pennsylvania as they were in the FatherIt
is
interesting
to
land with those of their descendants in the years that have elapsed since their coming.
Indeed
in
no other way can we get a true conception of the real genius of a people. No one would think of studying the character of New-Englanders without some knowledge of their Puritan ancestors as they
were
in
Such a comparative
England.
study as this shows us the Pennsylvania Germans not as an isolated phenomenon in the midst of English settlements, but the bearers to the
New World with their
of
own
another
civilization,
character and customs brought
from the Fatherland.
We
common
traits
some more
of the
striking
marked
is
the
have given above of character;
resemblance
in
still
customs.
2
CONCLUSION.
24
such as methods of farming, style of houses, love flowers and music, affection and
for
horses and
cattle, religious toleration,
haps more than anything
else,
care
for
and, per-
the identity of
superstitious customs and beUefs.
One
—
has persisted down to the present the strong spirit of conservatism. This has from trait
the very beginning been blamed by their
lish-speaking neighbors, half
called
ago
who
them stubborn and headstrong;
and even to-day the State historian attention to the fact that the to
Engand a
a century
is
apt to call
Germans
are slow
move along
Saxon has
is
its
those lines in which the Anglorushing forward. This conservatism
good and
would be better
its
sides.
No
doubt
it
some
for
have more of the
bad
"
village communities to " hustle of the West, or of
the education and refinement of certain aristocratic
communities
other hand,
it
great weakness
ohne Rast
of
New
England.
On
the
certain that lack of repose is a " in our national life; Ohne Hast,
is
"
an excellent motto, but Americans in general have cut theGoethean proverb into two parts, and thrown away the first. Students of ethis
and Freytag have constantly emphasized the enormous value to a nation of a nology
like Riehl
strong body of farmers.^ '
Thus
the former says (Biirgerliche Gesellschaft,
p. 41):
CONCLUSION. It is
not meant here that
it
225 better for any
is
it particular individual to be a farmer, although would seem that an independent life of comfort,
even though one of toil, such as the Pennsylvania farmer enjoys, would be preferable to the half-slavery of shop, factory, or counting-house which, for the majority of city people, is the only
prospect in life. It certainly is, however, good for a country to have a substantial, prosperous
substratum of farmers, for to-day, even as yester-
day and forever, the basis of national prosperity I for is and must remain in the tilling of the soil.
one do not wish to see the day when the sons of the old Pennsylvania-German stock shall, like
New
England, be fired with ambition to migrate en masse to the city and to desert the homesteads of their ancestors, those of the Puritans of
and especially traordinary
to
skill
throw away as useless the exin farming which has come
Macht in der deutschen Nation, ein fester, trotz allem Wechsel beharrender Der Bauer ist die Kern und das sind unsere Bauern. erfrischt Volksleben Unser Nation. deutschen der Zukunft die Bauern." und verjlingt sich fort und fort durch Freytag ''Es ruht eine unliberwindliche konservative
—
(vol.
letzte
.
.
.
Abth., p. 170) says: '-Audi deshalb liegt die Grundlage fur das Gedeihen der Volker in der einfachen
II.,
2.
reichlicher Thatigkeit des Landmannes,"etc. and again: "Je und ungehinderter neue Kraft aus den untem Schichten in die ;
und eneranspruchsvolleren Kreise aufsteigt, desto kriiftiger sein des Volkes kcinnen." gischer wird das politische Leben
2
26
CONCLUSION.
down
to
them
as the inheritance of thirty genera-
tions of ancestors,
who have made
Eastern Penn-
—and before that the banks of the Upper Rhine —a veritable garden.
sylvania
Not them.
no changes should be welcomed by
that
The farmer should share
in
whatever
is
improvements of modern life. Books and pictures and music and flowers charof service in the
acterize the
day;
may
homes
of
many
they increase
of our farmers to-
more and more!
Those
who have had an
opportunity of observing the
conditions of
in
life
the rural districts for the
twenty-five years, cannot help noticing great In some parts of Lancaster County changes.
last
German even
is
in the
being rapidly replaced by English, home life, and in the most remote
communities.
