Clymer Weir Cox Genealogy » WENDELL WYNANT FUNK (PA 1706) (BOWMAN) BACHMAN BAUMAN (1665-1735)

Persönliche Daten WENDELL WYNANT FUNK (PA 1706) (BOWMAN) BACHMAN BAUMAN 

  • Er wurde geboren im Jahr 1665 in Thun, Canton, Bern, Switzerland.
  • Alternative: Er wurde geboren im Jahr 1681 in Thun, Canton, Bern, Switzerland.
  • Alternative: Er wurde geboren im Jahr 1681 in Alsace, France.
  • Beruf: in Coppersmith.
  • (Emigrated) rund 1709 in To Germantown, Pennsylvania.
  • (Emigrated) im Jahr 1709 in Perhaps on ship MARY HOPE in first wave of Palatine Mennonites to leave for Philadelphia, Herrs in group.
  • Er ist verstorben April 1735 in Pequea, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States, er war 70 Jahre alt.
  • Alternative: Er ist verstorben April 1735 in Lampeter Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, er war 70 Jahre alt.
  • Er wurde beerdigt in Tschantz Graveyard, Lampeter, West Lampeter Township, Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
  • Ein Kind von Hans Rudolf (John) Dandliker Bachman Bauman und Anna Meili Funk
  • Diese Information wurde zuletzt aktualisiert am 28. Dezember 2023.

Familie von WENDELL WYNANT FUNK (PA 1706) (BOWMAN) BACHMAN BAUMAN

Er ist verheiratet mit ANNA LOTSCHER HERR.

Sie haben geheiratet


Kind(er):



Notizen bei WENDELL WYNANT FUNK (PA 1706) (BOWMAN) BACHMAN BAUMAN


ANCESTOR OF WYATT & OWEN CLICK THROUGH FATHER WILL CLICK

Wendel Santmann Bauman
Birth: 1665 Bern, Switzerland
Death: Apr 1735 (aged 69œ70) Pequea, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial: Tschantz Graveyard, Lampeter, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Memorial #: 104706157
Bio: Wendel Santmann Bauman was born abt 1665 in Thun, Canton, Bern, Switzerland. He was the son of Hans Rudolf John Dandiker Bauman (1636-1690) and Anna Santmann Bauman (1635-1682). "WENDEL BAUMANN, the original settler of this family, came to Pennsylvania at a very early date. He was born in Switzerland about the year 1665. When about 17 years of age he, in company with his parents, moved to Holland, where, they had the promise of protection from the persecuting parties of Southern and Central Europe, by William, Prince of Orange, afterwards King William III of England.

Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about Wendell Bauman Name: Wendell Bauman Year: 1707
Place: Germantown, Pennsylvania Source Publication Code: 927.47 Primary Immigrant: Bauman, Wendell Annotation: Date and place of naturalization, date and port of arrival, or date and place of first mention of residence in the New World. Excerpted from Lancaster County Heritage, January 1984. Many German names. Source Bibliography: BREITBARD, GAIL. Some Names from the 1725 Pequea Tax Lists, Lancaster County, PA. (Conestoga Township). In The Lost Palatine, no. 35 (1986), pp. 7-11. Page: 8. Arrived in October on the ship "Mary Hope" left Gravesend, England in June via Rotterdam, Holland, having sailed up the Rhine from Switerland. The nine heads of families arranged with William Penn's agents.

Wendel married Ann Herr (1680-1735) in 1709 in Strasburg, Chester, Pennsylvania, USA. Ann was the daughter of Hans H Herr (1639-1725) and Elizabeth Mylin Kendig Herr (1639-1730). It was not until Sept. 29, 1709, that the Mennonites as a body in and around Germantown were granted the rights of naturalization, and thus given equal civil rights with their English neighbors.

Wendel and Ann Herr Bauman had the following 11 known children: Hans John, Jacob, Benjamin, Joseph, Magdalena, Christian, Barbara, Peter, Henrick, Anna and Elizabeth.

