MANSFIELD & NINEMIRE FAMILY LINEAGE:Information about Friedrich Meinert, Sr.
Friedrich Meinert, Sr. (d. 1751)
Notes for Friedrich Meinert, Sr.:
Friedrich Meinert Sr. was our German immigrant ancestor. He married Eva Maria 'Mary' Weber, and together they are thought to have come to Pennsylvania from Germany in about 1730.
The Meinerts had 8 children -- Maria 'Elizabeth' Gaumer, Jacob Minerd Sr., Borkhard Meinder, Friedrich Meinder Jr., Catharine Eigner, John Meinert, Mary Bohm and Johannes Heinrich Meinert. At least one of their children -- Elizabeth -- was born in Germany. (To read an account of what their ocean voyage might have been like, click here. To read about the influence of the German language and culture they brought to America, click here.)
The Meinerts arrived in America sometime between June 10, 1730, when their daughter Elizabeth was born in Germany, and January 3, 1731, when she was baptized in America.
The family name became Americanized after their arrival, and afterward was spelled many different ways.Friedrich's first name became "Frederick," while Eva Maria's name became "Mary." The spellings of the children's last names also varied widely. However, their German language continued to be spoken fluently at least until the time of the Civil War.
They settled in the Oley Valley near Reading, Berks County, to the northwest of Philadelphia. A picturesque view of the area is seen here.
The 1st known record of the Meinerts in Pennsylvania is the baptism of daughter Elizabeth by Rev. Joh. Caspar Stoever on Jan. 3, 1731.
Although Frederick may have been an indentured servant, his name has not been found on any such lists, though few have survived to today.It's thought that he had to work a few years to accumulate enough capital to buy a farm.
The 2nd record of the family is from 1734.That year, on April 10, Frederick had a survey done on a 150-acre farm in Oley. The survey shows that Manatawney Creek flowed through part of his tract.The precise location of the farm is found on his patent record, seen below, marked by the arrow, and in Philip E. Pendleton's excellent 1994 volume, Oley Valley Heritage - The Colonial Years.
The old, handwritten survey plat also shows that one of the Meinerts' neighbors was George Boone, grandfather of the famous American explorer and pioneer Daniel Boone. Daniel Boone was born in nearby Exeter Township, Berks County, on Oct. 22, 1733. The two-story, stone house where Daniel was born, surrounded by a picturesque white picket fence, is seen here, and apparently was still standing when photographed for use on a colorized postcard early in the 20th century.
The Meinerts may also have been neighbors with Abraham Lincoln, grandfather of President Abraham Lincoln. Seen at left is the old hillside home and farm of President Lincoln's great-great grandfather, Mordecai Lincoln, in nearby Lorane, Berks County.
In September 1740, Frederick and other local men signed a petition to have the Oley Valley region recognized as a separate political entity.
In addition to farming, Frederick also was a blacksmith. He may have provided repair and maintenance services for local foundries, such as the Hereford Furnace, (with its ruins seen at left), in nearby Hereford Township. The furnace is said to have produced the first cook stove made in America.
Frederick died in Oley in 1751, leaving widow Mary and children, including three under age 21.His farm was sold to pay his debts and to provide support for the younger children until they reached age 21.At his death, his estate was valued at £1,755.
About a year after Frederick's death, widow Mary married their longtime neighbor and Quaker friend, Benjamin Longworthy.The marriage was controversial, andthe "Exeter Meeting officially expelled him from membership for marrying a non-Quaker, ... nonattendance at meeting, and 'disorderly practices'," says Oley Valley Heritage.
