Clymer Weir Cox Genealogy » CONRAD (F) STRICKLER (± 1696-1771)

Personal data CONRAD (F) STRICKLER 


Household of CONRAD (F) STRICKLER

He is married to BARBARA UNKNOWN.

They got married in the year 1718.


Child(ren):

  1. John Strickler  1720-1795 
  2. Jacob Strickler  1727-1802
  3. Abraham Strickler  ± 1735-????
  4. Magdelena Strickler  ± 1738-????


Notes about CONRAD (F) STRICKLER


Conrad Strickler
Birth: 1695 Friedrichstadt, Kreis Nordfriesland, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Death: 1771 (aged 75œ76) Stonybrook, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial: Strickler-Miller Cemetery, York, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
Memorial #: 23375402
Bio: Conrad Strickler, a Mennonite, was the son of Hans Strickler and Elsbeth.
He married Barbara and they immigrated ca. 1724.
Issue:
Barbara, b. 1720,
John, b. ca. 1723-5,
Jacob, b. 1727,
Conrad, b. ca. 1731.

Conrad Strickler received the land this cemetery is located on in 1736, Blunston License, survey B5-20 (PA Arch., ser.17.114).

Note: Until 1854 Friedrichstadt was controlled by the Danish monarchy, it is now part of Germany.
Inscription: Fieldstone: "C Str 1771"
Fieldstone reported back in the 1930's, I do not believe anyone has been able to located it since then.
Family Members
Spouse
Barbara Strickler 1695-1771
Children
Anna Barbara Strickler Treichler 1718-1777
John Strickler 1720-1795
Jacob Strickler 1727-1802
Conrad Strickler 1731-1793
Created by: Glen Swartz (46889224)
Added: 12 Dec 2007
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/23375402/conrad-strickler
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/23375402/conrad-strickler: accessed 20 October 2023), memorial page for Conrad Strickler (1695œ1771), Find a Grave Memorial ID 23375402, citing Strickler-Miller Cemetery, York, York County, Pennsylvania, USA; Maintained by Glen Swartz (contributor 46889224).

Conrad Strickler
Born about Jan 1696 in Friedrichstadt, Nordfriesland, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
ANCESTORS
Son of Hans Jacob Strickler and Elsbeth (Lohrer) Strickler
Brother of Abraham Strickler, Heinrich Strickler, Hans Jacob Strickler jr, Anna Katharina Dorothea (Strickler) Shellenberger [half], Hans Jacob Strickler [half], Ulrich Strickler [half], Margaretha (Strickler) Miller [half], Anna Barbara Strickler [half] and Anna Maria (Strickler) Shellenberger [half]
Husband of Barbara (Mueller) Strickler – married [date unknown] [location unknown]
DESCENDANTS
Father of Johannes Strickler, Henry Strickler, Jacob Strickler and Ulrich Strickler
Died after 1 Jul 1771 after about age 75 in Hellam Township, York, Pennsylvania

Jacob Strickler
Birth: 12 Sep 1727 Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death: 9 Oct 1802 (aged 75) Hallam, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial: Strickler-Miller Cemetery, York, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
Memorial #: 87056807
Bio: Jacob Strickler's biography is below, and the biography of his father Conrad Strickler follows it at the bottom.

Married: Anna Bixler (whose sister Christina married Jacob's brother Conrad)
Children:
Jacob (b. 5 Dec 1749 in Hellam, York Co., Pa.);
Daughter (b. c. 1750);
John (b. c. 1761);
Henry Abraham (b. 24 April 1763);
Conrad (b. c. 1765?, see below);
Other Daughters? (b: c. 1750- c.1760).

Based on location of the 1728 loyalty oath of Jacob's father Conrad, Jacob must have been born in Lancaster County where the Strickler brothers shared a farm, but since Conrad was soon associated with the Kreutz Creek area in 1732, Jacob must have grown up in the frontier area that would become York Co. In 1765 he was living on part of his father Conrad's land next to his brother John, and he patented 182 acres on 12 Feb. 1767 which was part of the original land grant to his father. This land was next to Ulrich Strickler's heir's property. Jacob was also a witness to a deed of Conrad Strickler's in 1769.

Jacob was constable of Hellam Township in March 1770 and likely held the same position in Oct. of the same year and Jan. 1771 when he is listed as a town official without indication of which office (York County Archives on line).

The Hellam Township tax lists that follow show the the property of Jacob Strickler and his relatives including his sons and nephews (his brothers were deceased by this time but the younger family members are difficult to differentiate). The Stricklers did not own any slaves which were allowed in Pennsylvania until 1781. The tax is computed in pounds. shillings. pence.

