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Anna Margretha Minkler

Anna Margretha Minkler

Female 1733 - Yes, date unknown

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Anna Margretha Minkler was born in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was christened on 2 May 1733 (daughter of Josiah Minkler and Anna Gertrude Schneider); and died.

    Notes:

    Germantown, Columbia Co., NY

    Anna married Sebastian Loop in 1753. Sebastian and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Jacob Loep was born about 1763; was christened on 6 Feb 1763; and died.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Josiah Minkler was born in 1700 in Grolsheim, Palitinate, Germany (son of Killian Minkler and Anna Margretta); and died.

    Notes:

    The Echo indicates Josiah Minkler had 12 children.
    The name is also known as Esaias, Esaia, Esa, Easias, isaias, Iesaias.

    Josiah married Anna Gertrude Schneider in 1725 in New York, USA. Anna was born on 3 Apr 1701 in Bellen, Westerberg, Germany; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Anna Gertrude Schneider was born on 3 Apr 1701 in Bellen, Westerberg, Germany; and died.

    Notes:

    Married:
    Esaias and Gertruyd Schneidern were patrons at the Lutheran Church., NY City at the 99th baptism of 1726 of Anna Gertrud, 5 weeks old, dau. of Herman Segedorf and Maria Cathar.

    Children:
    1. 1. Anna Margretha Minkler was born in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was christened on 2 May 1733; and died.
    2. Harmanous Minkler was born about 1717 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; died after 1790 in Ulster Co., NY.
    3. Killian Minkler was born about 1721 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; died after 1790.
    4. Anna Engel Minkler was born in 1726 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was christened in 1726; and died.
    5. Anna Catharina Minkler was born about 1730 in New York, USA; and died.
    6. Lena Margaretha Minkler was born on 2 May 1733 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was christened on 2 May 1733; and died.
    7. Andreas Minkler was born in 1734 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was christened in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; and died.
    8. David Minckler was born in 1735 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; died after 1800 in Rensselaer Co., NY.
    9. Casparus Minkler was born on 25 May 1737 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was christened on 25 May 1737; and died.
    10. Elisabeth Minkler was born on 14 Apr 1740 in Rhinebeck, Dutchess Co., NY; was christened on 14 Apr 1740; died on 22 Jul 1827 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was buried in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY.
    11. Jacob Minkler was born between 1742 and 1743 in Camp, Queensberry, Columbia Co., NY; was christened on 1 Sep 1745; and died.
    12. Josiah Minkler was born about 8 Sep 1745 in Prob. Germantown, Columbia Co., NY; was christened on 8 Sep 1745; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Killian Minkler was born in 1673 in Laubenheim, Germany; died on 20 Feb 1748 in Germantown, Columbia Co., NY.

    Notes:

    "In the year 1709, between the months of May and November, large numbers of persons migrated from South Germany - along the Rhine River valley - to Holland - then to London, England, thense to America in the following year of 1710 - to settle in New York state and in Pennsylvania. This migration was called "Palatine" as a large number of the emigrants came from the Rhenish of Lower Palitinate."
    Wm. Ward Miller, "Minkler in America", p. i.
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------
    I am direct decendant of Killian Minckler. My father was Rae Minler, Grandfather Don Douglas Minkler. My Mother Goldie Minkler is sure the name was Mienhart. Changed to Minkler after Killian came to America. My Aunt informed me that is correct. The Iowa Minklers attend Mienhart family reunions,so apperantly some of the Minklers kept the Mienhart name.
    drmcatcher95@webtv.net
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------
    The Echo gives conflicting dates for Killians birth date. The other date is 1670.

    "In 1709 they left their home in the Palatine area of Germany and traveled to Rotterdam, Holland. From there, in May of 1709, they traveled by boat to England. There they lived as wards of the Crown, first in rude huts on the beach and then for three months on a ship in the harbor. They finally sailed with a convoy March of 1710. Of the 6,520 souls leaving on the ships, 450 died and 30 children were born during the voyage. They arrived in America June 13, 1710."

