Advertisement

Jacob Schultz

Advertisement

Jacob Schultz

Birth
Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany
Death
1808 (aged 62–63)
Southampton Township, Somerset County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
York, York County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Sources vary about the origins of Jacob Schultz, some claiming he was from Germany and others Switzerland.

"The History of Macoupin County, Illinois," published in 1879, says: "The family which Mr. Shultz is descended from is of German origin. His grandfather, Jacob Shultz, came over from Germany when fourteen years of age, before the Revolutionary War.

Later in the same book, a passage says, "The first representative of the family came to America from Prussia about 1760, during the reign of Frederick the Great, when he was fifteen years of age, having been sent to this country by his parents."

But the "Encyclopedia of the History of St. Louis," published in 1899, contains bios of Jacob's grandsons, claiming Jacob was from Poltz or Paultz, Switzerland near Bern.

However, several Swiss genealogists who specialize in Bern say that there is no such town as Poltz or Paultz in Switzerland and that Schultz is a very GERMAN German name (not a SWISS German) name. The names Poltz or Paultz may be a misunderstanding of the German region Rheinland-Pfalz, where emigration to the United States was common during this period.

Sources also disagree about Jacob's birth year (some saying 1742, some 1744-45, and others 1751) and his age at emigration.

Some researchers believe our Jacob Schultz arrived on the ship Polly in August 1765. The ship also contained Conrad and George Jacob Hauenstein, relatives of the woman who would become Jacob's wife. (If Jacob were born in 1751, he would have been 14 in 1765, which matches certain accounts of his age at birth and emigration.)

Jacob married Margaretha Hauenstein, the daughter of Johann Heinrich and Christina Hauenstein from Oberlustadt, Germany. The Hauensteins arrived in America on August 15, 1750 on the "Royal Union." The ship passenger list declares, ""We subscribers, natives and late inhabitants of the Palatinate upon the Rhine, having transported ourselves into this Province....promise that we will be faithful to his present MAJESTY KING GEORGE THE SECOND..." Margaretha was a communicant at Manheim Reformed Lutheran Church in Lancaster County on June 28, 1771. Jacob appears to have married Margaretha about 1772 near Manheim, Lancaster County.

According to Keith Dull, who wrote a book on early settlers of Somerset and Fayette Counties in Pennsylvania, the following are the known children of Jacob and Margaretha:

1) Johann George (born June 18, 1773 and served in the War of 1812)
2) Elizabeth (born 1774)
3) Phillip (born 1776)
4) Maria (born January 1, 1777)
5) Johannes (born October 19, 1779)
6) Catherine (born about 1781)
7) Heinrich (born 1784)
8) Johann Peter (born April 30, 1786)
9) Susanna (born December 25, 1787)
10) Georg Adam (born February 28, 1789)
11) Maria Eva (born February 28, 1789)
12) Hanna (born August 4, 1790)
13) a daughter (born about 1792)

The eldest son, Johann Georg, was baptized at Saint Paul's Lutheran Church in Lancaster County, Manheim Township, PA on July 25, 1773, and was sponsored by his uncle, Johann Georg Hauenstein, and his wife, Elisabetha. (George Hauenstein appears in the deeds of Lancaster County in 1769 and 1789.)

Maria was born in Maryland on January 1, 1777.

The known baptism locations for the other children: Johann Peter (Berlin), Susanna (Berlin), Georg Adam (Pine Hill), Maria Eva (Pine Hill), and Hanna (Berlin). The preceding were all baptized in Somerset County, PA (Berlin and Pine Hill Lutheran Churches).

According to "The History of the Alison, Or Allison Family in Europe and America," published in 1893, Jacob died in 1808. Jacob was taxed in Somerset County, Southampton Township (near Pleasant Union) in 1805, and presumably died before 1810 since he is not listed in the census of that year.

The family eventually dropped the 'c' from the last name in America, but in older records the last name is spelled Schultz. For instance, the birth record of Jacob's son George Adam, born in 1789, spells the family name "Schultz."

A possible candidate for Jacob Schultz was born 25 Jul 1745 in Mussbach, Germany. He was the son of Benjamin Schultz and Clara Elisabetha (Rusten) Schultz. He would have been 19 going on 20 when he emigrated from German to America on the Polly in 1765. Many passengers on the Polly were from nearby towns in the Rhineland region of Germany.
Sources vary about the origins of Jacob Schultz, some claiming he was from Germany and others Switzerland.