This
not so true of Lehigh, Berks, and Northampton counties, but it seems is
hardly to be doubted that the time tant
when
is
not far dis-
the Pennsylvania-German dialect will
be a thing of the past. Railroads, telegraphs, and trolley-cars are constantly levelling the differences between town
and country, and making the inhabitants of Eastern Pennsylvania a more and more homo-
genous mass. the
constant
and
their
A
potent factor of this process
intermarrying
between
English-speaking neighbors.
is
Germans In no
CONCLUSION. State in the
minghng
Union
is
there a
of nationahties
227
more thorough
than here.
There
is
hardly one of the old families of Philadelphia, for instance, in which does not run English, Welsh, Scotch-Irish, Dutch, French, and German blood.
This fact constantly meets the student of PennAway back in the eighsylvania genealogy.
Muhlenberg frequently speaks of the mixed marriages which he was called on teenth century
to perform,
and from that time down
ent the process has
too
much
gone on,
to the pres-
until to-day
it is
not
to say that nearly every old family with
an English or Scotch-Irish name has some strain of German blood in it, and vice versa?
There are some who are impatient '
This
Wistar,
at the
sug-
true of the Morris, Shoemaker, Levering, Keen, Keim, Ross, Evans, and many other v/ell-known is
Pennsylvania families. As being of more than mere genealogThe ical interest, a few individual examples are here given.
mother of Senator Simon Cameron was a Pfautz, his wife was a Brua; Judge Jeremiah Black, who has been called "in some
man
Pennsylvania has produced since the Revolution," was partly of German descent; we have already mentioned in other connections Spencer F. Baird, Bayard Taylor, and Archibald Lampman. The late Governor Russell respects the ablest
of Massachusetts
ham Witmer, who
is
said to have been a descendant of Abra-
built in 1799 the fine old stone bridge over
the Conestoga near Lancaster (see Papers of Lane. Co. Hist. Soc, Oct. 1898). Finally, the wife of Lord Curzon, viceroy of India,
belongs to
German
stock.
the
Maryland branch
of
Pennsylvania-
22 8
CONCLUSION.
gestion that an infusion of English blood can add anything to the old-fashioned Pennsylvania-
German
stock; and yet, perhaps, there
son for
this feeling.
is
rea-
its
own
strength
and
Each nation has
own
no
characteristic
features,
weakness.
seems to be universally acknowl-
It
its
edged that the German character
is
marked by
honesty, industry, deep religious spirit, and many other minor yet noble traits. It is this deep in-
wardness, as Dr. Schaflf
German that has
calls
it,
made
that has
the
race the founders of Protestantism, and
produced
midst deep thinkers The Anglo-Saxons have
in their
and great scholars.
other attributes in greater measure, perhaps,
—
energy, individual initiative, power of self-government, attributes which have made them the
—
Surely the Penn-
empire-builders of the world. sylvania
Germans should be glad
peculiarly English traits engrafted
stock;
to see these
on
their
own
and the Anglo-Saxon American may on
his side be glad to see the elements of steadiness,
and even conservatism mingle with the ever-increasing forward movement of American
probity,
years ago a wise German observer of American life ^ saw the advantage civilization.
Some
to be derived
from
*
Francis Lieber,
fifty
He
this union.
The Stranger
in
says:
America,
"Could
p. 199.
CONCLUSION. but a
little
229
of this quickness in practical percep-
and boldness
embarking in the most daring enterprises be engrafted on German steadiness and thoroughness, it would produce fine
tion
fruit indeed."
in
And we
cannot close
this brief
survey of an interesting subject more appropriately than Vv'ith the words of Dr. Philip Schafif,
who, speaking of the great mission of Germans in
America, declares that they should
ically
"
energet-
appropriate the Anglo-Saxon American
nature and penetrate
it
temper and
its
excellencies,
and as
far as possible
with the wealth of their life."
own German
APPENDIX.
PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN FAMILY NAMES.