The book also says that for years before his marriage to Mary Meinert, Benjamin owned a black slave named Violet, who in turn had 3 children. Benjamin planned to free the 4 slaves, and to bequeath his farm to his nephews.But just before he died in 1765, Mary allegedly induced him in his "weakened, distraught mind" to re-write his will to give her more favorable terms:
She had talked him out of his longstanding plan to free Violet's children .. and into the making of a new will.Evidently, neither old nor new will freed Violet.The new will retained the inheritance by Longworthy's devout Quaker nephews Moses and Joseph Roberts of the Longworthy farm, while reserving to the widow tenure of the house and its homestead appurtenances.The new will's real bonus for Maria was the right to sell Violet's three children.
Several concerned neighbors sued, and argued in court that Benjamin was "not of sound mind" when he rewrote his will, and the Berks County court ruled the document was not valid.
Mary then left the farm for good and moved into the residence of her son Friedrich Jr. The slaves are thought to have been freed, though their ultimate fates are unknown.
Benjamin is mentioned in the 1844 volume, History of the Counties of Berks and Lebanon, compiled by I. Daniel Rupp.
In 1776, the year of our nation's independence, Mary died in Oley.She wrote in her will, seen here, that "I Rewmand my Infinite Soul into the Hands of Almighty God who gave it me and my Body to the Earth, whence it was taken in Sure and Certain Hopes of Joyfull Resurrection through the Merits of my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."
Her passing thus ended the era of the first generation of the family in America.The burial sites for Frederick and Mary are not known.
Click here to visit the website of the Oley Valley Heritage Association and the Berks County Historical Society.
The Meinerts in Germany
In the oral tradition of the Minerd-Miner-Minor family, it often has been said that the family was "Pennsylvania Dutch."This means that the family originally came from Germany, since the term "Dutch" is an American mispronunciation of "Deutsch," a German word meaning "German." Some of the earliest family members in America married into German clans -- Neün (Nein), Junghen (Younkin), Imel and Harbaugh.As well, a few early-20th-century relatives knew how to speak "Pennsylvania Dutch," strong evidence that the language was passed down for many generations within some branches of the family.
But it was not until the 1980s that the family's European origins began to be traced in earnest.Then, in 1992, the trail led to an 18th century couple named Friedrich and Eva Maria Meinert.This couple was found to have lived in Zwillinge, Germany, in August 1730, and then by 1734, four years later, was residing in what is now Berks County, PA.They must have left Germany and moved to America sometime during that four-year period.
Possible Reasons for Leaving Germany
There are many reasons why the Meinerts may have left their native home and braved the discomfort and danger of an ocean voyage to find a new home.Germany at that time was not a unified country as it is today. Rather, it was a patchwork of hundreds of small states.There were three primary factors why people there often decided to emigrate:
Political oppression and severe religious persecution;
Examples of many people who had already left; and
Alluring accounts they had heard about Pennsylvania.
Many religious and political wars were being fought then in Germany, especially with great fierceness in the area called the Palatinate from where we think the Meinerts came.Today part of the Palatinate is in Bavaria and part is in the Rhineland.
Why Pennsylvania?
There were three reasons why Germans focused on Pennsylvania as a destination:
Before the wave of German emigration began, William Penn, seen here, himself half-German by birth, had made two journeys to Germany.He made many friends among those who faced religious persecution.When Penn received his grant of land in America, his German contacts were naturally interested in his project to establish a colony in the New World.They were especially susceptible to the arguments published in Penn's pamphlets calling for colonists.
Initially, many German emigrants went to New York.They became convinced that the colonial English government was unjust to them because they were German.Many moved to Pennsylvania, where they found better conditions. They then wrote letters back to Germany, urging friends to come to Penn's colony.
Penn translated his pamphlets into German and distributed them widely throughout Germany, extolling the virtues of Pennsylvania as a place to find religious freedom.
A Trip in Three Phases
The book Pennsylvania German Pioneers by Ralph B. Strassburger is an excellent overview of the rigors faced by German emigrants on their long journey to America.The trip typically was in three phases, sometimes lasting up to 6 months total.
