The Migration of the Schoharie Germans to Pennsylvania and the History of Tulpehocken Township

The Migration of the Schoharie Germans to Pennsylvania and the History of Tulpehocken Township

Notes on The Meaning of Tulpehocken: Sources: Dick Creps, Judy Thayer, and
Dave Becker

Tulpehocken…which means “Land where the turtle sang and wooed”…also the
name of a Creek in Eastern Berks County. The Swatara, a tributary of the
Susquehanna, led to the Tulpehocken Creek, which “fed” into Lancaster Co.
Now, a distinct area of research within Berks and Lancaster Counties, and
into an even larger area.

When the Palatinites went to New York, and got fed up with the British
attitudes toward them, Weiser, and others began to look for other better
places to settle. Apparently, Wm. Penn’s folks had contacted them, offering
land in the western part of Pennsylvania. Seemingly, the ulterior motive for
the Penns was to provide themselves (in Eastern Penn) with a westerly buffer
against the Indians. The PA authorities didn’t throw down so many roadblocks
against German Settlement, as did the British (who allowed only 10 acres per
family and was not sufficient for adequate farming). The story of the
Palatinates migration is mythical. You might like to order Earl W. Ibach’s
“Map”.

Conrad Weiser (father and son) knew about the Tulpehocken area of Berks
County through numerous contacts with the Indian peoples of that area, and trips
made to the region. It is unknown how long the negotiations took, but the
decision was finally made to make the move to the Tulpehocken area. A
petition exists which names those original migrants. This migration took
place in 1723, when 33 families left New York upon the invitation of
Governor William Keith of Penn. And settled in the Tulpehocken area. The
following petition to Governor Keith from these Palatinates who would
eventually settle along the Tulpehocken Creek in Eastern Berks County.

“To his excellency, William Keith, Baronet, Governor of Pennsylvania…The
Honorable Council…The petition to us, the subscribers, being thirty-three
families in number, at present inhabiting Tuplehocken Creek, Humbly Sheweth
that your petitioners being natives of Germany about 15 years ago were by the
great goodness and royal bounty of her late Majesty, Queen Anne, relieved
from the hardships which they then suffered in Europe, and were transported
into the colony of new York, where they settled. But the families increasing,
being in that Government confined to the scanty allowance of ten acres of
land to each family were on they could not well subsist. Your petitioners
being informed of the kind reception which their countrymen usually meet with
in the Province of Pennsylvania, and hoping they might, with what substance
they had, acquire larger settlements in that Province, did last year (in the
Spring of 1723) leave their settlements in that Province, and came with their
families into this Province, where upon their arrival they applied themselves
to his excellency the Governor, who, of his great goodness, permitted them
to inhabit upon Tulpahaca Creek, on condition that they should make full
satisfaction to the proprietor of his agents for such lands as should be
alloted to them, when they were ready to receive the same. And now, your
petitioners, understanding that some gentlemen, agents of the proprietor,
have ample power to dispose of lands in this province. An we, your
petitioners, being willing and ready to purchase do, humbly beseech your
Excellency and Council to recommend us to the favorable usage of the
proprietors agents, that upon paying the usual prices for lands at such
distance from Philadelphia, we may have sufficient rights and titles made to
us for such lands as we shall have occasion to buy, that our children may
have some settlement to depend on hereafter, and that by your authority we
may be freed from the demands of the Indians of that part of the country, who
pretend a right thereto. And we humbly beg leave to
inform your Excellency and Council, that there are fifty families more who,
if they may be admitted upon the same conditions, are desirous to come and
settle with us. We hope for your favorable answer to this our humble
request, and as in duty bound shall ever pray.

JOHANNES YANS JOHANNES CLAES SHAVER
PETER RITT JO. HAMELAR RITT
CONRAD SCHITA ANTONIS SHARB
PALTUS UNSF JOHANN PETER PACHT
TORITINE SERBO JOCHAM MICHAEL CRICHT
JOSAP SAB SEBASTIAN PISAS
JORGE RITT ANDREW FALBORN
GODFREY T FILLER  

The above, as well as the portion to follow, is taken from “The German
Emigration from New York Province into Pennsylvania: Part V of a narrative
prepared at the request of the Pennsylvania German Society,” by Reverend
Henry Richards, D.D. and presented in 1899.