1779
Stickler Acres Horses Cows Tax
Henry 150 3 4 175.10.6
Jacob, Jr. - 1 4 6.15.0
John 190 3 5 142.10.0
Conrad - - - 32.19.0
Henry 125 2 6 76.10.0
*Jacob 182 4 5 191.5.10

1780
Stickler Acres Horses Cows Tax
Henry, 120 2 5 60.0.0
Stony Run
Henry, Jr. - 1 1 3. 0.0
Henry 150 3 9 150.0 .0
*Jacob 182 4 5 83.18.0
John 190 3 5 64. 1.6
Conrad - - - 32.10. 6

1781
Strickler Tax
Henry, Jr., mills 5. 9. 9
Jacob, Jr. 5.19. 7
Henry 6. 6. 6
Henry 2.17. 3
John 5. 4. 8
*Jacob 5. 11.-
Conrad 1. 5. 0
Unmarried Men
John 2. 5. 0
John (of Jacob) 2. 5. 0
Jacob 5.15. 0

1782
Stickler Acres Horses Cows Tax
Henry, Jr. 20 - 3 14.10. 0
Jacob, Jr. 130 4 2 15. 1. 10
John 196 4 5 9. 0. 0
Jacob - - - 30.19. 6
Conrad - - - 7.10. 6
Henry 125 3 6 13.11. 0
Single men
John, Jr. - - - 3. 0. 0
John, of Jacob - - - 3. 0. 0

1783
Strickler Acres Other Males Females Other Tax
Henry 80 - 2 1 grist-mill,1 saw-mill 6.0.3
Jacob, Jr. 180 - 2 - 6.4.4
John 195 - - - 4.8.3
John, son of Jacob 180 1 2 - 5.9.8
Henry, Stony Run 126 5 2 - 4..8.8
Single Males
John, Jr. - - - -

In 1777 a Jacob Strickler is named in the York County militia company of Capt. Jacob Beaver in the 3rd Battalion of Col. David Jameson . The same name appears in the York militia company of Capt. Jacob Blister of the 5th Battalion originally commanded by Colonel William Rankin, and this could be the same man since militia companies reorganized every year. By proximity, this Jacob was Conrad's son or nephew. That same year Jacob and Samuel Landis were executors for the estate of John Strickler 11 March 1777.

On 7 April 1787 the children of Jacob and Anna Bixler Strickler took up land warranted in Fayette Co., PA along Jacob's Creek. Jacob Strickler took up 240 acres stating he was from Hellam. On 15 July 1790 Jacob and his wife Elizabeth sold this land to his brother Henry Strickler , who was a blacksmith. The land was adjacent to Abraham Strickler, a cousin who was the son of John and Elizabeth (Sprenkle) Strickler.

A land record for Jacob as executor for his apparent brother-in-law Joseph Bixler is recorded on 29 April 1795. This seems to indicate that Jacob was respected and trusted by his wife's family to see to the estate. The family was close knit as evidenced by the will of Jacob's double sister-in-law Christina (Bixler) Strickler probated on 9 Nov. 1798, and John Strickler, the executor, seems to be Jacob's son. One of the legatees was Joseph Bixler who was the son of the Joseph who died in 1795. The following year on 11 Oct. 1796 it seems Jacob had yet again experience as an executor for the will of Michael Miller.

The 1800 census for Hellam Township identifies Jacob Stickler, Sr, over 45, with two others in the household: a female over 45 (his wife) and a female 26-45 (his daughter) (line 9 on page 1316). Beside him as neighbors are the household of his relatives Albrick (Ulrich), Barbara, John, and Jacob (Jr?). None of these are over 45, so it seems they are his children and/or nephews and niece.

On 8 June 1801 Jacob sold his 122 acres in Hellam Township to his son John. This was part of the 182 acres he patented in 1767, and on the same date he also sold his other acreage to Samuel Landes (son of the man who was co-excutor of John Stickler's will in 1777). He wrote his will on 1 Dec 1800 and it was proved 3 Nov 1802. In his will he wanted his estate divided among his children but does not name them. The executors were Jacob and John Strickler. However, another document (noted by Frank Duff) shows the settlement for the sons who included included John as well as Conrad and Jacob and Henry in Fayette Co.

Below is a biography for Jacob's father, CONRAD STRICKLER, THE IMMIGRANT.

