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John Conrad Jr WEISER (b. 02 Nov 1696, d. 13 Jul 1760)
John Conrad Jr WEISER (son of John Conrad WEISER and Anna Magdalena UEBELE)269, 269 was born 02 Nov 1696 in Gross-Aspach, Germany, and died 13 Jul 1760 in Womelsdorf, Berks Co., Pa. He married Anna Eve FEG Or Feck on 22 Nov 1720 in Weisersdorf, Ny, daughter of Johann Peter FEG and Anna Maria RISCH.
Notes for John Conrad Jr WEISER:
Held the title of "Colonel" and known primarily as "Conrad." Had livedwith the Indians and became a celebrated Indian interpreter.
BIOGRAPHY: John Conrad WEISER was born in 1696 in Germany. He died on 13 Jul 1760 in Womelsdorf, PA. He was buried in His farm, Womelsdorf, PA. The following is taken from a review of the book "Conrad Weiser 1696-1760 Friend of Colonist and Mohawk" by Paul A.W. Wallace:
BIOGRAPHY: Conrad Weiser, Pennsylvania's Indian ambassador, was one of the world's great originals, a hotheaded, true-hearted, whimsical Jack-of-all-trades; a farmer and owner of a tannery, one of the founders of Reading, Pennsylvania, a colonel during the French and Indian War, the first President judge of Berks County, a monk at Ephrata Cloisters, a pillar of the Lutheran Church, a promoter of Moravian missions, a rebel in New York and prisoner in an Albany jail, a hymn-writer, traveler, statesman, linguist, diplomat, woodsman and most notably an Indian agent.
BIOGRAPHY: His career introduces us to the whole colonial scene from New York to the Carolinas, taking in the seacoast towns, the frontier settlements, the forests of the Alleghenies, and the long houses and cabins of the Indians on the Hudson, Mohawk, Delaware, Susquehanna, and Ohio Rivers. He bought books from Benjamin Franklin and taught him what he knew about the Iroquois. He corresponded with Thomas Lee, the "President of Virginia." He quarreled with Gov. Denny of Pennsylvania, and in the conduct of Indian affairs, he was the rival of George Washington and Sir William Johnson. He introduced Count Zinzindorf to the Shawnees and saved his life in the Wyoming valley. He was advisor to Thomas Penn, General Forbes, and countless other notables. In his day, everyone knew him. Governors, churchmen, and Indian chiefs all relied on his advise. The Iroquois named him Tarachiawagon, "He Who Holds The Heavens." He was at home on Society Hill in Philadelphia as well as at John Harris' Ferry on the western frontier. He knew the Shamokin Trail like a village street and visited all the distant Indian towns from Onandaga to Logstown. He went everywhere, saw everyone, did everything and recorded in his journals, the most important information of his day. There was never any man like him, and never will be. He was as vital to the Pennsylvania frontier as George Washington was to Valley Forge. Yet, through all the excitement of his public life, he remained a common man who, above all else, always longed for his wife, his children and the little Tulpehocken home to which he came back finally to die.
BIOGRAPHY: Originally published in 1945. this deluxe 664 page book is printed on acid free paper, smythesewn and bound in a burgundy lexatone cover with gold embossing. Edition size limited to 1000 numbered copies. $44.95
BIOGRAPHY: Book available for ordering at http://www1.mhv.net/~hopefarm/
BIOGRAPHY: Other notes for John Conrad Weiser:
Source: Dallas, Texas, Johnson Library. "Conrad Weiser-Friend of Colonist and
Mohawk", (history room, row 119). 970.5 W427YW 1971. (Following paragraphs
copied from this book)
BIOGRAPHY: CONRAD WEISER....Receives the Queen's Bounty, Chapter 1.
Early in the morning on June 13, 1710, the ship LYON (of Leith, Captain
Stevens commander) drew into New York harbor with an escort, H.M.S.
FEVERSHAM. On board the LYON were 402 "poor Patines, among them thirteen year old Conrad Weiser (whom Count Zinzendorf in good time was to style the
Emperor of the the Irequois) with his father and seven brothers and sisters.
