USA > Pennsylvania > Schuylkill County > Blue book of Schuylkill County : who was who and why, in interior eastern Pennsylvania, in Colonial days, the Huguenots and Palatines, their service in Queen Anne's French and Indian, and Revolutionary Wars : history of the Zerbey, Schwalm, Miller, Merkle, Minnich, Staudt, and many other representative families > Part 30
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Charles6 Oscar Minnig (Adam". Jacob+, Benjamin3, Christopher2, Simon1), Robesonia, b. September 26, 1860, m. Emmeline A. Kalbach, August 27, 1881, b. August 19, 1865 ; c., Lloyd, Constance, Salome, Eugene, Willis, James, living and five deceased. Salome m. Calvin C. Master ; Eugene m. Annie Kreider. Mr. Minnig is a cement contractor and paver living at Robesonia.
(The author is indebted to him and to his son for data of the Chris- topher Minnich line, of which he has a collection of baptismal and mar- riage records.)
The tombstone inscriptions in the new cemetery at Hummelstown, Dauphin County, Pa., show the following:
Wendel Minnich, b. September 25, 1725, d. September 5, 1781.
Wife of Wendel Minnich, b. February 25, 1731; d. 1783.
Barbara Minnich, da. of Wendell, b. 1768; d. March II, 1823. Wendel Minnich, Jr., b. 1755; d. February 14, 1820.
Wendel Manig, of the Ship Lists, September 5, 1751, is shown on the State Tax Lists and Census of Derry Township, Dauphin County, with 10 to 40 acres of land, March 4, 1785, with two male persons above 16 years and two under sixteen years and two females, the name is spelled Menich. Wendel Minnich, of Derry, died 1781. His sons, according to the cen- sus, were George and Wendle Minnich, of Derry.
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SCHUYLKILL COUNTY Allied Families
Constantine Menach is shown as a taxable in Strasburg Township, Lancaster County, from 1779 to 1782.
Among the soldiers of the Pennsylvania Line in the Revolutionary War, who were entitled to "Donation Lands" in the northwestern part of Pennsylvania, provided by an Act of the General Assembly, of the State, of December 12, 1783, and the Purchase of 1784, as published in Vol. III, 3rd Series, Pennsylvania Archives, under "Return of the Pennsylvania Line, Entitled to Donation Lands Reported by the Late Comptroller" there is shown (page 704) :
Peter Minick, Private, Hughes Company, 200 acres of land.
This Peter Minnich was doubtless the Peter of the 1790 census, as of Allen Township, Northampton County. The tombstone inscriptions in the old Egypt Church graveyard, at Egypt, Lehigh County (Northampton prior to March 6, 1812), Pa., show the children of Peter Minnich to have been:
John Minnich, b. September 4, 1778; d. October 4, 1863; son of Peter and Sybilla Minnich.
Susanna Minnich (wife of John), b. February 26, 1777; d. January 16, 1854; 9 children.
Maria Minnich, (Braun), b. March 31, 1805; d. December 9, 1847; wife of Michael Minnich; 9 children.
Lutheran church record, Campbelltown, Lebanon County, (Dauphin prior to February 16, 1813), names a John Muench who had a son Samuel born in August, 1801. John was doubt- less the son of Peter.
The early Proprietary and State Tax Lists and the first census report taken in Pennsylvania, 1790, contain many more Minnich names.
PHILADELPHIA BRANCH OF MUENCHS
PASSPORT OF CONRAD MINNICH, OF PHILA.
The passport of Conrad Münch, in possession of J. F. Mynich, Lynbrook, Long Island, N. Y., divested of its tech- nical form, states that: "Conrad Münch, of Mechtersheimer, near Speyer, his wife and his brother Gottfreid Münch do intend to settle in the New England (U. S.)" Then follows the usual form that they should be permitted to "pass with- out hinderance." The passport is signed by the "Burgermeis-
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ter" in the name of the "Rath (Town Council) of the free city of Speyer, of the Holy Roman Empire," April 25, 1765. (Speyer, under the old division of Germany, was near Ba- varia.) He arrived August 24, 1765, ship Polly, Robert Por- ter, master, from Rotterdam.1
Conrad Mynich (as this branch spells it), died 1798. A bill of sale dated February 9, 1799, shows that he died pos- sessed of two houses in North Liberties, Philadelphia, which were sold at auction. Jacob Mynich, his son, was the admin- istrator2. No other children named ; wife, Margaret.
