Steven D. Oberlin
26 July 2005
Until the mid 1980's, I had assumed that our family immigrated just prior to the
Civil War, and had little to do with the founding of America. My paternal grandparents
provided me with some initial information, although they could only tell me about
ancestors they knew - two or three previous generations. My first visit to the Allen
County Public Library (Fort Wayne) yielded an additional generation. I also obtained
considerable information about the Oberlins who settled in Pennsylvania during the
early 1700's. It was years later before I actually confirmed the lineage to the
original immigrants.
The historical information has been gathered from several sources, and is basically
correct. I've made some judgments concerning incomplete and conflicting information
from multiple sources. In compliance with the requirements of the National Society,
Sons of the American Revolution, the patriot lineage is verifiable. I've corresponded
over the years with family members and others interested in Oberlin genealogy. I
also conducted on-site research when I lived near Philadelphia. Any and all comments,
suggestions, and especially corrections are welcomed and encouraged.
OBERLIN - One who came from Oberlinden (upper linden tree), in Germany. Virtually
all the records of Oberlins in Europe originate in the Baden-Wurtemburg and along
the Rhine River between Strasburg and Berne. Oberlinden is one of the oldest sections
of the city of Freiburg. There are also three places in Bavaria named Oberlind.
The Oberlin family crest aledgedly originated in 1415. The first known appearance
of the family name Oberlin in any public record concerns Christian Oberlin, who's
name appears among a 1543 list of those who "were executed for their faith" in Berne
Switzerland. There was considerable strife during those times between the Catholics
and Protestants throughout Europe, especially in the Rhine River and Palentine regions.
While we do not know Christian's specific fate, the prominant means were drowning,
beheading and burning alive.
Another early record is in the registry of the church in Sundhofen, a town near
Colmar. The entry in the registry states that one Jacob Oberlin, an emigrant miller
and baker from Messkirch, had presented his son Johannes to be baptized on June
7, 1574. It seems likely that Jacob, also a Protestant, had gone to Sundhofen because
there wasn't yet a Protestant church in Colmar, where he resided. The Oberlin family
tradition of Protestantism dates prior to when the faith was firmly established.
They endured the Thirty Year's War (1618 - 1648) when the region swayed back and
forth between religions and leadership. This struggle between Catholics and Protestants
is believed to have cost over 6,000,000 lives and virtually destroyed Germany.
In 1632, a second Johannes Oberlin, son of the Johannes baptized in 1574, moved
his family to Strasbourg, probably because Protestantism was more firmly established
there. Through two more generations the Oberlins were bakers. In the early eighteenth
century, perhaps in a effort toward upward social mobility, Johann Georg Oberlin
broke with family tradition and studied at the renowned Protestant Gymnasium in
Strasbourg. He married Marie-Madeleine Feltz and fathered two daughters and seven
sons. The second son, born in 1740, was Johann Friedrich Oberlin,
the famous clergyman of northeastern France and namesake of Oberlin College.
Meanwhile, back in Berne, the Oberlins were still having problems with the Church.
In 1710, Margaret Oberlin, and 29 others, were imprisoned because of there religious
endeavors. Margaret later escaped through Holland and became the first known Oberlin
in America. In 1711, she emigrated to New York aboard the ship "Oberlander." This
was the beginning of a mass exodus of 30,000 Palatinate Protestants to the Colonies.
Thousands of others were lost at sea seeking a new life in a new world. All of this
kind of personalizes the reasons why the United States of America was founded on
the principle of religious freedom.
While the name Oberlin seems to be the original spelling, several other forms are
prevalent in early American records. These variations were due to the interpretations
of the mostly English scribes entering the records. Oberlin, Oberly, Oberle, and
Oberli are the principle variations, with Overly and Overley also appearing for
the same individual identified in other records by the previous names. (Hearing
my name pronounced during a recent visit to Paris confirmed this reasoning.)
Prior to 1760, there appears to have been three original ancestors of the Oberlins
in America. There was also a John Francis Oberlin who lived in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
from about 1760 to 1780. John Francis was in charge of the church store, which was
located on the north side of Market Street, opposite the graveyard. He was a vehement
Tory, and remarked that he had sufficient rope in his store to hang all of Congress.
The official history of Bethlehem describes John Francis Oberlin as a "crotchety
and often troublesome man, with whom the authorities of the place more than once
came into unpleasant conflict about various matters." In 1781, he, with his wife
and four children, returned to Europe.
In 1751, Michael Oberlin arrived on the ship "Brothers." Michael is reputed to be
a relative of Johann Friedrich, the Alsace clergyman. Michael's descendants settled
and prospered in Schaefferstown, Pennsylvania. Michael's grandson, Frederick Oberlin
married Maria Schaeffer, daughter of the town's founder, Henry Schaeffer. Most of
Michael's family remained in the Schaefferstown, Lebanon County, Pennsylvania area
into the late 1800's.