A
KNOWLEDGE
great value for historian.
names is often of the genealogist and even for the
This
of family
especially true
when, owing to change in environment, such names have undergone great variations of form. For this reais
son a brief outline of the subject is given here, so far as it concerns the group of people discussed in this book. Pennsylvania-German family names, like
all
other
German names, may
be divided into three distinct classes:
first,
those
derived from personal names; second, those derived from occupation; and third, those derived
from the place where the individual lived (includIn this ing house-signs) or whence he came. last
class
may
likewise
be properly included
nicknames, or those due to personal peculiarities, physical or mental.
The names forming
the
first class
are by far
the oldest, often running back to the early cen231
APPENDIX.
232
case
the
of
turies
arc
Christian
in
every
and dignified meaning,
noble
of
and
era,
which the old German love
for war,
in
belief
the northern mythology, and ideals of
life,
in
are
These personal names exist toPennsylvania, some of them but little
clearly seen.^ in
day
such are Albrecht = of distinguished
changed;
race (P. G. Albright);
Arnwald = one who
Bernhard — strong as a bear; Con-
as the eagle;
rad = bold in council;
Dietrich
Eberhart = strong
ple;
= strong
a
as
= ruler
of
peo-
Eckert =
boar;
Garman = spearman;
strong sword;
generous
rules
Gebhard =
Gerhard Kephart); Gottschalk = servant of God;
giver
G.
(P.
spear;
Hartman = strong
man;
Heidrich = of
noble
rank; Hildebrandt=battle-sword; Hubert=bright of intellect;
Thrudr
(P.
Irmintraut= friend of the Walkyrie G.
Ermentrout);
Reinhard = strong
ple;
ruler
of
council;
Luhr = war-peo-
in counsel;
Reinhold =
Trautman = follower
of
the
Walkyrie Thrudr. In most cases, however, these double-stem names were shortened by dropping the second stem, whence such
names
as
Kuhn
(from
Kun-
For the meaning of German names see Heintze, Die Deutschen Familicnnamen; Tobler-Meyer, Deutsche Familicnnamen (Swiss); Steiib, Oberdeutsche Familiennamen. In the '
above
list
of
names
P. G.
=
Pennsylvania German.
APPENDIX.
233
Hein (from Heinrich), Ott (from Ottmann),
rat),
Traut (from Trautmann), Bar, Barr (from BerTo these stems diminutive sufifixes were liard). thus from
added; (from
Burkhard),
(from
Agilbrecht),
we have
/
the forms Biirki
Ebi (from Ebarhard),
Hagi
(from
EgH
Haginbert),
Lichti (from Ludger: P. G. Light), StaheH (from Stahal),
Gisalhart
and
Wehi :
P.
Wahher), Geissle (from G. Yeissley) from izo we get Boss (from
;
Bodomar), Dietz (from Dietrich), Fritz and Fritschi (from Friedrich: cf. Barbara Blitz (from
Frietchie), Heintz (from Heinrich),
Kuntz (from
Kunrat: P. G. Koons and Kuhns), Landis, Lentz, and Lantz (from Landfrid), Liitz (from Ludwig), Seitz (fromSiegfrid: P. G. Sides), Tietz (from Diet-
(fromWalther) from iko we get Frick (from Friedrich), lUig and the genitive Hilleges rich), Waltz
;
(from Hildebrand), Kiindig (from Gundobert), Leidig (from Luithart)
;
from
ilo
we
get Ebli and
Eberh (from Ebarhard), Bechtel (from BerchBickel (from Botger), Diehl (from Dietrich), Hirzel (from Hinizleip: P. G. Hartzell), told),
Hubeli (from Hugiibert), Markel and MarkH
Meih
(from Maganhard), NageH (from Nagalrich), Rubli (from Hrodebert = Robert), Schnabeli (from root Sneo = (from
Markwald),
snow: P. G. Snavely)
;
from s plus / we get Kiinzel
APPENDIX.
