Hij is getrouwd met Anna Catherine Merckel.
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Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1702 te Near Worms, Rhineland-Pfals, Germany, hij was toen 24 jaar oud.
Kind(eren):
{geni:about_me} *[https://www.fmoran.com/volck.html THE FAULK (FULK) FAMILY]
see also
*[https://www.ourfamtree.org/descend.php/Anna-Catherine-Merckel/283156 Andreas Volck Descendants ]
The Faulk family and the Faulk family name is of German origin, and it dates back nearly a thousand years into the Palatinate, one of the most historical areas of Germany. The name was found in its old German spelling as Volk, taken after the name of the first ancestor, with other spellings in the record as Volck and Volke, but after the family migrated to America, the name took the English form and became Folk or Fulk. It is under that Fulk spelling that the family was found in North Carolina.
The first of the Fulk name to come to America was a certain Andreas Volck, who came to New York in 1708 along with his wife and their oldest children. The family came on the ship, Globe, which was commanded by Captain Carolus Congreve. Along with Andreas Volck was his wife, who was Anna Catherine Volkin prior to the marriage, the three children, Maria Barbara, aged 5, ,George, aged 4, and anna Gertrude, aged 1. A fourth child, Carolus, was born on ship.
The family lived in New York for a number of years as members of the Lutheran Church at Newburgh. Andreas Volck and his family later moved to Pennsylvania, and some of the family joined the Moravian church there.
A son, also named Andreas Volck, who is better known as Andrew Fulk in later records, moved to North Carolina with the Moravians and became the ancestor of the Fulk family which spread into several areas of North Carolina. One group of the family, a branch of the Surry County family, moved to Sanford and added an "a" to the name, spelling the name as Faulk.
The Fulk Family History
This history of the Fulk family of the Pilot Mountain area of Surry County, NC traces the lineage back to a certain Andreas Volck (Fulk), who came with his family from Germany to America in the year 1708. The line traces down into North Carolina, with families in the Forsyty and lower Stokes County areas dropped after about 1800. The records after that time concentrate on the group which has lived in and near Pilot Mountain. It will be noted that the families of the Fulk women, who married into other family groups, have not in most cases been listed. the families who descended from Fulk men and kept the Fulk name have been included where such information was available. Persons who are descended from Jacob L. Fulk and Tabitha Ashburn Fulk make up almost all those around the Pilot Mountain area. Those whose names may have been omitted from this lineage will be able to add their own family information from their own family records.
HISTORY COMPILED BY LUTHER N. BYRD
ELON COLLEGE, NC
1977
THE FULK FAMILY HISTORY
The Fulk family of Surry, Stokes and adjoining counties in North Carolina dates its ancestry back into Germany to a certain Andrew Fulk I, whose name in the original German was Andreas Volck, who came from Germany to America along with his wife and older children and settled at Newburgh, NY in the year 1708.
He and his family later moved from NY to Pennsylvania, and one of his sons and perhaps others still later moved southward from Pennsylvania into North Carolina and settled with the Moravians in what was at that time Surry County, NC, although the center of the Moravian movement was later cut away from Surry County and became Forsyth County.
The Fulk family name, like the family itself, is of German origin and was found in the Palatinate area of Germany at least 800 years ago. The original name was recorded in the German form as Volk and was taken from the given name of the original ancestor. It was found under other spellings in Germany such as Volck and Volke, but after the family migrated to America the name took an English form and became Folk or Fulk. In modern times in North Carolina the name is almost always found as Fulk.
This sketch of the Fulk Family will start with that Andreas Volck, to be referred to from time to time as Andreas Volck I, who came to New York in 1708 along with his wife and three oldest children. The family came on the ship Globe, which was commanded by Captain Carolus Congreve. The names of the family coming on that ship included Andreas Volck (aged 30) and his wife, who was Anna Catherine Volkin prior to her marriage (aged 28), along with three children. They were Maria Barbara Volck (aged 5), Georg Hieronimus (aged 4) and Anna Gertruda Volck (aged 1). Actually there was a fourth child when the family landed in New York, for a son named Carolus Volck was born on shipboard and was baptized and christened on the ship on November 28, 1708.
After landing in New York, this family settled at Newburgh and held membership in the Lutheran Church for a goodly number of years. Several other children were born there in New York. They included Anna Maria Volck, born in 1711, Johannes Volck, born in 1712, Jacob Volck, born about 1715, and Andreas Volck, born May 12, 1722. There may have been other births between 1715 and 1722, but there is no record available.