It was good to see land: the sands, the Fort, the Battery outside its
walls, the neat rows of houses, with rock, mountain, and forest in the back
ground. It was better yet to feel solid ground underfoot when they disembarked
at Nutten Island, now called Governors Island. Conrad had been on board since
Christmas: some five months in English waters, where the LYON and nine other
ships of the convoy had puttered about between London and Plymouth awaiting
final orders; and seven or eight weeks on the ocean where Conrad lay sick and
bewildered in the midst of tossing death. The passengers were packed tightly
below decks, amid smells, darkness, and vermin, with a subsistence allowance
of sixpence a day per head. Poor food and bad water prepared the way for
typhus, the "Palentine fever". The little children died, almost all of them,
and a great number of their elders. Some two hundred souls were lost, a third
of the passenger list. The ship's doctor, Thomas Benson, tells us that he
"administered aid and Medicines, to about 330 p'sons which have all been sick
at one time in the said passage and none but himself to assist them: during all
the said time..."
BIOGRAPHY: Years later, after Conrad had become famous throughout the colonies, he
wrote down for his children what he knew about his own early life. I was little
enough. The uprooting had been commplete, and the voyage from Plymouth to New
York had interposed a dark barrier to recollection. His real life began on that
Tuesday morning in mid-June of 1710. This is what he had to tell of his origin.
(Written by his son)
BIOGRAPHY: In the year 1696 on the 2nd of November Conrad Weiser, was born in Europe, in
the country of Wuertemberg, in the Magistracy of Herrenberg. The village is
said to be called Astodt [Astaet], and was baptized at Kuppingen nearby, as
informed by his father. Source: Weiser Family Association Booklet.
BIOGRAPHY: Other notes: Source: Book-History of Berks County, Pennsylvania, pg 330, 331.
Conrad Weiser was the most prominent historical character in the county of
Berks previous to his death in 1760. His great prominence arose from his
intimate connection with the provencial government of Pennsylvania for thirty
years. He was the principal judge of Berks County from 1752 to 1760. He was
born November 2, 1696, at Afstaedt, a small village in the County of Herrenberg,
in Wurtemberg, Germany, and there he acquired a general education, which
included the principles of the Christian religion according to the catechism of
Martin Luther. Whilst still in his fourteenth year he emigrated with his father and famiy (which included himself and seven other children) to New York, landing June 17, 1710. At that time several thousand Germans were sent to America by Queen Anne. Shortly after thier arrival they were removed to Livingston Manor by the Governor of New York, to burn tar and cultivate hemp to defray the expenses incurred by Queen Anne in conveying them from Holland to England and from England to America. They labored till 1713 in this employment under the directin of commissioners: then, finding that they were existing under a form of bondage, they protested against the treatment and this effected their release. About 150 families of them including the WEiser famiy, removed to Schoharie, forty miles west of Albany. Wjilst spending the winter of 1713-1714 at Schenectady, the elder Weiser was frequrntly visited by an Indian chief of the Mohawk tribe, and during one of these visits the chief proposed to Conrad to visit the Mohawk country and learn the language of that tribe. This proposition was agreed to. Conrad Weiser was in his eighteenth year when he went to live with the Indians. He was a strong yung man, but all of his strength was necessary to endure the sufferings which he was compelled to undergo whilst living with them. He had scarely clothing sufficient to cover his body during the winter of that trying year. Besides much suffering, he was frequently threatened with death by the Indians during a state of intoxication. In July, 1714, he returned to his
father's home at Schoharie. In Mohawk language, and while at home, he increased this knowledge by acting as interpreter between the German settlers of that vicinity and the Mohawk Indians. The settlers having been disturbed in their possessions, Conrad Weiser's father and a number of others migrated to Pennsylvania. They located in Tulpehocken in the spring on 1723, in the midst of the Indians: and there they also commenced the improvement of the land without permission from the land commissioners. The Indians complained but the settlers were not disturbed. Subsequently the Indians released their rights and about 1733 they moved beyond the Blue Moutains.