Wendel Baumann, as the name of this settler is properly written, when he took up his original tract of land, consisted of 530 acres, including the 6 per cent. for road allowance. **The tract forms part of the Present Village of Lampeter and consisted in 1886 of 3 farms and 8 town lots, etc. In 1717 he took up another piece of land of 300 acres plus 6 per cent. for road allowance, along Big Beaver Creek, about 3 miles southeast of his mansion farm. This second tract was divided into 2 farms which he sold in his lifetime to John and Casper Bauman. He sold, also in his lifetime, 250 acres of his mansion place, leaving at his decease 280 acres. http://www.horseshoe.cc/pennadutch/families/bowman/bowman.htm#bfh

Wendal Baumann died in April, 1735. Letters of Administration for his estate were granted by the Registrar of Wills to Benjamin Baumann, dated September 6, 1735; bond given in 300(pounds); his bail are Jacob Baumann Martin Bear. An inventory was filed of his real and personal estate. Administrator's account is found on file. A true and compared copy of original inventory, as the same is on file in the Registrar's Office (Lancaster County). "A Inventory made the 7th day of April, 1735, for the Plantation of Wendel Bauman, deceased, and of all other goods as followeth. His oldest known son, Christian (born August 13, 1724), was then only eleven years old. At a Mennonite conference of the entire Pennsylvania church, held in 1725, two of the five preachers present from Conestoga, as the Pequea settlement was then called, Martin Baer and Johannes Bauman, names that correspond respectively, with one of the bondsmen and one of the valuators of the estate. Ulrich Breckbiel, also is known to have been a preacher at that time.

Wendel was buried a little south of his old home in the Hans Tschantz graveyard, which is located south of Lampeter and about 8 miles southwest of the City of Lancaster, Pa. His grave has no tombstone. This dilapidated ancient burying ground, set aside by Preacher Tschantz from his farm releasing all personal claim thereto in 1740, was for the use of the neighbors. It lies between two Mennonite meeting houses called Willow Street (or Brick and Strasburg, where some of the descendants of the pioneers still worship. One of their ministers, Frank M. Herr, is a descendant of Hans Herr, the bishop of this settlement and after whom it is named. Some of the early settlers including Jacob Miller, Hans Mylin and the consort of Martin Mylin, are all interred here. The earliest grave with any record on its marker is L. G. 1741. http://www.horseshoe.cc/pennadutch/families/bowman/bowman.htm#bfh

Family Members
Parents
Hans Bauman 1636-1690
Anna Meili Funk Bauman 1635-1681
Spouse
Anna Kendig Herr Bauman 1679-1735
Siblings
John Santmann Bowman 1679-1738
Children
Anna Cecelia Bauman Weaver 1703-1777
Peter Bauman 1703-1806
Benjamin Bowman 1712-1775
Hans John Bauman 1720-1795
Jacob Johannes Bowman 1722-1778
Created by: Stella (47848948)
Added: 5 Feb 2013
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104706157/wendel-santmann-bauman
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104706157/wendel-santmann-bauman : accessed 19 January 2022), memorial page for Wendel Santmann Bauman (1665œApr 1735), Find a Grave Memorial ID 104706157, citing Tschantz Graveyard, Lampeter, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA ; Maintained by Stella (contributor 47848948) .

ANCESTOR OF OWEN GOEKING CLICK

Wendel Santmann Bauman
Birth: 1665 Bern, Switzerland
Death: Apr 1735 (aged 69œ70) Pequea, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial: Tschantz Graveyard, Lampeter, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Memorial #: 104706157
Bio: Wendel Santmann Bauman was born abt 1665 in Thun, Canton, Bern, Switzerland. He was the son of Hans Rudolf John Dandiker Bauman (1636-1690) and Anna Santmann Bauman (1635-1682). "WENDEL BAUMANN, the original settler of this family, came to Pennsylvania at a very early date. He was born in Switzerland about the year 1665. When about 17 years of age he, in company with his parents, moved to Holland, where, they had the promise of protection from the persecuting parties of Southern and Central Europe, by William, Prince of Orange, afterwards King William III of England.

Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about Wendell Bauman Name: Wendell Bauman Year: 1707
Place: Germantown, Pennsylvania Source Publication Code: 927.47 Primary Immigrant: Bauman, Wendell Annotation: Date and place of naturalization, date and port of arrival, or date and place of first mention of residence in the New World. Excerpted from Lancaster County Heritage, January 1984. Many German names. Source Bibliography: BREITBARD, GAIL. Some Names from the 1725 Pequea Tax Lists, Lancaster County, PA. (Conestoga Township). In The Lost Palatine, no. 35 (1986), pp. 7-11. Page: 8. Arrived in October on the ship "Mary Hope" left Gravesend, England in June via Rotterdam, Holland, having sailed up the Rhine from Switerland. The nine heads of families arranged with William Penn's agents.