234
= (from Kunrat), Reitzcl (from Ricohard Richand Tietzcl (from Dietrich). From all the above forms patronymics in mann, inger, and Icr are formed: Bailsman,
ard),
Beidleman,
Denlinger,
Dietzinger,
Gehringer,
Grissinger, Heintzelman, Hirtzler, Hollinger.
In addition to the purely
names we have
also
characters
Biblical
German
personal
many names taken from and from the lives of
Bartholomaeus), Klause (Nicholas), Martin, Theiss, and Theissen (I\Iatthias), Peters, Hensel (Johannes), Jiiggi and saints:
Bartel
Jackli
(Jacobus:
(from
P.
G.
Yeagy and Yackley),
Jorges (George: P. G. Yerrick and Yerkes), Brosius (Ambrosius), Bastian (Sebastian), Flory (Florus), Johst (Justus: P. G. Yost),
Jorg,
The second class of Pennsylvania-German family names are derived from the occupation of the individual; among the best known are Becker Baumgartner (orchard-grower), Brenneisen (blacksmith), Brunncr (well-digger), Drcher, (baker),
Trachsel,Trechsler (turner), Fischer, Gerber (tanner, currier: P. G. Garver), Glockner (bell-ringer: P. G. Klackner),
Heilman
who owns
= small
Karcher P.
G.
a /nr&^
(carter),
Kaler,
(doctor),
Huber (one
farm), Jager (hunter),
Kohler, Koehler (coal-burner:
Cayler),
Kaufman
(merchant),
Kiifer, Kiifner (cooper), Kiister (sexton),
Maurer
APPENDIX.
235
(mason), Metzger (butcher), Lehmann (one under feudal tenure), Leineweber (linen-weaver), Miiller,
Probst
(provost),
Reifschneider,
Rie-
menschneider
(harness-maker), Sauter, Suter (shoemaker), Schaffner (steward), Schenck (cupbearer), Scherer (barber), Schlegel (one who hammers), Schmidt (smith), Schneider (tailor), Schreiber (writer), Schreiner (joiner), Schiitz (shooter, archer: P. G. Sheets), Schultz (mayor), Siegrist (sexton), Spengler (tin-smith), Steinmetz (stonecutter),
Tschudi (judge: Swiss), Vogt
(bailiff),
Wagner (wagoner), Wannemaker (basket-maker), Weber (weaver), Wirtz (landlord), Widmeyer Widmer (one who has land from church or monastery), Ziegler (brick-maker), Zimmerman (carpenter).
The
first
subdivision of
names
in the third class
comprises those which denote the place where one lives or whence one comes; such are Al-
gauer (from the Allgau
in Switzerland), Alten-
dorfer (from village in St. Gall, Switz.), Amweg (beside the road), Amend (at end of village),
Bach, Bacher, Bachman (who live near a brook), Berner (from Berne, Switz.), Basler (from Basel),
Berger
(lives
on mountain), Beyer
(a Bavarian),
Biemensdorfer, Blickensdorfer (from village in Canton Zurich), Boehm (a Bohemian), Brechbiihl
(unploughed
hill:
P.
G.
Brightbill
and
APPENDIX.
236 Brackbill),
Brubacher
Switz.), kofifer
Breitenbach
(from
in
in
Solothurn,
(village in Zurich),
Biittikofen,
village
weiler (village
(village
Biittig-
Berne),
Det-
Canton Zurich), Diefenbach Canton Uri, Switz.), Diffen-
(Tiefenbach, in dorfer (from Tiefendorf), Fliickiger (village in
Canton Berne), Fahrni Aargau,
(in
Halden,
Switz.),
(village in Berne), Prick
Haldi,
common name
Haldeman (from
for village
in
Switzer-
Hofstetter (name of several villages
land),
in
Zurich, St. Gall, and Berne), Eschelman (from
Aeschi, village in Canton Berne),
hollow land), Imboden farm-yard),
(in
(in
Imgrund (in bottom-lands), Imhof
Kollicker (village in Aargau),
(village in Berne), Mellinger (vil-
Longenecker
Aargau), Neuenschwander (village in Berne), Oberholtzer (sever?! villages in Berne),
lage
in
Riiegsegger (Berne: P. G. Ricksecker), Schollenberger (castle and village, Zurich), Schwab (a Swabian: P. G. Swope), Urner (from Canton Zug), Ziircher (from ZiJrich).^ During the Middle Ages the houses were not numbered as now, but had signs painted on
Uri),
Zug (Canton
them, something after the manner of hotels at the '
present
Some
time.