BIOGRAPHY: Conrad Weiser was married to a young woman of Schoharie in 1720. He continued at that place till 1729,when with his wife and five children he removed to the Tulpehocken settlement, locating on a tract of land near the prsent borough of Womelsdorf. Shortly after his arrival, his ability and sucess as an Indiann
interpreter became known to the Provencial government, and theGovernor employed
him in negotiation with the Indians. His first services in this capacity were performed in 1731, and from that time for nearly thirty years he was almost
constantly engaged in this important work. He assisted at numerous treaties, and in the published proceedings of these treaties his name appears prominently. His integrity was particularly recognized and publicly
complimented.
BIOGRAPHY: He was one of the most prominent men in the French and Indian War. HIs
numerous letters indicate his zeal, courage and patriotism. He served in the
war as a colonel, and his services were of great value to the government and to
the people of Berks county.
BIOGRAPHY: The first proceedings for the erection of Berks county were instituted in 1738.
In this behalf, Mr. Weiser was very active, and he continued active till the
county was established in 1752. The town of Reading was laid out by the Penns
in 1748, and in the ale of the town lots Mr. Weiser acted as one of the
commissioners. He was prominently identified with the first movements in
building up the town, and in developing the business interests of the place.
BIOGRAPHY: The Governor of the Province, in 1741, appointed him as a justice of the peace,
and he filled this office for a number of years. When the county was erected
in 1752, he was appointed one of the first judges. He acted as president judge
of the courts till his decease in 1760. He lived at Reading mostly during the
latter part of his life.
BIOGRAPHY: Conrad Weiser died on his Heidleberg farm July 13, 1760, and his remains were
buried in a private burying ground on the place, where they have remained
since. He left a widow and seven children: five sons, Phillip, Frederick,
Peter, Samuel and Benjamin; and two daughters, Maria (m. Rev. Henry Melchoir
Muhlenberg) and Margaret (m. a Finker). He was possessed of a large estate,
consisting of properties at Reading, and lands in Heidleberg township and in
the region of country beyond the Blue Mountains. In heidleberg, he owned a
tract which included the privilege of a "Court-Baron", granted to him in 1743,
the tract having originally contained 5,165 acres as granted to John Page in
1735, and having then been erected into a manor, called the "Manor of Plumton".
At Reading one of his properties was business stand, and it has continued to
be a prominent business location from that time till nw, a period embracing
over 150 years.
BIOGRAPHY: For upward of fifty years, various unsuccessful efforts were made in behalf of
erecting a suitable memorial to Conrad Weiser. In 1892 and 1893, the compiler
of this history (Morton L. Montgomery) delivered a lecture before local teachers' institutes in different parts of the county entitled "Life and Times of Conrad Weiser" for the purpose of securing a memorial, and the Reading Board of Trade led the school for observance by the teachers and scholars as "Weiser Day", and to facilitate this observance 3500 copies of the lecture were distributed gratutiously to all the schools of the city and county. It was not until October 30, 1907, that a modest tablet was placed in the west wall of the Stichter Hardware Store on Penn Square by the Historical Society of Berks County, which reads as follows:
BIOGRAPHY: POSTERITY WILL NOT FORGET HIS SERVICES-WASHINGTON.
________
IN MEMORY OF COLONEL WEISER
BIOGRAPHY: PIONEER, SOLDIER, DIPLOMAT, JUDGE, AS INTERPRETER AND INDIAN AGENT HE NEGOTIATED EVERY TREATY FROM 1723 UNTIL NEAR THE CLOSE OF THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR.-----The WEISER BUILDING, WHERE HE OFTEN MET THE INDIANS IN CONFERENCE, WAS ERECTED BY HIM ON THIS SITE IN 1751----BORN IN GERMANY IN 1696, ARRIVED IN BERKS IN 1729, DIED IN 1760, NEAR WOMELSDORF, WHERE HIS REAMINS ARE BURIED.----HIS UNSERVING HONESTLY SET A SHINING EXAMPLE TO FUTURE GENERATIONS---UNDER THE
AUSPICES OF THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF BERKS COUNTY THIS TABLET WAS ERECTED IN 1907 BY THE SCHOOL CHILDREN OF THE COUNTY.