A notice served on Jacob Mynich to attend a meeting March 4, 1818, shows that he was an active member of a so- ciety, connected with the Dutch Reformed Church then lo- cated at Fifth and Cherry St., Philadelphia, and buried in the burial ground near Tenth and Race, from which the bodies were removed on the sale of the ground and re-interred else- where. Conrad Münch died in Philadelphia, and his body and that of his son Jacob and others of the family were re- moved from the above and re-interred in Laurel Hill ceme- tery.
There is a tradition in the Mynich family that their grand- father served in the Revolutionary War. He is doubtless the Conrad "Minnig," private of the Continental Line. Depre- ciation pay.3
Of this branch of the Münchs are those of that name at Harrisburg, Indianapolis, Ind., the Minnichs of Gettysburg and others of that name, variously spelled, in Philadelphia, Reading and elsewhere.
August 24, 1728, there landed at Philadelphia, John Christopher Meng. According to the Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 1882, Vol. VI, pages 398-401, he was born in Manheim, Germany, in 1697, and married on June
(Note 1-Penna. Archives, 2d Series, Vol. 17, p. 471.)
(Note 2-Will Book "H," p. 357.)
(Note 3-Fifth Series, Penna. Archives, Vol. IV, p. 264.)
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29, 1723, Anna Dorothea Baumann. He settled and lived in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Among his children were Melchior Meng, given in the Census of Pennsylvania, who died October 13, 1812, in the 82nd year of his age; and John Meng, a portrait painter of more than ordinary promise, who died at the age of 20 years, having been born February 6, 1734. The name Meng may, however, have no connection with the name Muench ; but the brief sketch of the Mengs in the maga- zine referred to is interesting reading.
J4. F. Mynich, b. August 20, 1833, (Daniel3, Jacob2, Con- rad1. m. October, 1895) ; m. twice, second wife, Mrs. Frances Price, son Walter, issue of first marriage. Mr. Mynich was born in Philadelphia, the family subsequently removing to Wilmington, Del .. where he was raised. He was a master painter and decorator and was employed as such by the Bal- timore Central, W. C. and Phila., Mexican Central and Mexi- can National Railways, and also at the Brooklyn U. S. Navy Yard. During the Civil War he was Engineer Yeoman, of the Wyalusing U. S. North Atlantic squadron. Mr. Mynich is a 32d deg. Mason and in the year 1876 visited Europe as a special representative of the Grand Master of Masons, to the Grand Lodges of England, Scotland and Ireland. His home is in Brooklyn, N. Y. ; he is at present, at the age of 79 years, living at Lynbrook, Long Island, N. Y. His wife, too, is still living.
Jacob2 Mynich, (Conrad1), mn. Barbara Epis; c., Joseph and Daniel. Jacob2 Mynich and Joseph, his son, were sol- diers in the War of 1812-'15. The latter died from a disease contracted from exposure in that war. Jacob2 Mynich died 1830. Church records, Dutch Reformed Church, 5th and Cherry Sts., Philadelphia.
Joseph Mynich's children, Jacob and Julianna, both died unmarried. Jacob is buried in Laurel Hill cemetery, Phila- delphia.
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Daniel Mynich m. Ann Crawford Woodcock; c., Eliza, who died at the age of 83, unmarried; William died in in- fancy ; Emma Julianna m. Willis S. Holden. a first cousin, son of her mother's sister; Eliza d. 1911; issue: Cora C., d., and William W. Holden, of Wilmington, Del.
Jacob+ F. Mynich (Joseph3, Jacob2, Conrad1), m. Laura Ophelia Meyers, December 24, 1854, d. April 20, 1855. He m. Sarah E. Martin, January, 1862; d. 1893; c., Howard N., b. 1863, of Reading; Clara Ada May, m. Charles Hoxie, Fairville, Chester Co .; Gen. L. Z. Manager, New York, sin- gle ; Leila Annie, m. John McBride, Richardson Park, New Castle Co., Del .; C. Frank Mynich, postal clerk. m., Richard- son Park, New Castle Co., Wilmington, Del.