    "The first Palatine arivals in the new land were on the ship "Globe", January 1, 1709. The second, and largest convoy landed six months later. The first ship of that convoy to arrive was the "Lynn", June 13, 1710. Three others were slowed by storms and one was wrecked on the coast of Long Island, only a few miles from their destination."

    "Soon the Palatines were on the move again up the river and after lengthy problems with their original land patent, they came to Schenectady and then Schoharie in October of 1712. They were among the first white settlers in that area of New York State. The province furnished theim with food for the first winter. Still more of their group arrived in the Spring of 1713. In a short time they had settled towns on both sides of the river."

    "Over the next several generations, the family scattered and today number in the thousands."
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---
    I also have an article from the Yorker Palatine Newsletter, July 1998 Issue 57, p.5, describing the Palatine Monument Project, Text Inscription and List of Names:

    "Know O Traveler, within sight of this hill on October 6, 1710, led by the Rev. Joshua Kocherthal and the Rev. Johann Frederick Hager, there arrived on the east and west shores of Hudson's River nearly three hundred families of refugees of the Palatine region in Europe who suffered many sorrows in the ravages of war, sickness, poverty, and destitution, tet survived to settle these shores, sustained by their faith in the Lord and the sympathy of Queen Anne of England, whom they came to serve in the reduction of the pine forest for naval stores for her majesty's fleet. Do you wish to know more? Seek out their names on this tablet, on the pages of history their deeds."

    Minckler is shown in East Camp, (Hunterstown, Queenbury, Annsbury, Haysbury) Germantown area.

    Dedicated to the Memory of These Settlers, Saugerties Historical Society, June 13, 1998. St. Paul's Lutheran Church, West Camp, NY.
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------
    According to Fonda Baselt, Baselt2@AOL.COM he arrived on the ship "LYON" in 1710 in New York, NY and was born 1673 Grossen Engels, Hesse, GER. Her source was Hank Z. Jones publication.

    Books Found in the Library of Congress:
    Ancestry of Henry Fowler and Emma Minkler, Henry Leroy Fowler (1843-1938) LC Call No. CS71.F7881987B, Dewey No. 929/.2/0973 ED: 19 LCCN: 87-80989 Published Baltimore (1001 N. Calvert St., Baltimore 21202 : Gateway Press, 1987) 196 p. and bibliography.

    Patriot Families: a genealogy of the direct descendants of Jacob Coy and Killian Minkler, 1st ed. by Alfred A. Rousseau, 1928 published by Keepsake Publications, Seattle WA 1994. LC Call No. CS71.C87751994, Dewey No. 929/.2/0973 ED: 20

    Minkler in America, c.1980 by Robert Arthur Minkler (deceased).
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------
    From a posting at Genforum:
    "Palatinate" or "Palatine" could be a reference to what is the modern German state of Rheinland-Pfalz. It was formed from the southern part of the Prussian Rhein Province, the Bavarian Palatinate, and parts of Rhein-Hessen and Hessen Nassau. Principal cities in this state include Mainz, Kaiserlautern, Trier, Koblenz, Worms and Speyer.

    Many of my ancestors were from this area and came to Pennsylvania in the 1700's (Seidemann and Sebastian from Freinsheim, Grumbach
    from Duttweiler). Please be advised, however, that in 18th century America not all "Palatines" were actually from what is now Rheinland-Pfalz. German speaking immigrants were sometimes indiscriminaty called Palatines even though they might have been from this place or might have been from Alsace (present French Departments of Moselle and Bas-Rhein), the Saarland, northwestern Baden-Wurttemberg, western Hesse or southwestern Westfalen,all neighboring regions.
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    From: http://www.fortklock.com/knittleholland.htm
    THE EMBARKATION LISTS FROM HOLLAND

    These lists comprise the enumeration of five separate sailing of Palatines from Holland, as sent by the Rotterdam Commissioners, vanToren and van Gent, to Minister Dayrolle, who forwarded them to England. The lists were found in the Public Record Office, T 1/119, 6-10, 19-26, 68-72, 58-65, 79-82. They comprise notations of about 11,000 persons, by far the largest lists relating to this immigration, although even the Embarkation Lists are not complete. They lack the enumeration of the first party to sail in 1709, the 825 persons given in Appendix B. They do not include those Palatines who paid their own way to London or were sent by private charity in August and October, 1709 as related in Chapter III.