of these
in the Palatinate
From
these
many names
names may come from homonymous places almost all the Lancaster County family-
;
names, however, which are derived from places, are of Swiss origin.
APPENDIX.
Bar
were derived:
237
Baum
(bear),
(tree),
Bieber
(beaver), Bischof (bishop),
Engel (angel), Fasnacht (Slirove-Tuesday), Faust (fist), Fuchs(fox), Fiinfrock (five-coats), Haas (hare), Hahn (rooster), Hehii (helmet), Hertzog (duke: P. G. Hartsook),
Holtzapfel (wild-apple), Kalb Gulp), Kaiser (emperor),
Konig
Miinch (monk), Oechsli
(crab),
Pfaff
Exley), (bird),
(calf:
Ritter
(priest),
Voegli
(little
P. G. Kulp,
(king),
(little
ox: P. G.
(knight),
Finally
bird: P. G. Feagley), Wiir-
we have names given from Such
peculiarities.
personal
are: Braun, Diirr (dry, thin),
Frohlich (cheerful: P. G. Frailey), Frei
Freytag
(Friday),
liver:
Reich
Krause
Hiibschmann Jiing (young), Kahl
(curly),
Lang
(short),
Rothaermel
Roth
(small
Krumbein (crooked (long),
(red),
serlegs),
Lebengut (good-
P. G. Livingood), Rau, (rich),
(free),
Gut (good),
(handsome), Hoch (tall), (bald), Klein (small), Kleindienst
Kurtz
Vogel
cube). Wolf.
fel (die,
vice),
Krebs
Ranch
Rothrock
(rough),
(red-coat),
Schwartz (black), SelWeiss (white) .^
(red-sleeve),
tenreich (seldom rich),
Such were some of the names brought by the Pennsylvania Germans from the Palatinate and Switzerland to the New World. It was but nat'
The author has
ject,
which
is
written an extended treatment of this sub-
soon to appear in the Americana Germanica.
APPENDIX.
238
names should undergo certain their new environments changes
ural that these
—
changes in which took place from the very beginning. An interesting illustration of the way in which
many names
received an English form
is
seen in
the Pennsylvania Archives, Second Series, vol, XVII., which contains a list of the German and
Swiss
settlers in
Pennsylvania during the eigh-
teenth century, the
names
of the vessels in
which
they came, and the dates of their naturalization. Often there are two lists given, one called the " original
list,"
which apparently was made by
an English-speaking person, who took down the names as they were given to him orally, and who spelt
them
phonetically.
throw a great deal
of light
These duplicate lists on the pronunciation
names by the immigrants themselves. We find the same person's name spelled Kuntz and Coones, Kuhle and Keeley, Ruber and Hufifer,
of the
Gaul and Kool, Vogelin and Fagley, Krautz and Grauce, Froehlich and Frailick. Often there are
some marvellous examples
of phonetic spelling.
Thus, Albrecht Graf^ is written Albrake Grove, Georg Heinrich Mertz is called Jurig Henrich
metamorphosed into Yerrick Burry. Thus even before the immigrant landed the impulse toward a change of name was March, and Georg Born
given.
is
APPENDIX.
239
Sometimes the change was gradual, and we may trace many intermediate steps between the
name and its present form. Thus, for Krehbiel we have Krehbill, Grebill, Grabill, and So Krumbein gives us Krumfinally Graybill. original
Grumbein, and Grumbine, and Kuehbortz Often members gives Kieportz and Keeports. of the same family spelled their names differently. bine,
In Lancaster there once lived two brothers, one
named we are
Carpenter, the other Zimmermann, and told by Francis Lieber (The Stranger in
America), that one family in Pennsylvania had the three forms, Klein, Small and Little.