(The author is indebted to J. F. Mynich, Brooklyn, N. Y., for the above data and for the use of the manuscript and letters which follow that establish the facts. The letters were translated from the German by "Herr" August Knecht, of Pottsville, former editor and publisher of the "Amerikanischer Republikaner.")
Philadelphia, March 15, 1784.
Our friendly greetings to our dear father, Gottfried Muench, and to our dear mother and to our dear brothers, Simon and Jacob, and to our dear sister, Catherina, and to Margaretha Elisabetha and to our dear brother-in-laws, Jacob Detrich and Christophel Adolf and to our dear sister, Eva Margaretha. We send you all a thousand greetings.
We cannot fail at this good opportunity to write you and we hope that these few lines will reach you in good health, the knowledge of which would afford us sincere pleasure. As regards us, we are, thanks to God, getting along very well. Now, we beg of you, that you inform us, through this opportunity, how it is with you, which we heartily desire to know, when so far apart, friends are glad to hear from one another.
We are all living in the city of Philadelphia and can amply support ourselves. Now, we beg of you, dear brothers and sisters, to write to us, as we have not heard anything from you, and you nothing from us, and we hope that it affords you as much pleasure to hear from us as it will us to hear from you. We have nothing further to write this time. We commend you all to the protection of God the most High.
Herewith we remain your faithful brothers unto death.
Conrad Muench, Gottfreid Muench.
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Waldorf, June 11, 1790.
Both brothers-in-law and their families, our friendliest greeting!
This opportunity1 which we have through the presence of the Ameri- can, Mr. Peter Ulrich, a native of this place, to send a letter to our esteemed friends in America, in the city of Philadelphia, is in part our greatest pleasure and would become complete if this would reach our dearest friends in good health, as we sincerely wish.
As to ourselves, we enjoy, thank God, good health. My family con- sists of four children, to wit: three sons and one daughter, the latter being married to the son of a citizen of this place by the name of Adam Abel and they are living happily together which is a source of pleasure to all parents to have their children entered into such peaceful matri- mony. The three sons are still single, the eldest of them having firmly resolved to emigrate to America with the said Mr. Peter Ulrich, which we would have permitted him to do, if we could feel assured that he would make his journey in safety, he having no doubt about his welcome reception by his esteemed friends. He is an expert in the profession which he learned, so that he can succeed in it. If, therefore, through the said Mr. Ulrich, who contemplates, within a few years to return from America to his native land, we should receive a communication from our friends, informing us of their well-being, it would afford us great pleas- ure and honor. We would beg them to inform us especially what the transportation across the ocean costs and whether they would advise us to let one of our sons make the journey to America.
We know of nothing further to communicate but this, that our dear brother-in-law, Deneig, on the Mechlersheimerhof, has passed from time into eternity.
In conclusion we wish you, wider repeated, most friendly greet- ings, continuous good health and happiness and commend you to the protection of the Most High.
Margaretha Elisabeth, Christophel Adolf.
Mechtersheim, August 4, 1810.
Dear sister and the rest of the dear friends!
This letter which you will receive through Mr. Ulrich, of Waldorf. we sincerely hope will reach you all in good health, which will give us all great pleasure. With sorrow we have heard through him of the death of our two brothers (Conrad and Gottfried) in America, leaving my wife (Margaretha Elisabetha) the only one of the Muench brothers and sisters to survive by the grace of God. Sister Catherina died over thirty years ago and her son Frederick followed her in death seventeen years ago, leaving four children to survive him. The daughter, Dorothea, who was deaf and dumb, died a half year ago, leaving only one of the four chil- dren, Esther, who is, thank God living happy and contented with her hus- band. May Providence grant them many years of health and happiness together. The brother died at Weiller three years ago. We have heard nothing from Phillip to the present day and do not know whether he is living or dead.
(Note 1-There were no mail connections between this country and the old world.)