    So far as possible the enumerations have been retained in exactly the form in which the Dutchmen made them. This was considered most desirable for genealogists, who will use them to greatest advantage. For the ordinary reader, it may be necessary to explain further that "vrouw" means wife; "weduw", widow; "moeder", mother; "swister," sister; "knegt," servant. Of course, each sailing list has been alphabetized to facilitate their use. When names are indented, they are the names of children which happen to be mentioned, and they are not included in the additional number of children ending the line. (Because of the limitations of html, the names are directly below the parents' names. I sincerely hope the names are correct, it is tough typing lists of names. My apologies for the errors. ajberry)

    SECOND PARTY SAILING MAY 23, 1709

    Minkeler, Kelioen & vrouw
    Anna Margreta

    Schneider, Bernhard & vrouw
    Ariaan, Anna Bara, & 1 ch
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    At Minkler Forum, WWW.Genforum.Genealogy.Com
    Oldest ancestor of the Minklers
    Posted by: Uwe Minkler Date: December 07, 2001

    Minkler, is as far as I know, derived from a German Name "Winkler" which is quite common around there (made up by two morphenes "Winkel" which would be translated as "angle" and "-ler" being the executive of this (as in building a house), I'm studiying linguistics at the U. of Cologne, Germany, and this is the most likely explanation that I can think of)
    Though the oldest scrap of paper that I found about my family is on a certain "Minkleer", a dutch merchant, around 1440 A.D., him being the oldest direct ancestor that I found any real evidence on.
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    Date: Mon, 7 Jul 2003
    From: "Margaret Miesterfeld"
    To: PALATINES-L@rootsweb.com
    Subject: [Palatines] Re: Genealogy of the Pfalz

    Dear List,

    I have traced my Herrle family in New Orleans back to the Pfalz in
    Germany using Mr. Albert Weigel's Hatzenbuhl book of genealogy. He has
    compiled church records and civil records of Hatzenbuhl, Steinweiler and
    NeuenPotz in the Pfalz. They contain the families, history, photographs, and
    migration of each town. Mr. Weigel now has 90 manuscripts on 90 towns in the
    Pfalz ready for publication. These books are outstanding and should not be
    overlooked if you are researching in the Pfalz. He may be contacted at
    Wendelinusstrasse 5, 6729 Hatzenbuhl, Germany. Happy Hunting.

    Killian married Anna Margretta after 1699 in Laubenheim, Germany. Anna was born in Prob Laubenheim, Germany; died in New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Anna Margretta was born in Prob Laubenheim, Germany; died in New York, USA.

    Notes:

    I am confused on whether Killian was married twice or if Anna was an error.
    The Echo article could have been a misprint.

    Other sources give Killian's wife as Dorothea Koch.

    Notes:

    Married:
    They were of the Reformed Dutch faith. (Miller, p.i.)

    Children:
    1. Barbara Anna Minkler was born about 1698 in Grolsheim, Palatinate, Germany; died between 5 Jan and 11 May 1766 in Claverack, Columbia Co., NY.
    2. 2. Josiah Minkler was born in 1700 in Grolsheim, Palitinate, Germany; and died.
    3. Gertrude Minkler was born about 1702 in Germany; and died.
    4. Johannes Minkler was born between 1709 and 1710 in En Route To Or In NY.; died about 1770 in New York, USA.
    5. Jacob Minkler was born on 24 Jul 1712 in West Camp, Schoharie Co., NY; was christened on 27 Jul 1712; and died.
    6. Anna Maria Minkler was born on 18 Sep 1713 in West Camp, Schoharie Co., NY; was christened on 20 Sep 1713; died about 1778 in Columbia Co., NY.



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