Andreas Volck I and his family moved from Ney York to Allemaengel, PA in 1735 and after removing to Pennsylvania some of the family united with the Moravian Church there, although the family held membership in the Lutheran Church while in New York. Among those joining the Moravian Church were the three sons, Carolus (Carl), Jacob and Andreas II (Andrew). This data comes from the records of a certain Rev Joshua Kocherthal, who had served as a Lutheran minister for the family in New York and later in the new home in Pennsylvania.
The younger Andrew Volck, whom we shall know as Andrew Fulk II, and his family moved from Pennsylvania to North Carolina in 1767, that fact being proved by the Moravian records for the Wachovia settlements around what is now Winston-Salem, along with the various deeds, wills and marriage records of Surry, Stokes and other counties that add to the story of the Fulk family. That Andreas Volck II and his wife the former Maria Margaretha Romig, were in Rowan County when they settled here in 1767, but Surry County was taken away from Rowan in 1770, and still later Stokes County was cut from Surry in 1789.
The Surry County Tax List for 1774 is the first real listing of Andreas Volck II in Surry County, but the Moravian Records prove the 1767 arrival date. He had no sons listing taxes in 1774, but the Surry Tax lists for 1784, ,1785, 1786 and 1789 all list him and some of his sons. In those listings the name had become Folk, and in a few instances it appeared as Fulk, for the name was already taking the English form of spelling.
The very first deed record for Andreas Volck is in Surry Deed Book B, Page 283, and it uses his name in that form as it recorded where he bought 110 acres of land from Frederick William Marshall, who was head of the Moravian Church in thie section. The date of this first deed was September 9, ,1783. Andrew Fulk II listed that 110 acres of land in his early tax lists, and near him in Captain Krouses's district were his sons John Fulk, Adam Fulk and Andrew Fulk III. There was also a William Fulk listed some of the time, but he was not a son of Andrew Fulk II, and he disappears from this area after a few years, probably moving into the western lands.
The deed and tax lists and census records from 1790 through 1870 show two general settlements of the Fulk family, one of them along the Little Yadkin River in Stokes County and the other around Pilot Mountain. The group along the Little Yadkin River in Stokes County apparently descended from Adam Fulk, a son of Andrew Fulk II. The group around Pilot Mountain was almost entirely descended from Johannes (John) Fulk, the son of Andrew Fulk II.
The rest of the history will be included in the Fulk Family Tree in Geni Form...
--------------------
THE FAULK (FULK) FAMILY
The Faulk family and the Faulk family name is of German origin, and it dates back nearly a thousand years into the Palatinate, one of the most historical areas of Germany. The name was found in its old German spelling as Volk, taken after the name of the first ancestor, with other spellings in the record as Volck and Volke, but after the family migrated to America, the name took the English form and became Folk or Fulk. It is under that Fulk spelling that the family was found in North Carolina.
The first of the Fulk name to come to America was a certain Andreas Volck, who came to New York in 1708 along with his wife and their oldest children. The family came on the ship, Globe, which was commanded by Captain Carolus Congreve. Along with Andreas Volck was his wife, who was Anna Catherine Volkin prior to the marriage, the three children, Maria Barbara, aged 5, ,George, aged 4, and anna Gertrude, aged 1. A fourth child, Carolus, was born on ship.
The family lived in New York for a number of years as members of the Lutheran Church at Newburgh. Andreas Volck and his family later moved to Pennsylvania, and some of the family joined the Moravian church there.
A son, also named Andreas Volck, who is better known as Andrew Fulk in later records, moved to North Carolina with the Moravians and became the ancestor of the Fulk family which spread into several areas of North Carolina. One group of the family, a branch of the Surry County family, moved to Sanford and added an "a" to the name, spelling the name as Faulk.
The Fulk Family History
This history of the Fulk family of the Pilot Mountain area of Surry County, NC traces the lineage back to a certain Andreas Volck (Fulk), who came with his family from Germany to America in the year 1708. The line traces down into North Carolina, with families in the Forsyty and lower Stokes County areas dropped after about 1800. The records after that time concentrate on the group which has lived in and near Pilot Mountain. It will be noted that the families of the Fulk women, who married into other family groups, have not in most cases been listed. the families who descended from Fulk men and kept the Fulk name have been included where such information was available. Persons who are descended from Jacob L. Fulk and Tabitha Ashburn Fulk make up almost all those around the Pilot Mountain area. Those whose names may have been omitted from this lineage will be able to add their own family information from their own family records.