Wendel married Ann Herr (1680-1735) in 1709 in Strasburg, Chester, Pennsylvania, USA. Ann was the daughter of Hans H Herr (1639-1725) and Elizabeth Mylin Kendig Herr (1639-1730). It was not until Sept. 29, 1709, that the Mennonites as a body in and around Germantown were granted the rights of naturalization, and thus given equal civil rights with their English neighbors.

Wendel and Ann Herr Bauman had the following 11 known children: Hans John, Jacob, Benjamin, Joseph, Magdalena, Christian, Barbara, Peter, Henrick, Anna and Elizabeth.

Wendel Baumann, as the name of this settler is properly written, when he took up his original tract of land, consisted of 530 acres, including the 6 per cent. for road allowance. **The tract forms part of the Present Village of Lampeter and consisted in 1886 of 3 farms and 8 town lots, etc. In 1717 he took up another piece of land of 300 acres plus 6 per cent. for road allowance, along Big Beaver Creek, about 3 miles southeast of his mansion farm. This second tract was divided into 2 farms which he sold in his lifetime to John and Casper Bauman. He sold, also in his lifetime, 250 acres of his mansion place, leaving at his decease 280 acres. http://www.horseshoe.cc/pennadutch/families/bowman/bowman.htm#bfh

Wendal Baumann died in April, 1735. Letters of Administration for his estate were granted by the Registrar of Wills to Benjamin Baumann, dated September 6, 1735; bond given in 300(pounds); his bail are Jacob Baumann Martin Bear. An inventory was filed of his real and personal estate. Administrator's account is found on file. A true and compared copy of original inventory, as the same is on file in the Registrar's Office (Lancaster County). "A Inventory made the 7th day of April, 1735, for the Plantation of Wendel Bauman, deceased, and of all other goods as followeth. His oldest known son, Christian (born August 13, 1724), was then only eleven years old. At a Mennonite conference of the entire Pennsylvania church, held in 1725, two of the five preachers present from Conestoga, as the Pequea settlement was then called, Martin Baer and Johannes Bauman, names that correspond respectively, with one of the bondsmen and one of the valuators of the estate. Ulrich Breckbiel, also is known to have been a preacher at that time.

Wendel was buried a little south of his old home in the Hans Tschantz graveyard, which is located south of Lampeter and about 8 miles southwest of the City of Lancaster, Pa. His grave has no tombstone. This dilapidated ancient burying ground, set aside by Preacher Tschantz from his farm releasing all personal claim thereto in 1740, was for the use of the neighbors. It lies between two Mennonite meeting houses called Willow Street (or Brick and Strasburg, where some of the descendants of the pioneers still worship. One of their ministers, Frank M. Herr, is a descendant of Hans Herr, the bishop of this settlement and after whom it is named. Some of the early settlers including Jacob Miller, Hans Mylin and the consort of Martin Mylin, are all interred here. The earliest grave with any record on its marker is L. G. 1741. http://www.horseshoe.cc/pennadutch/families/bowman/bowman.htm#bfh

Family Members
Parents
Hans Bauman 1636-1690
Anna Meili Funk Bauman 1635-1681
Spouse
Anna Kendig Herr Bauman 1679-1735
Siblings
John Santmann Bowman 1679-1738
Children
Anna Cecelia Bauman Weaver 1703-1777
Peter Bauman 1703-1806
Benjamin Bowman 1712-1775
Hans John Bauman 1720-1795
Jacob Johannes Bowman 1722-1778
Created by: Stella (47848948)
Added: 5 Feb 2013
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104706157/wendel-santmann-bauman
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104706157/wendel-santmann-bauman : accessed 23 December 2021), memorial page for Wendel Santmann Bauman (1665œApr 1735), Find a Grave Memorial ID 104706157, citing Tschantz Graveyard, Lampeter, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA ; Maintained by Stella (contributor 47848948) .