BIOGRAPHY: -----------
By JOHN HOWER
http://www.leba.net/~jhower/Valley/Weiser1.html
BIOGRAPHY: When Conrad Weiser moved to the Lebanon Valley from Schoharie, New York, in 1729 at the age of 33, he brought with him a great knowledge of the Indian languages and customs.
BIOGRAPHY: Weiser had first lived with the Mohawk Indians in New York in 1712, two years after his family arrived with other refugees from the Palatinate region of Germany. Weiser's father, John Conrad, had the foresight to realize that a knowledge of Indian ways would serve both the colony and Conrad well in the years to come.
BIOGRAPHY: When he came to the Lebanon Valley, Weiser brought with him his wife, Anna Eve. Anna Eve's maiden name was never mentioned by Weiser and a romantic tradition has it that she was a Mohawk Indian. One other explanation for the lack of a maiden name may be that she was an indentured orphan girl. The lack of record keeping often could account for the omission of a maiden family name.
BIOGRAPHY: The first mention of Weiser as an interpreter for Pennsylvania come in 1731, when he accompanied Shekallamy to meet with Governor Gordon in Philadelphia. Shekallamy was an agent for the "Six Nations" (Iroquis) and was a friend of the English throughout his life. A statue of Shekallamy stands on the grounds of Weiser's homestead, just east of Womelsdorf.
BIOGRAPHY: On this first trip, Weiser volunteered his services, and by August 1732, he was employed as an interpreter by the governor. In later years, he also served in the same capacity for Virginia, Maryland and New York. Throughout the following years, Weiser was to make many trips to the Indians as a representative of the government and as a guide and interpreter for the Moravian missionaries.
BIOGRAPHY: The high regard that the Indians had for Weiser was evident by the name they gave him, Tarachawagon, which meant "holder of the heavens."
BIOGRAPHY: During this time, Weiser also became a justice of the peace for Lancaster County (Berks County was not formed until March 1752) and continued to increase his land holdings. By 1736, he had become one of the area's largest landholders, owning most of present-day Womelsdorf.
BIOGRAPHY: During his early years in Pennsylvania, Weiser underwent a religious transformation. On top of his duty to his growing family (four children by the time he arrived in Pennsylvania; fourteen children in all) his duties as an interpreter and justice of the peace, Weiser joined the Ephrata Cloister. During the first several years he contributed mostly his name and money by purchasing supplies in Philadelphia. In 1740, Weiser became a priest at the Cloister, but due to the great need for his services elsewhere he left the Ephrata community in 1741.
BIOGRAPHY: Throughout the 1740s, Weiser traveled extensively, negotiating treaties for several colonies and serving as a language teacher and guide for missionaries wanting to convert Indians to Christianity.
BIOGRAPHY: A story that comes from the portion of Weiser's life related the great strength Indians placed in dreams. It is related that on one of his visits to Shekallamy, the chief told Weiser that he had dreamed that Weiser had made him a present of his rifle. Weiser, several nights later, to Shekallamy that he had also had a dream in which Skekallamy presented him with an island in the Susquehanna River. Shekallamy gave Weiser the Isle of Que, said to be the chief's favorite. Whether this story is true or romanticized, the island was owned by Weiser and remained in his family for several generations.
BIOGRAPHY: Early in the 1750s, trouble started to break out among the settlers and the Indians, trouble which Weiser was to play perhaps one of his most important roles. The trouble, of course, was to become full warfare -- the French and Indian War.
BIOGRAPHY: The beginning of the French and Indian War in 1754 found Conrad Weiser the Superintendent of the Indian Department for the Provincial Government.
BIOGRAPHY: His duties included a trip in April 1754 to Shamokin in an effort to conciliate the chiefs of the Six Nations. In June of the same year he accompanied Benjamin Franklin to Albany as an interpreter for an Indian conference. This conference lasted through June, July and part of August. At this conference, more lands were purchased from the Indians and the first "plan of union" for the colonies was discussed. Throughout the remainder of 1754 and 1755, Weiser was almost constantly on the move between Philadelphia and Albany, this at a time when speedy travel might mean riding half the distance while leading a horse over mountain trails for the other half.