—
In some cases the changes were
owing
slight,
between the English and the Baker (Becker), Miller (Mueller),
to the similarity
German,
Brown ber),
as in
(Braun),
Pepper
came almost
Weaver (Weber), Beaver
(Pfeffer); at
of course
once Smith.
differences are so great that
cover the original
(Bie-
Schmidt be-
In other cases the it
is difficult
German form, and
to dis-
it is
only by searching public documents and church records that the truth is found. Who, for instance, could
any connection between Seldomridge and Seltenreich, or between Rhoades and Roth? Yet see
nothing
names
is
surer than that in
are one and the same.
true that
cases these
many It is
undoubtedly
most Pennsylvania Germans
of
modern
240
yIPPENDIX.
times have no conception of the changes that have taken place. The remark of a farmer who
name Minich
spelled his "
nounced),
Oh,
that INIinnick
name with
spells his
(with the guttural pro-
a
A',"
is
an Irishman; he
illustrates the igno-
rance of the people in regard to their own names; for Minich arid Minnick both come from the
Muench.
original
In the present discussion
we must bear in the names of those
mind that we are speaking of Germans who came to America before
the
Revo-
and who were subject to an entirely ferent set of influences from the German of
lution,
who changes
cent times,
and bodily
into English.
Pennsylvania sciously
had is
to do.
like that
re-
consciously of the early
Germans were changed unconwhich they The difference between the two
and according
little
name The names his
dif-
to forces with
between the mots savants and the mots
populaircs of
French philology.
These German names almost Palatinate and Switzerland. trace the Swiss origin of
Urner (from
all
came from the
Even to-day we can
many,
as, for instance,
Johns (Tschantz), Neagley (Naegeli), Bossier (Baseler). Some are of French Huguenot origin, which by combined German arid
Uri),
English influence have often received a not
very elegant or euphonious
forfii:
examples are
APPENDIX.
Lemon
241
(Le Mon), Bushong (Beauchamp), and
Shunk (Jean); the original Fierre was changed to German Faehre, and later became anglicized into Ferree.*
The number of different ways of spelling even the simplest names is often surprisingly large: thus, for the original Graf we find to-day Graaf, So Baer Graff, Groff, Groft, Graft, and Grove. gives us Bear, Bare, Bair. Of course the vagaries of English orthography are largely responsible for this.
tion
is
An
interesting fact to note in this connec-
the difference yet to be seen between the
same names
in
town and country.
The farmers
of Pennsylvania are a conservative people,
and
even to-day, after nearly two hundred years of settlement in America, the people dialect.
Naturally the
to English influence,
cities
and
it is
still
speak their
were most subject there that
we
find
the greatest changes in names. Take as an example of this the name of Kuntz (with the later forms of
Kuhns and Koons)
of Allentown.
in the
town and environs
In the town proper there are
recorded in the directory twenty-two Koonses, Other Huguenot names in Pennsylvania are Fortune (Fordney), Correll, Flory, De Frehn, Farny, Ruby, Salade, Bene*
Broe (Brua), Lefevre, Levan, Erny be (See Keiper, Swiss), Gobain, Hubert. (this name may Franzosische Familiennamen in der Pfalz, and Geschichts-
tum, Bevier,
Bertalot,
blatter des deutschen Huguenotten-Vereins.)
APPENDIX.
242
twelve Kuntzes, and fourteen Kuhnses; while in the smaller villages around Allentown
sixty-two
Kuhnses,
few
a
Kuntzes,
we
find
no
and
Koonses.