In 1755, a John Martin Oberlin, reputedly from Wurtemburg, Germany, married Eva
Nagel in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Around 1779, with their sons Christopher,
Casper (Gasper), Henry, Boston, and Frederich, they moved to Westmoreland County,
where many of Christopher's descendants still live. In 1792, John & Eva and
most of their sons moved to Bourbon County, Kentucky, probably by way of the Ohio
River. In 1797, leaving Henry behind, the family moved to Ross County, Ohio. Most
later records show their name as Overly or Oberly. Many of their descendants live
in southern Ohio, Indiana, and Kansas.
The third group descended from two brothers, John Michael Oberlin and John Adam
Oberlin. They came to America with their father, John Martin Oberlin prior to 1726
from Liedolsheim (east of the Rhine River north of Karlsruhe), Germany. The Oberlin
(Stober and Fry) families are listed as "pioneer families" in the 1883 History of
Lancaster County and Martin Overle appears on the 1726 Conestoga Township
tax roll. It's believed John Martin died shortly after arriving in America. Referring
to Martin and his sons, in his 1901 publication, Memorials of the Huguenots in America,
Reverend A. Stapleton writes: "The Oberlins were distinguished in the history of
France, notably the Reformer of Ban-de-la-Roche (Johann Friedrich Oberlin), who
was a relative of the Pennsylvania Oberlins." (The physical resemblance my grandfather
and brother bear to Johann Friedrich's pictures is remarkable.) They probably traveled
by boat on the Rhine River to the Netherlands where they boarded a Dutch ship, which
brought them to the new world. An interesting account of such emigrants can be found
at Elser Family Website
(The Elsers lived and intermarried with the Oberlins in Germany and America.)
John Michael was born in Germany on 27 September 1717. Michael married Christina
Barbara Zwecker 19 November 1742 at Trinity Lutheran Church, New Holland. One of
the oldest and most historic churches in that area is the old Bergtrasse Church,
which Michael co-founded 13 May 1752. Wendle Zwecker, Barbara's father, was a founder
of Trinity Lutheran Church. Michael died 17 May 1787 in Earl Township, Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania. His will lists the following children: John Jacob, Adam, Margaret,
Christina, Rebecca, Elizabeth, and Hannah.
Note that John Michael is referred to as Michael. It was common practice to name
children with the same first names as their parents. Usually the middle name then
became the name most often used. John Adam was known as Adam, John Martin was known
as Martin. This common use of the name John and frequent use of the same middle
names occasionally creates challenges when researching.
John Adam Oberlin is probably the ancestor of the majority of the Oberlins in Stark
and Williams Counties of Ohio, and northeastern Indiana. He was born about 1715,
in Germany and married Catherine Agatha Stober (Stover) 8 January 1740, at Muddy
Creek Lutheran Church in Lancaster County. He was naturalized in 1762, and died
in 1780, leaving a very large estate. Mentioned were the following children: Christopher,
Adam, Jacob, Michael, Eva, Barbara, Christina, Henry, and Frederick.
John Adam's older sons were active members of the Lancaster County Militia during
the Revolutionary War; Captain Michael, Sergeant Adam, Sergeant Christopher and
Jacob. Several Lancaster County Associators (militia), including Adam and Christopher,
were placed in "Continental service" for a period of two months and sent to Perth
Amboy, New Jersey, 13 August 1776. They were among the 10,000 Colonials opposing
30,000 British regulars and Hessian mercenaries in the Battle of Long Island, August
22-28. Cousin Valentine Stober was deployed in the same unit under Captain John
Jones. According to Valentine's pension, they were in the field at least one month,
before Valentine joined the Continental Army artilery in Philadelphia.
Lancaster troops were involved in the 26 December 1776 crossing of the Delaware
River and subsequent assault on Trenton, New Jersey. (Another patriot ancestor,
James Huston, lived in Trenton and participated in the battle.) The following year,
virtually the entire Lancaster County Militia was activated during the defense of
Philadelphia. Several Lancaster County units participated in the Battles of Germantown
and Brandywine Creek with General "Mad" Anthony Wayne. Lancaster militiamen accompanied,
then British officer, George Washington during the 1763 siege of Fort Duquesne (Pittsburgh)
and virtually all of the American Revolution.
The Hessian mercenaries captured at Trenton were immediately marched to Lancaster
County with specific instructions from Washington that "good principles be infused
into them." All indications suggest they were treated well by their Lancaster hosts.