BIOGRAPHY: In October of 1755, Governor Morris advised Weiser that he had been commissioned as a colonel in the Provincial Service. Weiser commanded a regiment of volunteers from the present-day Berks County and had command of the Second Battalion of the Pennsylvania Regiment, consisting of nine companies. His command manned the line of defensive forts built along the base of the Blue Mountains.
BIOGRAPHY: The first of these forts were constructed during the winter of 1755-56, and were situated about 10 miles apart. Weiser's command stretched from the Delaware River at Easton to the Susquehanna River at Harrisburg. Private blockhouses scattered between these forts helped guard the Valley against attack.
BIOGRAPHY: The nearest of these forts and blockhouses were Fort Swatara, situated north of Lickdale on the farm of Peter Hedrick, and a private blockhouse near Harpers, north of Annville.
BIOGRAPHY: During the time Fort Swatara was actively manned, from January 1756 until May 1758, the average garrison consisted of 42 men and officers. Of these men, 8 to 10 were usually dispatched to assist settlers in Monroe Valley (known then as the hole), 8 to 10 on ranging duty along the mountain and 21 to garrison to smaller fort at Manada Gap (a private blockhouse in Manada Gap was actually in a better defensive position then the Provincial fort there).
BIOGRAPHY: The duties of command did not stop Weiser's travels as an interpreter, though. In November of 1756, he was called to a conference in Philadelphia to act as an interpreter for the Delaware Indians. Some of the Delawares had allied themselves with the French and were blamed for Washington's defeat in western Pennsylvania.
BIOGRAPHY: The years 1756 and 1757 found many people asking for Weiser's service, but age was beginning to catch up with him. On several occasions, Weiser's son, Samuel, was act as an agent for his father.
BIOGRAPHY: In January 1758, Weiser resigned his commission in the Provincial Service due to his failing health. This resignation did not remove Weiser from public life, however. He remained active in his private business dealings, served as the Chief Justice of the Reading court, and continued to serve as an Indian agent.
BIOGRAPHY: In 1758, Weiser assisted General Forbes by supplying wagons and drivers for the expedition to drive the French from western Pennsylvania. Many of the local people were not willing to lend wagons and teams for military use, but with the influence Weiser had, General Forbes was able to move his army west from Carlisle.
BIOGRAPHY: Weiser died on July 13, 1760. He had been active in Indian affairs until the day before his death. Weiser is buried on a knoll near his home.
BIOGRAPHY: The site is maintained by the Pennsylvania Historic and Museum Commission.
BIOGRAPHY: -----------------
BIOGRAPHY: Perhaps the most fitting accolade bestowed on Conrad Weiser was by an Iroquois, who, speaking to white men upon the death of Weiser in 1760, lamented, "We are at a great loss and sit in darkness...as since his death we cannot so well understand one another."
BIOGRAPHY: Who was this man who had such far-reaching influence on relations between Pennsylvania and the Iroquois Confederacy; who had access to provincial governors and sachems alike; who interpreted and negotiated treaties; who was commissioned an officer during the War for Empire; but who also sat as a country judge, served as lay minister, and prospered as a farmer, tanner, and storekeeper?
BIOGRAPHY: Conrad Weiser was born November 2, 1696, in the German principality of Wurttemberg. By 1709, his father, Johann Conrad Weiser, had decided to heed Queen Anne's invitation to inhabitants of the Rhine Valley to migrate to England and to the British colonies in America.
BIOGRAPHY: The Weiser family settled on the New York frontier and in the winter and spring of 1712-1713, young Conrad resided with neighboring Mohawks to learn the language of the Iroquois and serve as a go-between for the German community.
BIOGRAPHY: During his years in New York, Weiser acquired a keen knowledge of the language, customs and statesmanship of the Iroquois Confederacy (or Six Nations), consisting of the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, Senecas and Tuscaroras.
BIOGRAPHY: By 1723, Germans from the Mohawk Valley had begun the overland trek 400 miles, following the Susquehanna river to settle the Tulpehocken Valley in what is now Berks and Lebanon Counties, Pennsylvania. In 1729, Weiser brought his German-born wife, Anna Eve, and their children to the Tulpehocken region, settling on 200 acres near the present town of Womelsdorf.