"The History of Macoupin County, Illinois," published in 1879, says: "The family which Mr. Shultz is descended from is of German origin. His grandfather, Jacob Shultz, came over from Germany when fourteen years of age, before the Revolutionary War.

Later in the same book, a passage says, "The first representative of the family came to America from Prussia about 1760, during the reign of Frederick the Great, when he was fifteen years of age, having been sent to this country by his parents."

But the "Encyclopedia of the History of St. Louis," published in 1899, contains bios of Jacob's grandsons, claiming Jacob was from Poltz or Paultz, Switzerland near Bern.

However, several Swiss genealogists who specialize in Bern say that there is no such town as Poltz or Paultz in Switzerland and that Schultz is a very GERMAN German name (not a SWISS German) name. The names Poltz or Paultz may be a misunderstanding of the German region Rheinland-Pfalz, where emigration to the United States was common during this period.

Sources also disagree about Jacob's birth year (some saying 1742, some 1744-45, and others 1751) and his age at emigration.

Some researchers believe our Jacob Schultz arrived on the ship Polly in August 1765. The ship also contained Conrad and George Jacob Hauenstein, relatives of the woman who would become Jacob's wife. (If Jacob were born in 1751, he would have been 14 in 1765, which matches certain accounts of his age at birth and emigration.)

Jacob married Margaretha Hauenstein, the daughter of Johann Heinrich and Christina Hauenstein from Oberlustadt, Germany. The Hauensteins arrived in America on August 15, 1750 on the "Royal Union." The ship passenger list declares, ""We subscribers, natives and late inhabitants of the Palatinate upon the Rhine, having transported ourselves into this Province....promise that we will be faithful to his present MAJESTY KING GEORGE THE SECOND..." Margaretha was a communicant at Manheim Reformed Lutheran Church in Lancaster County on June 28, 1771. Jacob appears to have married Margaretha about 1772 near Manheim, Lancaster County.

According to Keith Dull, who wrote a book on early settlers of Somerset and Fayette Counties in Pennsylvania, the following are the known children of Jacob and Margaretha:

1) Johann George (born June 18, 1773 and served in the War of 1812)
2) Elizabeth (born 1774)
3) Phillip (born 1776)
4) Maria (born January 1, 1777)
5) Johannes (born October 19, 1779)
6) Catherine (born about 1781)
7) Heinrich (born 1784)
8) Johann Peter (born April 30, 1786)
9) Susanna (born December 25, 1787)
10) Georg Adam (born February 28, 1789)
11) Maria Eva (born February 28, 1789)
12) Hanna (born August 4, 1790)
13) a daughter (born about 1792)

The eldest son, Johann Georg, was baptized at Saint Paul's Lutheran Church in Lancaster County, Manheim Township, PA on July 25, 1773, and was sponsored by his uncle, Johann Georg Hauenstein, and his wife, Elisabetha. (George Hauenstein appears in the deeds of Lancaster County in 1769 and 1789.)

Maria was born in Maryland on January 1, 1777.

The known baptism locations for the other children: Johann Peter (Berlin), Susanna (Berlin), Georg Adam (Pine Hill), Maria Eva (Pine Hill), and Hanna (Berlin). The preceding were all baptized in Somerset County, PA (Berlin and Pine Hill Lutheran Churches).

According to "The History of the Alison, Or Allison Family in Europe and America," published in 1893, Jacob died in 1808. Jacob was taxed in Somerset County, Southampton Township (near Pleasant Union) in 1805, and presumably died before 1810 since he is not listed in the census of that year.

The family eventually dropped the 'c' from the last name in America, but in older records the last name is spelled Schultz. For instance, the birth record of Jacob's son George Adam, born in 1789, spells the family name "Schultz."

A possible candidate for Jacob Schultz was born 25 Jul 1745 in Mussbach, Germany. He was the son of Benjamin Schultz and Clara Elisabetha (Rusten) Schultz. He would have been 19 going on 20 when he emigrated from German to America on the Polly in 1765. Many passengers on the Polly were from nearby towns in the Rhineland region of Germany.


Advertisement

  • Created by: GM
  • Added: May 17, 2017
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/179437014/jacob-schultz: accessed ), memorial page for Jacob Schultz (1745–1808), Find a Grave Memorial ID 179437014, citing Strickler-Miller Cemetery, York, York County, Pennsylvania, USA; Maintained by GM (contributor 48263333).