Seventy Hessian prisoners were subsequently moved to Brickerville to participate
in the construction of an irrigation ditch, which supplied water to the Elizabeth
furnace. The furnace was then being used to process iron ore for use in the war
effort. The barracks, a converted horse barn, where they were housed was still standing
in 1988 when I last saw it. The Lancaster Militia was tasked with guarding their
"brethren" Germans. After the war many released prisoners remained in Lancaster
and became part of the community. Brunswick Dragoon Henry Newstetter's daughter
Catherine, married Adam Oberlin's son, John.
Family lore and several published accounts indicate that the Oberlin brothers served
as "bodyguards" to General Washington. One source further states the Oberlins were
all over six feet tall. It's well documented that militiamen were considered to
be undisciplined, and although many were excellent fighters, they were not necessarily
good soldiers. Washington's bodyguards would have certainly been disciplined soldiers.
10 March 1776, Washington ordered that each regiment provide four trusted men to
serve as his personal guards. Since a regular army did not yet exist (The very first
two Continental Army units were commissioned in Lancaster County, 25 June 1776.)
the Oberlins, who were already "minutemen" in the Pennsylvania Military Association,
may have been selected within their regiment to fulfill this request or serve as
interim guards. Analysis of the Pennsylvania Archives and surviving records do not
list any Oberlins as members of "Washington's Life Guard," which the men themselves
referred to as "body guard." All of the Life Guard's official records were destroyed
in an 1815 fire.
In the autumn of 1776, during the siege of New York, Washington established his
headquarters in the Morris-Jumel Mansion in Brooklyn. Another family member, Peter
Wyckoff served in the New York Militia and was at the Battle of Long Island. According
to his pension record, he "...acted as sentry before the door of the house in which
Gen. Washington was..." Given the Oberlins were also serving in New York during
this time, they too may have been delegated to such sentry duty.
General Washington was also known to frequent Curtis and Peter Grubb's iron works
in Lancaster. Colonel Peter Grubb was the first commander of the Oberlin's militia
battalion. The Oberlins may have therefore been involved with the General as a result
of their militia duties. Also, Captain Henry Schaeffer (Schaefferstown) was reputed
as "close" to George Washington. While it's uncertain to what extent, it's evident
the Oberlins had the distinct opportunity to serve the General in some personal
capacity.
For three generations, the Oberlins were typical Pennsylvania "Dutch" farmers. They
lived in the heart of German America and probably spoke German as well as, or better
than, they spoke English. (How convenient for communicating with the Hessian prisoners.)
It is mostly in these generations that the names Oberly and Oberle are found instead
of Oberlin. The German pronunciation is 'Oh-bare-leen.'
Sergeant Adam Oberlin (born 31 May 1745) and his wife Mary "Eve" Ensminger were
the first Oberlins to move west from Lancaster County. In about 1795, they moved
to Hopewell Township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. In 1811, they followed their
son Frederick to Stark County, Ohio. Adam and Eve were among the pioneers of Tuscarawas
Township, Stark County. Adam's handwritten will is dated 6 March 1825. He's buried
in Stanwood Cemetery near Massillon. A brass grave marker, placed several decades
later, denotes his year of death as 1812. Eve is allegedly buried beside Adam, but
without a marker.
As was common during the period, many families within the same community would intermarry
and migrate with each other. This was certainly true among the Oberlin, Wagoner
and Shilling families. The same names are found in Lancaster and Cumberland, Pennsylvania;
Stark, Richland and Williams, Ohio; Dekalb and Steuben, Indiana.
Adam and Eve had eight children: Barbara, Margaret, Peter, Eve, Frederick, John,
Catherine, and Elizabeth. Many of the Oberlins in Stark County are descendants of
Peter and John. John, owned a coalmine in Stark County. Those in Richland and Williams
Counties are from Peter. Two of Peter's sons, Joseph and Isaiah, successfully pursued
California gold from 1853 to 1857, and then returned to Stark County. Frederick's
descendants reside mostly in northeastern Indiana.
The other son of John Adam Oberlin who was also an ancestor of many of the Oberlins
in Stark County is Michael. He was born about 1757 and spent all of his life in
Cocalico Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. About 1779, Michael married Anna
Mentzner. They had eight children who were mentioned in his will; Christina, Catherine,
John, Jacob, Michael, Susanna, George, and Adam. Being unmarried at the beginning
of the Revolutionary War, Michael became a gunner in the early army. Later he was
appointed Captain of Company 6, Battalion 3, Lancaster Militia. His brothers, Christopher
and Jacob, served in his unit. He was a founder and trustee of the Reformed Mennonite
Church at Shoeneck, Pennsylvania. He died September, 1818, leaving a considerable
estate, which was divided equally among his children.
Adam and Eve's son, Frederick (born c1776), moved to Stark County in 1809, two years
before his father and brothers. He and his wife, Mary, had at least five sons and
five daughters. There is little known of Frederick. He lived for a few years as
a member of the "Friendly Association of Mutual Interests" (Kendall Community, Society
of Friends) near Massillon, Ohio. This communal group broke up in the late 1820's.
