John David and Christina Held were the original immigrants of our Held family. John David grew up in Aurich near Stuttgart, Germany. Christina was raised in nearby Mönsheim. They married on February 26, 1843, and were the parents of ten children: six born in Germany, the last four born in Pennsylvania. In the summer of 1856, they sailed to the United States of America for economic reasons. The Held family had first choice for space on the ship because they had the largest family. Two other related families, Reichenbachs and Blyholders, had immigrated earlier. It took forty-four days to cross the Atlantic Ocean on the bark Genessee. Outside of New York harbor the ship stuck on a sandbar at Little Egg Harbor. The first tugboat that went out to pull them off the sandbar asked too large a fee. They did not have enough money. After remaining on the sandbar four days they pooled enough of their possessions to make up the difference. Then finding there was whiskey on board they would not work until they shared their drink. Finally the ship was pulled off the sandbar and landed safely at New York.
After arriving at Leechburg by train two of the older boys walked to Cherry Run to tell the Reichenbachs their families had arrived and were waiting at the Leechburg train station. This Reichenbach family had immigrated from Germany a few years earlier and settled on a farm in Cherry Run. They went with the horses and wagon to meet their friends, took them home with them and gave them temporary shelter and food. The Held family moved to Manor Township. In 1862, they moved to a log cabin on a 75 acre farm in Burrell Township. The only lights in the cabin were candles.
John David was a certified tailor by trade and brought his own sewing machine packed in a trunk of clothes on the boat from Germany. At that time to be certified in tailoring, one had to make a suit of clothes for a stranger without measuring him. If the suit fit perfectly he was given certification. The first suit John David made in Pennsylvania was for their pastor at St. Michael's Evangelical Lutheran Church at Brick Church, PA. He charged fifteen dollars for the suit. Frederick walked to the manse to deliver the suit.
Speaking only German, the Held family found it difficult to converse with English-speaking neighbors. The children learned English quickly and helped their parents. John David relied on his son Frederick to translate conversations while he measured men for suits. They walked to Greensburg to get orders and deliver suits. None of his sons cared to learn the tailoring trade.
Frederick at age thirteen led a cow from Cherry Run to Mosgrove, a distance of seventeen miles. The cow was a wedding gift from John David to his son, George. As he was passing the Kittanning railroad station someone called to Frederick it had just come over the telegraph that President Lincoln had been shot.
Their children grew older and went to find work. George moved to Kittanning to work. Regina married Joseph Frantz and moved to Kittanning, also. Jacob farmed a large farm at Kelly Station. Frederick built a house on the next farm. Louisa married Samuel Kunkle and moved to the Shay area. Hiram worked in the Apollo steel mill. Mary Ann was a dwarf and stayed at home.
John David died in 1882 and was buried beside his two children in St. Michael's Evangelical Lutheran Church Cemetery at Brick Church, Armstrong County, PA. Nineteen years later Christina Lydia died and was buried beside him. Mary Ann went to live with her niece Bretha Swank. They were brave and courageous pioneers.
From The Held Family Tree 1983, by Lois Jean Altman Rupert. [with modifications based on German church research added by Fred H. Held]
This Held family ancestor tree ties to other Held decendant family trees. See World Family Trees Vol 1 #2370 and Vol 3 #6555.
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