Konrad/Conrad Strickler
Born: ca. Jan 1695
Died: Oct 1771
Barbara (Müller/Simens?}
Children:
Barbara (arrived with Conrad when the family immigrated ca. 1725, later married Johannes Treichler;
she requested her brothers John and Jacob to be guardians of her children);
Johannes (b. c. 1725, d. c 1795 in Hellam Township, York Co., married Elizabeth Sprenkle);
Jacob (b. 21 Sep 1727 in Kancaster Co., Pa., married Anna Elizabeth Bixler œ see below);
Henry (b. c. 1727, d. 1796, settled in Donegal Township which became Rapho Township, Lancaster
County; on 26 March 1759 he and Abraham Strickler bought 35 acres there, and Abraham sold him his share on 10 Feb. 1763);
Daughter (b. c. 1731);
Ulrich (b. c. 1734, d. 1804, married Elizabeth Funk; he too settled in Rapho Township where he was
listed as an unmarried man in 1757 but later was taxed as a land owner and was in the 1790
census; he was fined for refusal to bear arms at Rapho from 1783-1786 with his son John,
which would indicate that Ulrich was under age 55, thus born in 1728/1731 or later)
Abraham (b. c. 1735, d. c. 1767 in Londonderry Twp., Dauphin Co., Pa, married Catherine Rohrer
between Mar 26 1765 and 19 Apr 1765);
Magdelena (b. c. 1738, she had ten children from her marriage with Christian Bixler, the brother of
Anna who married Jacob and Christina who married Conrad Strickler, so the three Stickler
siblings married the three Bixler sibligs).
Conrad (b. c. 1739, d. by 1793 in Hellam Township, York Co., married Christina Bixler œ no children,
fined in York County between 1777 and 1783 for refusal to bear arms ).

For the parents of Conrad and his brothers Abraham and Heinrich who came to America in the 1720s, see researcher Frank Duff's analysis at the website "The Strickler Family (http://www.geocities.ws/ibersheim/index-2.html. Much of what follows below is his work.

Known Mennonite records logically reveal that Abraham and Conrad are the sons of the Rev. Hans Strickler and his first wife, who may have been Elsbeth Löhrer or Elsbeth Schneider.

The connection of Conrad and Abraham Strickler to Hans Strickler is purely by process of elimination. The number of Mennonite Stricklers living in Germany during the 1690's was limited to only 3 or 4 families: Hans, Hans Jacob (father of Hans), Hans Jakob (called Jakob) and Hans Conrad Strickler.

Hans Jacob Strickler b. 24 Jul 1636, the father of Hans Strickler and Hans Conrad Strickler, was too old to be the father of Conrad and Abraham Strickler.

Hans Conrad Strickler moved to Friedrichstadt, Germany. His children are found in the records of Friedrichstadt beginning in October 1699. He had no child by the name of Abraham.

Hans Jacob Strickler, known in records as Jakob Strickler, had a number of children, the first of which was not born until 1701. This Jacob is probably the Jacob b. 20 May 1677 in Hirzel, the son of Hans Strickler and Anna Asper. This Hans Jacob Strickler is often listed as Jakob Strickler, son of Hans Jacob Strickler b. 1636; however no record of a Jakob Strickler living to adulthood is found in the family of Hans Jakob Strickler b. 1636, unless he was born after the family moved from Hirzel.

Hans Strickler, b. 4 Dec 1669 is by elimination, the most probable father of Conrad and Abraham Strickler b. c1693.

There are a few records of Conrad from which to create a brief biography. From his actions, we see he was willing to take risks for a better future when he crossed the Atlantic to a new world and then soon moved to the frontier of that land where he would be among the first to build a new community. He also was a person who stood by his beliefs and was not afraid to challenge authority that had overstepped its bounds. In this he had the model of his father and generations of other Stricklers who had stood up for their Mennonite beliefs and suffered persecution for it. He was not one to shrink from a challenge.

As noted above, it seems he came at the same time as Abraham Strickler who is his brother, and they initially settled in Lancaster County where Conrad's son Jacob was born. Immigrant ships usually arrived in September and October to take advantage of a calmer summer crossing of the Atlantic, and since Abraham is found in the tax records for Little Conestoga (now W. Hempfield) in Lancaster County in 19 August 1725, it seems he must have arrived at least by the previous year in order to have planted a taxable crop, and it is likely Conrad sailed from Rotterdam with him. Their brother Heinrich is recorded as arriving in 1727.