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We are, thank God, in pretty good health, as good as you can expect from old age, as old people are afflicted with many kinds of ailments. We have yet two sons and one daughter living, all married and are get- ting along pretty well. We wish and hope that the two families (Conrad and Gottfried's) that had a disagreement, have again become united and remain good friends, it being best when brethren and the brethren's children live in friendship together and forget old animosities.
You have doubtless heard of the great revolution which has affected nearly all Europe. We also suffered through the war but the country about here has nearly recovered from the devastation and we are living happy under the French government. If you should honor us with an- other letter, write under my address at Mechtersheim.
Finally, you will accept friendly greetings, those of my family, wife and children. I commend you to the protection of God, and remain as ever your sincere friend and brother-in-law.
Christoph Adolph, Margaretha Elisabetha Muench.
Mechtersheim, bei Speier, in the Palatina, Kingdom of Bavaria on the Rhine, March 7, 1822.
Unknown but nevertheless dear relatives and friends:
I give many greetings dearly beloved cousin, Jacob Minnich, I hope my letter will find you still hale and hearty and among the living. I have no news to report, but that my mother died, January 14, 1822, she having come into the world, April 18, 1739.
Concerning myself and family, I can say we are all in good health.
It was well for my mother that I was living. I was with her, I and my wife, for three weeks day and night, we did all in our power for her. She said, "if she could only live long enough to hear again from our friends in America," but it was "Thy will not my will be done."
My dear son, Jacob Adolph :- I had to attend to the draft for you and at the inspection when your name was called, I stepped up. The com- missioner said: "Are you the father of Jacob Adolph ? I answered "yes." Then some one said "write to him." Mr. Thierman gave me your number 215 with "soldier" on it. Jacob Moser, Daniel Aot, Frederic Vant and your cousin Christopel are all soldiers.
Grain is very cheap but you would not believe that money is scarce. It is my desire that you write soon, that I may hear how my son looks, whether he is obedient or not, whether he follows his profession or how he sustains himself. It may easily be that he is better off than in our coun- try, because there is nothing here neither in the professions or in agri- culture.
One thing I beg of you, cousin Jacob Minnich, when you write again, let me know how it is with the youngest brother, Gottfreid Muench, and his family and tell them they should write a few lines to us. I and my family long to hear from all the freundschaft.
My mother's brothers and sisters are all dead except her stepsister, Dorothea Muench, who is a widow, in Grossasen and she is also anxious to hear from the family in America. This is the second letter I have
Stoudts Ferry Bridge above Reading Pa
OSTON UBLIC LIBRARY
JOHN MICHAEL STOUDT HOMESTEAD, SETTLED 1736.
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written to you within a year. Mr. Fux from Speier, came to me and said, I should not close this letter as he would like to send one with it for Mr. Gund.
I have been sorry for this, for Fux acted cruelly and I am afraid because the Gunds here said they would write to their cousin in America and Fux said, "he would write a letter, too, to Mr. Gund, that he would not place in the window."
I beg of you, much beloved cousins, that you will take care of my son, John Jacob Adolph. I must banish it from my mind but he was always so thoughtful for his father. It hurts me to my heart, when you raise up children and then have no support in your old age. If he does not like it in America, I beg of you, dear cousins, that you will assist him to return, but he should consider it well first. It is his fate and "What God does is well done. His will remains just." I commend you all to Kind Providence. So much from your unknown friend and cousin.
Frederick Adolph.
(Two Minnich genealogists having confessed their ina- bility to "unravel the tangled skein" of the two Conrad Muenchs and the numerous Jacobs, the author takes a par- donable pride and pleasure in presenting the above history as the true solution of the generic difference.)
THE STAUDTS, STOUDTS, STOUTS
Allied With the Miller, Filbert, Kerschner, Lerch, Ebling, Snyder, Maurer, Wagner, and Other Early Pennsylvania Families
Tradition among family connections in Germany traces the Staudt family in Pennsylvania back to 1380, but unfortu- nately the full documentary evidence is lacking. The three Staudts, ubiquitous in the history of so many early families of this Commonwealth, John Michael, John and Mathias Staudt, came from the Chur Pfalz, in the Palatinate, Ger- many, September 15, 1733.1
(Note 1-Ship Lists, History of the Filberts, Montgomery's New History, gives John Jacob Stoudt and Johannes Stoudt as having, with Samuel Filbert, Peter and Simon Minnich come over on the Ship Samuel, Hugh Percy, Master, from Rotterdam, qualified August 30th, 1737.