HISTORY COMPILED BY LUTHER N. BYRD
ELON COLLEGE, NC
1977
THE FULK FAMILY HISTORY
The Fulk family of Surry, Stokes and adjoining counties in North Carolina dates its ancestry back into Germany to a certain Andrew Fulk I, whose name in the original German was Andreas Volck, who came from Germany to America along with his wife and older children and settled at Newburgh, NY in the year 1708.
He and his family later moved from NY to Pennsylvania, and one of his sons and perhaps others still later moved southward from Pennsylvania into North Carolina and settled with the Moravians in what was at that time Surry County, NC, although the center of the Moravian movement was later cut away from Surry County and became Forsyth County.
The Fulk family name, like the family itself, is of German origin and was found in the Palatinate area of Germany at least 800 years ago. The original name was recorded in the German form as Volk and was taken from the given name of the original ancestor. It was found under other spellings in Germany such as Volck and Volke, but after the family migrated to America the name took an English form and became Folk or Fulk. In modern times in North Carolina the name is almost always found as Fulk.
This sketch of the Fulk Family will start with that Andreas Volck, to be referred to from time to time as Andreas Volck I, who came to New York in 1708 along with his wife and three oldest children. The family came on the ship Globe, which was commanded by Captain Carolus Congreve. The names of the family coming on that ship included Andreas Volck (aged 30) and his wife, who was Anna Catherine Volkin prior to her marriage (aged 28), along with three children. They were Maria Barbara Volck (aged 5), Georg Hieronimus (aged 4) and Anna Gertruda Volck (aged 1). Actually there was a fourth child when the family landed in New York, for a son named Carolus Volck was born on shipboard and was baptized and christened on the ship on November 28, 1708.
After landing in New York, this family settled at Newburgh and held membership in the Lutheran Church for a goodly number of years. Several other children were born there in New York. They included Anna Maria Volck, born in 1711, Johannes Volck, born in 1712, Jacob Volck, born about 1715, and Andreas Volck, born May 12, 1722. There may have been other births between 1715 and 1722, but there is no record available.
Andreas Volck I and his family moved from Ney York to Allemaengel, PA in 1735 and after removing to Pennsylvania some of the family united with the Moravian Church there, although the family held membership in the Lutheran Church while in New York. Among those joining the Moravian Church were the three sons, Carolus (Carl), Jacob and Andreas II (Andrew). This data comes from the records of a certain Rev Joshua Kocherthal, who had served as a Lutheran minister for the family in New York and later in the new home in Pennsylvania.
The younger Andrew Volck, whom we shall know as Andrew Fulk II, and his family moved from Pennsylvania to North Carolina in 1767, that fact being proved by the Moravian records for the Wachovia settlements around what is now Winston-Salem, along with the various deeds, wills and marriage records of Surry, Stokes and other counties that add to the story of the Fulk family. That Andreas Volck II and his wife the former Maria Margaretha Romig, were in Rowan County when they settled here in 1767, but Surry County was taken away from Rowan in 1770, and still later Stokes County was cut from Surry in 1789.
The Surry County Tax List for 1774 is the first real listing of Andreas Volck II in Surry County, but the Moravian Records prove the 1767 arrival date. He had no sons listing taxes in 1774, but the Surry Tax lists for 1784, ,1785, 1786 and 1789 all list him and some of his sons. In those listings the name had become Folk, and in a few instances it appeared as Fulk, for the name was already taking the English form of spelling.
The very first deed record for Andreas Volck is in Surry Deed Book B, Page 283, and it uses his name in that form as it recorded where he bought 110 acres of land from Frederick William Marshall, who was head of the Moravian Church in thie section. The date of this first deed was September 9, ,1783. Andrew Fulk II listed that 110 acres of land in his early tax lists, and near him in Captain Krouses's district were his sons John Fulk, Adam Fulk and Andrew Fulk III. There was also a William Fulk listed some of the time, but he was not a son of Andrew Fulk II, and he disappears from this area after a few years, probably moving into the western lands.
The deed and tax lists and census records from 1790 through 1870 show two general settlements of the Fulk family, one of them along the Little Yadkin River in Stokes County and the other around Pilot Mountain. The group along the Little Yadkin River in Stokes County apparently descended from Adam Fulk, a son of Andrew Fulk II. The group around Pilot Mountain was almost entirely descended from Johannes (John) Fulk, the son of Andrew Fulk II.
The rest of the history will be included in the Fulk Family Tree in Geni Form...
--------------------
http://www.ourfamtree.org/browse.php?fid=283156
Andreas Volck | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1702 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Anna Catherine Merckel |
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