The question so many American families ask is what was it that made the ancestors leave their homes and come to America, an unknown land where customs and perhaps even the language were foreign? In "Our Strickler Heritage" Brenner describes the situation for the Stricklers:
The immigration of Mennonites to America began in 1683 when Francis Daniel Pastorius, a well-to-do German lawyer, acting as agent for a group of Mennonites, Pietists and Quakers purchased from William Penn 15,000 acres for a settlement in what is now the Germantown section of Philadelphia. On October 6, 1683, the ship Concord docked in Philadelphia bearing the group, "thirteen heads of families" with their wives.

In 1710, Martin Kundig and Hans Herr of Amsterdam, Holland, took title for the Mennonites to 10,000 acres on Pequea Creek in what is now West Hempfield Township. It was known then as Conestoga for the Native American tribe of the same name which lived there. This area is where the first Strickler immigrants later settled.

During this time, the Swiss government had taken the intriguing position of attempting to prevent the "better" class of citizens from leaving the country. Accordingly, an immigration tax was imposed, and in some cases the government threatened to confiscate property from those who voluntarily emigrated.

Conversely, the government wanted to encourage the departure of the poorer classes and the radical religious groups such as the Mennonites. In 1711 the government decided to waive the immigration tax and to pay for transportation to Holland for the Mennonites provided they agreed never to return to Switzerland. (William) Penn must not have had to resort to the "hard sell" during his recruiting trips to the area in the early 1700s (although some sources deny that he, himself, actually made such trips).

With fellow Mennonites giving them moral support, Conrad and Abraham Strickler used the first three years in North America to establish themselves, and they took an Oath of Allegiance to the British Crown and Pennsylvania authority in March 1728 in Lancaster Co.. Abraham wrote his full name, but Conrad signed with just his initial "K" for the German Konrad, and they included the information that they were Mennonites. Also in 1728 Abraham (with Conrad present on the land) purchased 161.25 acres in Lancaster Co. from John Daugherty located on the Susquehanna River near what is today West Hempfield. Abraham continued to pay the tax through 1732. From 1727 their brother Heinrich lived there with them as well, but within a few years they all went their separate ways pursuing different opportunities.

Through the land agent Samuel Blunston, Conrad received official permission on 23 Aug 1732 to settle in the wilderness in the new territory beyond the Sesquehanna River in the area that would become York Co. This is supported by a statement published in 1886 in "History of York County, Pennsylvania " by John Gibson. In the biography of Benjamin Strickler, Gibson adds, "Mr. Strickler's ancestors were among the first persons to obtain permits from Samuel Blunston, agent of the Penns, to settle on this side of the Susquehanna River. They settled in Kreutz Creek Valley as early as 1732 and were in the valley when Capt. Cressap and his band of Marylanders encroached upon the right of the Pennsylvania settlers" (see below for this episode).

Meanwhile Abraham looked further south to the Shenendoaha Valley in Virginia. As early as 8 March 1726 he had received a trading pass to do buisness south of the Pennsylvania border. This he conducted in Page Co., Virginia, and there is the report that his trading shelter was found ca. 1924 at Egypt Bend, and there was a date of "1725" etched into one of its stones. By 1733 Abraham had permanently moved into Egypt Bend, Orange Co. (now Page Co.), Virginia, and Heirich stayed behind in Lancaster Co. where he took over paying the taxes on the property at Little Conestoga.
A document dated 30 Oct 1736 shows Conrad received 350 acres in the Kreutz Creek Settlement area where he had probably taken up a homnestead four years earlier, and his neighbors were Michael Tanner, Herny Bacon, and Jacob Welshover. This area later became Hellam Township, York County, but it was disputed by the government of Maryland. Conrad's name does surface in the documents of "the Chester County Plot" which was a political imbroglio between Pennsylvania and Maryland in 1736-7 (see The Beginnings of the German Element in York County, Pennsylvania by Abdel Ross Wentz).

Conrad was one of the new German immigrants who were settling the virgin territory in the wilds to the west of the Susquehanna River which Pennsylvania claimed, but the land was also coveted by Lord Baltimore of Maryland and his supporters, and he sent a surveying party into the region to prepare its annexation by his colony. At first the settlers in the area cooperated, not understanding the situation, but when it was learned that they were breaking their oaths to the Pennsylvania authorities, they expelled the survey party. On 13 Aug. 1736 some 56 of them signed a letter to the Pennsylvania authorities explaining their mistake and praying for reinstatement as subjects of the province, and another letter with their names had been sent on 11 Aug. to Lord Baltimore rejecting Maryland's claims and asserting their allegiance to Pennsylvania. Conrad Strickler signed these documents. On 21 Oct. 1736 Maryland issued arrest warrants for the signers including Conrad (spelled Conrade Stricklaer by the Maryland court clerk) for "contriving signing and publishing a seditious paper and writing against his Lordship and his government."