Frederick died 1828 in Massillon. His wife, Mary, along with sons, Adam (Mary Wagoner)
and John (Rachel Duch), and a daughter, Sarah (John Kennedy) moved to Dekalb County,
Indiana in 1847. Frederick's youngest son, David (Mary Van Horn) moved there a few
years later. Mary died in 1871 and is buried in the Hamilton, Indiana cemetery.
Adam Oberlin and Mary Wagoner are my ancestors. Adam was born in Shippensburg, Hopewell
Township, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania in 1801. Anthony Meyer married Adam and
Mary 9 September 1825 in Stark County. Adam cultivated the first pear trees in Stark
County.
Adam and Mary had at least ten children, nine of which were born in Stark County.
Eight of the children moved to Dekalb County with them. Their daughter, Elizabeth,
died in 1840 as an infant and is buried in Mudbrook Lutheran Cemetery north of Massillon.
The tenth child, William W. was born in Indiana about 1850. Their other children's
names were Frederick W., John W., Joseph W., Catherine, Jacob W., David W., Samuel
W., and Adam W.. The middle initial, "W", was representative of their mother's maiden
name, Wagoner. This was a common practice of the time. Sons Samuel and Adam both
served in Company F, 44th Indiana Volunteer Infantry and saw considerable action
during the Civil War.
Frederick W. Oberlin was born 21 September 1826, in Massillon, Ohio. When he was
an infant his family moved to a farm where he had limited educational opportunities.
He became a successful businessman, and at one time owned the entire block on the
west side of Broadway in downtown Butler, Indiana. "Oberlin" is still prominently
displayed in the building's facade.
Adam and Mary continued to raise their family on a farm in Franklin Township, Dekalb
County. Adam sold the farm in 1872 to Frederick Oberlin for $2,000. He then moved
to Williams County, Ohio, and lived with his son John until he died 13 February
1881. He is buried without Mary in West Buffalo Cemetery near Bryan, Ohio. I do
not know what happened to Mary, nor do I have proof of her parentage. John and Philip
Wagoner were members of the Kendall Community along with Adam's father, Frederick.
Adam's sister, Margaret, married John Wagoner in Dekalb County. Son Adam and Phillip
Wagoner were administrators of Frederick's estate. Based on this and other evidence,
I strongly believe Phillip and John were Mary's brothers.
David W. Oberlin was born 10 August 1841, in Stark County. He married Hannah L.
Dirrim 22 June 1861, in Steuben County, Indiana. David and Hannah raised three sons:
Richard D., Henry M., and Arthur D.. David owned and worked a farm near the Dekalb-Steuben
County line just east of Hamilton, Indiana. He was active in the United Brethren
Church for over 50 years. Hannah Louisa Dirrim was born in Wayne County, Ohio, March
15, 1843. At the age of two, she with her parents Isaac and Eleanor, moved to near
Hamilton. She lived the last year and a half at her son Arthur's home in Hillsdale,
Michigan, where she passed away 8 April 1918. David and Hannah are buried together
in Hamilton.
Richard D. Oberlin was born in Otsego Township, Steuben County, Indiana, on 11 December
1862. In 1886, he was converted and joined the United Brethren Church. On New Year's
Day, 1889, he married Isrealla Brown, the daughter of William Brown and Elizabeth
Gunsenhouser. The Gunsenhousers were among the very first settlers in northeastern
Indiana. Richard and Ella lived in Bryan, Ohio, until 1892 when they moved to a
farm near Hamilton. Elizabeths' brother, Captain John Gunsenhouser, was killed 20
September 1863 during the battle of Chickamauga.
Richard and Ella raised three sons: Clayton, Floyd, and Glenn Dale. A fourth and
youngest child, Florence, died of dehydration in 1908 at the age of two. Ella's
mother, Elizabeth passed away 5 March 1908, and tuberculosis took Richard, 3 May
1908 Ella died in 1956 and is buried with Richard in Hamilton.
Glenn Oberlin married Mary Geneva Hagerty, the daughter of Commodore Hagerty and
Ada Viola Wyckoff, 19 April 1924. Commodore's mother was Mary E. Dirrim, the younger
sister of Hannah, David W. Oberlin's wife. Mary's and Hannah's mother was Eleanor
wyckoff. Eleanor and Ada have common ancestors several generations back in New Jersey
in the early 1700s. Our "patriarch," Glenn, passed away on Father's Day, 2000.
(There is 1200 years of published genealogy information on the Wyckoff's back to
Erik, "king of Sweden." Eleanor Wyckoff's mother, Elizabeth Bruce, was a descendant
of Robert the Bruce, first King of Scotland, portrayed in the motion picture Bravehart.)
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