There were three ways
names took
which the change
in
of
by translation; second, by spelling German sounds according to English methods; and third, ])y analogy. The former is place:
first,
the most natural in cases where English equivalents exist for the
mann we have
German; hence for
Carpenter;
for
Zimmer-
Steinbrenner,
Stoneburner; for Schumacher, Shoemaker;
for
Lebengut, Livingood; for Fuchs, Fox; for Hoch, High; and so Often only half the name is translated, forth. for
Seidensticker, Silkknitter;
while the other half
is
changed phonetically, as
Slaymaker (for Schleiermacher), Wanamaker (for Wannemacher). But the true field for the philologist is found in
in the
second
class, that of
English spelling of
German sounds. The a in Pennsylvania German was
pro-
nounced broadly, like English aic, and this sound is represented in such names as Groflf and
Grove (from
Aughey nounced
Graff),
(Ache), and like
names Staley
Swope (Schwab), Ault
Rawn
English (Stehli),
a.
(Rahn).
and
this
E
(Alt),
was pro-
gives us the
Gable (Gebel),
Amwake
APPENDIX.
(Amweg).
/,
pronounced
ce,
243 gives
Reed
Sheeleigh (Schillig), also written Shelley.
(Rith),
U
in
German has two sounds, one long and one short. The long sound is represented by 00 in the names
Hoon (Huhn), Fooks
(Fuchs), Booker (Bucher), The short sound, being un-
Hoover (Huber).
was lengthened, as Kootz (Kutz), Zook (Zug). Sometimes an h was added to indicate the lengthening of the
familiar
to
English
ears,
vowel, as in Johns (Tschantz), is
Kuhns
(Kuntz).
usually retained, although sometimes spelled
Hoak
(Hoch), Boats (Botz). Of the diphthongs, an naturally is spelled otv or on, as in Bowman (Bauman), Foust (Faust),
oa, as in
Mowrer More
(Maurer).
above
the change in the diphthong
ular
is
interesting
and complicated than, the
German pronunciation
sented by English
i
or y:
of
ci.
this
The is
reg-
repre-
hence such names as
Hines (Heinz), Smyser (Schmeiser), Whitesel
Snyder (Schneider), Tice
(Weitzel),
(Theiss),
Rice (Reis), Knipe (Kneipe). In the names Heil-
man, Weiser, and Beiler the German spelling and sound are both retained. The Pennsylvania Germans, however, pronounced ci as English a, and thus
we
find the
(Kreidig),
names
Sailor (Seller), Graty
Hailman (Heilman), Espenshade (Es-
penscheid).
APPENDIX.
244
The mixed vowels were c in
ing
Derr (Doerr), Sener (Soehner), Kelker
(Koellicker),
(Oehrle),
becom-
simplified, o
Mellick
ca
(Moehlich),
in
Early
Hake (Boehm), and long and short in German. The
Beam
in
a
(Hoeck). Ue is former gives ce, as in Keeney (Kuehne), Keeley (Kuehle); the latter usually gives i, as in Bitner (Buettner), Kindig (Kuendig), Bixler (BuechsIn Sheets ler), Tliss (Huess), Miller (Mueller). (Schuetz), however, short ue is lengthened to ee. In the following names the umlaut is ignored:
Stover (Stoever), Shroder (Schroeder), Shober (Schoeber). Of course the
changes undergone by con-
sonants are not so great as in the case of vowels, yet
we have some
interesting
naturally changed to
Yost
(Johst).
3-;
Z becomes
phenomena.
hence .y
Curts (Kurtz), Butts (Butz).
in
K
/
is
Young (Jung), many names, as and
c,
and often
interchangeable, as in Cofifman (Kauff-
g, are
man), Cline (Kline), Capehart (Kephart hard), Grider (Kreider), Givler (Kubler).
= GebAt
the
end of a word, ig usually becomes y, as in Leiby T is changed to d in (Leibig), Leidy (Leidig). Sides
(Seitz),
Road
(Roth),
Widmayer (Wit-
meyer).
H
is
omitted
in
Sener (Soehner), Cole (Kohl),
Fraley (Froehlich),
Lcman (Lehman).
Pf
be-
APPENDIX.
comes in
simplified to
Kopp
in
/"
B was
(Kopf).