The first phase was usually by boat down the Rhine River from emigrants' villages to Rotterdam, Holland.One traveler wrote that his river voyage was "amid such hardships as no one is able to describe adequately with their misery."Frequent stops were needed to pass through customs of the various German states, resulting in lengthy delays of many weeks, forcing travelers to spend their precious savings just to eat.
When the emigrants arrived at Rotterdam, they often found that booking passage on a ship was on a first-come, first-served basis.
The second phase typically was by ship from Rotterdam to ports in England, where supplies were added and passengers were picked up or dropped off.Further delays in English ports could add another 1 to 2 weeks to the trip.
The third phase was across the Atlantic Ocean, lasting up to 12 weeks depending on the weather and reliability of the ship.These voyages were often marked by terrible suffering and hardship.The food on one such voyage was described as "horrible salted corn meat and pork, peas, barley, groats and codfish.The drink was a stinking water in which all food was cooked."Passengers were "packed densely, like herrings," and were exposed to diseases such as "dysentery, scurvy, typhoid and smallpox."In stormy seas, the crowded hold must have been in utter chaos.
What Ship Were the Meinerts On?
We will probably never know the ship the Meinerts sailed on, or to which port they arrived.While Philadelphia was perhaps the most popular destination for German emigrants, other Germans arrived at New York, Boston, Baltimore, Savannah and Charleston, S.C.Between 1730 and 1734, when our Meinerts would have arrived, about 27 ships transporting German settlers arrived at the Port of Philadelphia.Unfortunately, not every ship kept a list of its passengers (manifests), and of those that did, not all of the documents have survived to today.Of the few manifests that are known, our Meinerts are not listed in any one of them.Whether Friedrich Meinert paid for his own passage, or was an indentured servant, is not known, but his name has not yet been found on any indentured servants' lists.
Upon Arrival
Upon landing in port, the passengers often faced more delays.They were examined by a health officer to make sure they had no contagious diseases.In Philadelphia, for instance, after passing the exam, emigrants then were taken to City Hall to swear an oath of allegiance to the King of England.Those travelers who had paid their own passage were then free to go their own way.Those who could not pay were forced to go to work as "indentured servants" until their debts were paid off.
The First of Our Meinerts in Pennsylvania
The name Meinert became Americanized after their arrival, and in years afterward was spelled many different ways.Friedrich's first name became "Frederick," while Eva Maria's name became "Mary."The first known printed record of the Meinerts in Pennsylvania is from 1734.That year, on April 10, Frederick had a survey done on a 150-acre property in Oley Township near Reading in what is now Berks County.The survey shows that the Manatawney Creek flowed through part of the Meinert farm.The survey also shows that one of the Meinerts' neighbors was George Boone, grandfather of famous American pioneer Daniel Boone.In the years that followed, Frederick also worked as a blacksmith.In September 1740, he and other local men signed a petition to have the Oley Valley region recognized as a separate political entity.
The Meinerts had seven known children, with at least one of them born in Germany.The spellings of their last names also varied widely.They included:
Jacob Minerd, Sr., our pioneer ancestor.He married Oley Twp. girl Maria Margaret Nein, the daughter of Johann Casper and Barbara Neün, who likewise were German immigrants.In about 1785, Jacob and Maria moved to Emmitsburg, MD, and then in about 1791 moved again to near Mill Run, Fayette Co., PA.He died in about 1811.They had 12 children, and today their descendants and spouses number more than 8,000, with some attending the Minerd-Fest event.
Maria 'Elizabeth' Meinert married Johann Diederich Gaumer, Sr., and died in 1802.She is the only child known to have been born in Germany.
Borkhard Meinder married Maria Barbara Bader. He died in 1797 in Macungie Twp., Northampton Co., PA.
Frederick Meinder married Catherine Nein.He lived at Rockland Twp., Berks Co., and died in 1816.
Catherine Meinert married Johannes Eigner and died between 1772 and 1776.
John Meiner married Maria Margaret and died in 1770 in Macungie Twp., Northampton Co.