This next section deals with the long journey from New York to Pennsylvania,
which these original settlers made: “Guided by the Indians, and not under the
leadership of either the elder Weiser, or his gifted son, as some
suppose, both of whom came later, the pioneers of 1723, with much toil and
labor, cut their way through the forest, after which, with their wives,
little ones, and animals, they followed, by day, the scanty track they had
made in the woods and slept at the foot of it’s trees, wooed to slumber by
it’s ceaseless noises, during the night, until the forty or fifty miles,
which separated them from the (Susquehanna) river had been traversed. Then
came the building and launching of heavy rafts, to contain their domestic
utensils, and of the light and speedy canoes for themselves, on which they
were to continue their long journey to the haven of rest, accompanied slowly
by their cattle, driven along the river’s banks. As forest and open space,
trees, rocks, and sandy beach, succeeded in each other, with tiresome
monotony, and as camp-fire at the close of day, they little reckoned that they
had swept by the spots where the flourishing towns of Binghamton and Oswega
were, later, to stand. As they rounded the curve where the Lackawanna joins
the Susquehanna at Pittston, who was the wizard of their number whose
divining rod would point to the priceless diamonds beneath them and tell them
that their dumb animals were treading underfoot riches of far greater value
to mankind than all the pears and rubies for which the world was striving?
Whose fancy amongst them all would have pictured or imagined the
beautiful city of Wilkes-Barre, and the cola breakers everywhere rearing
their heads into the air as though they were indeed giants issuing from their
long slumber in the bowels of the earth? As they exchanged greetings with the
Indians, in their village of Shamokin, can it be that there rose up before
any one of them a picture of the hideous scenes of their near future, or any
foresight of their murdered sons, and daughters and the blackened ruins of
the homes towards which they were hastening, or did the troubled dreams of any
other reveal to him the fort at Sunbury, no longer Shamokin, filled with it’s
soldiers, and sound into his astonished ears the booming to it’s guns? Down
the Grand Stream, which was bearing them, they slowly floated until their
watchful eyes caught sight of a long log cabin on its shores, where now
stands the capitol city of Pennsylvania, (Harrisburg) and as they looked upon
the home of John Harris, it is altogether probable they
saw, for the first time in all their journey, the dwelling of a white man.
Cheered by the sight on they went, until they came to where the Swatara Creek
joined it’s waters with those of its mighty brother, and at the spot
where Middletown now stands, our wanderers at last changed course and entered
the stream which told them they were drawing near the goal towards which they
had been hastening for so many weary days. To reach this goal, was to endure
a few more hardships and trials, and when, in the lovely Tulpehocken (which
means “land where the turtle sang and wooed.”) region, nestling at the foot
of the Blue Mountains and wavered by its numerous streams, they pitched their
camp for the last time, it was HOME.

Outside of the surrounding Indian villages, we have no record of previous
settlements, so that, in very truth, they had taken up “vacant lands.” Thus
is the connection of the Tulpehocken Settlement with the region of
Schoharie, New York.

Later in the same paper, Rev. Richards wrote:

“There were constant accessions to the number of the first feeble band. In
1728, other families left Schoharie, and settled (in Tulpehocken), amongst
whom were:

Leonard Anspach Jacob Werner
Caspar Hohn Johann Philip Schneider
George Schmidt Jacob Katterman
George Zeh Johannes Noecker
Jacob Lowengut Johann Jacob Holsteiner
Heinrich Six Michael Lauer
Philip Theis Conrad Scharf
Anreas Kapp  

And in an even later work, Rev. Richards writes:

“Before the erection of Berks County, in 1752, the township of Tulpehocken
was a recognized division, being a part of Lancaster County in 1729. Because
of its great size, in 1734, another township was laid off from it and
erected, called “Heidelberg” to commemorate that part of the fatherland from
whence many of the settlers came. The early inhabitants, therefore, of the
old Townships of Heidelberg and Tulpehocken, were composed, mainly (though
not entirely) of the immigrants from New York Province.

Rupp names the following as amongst the first settlers:

John Adam Diffebach Peter Lebo Christian Lower
Jacob Fisher Peter Ansbach John Soller
Michael Reid Jacob Sorbet Herman Walborn
Francis Wenrich Frederick Reed Ulrich Schwartz
George Landauer Steven Conrad Henry Boyer
Conrad Sherf Martin Stip John Livergood
Abraham Lauch Peter Sanns Peter Serby
Adam Stein Casper Ritt John Edwards
Peter Reed George Null Lenard Res
Jacob Livergood Adam Lesh Francis Parvin
Philip Brown Henry Seller Peter Shever
Ludowick Ansbach Felty Unruth George King
Jacob Miller John Fohrer Jacob Hubelor
Christopher Keiser Jacob Wilhelm John Trautman
Jacob Bartner Michael Detweiler Nicholas Olly
Nicholas Kinser John Hovershen John Moir
Simon Scherman Henry Stein John Riegel
Christian Moir Jacob Schwaner George Sherman
Henry Millberger Peter Keephart Wolf Miller
William Keyser George Paffinberger George Jacob Sherman
George Kantrico Gottfried Rohrer Daniel Moir
Jacob Hoffman Martin Schell Mathias Doebler
Adam Jordan George Wolf Jacob Tantor
Bartel Dissinger Jacob Fullman George Tallinger
Matthias Noffzinger Jacob Reed John George Meirslem
Frederick Kaufman Jacob Miller Christian Frank
Simon bogenreif Rulolph Moir Andrew Wollinbeck
Michael Kofner George Gotyman George Brosius
Henry Reidenbach Jacob Bortner John Balsar
Jacob Casert Valentine Brindseil Casper Reed
Martin Warner Christopher Ulrich William Brath
Johann Jacob Snelby Gottfried Fitler Matthias Bricker
Peter Mink John Pontius Casper Stump
Peter Criser Matthias Wagner Daniel Lucas
Nicholas Hamber William Keyser Nicholas Miller
Philip Gebhart George Weaver George Ulrich Fisher
Philip Meade William Dieler John Philip Bunger
Conrad Reber George Christ Valentine Bungardner
Conrad Wirth Nicholas Lang Thomas Kern
Frederick Stap Mithias Shefer Valentine Neu
John Ridnore Christian Kurtz Jacob Stough
John Ebberts John George Mats Michael Alberts
William Sassaman Peter Laux Adam Rehm
Peter Krieger John Adam Weaver John Weiser
Jacob Houksvert    

Copyright © 1997 by: Judy Thayer for use in the USGenWeb Archieves.


Further information:

Many of the records that we use to learn about the 1709 -1710 group in New
York are taken from a Lutheran Minister, Reverend Kocherthal, born Josua
Harrsch. In the book by Roland Paul, PALATINES IN AMERICA, on page 39, he
states that this Lutheran Parish Register, which began in 1708 on board ship
and kept until his death in 1719 is the oldest parish register in the United
States written in the German language.

My ancestors who came to PA from New York helped start other Lutheran
Churches in the Tulpehocken area.

There are many excellent books, and societies that tell the history of the
people who came to PA. The Tulpehocken Settlement Historical Society has
published much information on the families.

My WENRICH and SCHAUER, and allied families were part of that group who
came. To my knowledge, most of them were Lutheran or Reformed not
Mennonites.

Contributed by: Joan.


I find the Schoharie Colony, est 1709, very interesting since I was reared
not far away in upstate NY and to my recollection there was nothing in the
history books about it and there was quite a bit about other early
communities. These were German-speaking Swiss Mennonites who had suffered
religious persecution and had been exiled to locations all over Europe and
England. I quote from a paper by Eshleman:

“1723 — German Palatines of New York Come to Pennsylvania”

“In the great German Exodus of 1709, of which we have spoken before,
Governor Hunter brought 3000 of those Palatines (who were landed and
stranded in England in the Exodus) to New York. They camped or lived in New
York till the fall of 1710, and then the Queen of England provided for their
transportation to a wilderness near Schoharie, New York, where it seems one
of the chiefs of the Five Nations gave a tract of land, because this chief
and several of his tribe (who were in England to get England to send a Force
to reduce the French in Canada) saw the destitute condition of these
Germans, while they lay in England in their poverty and their misery.
The laws of New York did not suit the Germans — and therefore, in 1723,
they asked permission to come to Pennsylvania. They were allowed to do so,
and settled on Tulpehocken and Swatara Creeks — becoming the foundation of
some of the best German stock of Upper Lancaster, Dauphin, and Montgomery
Counties…. The petition of these people for permission to come to
Pennsylvania is also found in the Colonial Records.”

These people were German-speaking Swiss Mennonites. There were “camps”
for them, one just outside of London and another in Northern Ireland. I
have read elsewhere that the Mennonites were part of the “Barbarian” tribes
that toppled the Roman Empire — they may have originated in Eastern Europe,
i.e. in Silesia on the banks of the Odder River. After conquering western
Europe, most of them settled in Switzerland, and became Christians,
following the teachings of Menno Simons. After the Reformation they were
known as “Anabaptists”– they did not believe in infant baptism. They
suffered extensive religious persecution from the State Church of
Switzerland. (I also find the history books lacking on this subject.) But
I suspect knowledge of what went on in Europe at this time is the reason
that later the American founding fathers insisted on separation of Church
and State in the constitution.

<!–
St. Paul’s West Camp</A

–>

Additional information

A Brief Sketch of the First Settlement of the County of Schoharie

Contributed by: Doug Garber.


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