Pennsylvania Germans to a large
number
of
Foutz (Pfautz), or to p often
like v,
pronounced by the and this gives rise
new names, among them Everly (Eberle), Hoover
being the following: (Huber), Garver (Gerber),
—Whitescarver
245
—also written Carver,
(Weissgerber), Lively (Leibly),
Suavely (Schnaebele), Beaver (Bieber). The change of cli into gli has also brought large
number
bright
of
names, as
in
in a
Light (Licht), Al-
Hambright
(Hambrecht), and the numerous class Slaughter (Schlachter), of
(Albrecht),
names
in
baugh
(bach), as
Baugher (Bacher), Harbaugh (Herbach), Brightenbaugh (Breiten-
bach),
Rodenbough (Rothenbach).
becomes k
Cli
in the suffix
maker; probably Of course sch largely due to translation. plified to sh or
.y
in the
names Slagle
usually this is is
sim-
(Schlegel),
Slatter (Schlatter), Shriner (Schreiner).
One changes
of is
the
most interesting
of
all
these
that of cr to ar, thus illustrating a
phenomenon common
to
all
languages.
As
the
Latin mercantein becomes French marcJiand, as the English
Derby
Clark, and so forth,
comes
pronounced Darby, Clerk so the German Gerber be-
is
Herbach becomes Harbaugh, Berger becomes Barger, Werfel becomes Warfel, Merkley becomes Markley, Hertzell becomes Garver,
/IPPENDIX.
246 Hartzell,
and Herzog becomes Hartsook.
lar to this is the
Simi-
change of Spengler to Spangler.
Interesting also
is
the tendency to introduce
an extra syllable between certain consonants, as Minich for Muench, Sherrick for Sherk, Widener for
Waidner, Keneagy for Gnege, Yerrick
for
Jorg.
As
in all
language-changes, so here, analogy
exerted more or less influence.
When
the simple
spelling of foreign sounds did not produce an
English-looking name, often a name which resembled the German in sound or appearance was substrtuted, as, for example, Rush for Roesch.
probably the explanation of the inorganic Rhoades (for Roth), Richards (for Reichert).
This ^ in
is
Probably the spelling baugh for hack may be more or less influenced by such names as Laughlin,
Gough, or by American names
origin.
of
Dutch
BIBLIOGRAPHY.' The
following
contains the chief works which
list
treat of the various topics discussed in this book. It is here given as a guide to those who wish to pursue the
subject further.
GENERAL. The
Colonial Records of Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Archives, Phila. and Harrisburg, 1852-1900. Three Series.
The
Statutes
at
Large
of
Pennsylvania, vols. 2-5.
1896-
1898.
Americana Germanica.
Pub. by M. D. Learned of the
University of Pennsylvania.
American
Historical
Association,
Annual
Reports of, Washington, 1889-1899. Hazard, Samuel. The Register of Pennsylvania. Phila. 1828-32.
Hallesche Nachrichten. Ed. by W. J. Mann and B. M. Schmucker. Allentown and Philadelphia, 1886, 1895. Notes and Queries, Historical and Genealogical. Chiefly relating to interior Pennsylvania. From 1879 on. Harrisburg.
The Pennsylvania German. Rev. P. C. Croll.
Ed. by
W. H.
Issued quarterly,
Egle.
Ed. by
Lebanon, Pa., 1900.
* This Bibliography contains only part of the sources used in the preparation of this book, sources which include not only printed material, but church and town records, traditions, and personal obser-
vation.
247
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
248
The Pennsylvania Magazine
of
History and Biography.
Pub. by the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. adelphia.
The Perkiomen Region, appeared.
Past and Present. Vols,
Issued periodically.
S. Dotterer.
Eckhoff, A.
Phil-
Vols. 1-22.
Philadelphia. In der neuen Heimath.
2.
i
Ed. by H. and 2 have
Ausgabe.
New
York, 1885.
Loher, Franz. Amcrika. Baer, Geo. F.
Geschichte und Zusiiinde der Deutschen in 2.
Ausgabe.
Gottingen, 1885.
The Pennsylvania Germans.
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