Mary Meinert married Balzer Bohn.She died between 1769 and 1776.
Other Meinerts settled in Pennsylvania over the years, but we do not know if they are related.For example, in 1840, John Meinert, a native of Prussia, settled in Allegheny County, Pa., with descendants today scattered throughout the northern suburbs of Pittsburgh.
The End of an Era
The immigrant, Frederick Meinert, died in Oley Twp. in 1751, leaving widow Mary and children, including three under age 21.His farm was sold to pay his debts and to provide support for the younger children until they reached age 21.At his death, his estate was valued at £1,755 and included these items (with the original misspellings):
Horse, sadel and bridel
2 old guns
2 puter dishes, 3 plates, 12 spones
3 old Guckeds, 1 iron kettell and 2 old bras kettels
Old fryen pan, 2 iron spones, seemer, 1 flesh forke
1 pott and 2 pott Whracks
Old pair tongs and shovall and stillows
Two beds, shetts and wrogs
Two spinen whels for flax
One Bed Sheetts, wrogs, pillow
One old bed
An old Hekell and one puckskin
2 old Shovells, nales, rings, weges, old ax
Six cows, 2 heffers, 2 one year old Bulls
Twenty head of sheep
Two old horses
Weale in Loft and the Rig
Plantation wagin
Anvell and Hand serv and Dulls, Gun Borrers
A drawnife and sum small Dules and old Iron
Plow and harrow and Grinstone
Two old Collers and Trases
A grubin how, 2 weedin hows, 2 Dong forkes, & hook and one bell
Twenty Gees
The Improvements with the Winter Gran in the Ground
10 Hoggs
About a year after Frederick's death, widow Mary married their longtime neighbor and Quaker friend, Benjamin Longworthy.The marriage was controversial, andthe "Exeter Meeting officially expelled him from membership for marrying a non-Quaker, ... nonattendance at meeting, and 'disorderly practices'," says Oley Valley Heritage.
The book also says that for years before his marriage to Mary Meinert, Benjamin owned a black slave named Violet, who in turn had 3 children. Benjamin planned to free the 4 slaves, and to bequeath his farm to his nephews.But just before he died in 1765, Mary allegedly induced him in his "weakened, distraught mind" to re-write his will to give her more favorable terms:
She had talked him out of his longstanding plan to free Violet's children .. and into the making of a new will.Evidently, neither old nor new will freed Violet.The new will retained the inheritance by Longworthy's devout Quaker nephews Moses and Joseph Roberts of the Longworthy farm, while reserving to the widow tenure of the house and its homestead appurtenances.The new will's real bonus for Maria was the right to sell Violet's three children
Several concerned neighbors sued, and argued in court that Benjamin was "not of sound mind" when he rewrote his will, and the Berks County court ruled the document was not valid.
Mary then left the farm for good and moved into the residence of her son Friedrich Jr. The slaves are thought to have been freed, though their ultimate fates are unknown.
Benjamin is mentioned in the 1844 volume, History of the Counties of Berks and Lebanon, compiled by I. Daniel Rupp.
In 1776, the year of our nation's independence, Mary died in Oley.She wrote in her will that "I Rewmand my Infinite Soul into the Hands of Almighty God who gave it me and my Body to the Earth, whence it was taken in Sure and Certain Hopes of Joyfull Resurrection through the Merits of my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."
Her passing thus ended the era of the first generation of the family in America.The burial sites for Frederick and Mary are not known.
Mary died in Oley Twp. in 1776, writing in her will that "I Rewmand my Infinite Soul into the Hands of Almighty God who gave it me and my Body to the Earth, whence it was taken in Sure and Certain Hopes of Joyfull Resurrection through the Merits of my Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ." Her passing thus ended the era of the first generation of the family in America.Frederick and Mary's burial site is not known.