Lord Baltimore's officials reacted quickly to the impudence of the Pennsylvania German farmers who rejected his authority, which they labeled "the revolt of the Germans," and sent some 300 troops into the remote western area, harassing the population and searching for those who signed the document, including Conrad and the three neighbors name above who were taken prisoner while they was attending the funeral of a local child. All four were carted off to imprisonment at Annapolis as were 18 others who were found. However, when Pennsylvania troops soon arrived in the disputed area, they took into custody some of the Maryland officials attempting to implement the survey including Col. Cressap who had led Maryland's troops.

Before further hostilities erupted into a war between the colonies, cooler heads prevailed, and negotiations reduced the tensions. The 22 jailed in Baltimore were released as well as the Marylanders held by Pennsylvania authorities. Some researchers indicate that as part of his release Conrad promised to quite the disputed area, but he remained there, and the courts eventually established Pennsylvania authority in the area. But it was not until 1767 that the famed Mason Dixon Line established the clear boarders for Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware and Virginia. The Creation of West Virginia in 1863 established the present boundaries.

So Conrad went back to his farm. What he though of all this is unrecorded (which could have been bewildering, especially as a German/Swiss immigrant new to the colonies), but his willingness to resist illegal authority and to sign a document rejecting the claims of a lord seem to be significant acts. In fact, the Stricklers had a history of rejected authority they did not recognize (as seen in the Mennonite conflict in Europe), and Conrad's actions are right in line with those American farmers who would take on the British government forty years later in which some of Conrad's relatives and descendants would fight while others stood by their pacifist beliefs.

Conrad's father Hans died in April 1737, and step his half-brothers and sisters evidently decided to join there siblings in Pennsylvania. There is no proof that their mother came with them, and the age of 62 (advanced for that era) she might have decided not to go. Five months later they arrived in Philadelphia on 18 Sept. having crossed the Atlantic aboard "The Charming Nancy." Initially they joined Heinrich on the West Hempfield farm. Among them were Anna Katharinia Strickler (1701-1738) married to Ulrich Shellenberger with 5 children. This family remained on the original West Hempfield farm. Also arriving with the group was Anna Maria Strickler, and when Anna Katheraina soon died in 1738, she married her brother-in-law Shellenberger and they remained in West Hempfield with six more children. Hans Jacob Strickler (1704-1782) who was married to Anna Catharina Heistand, signed the colony loyalty oath on 8 Oct 1737 and eventually moved to Donegal (now Rapho) in Lancaster County by 1745. Later they relocated to Mt. Joy in the same county in 1758 where they are recorded with six children, and the last notice for Hans is the transfer of his property to his son Abraham in 1779. Anna Barbara Strickler (1715-1765) and husband Christian Landis were living in Windsor Township in York Co. by 1751 with five children.

As for the fifth sibling Ulrich Strickler (1709-1749) who was married Mary Kneisley Kauffman, he too signed the colony oath on 8 October, and by 1742 he arrived in the Kreutz Creek area to join has half-brother. On 5 May he settled a 400 acre farm adjacent to Conrad on property sold by John Davis. Some of this land has remained in the Strickler family ever since, and today it is the site of Strickler Family Homestead and Strickler-Miller Cemetery. However, some of the old property is occupied by the York County Prison.

In 1749 Henrich and his wife Susanna left the original homestead in West Hempfield and joined Conrad and Ulrich in York Co. They brought with them perhaps as many as 10 children, but there is speculation that two of these were adopted from family of nephew Abraham, Jr. who had lived in the Shenendoah Valley when his father moved there ca. 1732.

There is a land record from 23 July 1763 for a land purchase by Contad Strickler from Martin Manaberger in Manch Township in York Co. This might be the Conrad in Hellam who saw an opportunity eleswhere in the county.

Concerning Conrad's land, some of his acerage was patented to his son Jacob Strickler in Feb 1767. He previously sold part 196 acres of his land with his wife Barbara to his son John on 29 July 1765 for "natural love" and then later John sold this land to his son Ulrich.