BIOGRAPHY: Over the next 31 years Weiser became a major land-holder, farmer, tanner and businessman. He and Anna Eve raised 14 children (seven of whom lived to adulthood).
BIOGRAPHY: By the early 1730's, Weiser had become known in government circles in Philadelphia for his knowledge of the Iroquois. Provincial Secretary James Logan hired him to guide the new Pennsylvania Indian policy recognizing Iroquois dominance over the indigenous Lenni Lenape and guaranteeing a stable and safe frontier.
BIOGRAPHY: Over the next two decades Weiser was constantly directing and implementing this policy through treaty negotiations, land purchases, and journeys to the Iroquois homeland. He worked closely with Shikellamy, who had been appointed by the Confederacy to embody Iroquois authority over the Lenni Lenape.
BIOGRAPHY: It was through Weiser and Shikellamy that the Pennsylvania frontier remained stable and peaceful until mid-century.
BIOGRAPHY: By 1755, however, growing competition between Britain and France had ignited a full-blown "War for Empire." Diplomacy was put aside as the Six Nations divided over which side to join.
BIOGRAPHY: Meanwhile, the French established an alliance with the Lenni Lenape and other Native American peoples and launched raids against the eastern Pennsylvania settlements along the Blue Mountain line.
BIOGRAPHY: Pennsylvania responded by forming provincial militia and building a line of outposts. In 1756, Weiser received a commission of Lieutenant Colonel with command of the 1st Battalion, Pennsylvania Regimen responsible for manning the line between the Delaware and Susquehanna Rivers. He held this post until 1758. In that same year an expedition to western Pennsylvania by General John Forbes resulted in the eviction of the French and an end to the fighting in eastern Pennsylvania.
BIOGRAPHY: Throughout his life, Weiser was active in local affairs. He served as a magistrate for Lancaster County, helped found and lay out the town of Reading in 1748, helped to establish Berks County in 1752, and was its President Judge until his death.
BIOGRAPHY: Though a Lutheran, Weiser joined the monastic community of Ephrata Cloister between 1735 and 1741. He lived intermittently as a celibate brother, withdrawing from family and political life until becoming disenchanted with the Cloister's leader Conrad Beissel.
BIOGRAPHY: Weiser, returning to the Lutheran Church, in which he had served as a lay minister, became a founder of Trinity Church in Reading. His daughter Maria married Henry Melchoir Muhlenberg, "patriarch" of the Lutheran Church in Pennsylvania.
BIOGRAPHY: At this death on July 13, 1760, Weiser owned several thousand acres, in addition to his farm, tannery and the store in Reading.
BIOGRAPHY: Movements to honor Weiser's considerable accomplishments culminated in the establishment of the Conrad Weiser Memorial Park by the Conrad Weiser Memorial Park Association in 1928. The nationally known Olmsted Brothers landscape firm designed the park.
BIOGRAPHY: Owned now by the Commonwealth, the Conrad Weiser Homestead is administered by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, which preserves the restored Weiser structures, graveyard and landscaped park, in addition to interpreting Weiser's life.
BIOGRAPHY: This page hosted by Computex/BerksWeb.
http://www.berksweb.com/weisertext.html
Immigration: There are, however, English governmental embarkation lists among which is recorded the sailing of "Weiser, Johan Koenraet and Vrouw and 8 Ch." This entry occurs in the "Fifty party-embarked July 3rd to July 10th; sailed July 15th, 1709."
CONRAD WEISER, Biography
One of the most noted agents of communication between the white men and
the Indians, passed through the territory of Blair county in 1748. He was a
native of Germany, who came to America in early life, and settled, with his
father, in the present Schoharie county, New York, in 1713. They left England
in 1712, and were seventeen months on their voyage. Young Weiser became a
great favorite with the Iroquois Indians in the Schoharie and Mohawk valleys,
with whom he spent much of his life. Late in 1714, the elder Weiser, and
about thirty other families, who had settled in Schoharie, becoming
dissatisfied with attempts to tax them, set out for Tulpehocken, in
Pennsylvania, by way of the Susquehanna river, and settled there. But young
Weiser was enamored of the free life of the savage. He was naturalized by
them, and became thoroughly versed in the languages of the whole Six
Nations, as the Iroquois confederacy in New York was called. He became
confidential interpreter and special messenger for the province of
Pennsylvania among the Indians, and assisted in many important treaties. The
governor of Virginia commissioned him to visit the grand council at
Onondaga, in 1737, and, with only a Dutchman and three Indians, he
traversed the trackless forest for five hundred miles, for
that purpose. He went on a similar mission from Philadelphia to Shamokin
(Sunbury) in 1744. At Reading he established an Indian agency and
trading-house.