The Frustrating Effort to Find 'Zwillinge'
The effort to locate where our Meinerts came from in Germany has been frustrating.Though one source places them in a town named Zwillinge in August 1730, that town apparently does not exist today, or at least not by that name.The Neün family, into which two Meinert brothers married, is thought to have come from the village of Schonsee, east and slightly north of Nuremberg.Could the Meinerts have come from the same village?
I have written to 14 archives in Germany but have not yet found any definitive connection.I had a reply from archives in Bavaria (Archiv Des Bistums Passau), saying that "though there is a place called Zwilling in the parish of Arnstorf," there are no mentions of our family in parish registers.The name Meinert was not in that area in the 1700s, nor was the given name Frederick.
I also had a disappointing letter back from an archives in Lower Bavaria (Staatsarchiv Landshut).The letter said that in that region, no town exists by the name Zwillinge.It was suggested that I write to sources further north, closer to the area known as the Palatinate.
The Society of Palatinate-Rhine Family History wrote that in 1744, there were many Meinerts living near Kastel, a suburb of Mainz.However, it could not verify if our Friedrich Meinert came from Kastel.
One archives did have a record of Georg Meinert, a painter, born in 1920 in Main Kastel, near Frankfurt in the Palatinate region.Nothing resulted from a follow-up letter.
My biggest disappointment was with the archive responsible for records about emigration from the Palatinate.I wrote a letter there seeking information and waited five months, without a reply.I then had my letter translated into German and sent it again.Again, no reply.In the meantime I heard that when sending to Europe it is best to include an international reply coupon (IRC), so I included one in my third letter, which was back in English.Once again, no reply.
Then I thought that the archives might need a clue to find our family from among all the villages in Germany.I found 36 places on the International Genealogical Index where the name Meinert was mentioned in the 1700s.For the fourth time, I wrote to this archive, enclosing two IRCs and a list of towns and villages.There's been no reply.
I've changed my direction and am going high-tech.Using the Internet, I hope to eventually connect with long-lost German cousins.Also, while in Europe this summer, I hope to contact some Germans to see if I can get some "inside" help.
When I was in Hungary in 1987, I thought that the original name was spelled "Minerd."Some German students I talked with knew that the family could not have come from southern Germany simply because the last name ended with the letter "d."Now we know that the last letter in the last name was "t."So I haven't ruled out southern Germany.
The archives I have contacted so far include:Archiv Des Bistums Passau; Staatsarchiv Landshut; Hessische Familiengeschichtliche Vereinigung; Society of Palatinate-Rhine Family History; Institute for Palatinate Emigration History; West German Society for Family History; Arbeitsgemeinschaft Pfalzisch - Rheinische Familienkunde; Evangelische Kirche Der Pfalz; Institut fur Pfalzische Wanderungsgeschichte (four times); Landeshauptarchiv; Landeskirchliches Archiv; Nordrhein-Westalisches Hauptstaatsarchiv; and Germanic Emigrants Register.
Author Eugene F. Podraza is the son of Dorothy (Minerd) Podraza and the late Francis Joseph Podraza, formerly of Mt. Pleasant, PA.He is a teacher in the Trenton, NJ School District and has been actively researching his Minerd-Miner-Minor roots since 1989.For more information, contact him at [email protected].
Our Lost German Culture
Click for a 2001 research update and the original 1995 report by Eugene F. Podraza
The Germans have a saying -- “Wir sind ein volk” -- “We are one people.” As a family, while we have grown large in numbers and diverse lifestyles, our DNA and our sense of history are unique in uniting us.Our immigrant ancestors, Friedrich and Eva Maria (Weber) Meinert Sr., left Germany in about 1730, and settled near Reading, Berks County, PA.
Today, some 270 years later, few traces of the family's German culture remain.Yet the German language of the clan was dominant for about 135 years, from the 1730s to the time of the American Civil War. It's amazing these "Pennsylvania Dutch" traits lasted as long as they did.