Wendel Baumann, b. ca 1670-81, Canton Bern; d. 1735-04, Lampeter, Lancaster Co., PA (11111.13462.1); m. Ann[a] Sant[a]mann, b. ca 1675[9?]; d. 1735?, Lancaster Co., PA)
In the 1660s and ‘70s, various Mennonites moved from Switzerland to the Palatinate in western Germany, due to a decrease in tolerance for the Anabaptist faith of the Mennonites in their ancestral home-country and a temporary increase in tolerance in parts of Germany. It is likely that Wendel and Ann met in the Palatinate in their teens in the 1690s. Later, some families travelled along the Rhine to Rotterdam, Holland (around 1688; immigration appears to have taken place in 1698), and Wendel and Ann probably married there and had their first three children. Wendel worked as a coppersmith.
Several Mennonites arranged with William Penn in London in early 1707 to purchase land across the ocean, and they voyaged from Rotterdam to North America on the barque Mary Hope, with Captain John Annis. They left Rotterdam in mid- to late-June of 1707 and then continued from Gravesend, Kent, England on June 29 and travelled via Harwich, intially alongside the Russian fleet (which they overtook), and Scotland‘s Shetland/Orkney Islands. The total reached 94 passengers, including the Quaker preacher Thomas Chalkley. Seven weeks and four days from Shetland (and after considerable rough seas and resultant illnesses), they arrived in America probably in late September of 1707. They landed at Philadelphia, immigrated in 1709, and lived in nearby Germantown until 1710, when additional relatives joined them.
In the meantime (1709-10), Wendel and several others (from the Herr, Weber, and Kendig families) established the details of their new land: a tract of 10,000 acres some fifty miles to the west, near the Pequea Creek, several miles south-east of present-day Lancaster, PA, and partly overlapping with the later location of the village of Lampeter. Wendel had a farm on the north side of what is now called Penn Grant Road and ran a mill on the Pequea Creek, just to the south. The 1712 farm was located at what is now 873 E. Penn Grant Road, but the house (and perhaps the other buildings) were razed in 1874. Wendel‘s son Christian also settled on 444 acres of this land around 1718-20 and patented it in 1730. This area is in what was then Chester County and is now West Lampeter Township, in Lancaster County, between Willow Street and Strasburg. Many of these earliest settlers (the first whites in the area) are buried at the Tschantz Graveyard (originally on the corner of a farm), on the west side of Pequea Lane, just south of Penn Grant Road. Willow Street (—Brick“) Mennonite Church and Strasburg Mennonite Church are also both nearby, as is the 1719 —Hans Herr“ House–the oldest from that era, which was built by Bishop Hans Herr‘s (1639-1725) son Christian (1680-1749), but Hans and his wife, Elizabeth Kendig Herr (1639-1730), did also live there and regularly held church services in its small meeting-house room. The house is preserved as a museum, along with a number of later buildings. Christian Herr and his wife Anna‘s daughter Maria (1702-56) married a Brubacher ancestor of mine, Abraham Brubaker (1695-1753), so I am also a descendant of Hans Herr. Herr‘s line has been traced to the Schwabish Knight Hugo, the Herr or Lord of Bilried (ca 1009).
See also DB‘s Photo Album.
?(—Brecknock“) Jacob, b. ca 1698, d. ca 1745, near Alleghenyville, PA
?Christian, b. ca 1700 [1xxxx.x3462.11]
?Anna, b. ca 1703, m. Jacob Weaver; d. 1771-02-11, Ephrata Cloister, PA
?Hannes (John), b. ca 1709, Lancaster Co., PA?
?Benjamin, b. ca 171-; d. ca 1775, Lancaster Co., PA
?Joseph, b. 1714
?Peter, b. 1726-09? (either born before 1720, or to a second wife of Wendel); m. Elizabeth ? (daughter —Die Alte Betty,“ b. 1757-02-14; d. 1832-09-24, Kitchener, Ontario, Canada)
?Michael, b. ? (either born before 1720, or to a second wife of Wendel); d. 1762?, there is an —MB“ marker at the Alleghenyville Cemetery
Christian (?) Baumann, b. ca 1700; d. 1735, Philadelphia, PA; m. Barbara ?
-Christian lived on 444 acres on the original 1710 tract, was a potter, and died of mercury poisoning at a young age, leaving an impoverished family
?John, b. 1720; d. 1795
?Jacob Bauman(n), b. 1722 [1xxxx.x3462.112]. For this line, continue with A (directly below).
?Christian, b. 1724 [1xxxx.x3462.113]. Go to —B. Lines Through Christian Baumann“ (about one screen below).
?Barbara, b. 1726-12-29
?Elizabeth, b. 1728-07-19

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