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BLUE BOOK OF Allied Families
John Michael Stout took the oath of allegiance to the British government, April 10, 1761. Stout's Hill, located at the great bend of the Schuylkill river, about six miles north of Reading, was named after this man.
(Note-Scull's or Sculp's Hill, near Schuylkill Haven, was named for Nicholas Scull, the surveyor.)
John Michael Staut, b. 1712, d. May 13, 1776; wf., Bar- bara ; c., John, Jacob, Michael, George Wilhelm, John George, Jost, Anna Barbara, Catherine, Apolonia, Catherine, Elisa- beth.
Johannes2 (John1 Michael), b. 1737; d. 1826; wf., Maria Catharine Kerschner; e., George, Catharine, m. Henry Rudy; Barbara, m. George Snyder; Elisabeth, m. Daniel Maurer; John, Daniel, Samuel.
Jacob, b. 1738; d. 1802; wf., Margaret; c., John Adam, Adam, John Henry, Barbara, Mary, Catharine Elizabeth, wf. of William Ebling.
Michael Stout, b. 1742; d. 1807; wf., Elisabeth Brown, b. 1758; d. 1820, at Homestead, Bern. Four sons and five daughters.
George William Staudt, b. 1748; d. 1820; wf., Christina Weidenham- mer, b. 1752, d. 1820, Maidencreek; c., George, Margaret, Madelina wf. of George Stoudt, of Rehersburg (son of Johannes), Daniel, Maria, Adam, Jacob, Catherine.
John George Stoudt, wf. Anna Margaret, d. 1818. (W. B. Vol 8, pp. 197-170). Lived in Tulpehocken Twp.
Jost Stoudt, wf. Mary Elizabeth, Bern Twp. C., Jacob, Margretha, Catherine, Anna Barbara, Magdelena.
Anna Barbara, m. Baltzer Lerch, Berne; seven children: Catharine, m. Christopher Lerch, Heidelberg; Appolonia, m. Daniel Aurand, Buffalo Valley; Catherine Elisabeth, m. Peter Weise, Berne.
Johannes Stoudt, the second of the immigrants (1733), d. 1773. He was a taxable in Pinegrove Twp., Berks County, 1759. His estate was settled 1777 and '781, and shows that he left four children, namely John, of age, Daniel and Jacob, over fourteen ; Anna Margaret, under fourteen. Their guardians were from Maiden Creek.
John and Daniel Stoudt were taxpayers in Manheim, 1801-'09. John Stoudt, Jr., settled on a tract of land of one hundred acres, referred to in the deed book as being in Bruns- wick Township, and is doubtless the same tract warranted to
(Note 1-Berks County Court Record, B. 2, pp. 222, 224.)
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SCHUYLKILL COUNTY Allied Families
his father and upon which he paid taxes, 1759. This land adjoined that of Heinrich and Andrew Miller, Sr., (Bear Ridge, between Auburn and Jefferson.)
(The division of Brunswick was confirmed, 1791, Manheim being erect- ed 1789.)
Mathias Stout, of the Township of Bern, in the County of Berks, Yeoman, "cousin," and principal creditor to John Stoudt, Sr., late of Brunswick Township, Berks County, had letters granted him, August 13, 17731, and as above shown, it was not settled until 1777.
Mathias Stoudt, the third of the immigrants (1733), b. 1725, d. 1795; wf. Anna Maria Schrader, b. October 13, 1728; d. May 22, 1797 ; c., John, Abraham, Mathias, Catharine, Maria, Anna Elisabeth, wf. of Andrew Miller.
(Note-There is a tradition in the family that Mathias and John Michael were brothers and that their father died at sea, Mathias being five years old, and that John Stoudt, Sr., was a cousin, which is corroborated above.)
Abraham2 (Mathias1), b. 1757, d. November 24, 1824; wf., Mary Magdelena Hartzell; c., Mathias, John, Jacob and Elis- abeth ; wf. of Conrad Christ, Bern Township.