When the French on the frontier made hostile demonstrations, in 1755, he
was commissioned a colonel of a volunteer regiment from Berks county; and,
in 1758, he attended the great gathering of the Indian chiefs, in council
with white commissioners, at Easton. Such was the affection of the Indians
for Weiser that for many years after his death they were in the habit of
visiting his grave and strewing flowers thereon. Mr. Weiser's daughter
married Henry Melchoir, Muhlenberg D.D., the founder of the Lutheran church in America.
Transcribed and submitted to the Blair County, PA, USGenWeb archives by
Ruth Curfman rcurfman@home.com
----------------
To my children, Philip, Frederick, Peter, Samuel, Benjamin, and
Maria MUHLENBERG and Margaret FRICKER, all my lands lying beyond the
Kittochtany Mountains. Authorized exrs. to convey land to bro. John Frederick
WEISER, now in his occupation on Swatara.
2
Marriage 1 Henry Melchior Muhlenberg b: 06 SEP 1711 in Eimbeck, Hanover, , Germany
Married: 30 APR 1745 in Reading, Berks, PA
Children
Maria Salome Muhlenberg b: 1760 in Reading, Berks, PA
Sources:
Title: PA Wills 1682-1834 CD-Rom #209
Abbrev: PA Wills
Title: William J White
Note: 8 Virginia Drive, Nashua, NH, USA, 03060, wjwhite@comcast.net
More About John Conrad Jr WEISER:
Burial: 15 Jul 1760, Womelsdorf, Berks Co., Pa.
Christening: Kuppingen, Germany.
More About John Conrad Jr WEISER and Anna Eve FEG Or Feck:
Marriage: 22 Nov 1720, Weisersdorf, Ny.
Marriage Notes for John Conrad Jr WEISER and Anna Eve FEG Or Feck:
Tradition claims Anna Eve was the daughter of an indian chief but no foundation exists for this rumor.
Children of John Conrad Jr WEISER and Anna Eve FEG Or Feck are:
- Philip WEISER, b. 07 Sep 1722, Schoharie, Schoharie Co., Ny, d. 27 Mar 1761, Womelsdorf, Berks, Pa.
- Anna Magdalena WEISER, b. 13 Jan 1724/25, Schoharie Valley, Schoharie, Ny, d. 16 Mar 1741/42.
- +Anna Maria WEISER, b. 24 Jun 1727, Schoharie, Schoharie Co., Ny, d. 23 Aug 1802.
- Frederick WEISER, b. 24 Dec 1728, Schohary, Ny, d. 15 Nov 1773, Womelsdorf, Berks Co., Pa.
- Peter WEISER, b. 27 Feb 1729/30, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa, d. Aft. 1785.
- Christopher WEISER, b. 15 Feb 1730/31, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa, d. May 1731.
- Jacob WEISER, b. 15 Feb 1730/31, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa, d. May 1731.
- Margaret WEISER, b. 28 Jan 1733/34, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa, d. 1838.
- Samuel WEISER, b. 23 Apr 1735, Tulpehocken, Pa, d. date unknown.
- Benjamin WEISER, b. 18 Jul 1736, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa, d. Oct 1736.
- Jabez WEISER, b. 11 Aug 1740, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa, d. 28 Aug 1740, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa.
- Hannah WEISER, b. 27 Feb 1741/42, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa, d. 11 Aug 1742, Tulpehocken, Berks, Pa.
- Benjamin WEISER, b. 12 Aug 1744, Maxatawny Twsp, Berks County, Pa, d. 1782, Maxatawny Twsp, Berks County, Pa.

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