The Strickler heritage in Hellam which was begun nearly three centuries ago by Conrad has been maintained to the present day, and in addition to the properties noted above, there is also one building that has disappeared but remains a historical site. According to a 1907 history of York Co., "Strickler's Mennonite Church, named in honor of one of the early settlers, is situated in Hellam Township, two miles east of Wrightsville. It is one of the oldest churches of this denomination west of the Susquehanna. The present house of worship was erected more than one hundred years ago. Michael Strickler was the deacon in 1907" (History of York County by George W. Prowell). The land was provided by a Jacob Strickler and his wife Elizabeth in 1798 to Henry Strickler and the elders of the church. Henry must have been a nephew ("Our Strickler Heritage" 172-3). The congregation was under the Lancaster Conference, but in 1923 it was absorbed by the Stony Brook Mennonite Church, then known as Witmer's, a few miles west, and the building later was razed.

One other historical contribution of Conrad's descendants is a popular dessert. According to Morgan G. Brenner, the popular concoction was the creation of a Strickler inventor:
He is David Evans Strickler, a descendant of Conrad, a brother of our Heinrich. What did he do? He invented the banana split as explained in "Our Strickler Heritage"

As the story goes, while working as an apprentice pharmacist at Tassel's Pharmacy, 805 Ligonier Street in downtown Latrobe, PA, the 23 year old invented the popular soda fountain treat in 1904. He supposedly was inspired by watching soda jerks ply their trade while he was visiting in Atlantic City. The sundae caught on with the students at nearby St. Vincent's College and word quickly spread.

The price? Ten cents–twice the price of other sundaes.

The city of Latrobe recognized the invention with a centennial celebration in 2004, the same year that the National Ice Cream Retailers Association certified Latrobe as the birthplace of the delicacy. Several other cities had claimed the honor. Walgreen's Drug Store chain is credited with creating national interest in the sundae.

Young Strickler eventually bought the drug store, renaming it Strickler's Pharmacy. He later graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in pharmacy and still later became an optometrist. It is believed that he also designed and patented the classic glass serving dish for the sundae, known as a boat, originally made by Westmoreland Glass Co., in Grapeville, PA, which continued to do so until 1985.

Strickler sold the business in 1965, having continued to make banana splits until then. He died in 1971 at age 90. His last surviving child died in 2009; there are no known heirs. A project is underway in Latrobe to restore the drug store, now closed, and add a community museum in an adjacent building ("Our Strickler Heritage" 136).

The final resting place for Conrad ca. 1771 must have been in the Strickler œ Miller Cemetery, one other enduring location in Hellman Township. There is a reported field stone that reads "C. STR. 1771" which is among many of the family graves.
Family Members
Parents
Conrad Strickler 1695-1771
Barbara Strickler 1695-1771
Siblings
Anna Barbara Strickler Treichler 1718-1777
John Strickler 1720-1795
Conrad Strickler 1731-1793
Children
Conrad Strickler 1765-1848
Created by: Steven Showers (47715988)
Added: 19 Mar 2012
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/87056807/jacob-strickler
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/87056807/jacob-strickler : accessed 21 September 2021), memorial page for Jacob Strickler (12 Sep 1727œ9 Oct 1802), Find a Grave Memorial ID 87056807, citing Strickler-Miller Cemetery, York, York County, Pennsylvania, USA ; Maintained by Steven Showers (contributor 47715988) .

Conrad Strickler received the land this cemetery is located on in 1736, Blunston License, survey B5-20 (PA Arch., ser.17.114).

Note: Until 1854 Friedrichstadt was controlled by the Danish monarchy, it is now part of Germany.
Inscription: Fieldstone: "C Str 1771"
Fieldstone reported back in the 1930's, I do not believe anyone has been able to located it since then.
Family Members
Spouse
Barbara Strickler 1695-1771
Children
Anna Barbara Strickler Treichler 1718-1777
John Strickler 1720-1795
Jacob Strickler 1727-1802
Conrad Strickler 1731-1793
Created by: Glen Swartz (46889224)
Added: 12 Dec 2007
URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/23375402/conrad-strickler
Citation: Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/23375402/conrad-strickler : accessed 21 September 2021), memorial page for Conrad Strickler (1695œ1771), Find a Grave Memorial ID 23375402, citing Strickler-Miller Cemetery, York, York County, Pennsylvania, USA ; Maintained by Glen Swartz (contributor 46889224) .

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Timeline CONRAD (F) STRICKLER

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About the surname STRICKLER


When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Donnagene, "Clymer Weir Cox Genealogy", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/clymer-weir-cox-genealogy/I9629.php : accessed June 3, 2024), "CONRAD (F) STRICKLER (± 1696-1771)".