Digby Baltzell's authoritative and classic 1979 book, Puritan Boston & Quaker Philadelphia, says that the Meinerts' eastern/central "Pennsylvania Dutch country, the richest farming land in America, is a remarkably [culturally] homogenous area even today. Indeed, for a long time the area was bilingual; the so-called Pennsylvania Dutch dialect is a mixture of English and German."
After the end of the Revolutionary War, German ways and means became even more dominant in the region, and "its distinct dialect exaggerated the isolation of the area from the rest of the new nation," says Frantz and Pencak's 1998 book, Beyond Philadelphia. "Adding to this insularity was the inclination of the Pennsylvania German subculture to marry within its own community, to remain wedded to the soil, and perhaps to be more religious, superstitious, and suspicious of the outside world than others."
While long-term assimilation is natural for any clan, other strong forces were at work to ultimately Americanize our family.Wright’s Franklin of Philadelphia reports that Benjamin Franklin was partly to blame for being “especially critical of the Germans in western Pennsylvania” during the colonial era.Franklin wrote:
Why should the Palatine boors be suffered to swarm into our settlements and, by herding together, establish their language and manners to the exclusion of ours?Why should Pennsylvania, founded by the English, become a colony of aliens, who will shortly be so numerous as to Germanize us, instead of our Anglifying them?”
Legislation was introduced in Parliament in the 1750s that would have kept Pennsylvania Germans from voting, as Wright says, “until they had acquired ‘a sufficient Knowledge of our Language and Constitution,’ and requiring that all newspapers, almanacs, and legal documents in the province be written in English.”Under such restraints, it is little wonder that the German values were left behind.
Yet despite such pressure, German continued to be spoken by succeeding generations.In 1828, John Minerd of Kingwood, PA, was sued by a cousin for speaking libel in German.(Click here to read about the fascinating case.)In 1865, Minerd’s son Henry A. Miner likewise was sued for alleged slander spoken in German.In 1846, the grave marker of Heinrich Gaumer, a great-grandson of the immigrants, was written in German, in the old gothic script. The marker is seen here.
In one branch of our family, who settled in Kansas and Missouri, it was well known that the family's origins were German. However, the pronunciation of the family name underwent a change around 1920. According to one member of this branch:
Before World War I, the name was pronounced MY-nerd. It was German. When my brother, cousins and uncles returned from the war, they wanted no part of anything German. I remember my father and uncle talking about it more than once. And that was when our name was changed to the softer, French-sounding Meh-NARD.
Some old German songs continue to be passed down today though we don’t know what the words mean.
Nancy Farabee’s Song - passed down to her grandson, Donnus F. Farabee, of Waynesburg, PA, who recited these lyrics in 1988:See-bee, quah-bee, English Mary, singlum, sanglum, buck...
Somerset County Farm Song - a hybrid of German and English, was sung in the farm fields of Somerset County, PA, by the late Minnie (Miner) Gary. It was passed down to her daughter, the late Gladys (Gary) Kreger:
E hope mutta en de Rabie carric (repeat 3 times)
Way nibber en de Rabie carric awanie (onie)
en de hymnal crom crafting mine mutta room
Ugaena with angula en blonda rue (repeat 3 times)
I have a mother in the promised land (repeat 3 times)
When I get to Heaven then I will meet my mother there
Gone with the angels to wear God's crown (repeat 3 times)
Other Words:Mary A. (Luckey) Malone, daughter of Sadie (Minerd) Luckey, reported that "jangle" meant to argue or bicker. A granddaughter of Joanna (Minerd) Enos said "grumbeer" meant potatoes.
More About Friedrich Meinert, Sr.:
Residence: June 10, 1730, arrived in America.
Children of Friedrich Meinert, Sr. are:
- +JACOB MINERD, SR., b. Abt. 1740, Fayette/Somerset Counties, PA, d. Bet. 1811 - 1815, Fayette County, PA.