Mathias Stout's will states that his wife, Anna Margaret, snould be amply provided for during her life. His plantation, grist, saw and hemp mill, partly in Bern and Heidelberg Townships, adjoining lands of John Dundore, Anthony Bickle and Joseph Obold, on the Tulpehocken, thirty-six acres, charging John Stout, his eldest son, nine hundred and fifty pounds. To Mathias, Jr., he gave 135 acres of land, partly in Bern and Heidelberg. Abraham got four hundred pounds; Catharine, wife of Thomas Umbenhauer, founder of Bernville, the same, and Elizabeth, four hundred pounds. The balance to be divided between the above; no other heirs are mentioned in the will, they probably having been provided for prior to that date. This John Stoudt was an ensign and afterward captain in the Revolutionary War, from Bern Township.
(Note 1-B. 3, p. 102.)
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Capt. John Stout was never married.
(Note-Heidelberg Township, in Berks County, was a part of Heidel- berg Township, in Lancaster County, before 1752, and remained the same in Lancaster after the boundaries were made.)
The children of Catharine and Thomas Umbenhauer were : Catharine, Magdalena, Anna Maria, Susanna. The mul- tiplicity of Johns and Elizabeths in the Stoudt family will be noted. The Stoudts occupied prominent positions among the early settlers and were numerous in the Revolutionary War. There were about twelve immigrants in the first half of the eighteenth century and they were said to have all been of the same origin. The similarity of names among their descend- ants of the second generation makes it almost impossible to classify them. The spelling of the name has no primal sig- nificance. Many are buried at the old church in Bern. The Staudts were mainly of the Reformed faith.
John3 (John2, John1 Michael), b. 1756, d. 1823. In the census of 1790 he is credited with one son over sixteen and several daughters. He was a petitioner for his father's estate for an inquest, 1777, and the original papers are on file, when his father's cousin, the principal creditor, was made adminis- trator.
John Stout, of Manheim Township, Schuylkill County, died, intestate, August 20, 1823. Heirs, John, Mary, Maria, Peggy and Elizabeth, Mary, wf. of Henry Werner, who was administrator, the widow, Anna Maria, renouncing. The es- tate contained about 190 acres and partition was made among the heirs. The petitioners refused to accept the land at the value appraised and it was sold according to law, at Or- phans' Court, July 31, 18281. Elizabeth Stout, a minor, mar- ried - Kemmerling.
John4 Stout, b. December 13, 1786, d. May 21, 1855. (Zions' church records.) The same records also show his father, John Stoudt, to have stood sponsor at a baptism, 1779.
(Note 1-Orphans' Court Book 1, Schuylkill Co. C. H.)
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SCHUYLKILL COUNTY Allied Families
Daniel3 Staudt, (Johannes?, John1 Michael), brother of John3, lived in Manheim Township, near what is now Land- ingville ; wf., Maria Salome. They baptized the following children : da. - , b. October 26, 1783. d. 1841 ; George Wil- helm, bap. May 5, 1792; Jacob, bap. March 7, 1795 ; Maria, bap. July, 1796; Catharine, bap. February 9, 1798; another, Su- sanna, m. John Schaeffer ; Peter, bap. March 30, 1804; Henry, bap. February, 1806.1
Daniel Staudt gave seven shillings six pence to the Summer Berg church, 1799.
There was also a Phillip Stoudt living in Pinegrove Township, near the Lebanon County line, who at the census, 1790, had two sons and six girls living. Daniel Stoudt died 18252. Phillip had an Elizabeth among his daughters.
MARRIAGES IN PENNA. ARCHIVES
1775, December 8, Stout, John Henry, to Margaret Calan.
1778, May 1, Stout, Elizabeth, to Elijah Crawford.
1765, September 20, Stout, Sarah, to Abraham Freid.
1772, October 21, Stout, Abraham, to Mary Magdelena Hartzell.
1772, September 3, Stout, Brightwed, to William Nichols.
(2nd Series, Vol. 2. The marriages of about fifty Millers occur in the same volume.)
LAND WARRANTS IN LANCASTER
Land warrants in Lancaster, Lebanon, Dauphin, now Lebanon Coun- ty, are as follows:
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