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3451 Page 244 COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.

Nicholas Bierly, ... located upon the original tract, and passed his life there, dying July 25, 1848, at the age of seventy-three years. His wife Lucy was a daughter of John Buchtel, who came to Centre county about the same time as the Bierlys. She died March 26, 1851, aged seventy-three years, and both were laid to rest in the Lutheran Reformed cemetery at Rebersburg. They had ten children, whose names with dates of birth are as follows: Nicholas, February 12, 1799, died in Sugar Valley, aged seventy-eight; Hannah, May 26, 1800, married Henry Meyer; Michael, November 25, 1801; John, September 25, 1803; December 6, 1805 , moved to Ohio ; Anthony, August 26, 1807 ; Reuben, March 8, 1809, moved to Missouri; Peter, April 13, 814, ...; Simeon, March 25, 1817; George, July 17, 1819, settled in Ohio.
 
Bierly, Nicholas (I274)
 
3452 Page 276 COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.

DANIEL BRUNGART (deceased) was a member of one of the oldest families of Brush Valley, their settlement dating back a full century. The family originated in Germany, where our subject's great-grandfather was born. Martin Brungart, the grandfather of our subject, was the first to settle in Centre county, Penn. , having left his former home in the neighborhood of Hanover, York county, Penn., in 1798 to locate in the east end of Inrush Valley, where he died, his remains being laid to rest in the old graveyard at Rebersburg. He had a large family of children, namely: Martin, Jacob, Johan George, John and several daughters, two of whom remained in York county.
Johan George Brungart (commonly known as George), our subject's father, was born July 20, 1788, in Manheim. York county, and was but a lad when his parents removed to Centre county.
He was married April 9, 1811, to Salome Kahl, who was born January 14, 1787, at Heidelberg, Berks county, Penn., a daughter of Jacob and Catherine Kahl.
Seven children were born of this union, the names with dates of birth being as follows:
Catharine, January 20, 181 2, married Jacob Erhard, and died in Miles township. Centre county;
Jacob, January 9, 18 14, died in Rebersburg;
Johannes, March 9, 181 7, died in January, 1825;
Susan, March 10, 1819, married Jeremiah Haines, and is deceased;
George, February 4, 1821, lives at Rebersburg;
Daniel, July 4, 1823, is the subject of this sketch;
Sarah, April 22, 1825. married Samuel Frank;
and Margaret, March 15, 1827, married John Hosterman, and died in Miles township.

George Brungart was a farmer, also an extensive land owner, and was one of the substantial citizens of his time. In 1820 he built on his farm a tannery, which was superintended by Jacob Steffy, also from York county, and the leather he took to Philadelphia by team, bringing back goods for the merchants, the trip occupying three weeks. He never learned the trade, but was a most skilled mechanic, and spent most of his time in a shop on his farm, where he made tools and instruments of various kinds. He made a plow which was an improvement over the clumsy ones then in use, and which became well known. It was the one alluded to in the old saying common in Brush Valley, that "no man was much unless he owned a long-barrelled shot-gun, a red wamus, and a Brungart plow. " He was a Democrat in politics, and a member of the Lutheran Church, in which he held an influential place. Tall and slender in person, he possessed much vitality, and lived to see his ninetieth year, dying December 21, 1877. His wife died some years previously, being over seventy years of age, and both were buried at Rebersburg.
The subject of this sketch had but meager educational privileges, and attended the old-time subscription schools for a few weeks in winter each year. Reared as a farmer boy, he always followed that occupation, and, after working for his father several years in early manhood, he bought the old farm in Miles township. Centre county. In May, 1846, he was married in Milestownship, to Miss Phoebe A. Royer, who was born in that township, February 19, 1825, the daughter of Col. Henry and Polly (Gross) Royer. Col. Henry Royer came from Berks county, and at one time owned much of the land around Rebersburg, as well as a large tract of mountain land. In 1877, Mr. Brungart removed to Rebersburg, where he built the present substantial brick residence. He had two children: Elmira E. , born February 6, 1847, died February 15., 1850; and Jasper R., born June 17, 1851, of whom special mention will presently be made. Daniel Brungart died April 8, 1897, and is buried in the cemetery at Rebersburg.
Politically, Mr. Brungart was a Democrat, and he held several minor offices in his township but was never a politician. He was a leading member of the Reformed Church, as is his widow, and he was at one time an elder therein. He owns an excellent farm containing over 165 acres, and two valuable lots in Rebersburg. While he never posed as a philanthropist, he contributed to almost every worthy movement seeking aid, and he and his estimable wife were noted for their kindness of heart.
Jasper R. Brungart, the only living child of our subject, received his education in the schools of the township, after which he followed teaching some five years. In 1879 he entered mercantile business in Rebersburg, buying out J. Spiglemyer, and continued same for five years, at the end of which time he commenced farming, which vocation he followed up to 1890, when he built his pleasant home at Rebersburg, where he has since lived retired. In December, 1894, he graduated from the Chautauqua University at Syracuse, N. Y. , and is at present taking a reading course from that institution.
On October 3, 1876, Jasper R. Brungart was married in Union county, Penn., to Mary E. Long, who was born June 28, 1850, a daughter of Ephraim and Margaret (Slear) Long, highly respectable farming people. Her father was a native of Berks county, Penn., born April 8, 1814, and died January 13, 1856, a son of Ludwig and Hannah Long, natives of Pennsylvania. Ephraim Long was twice married, first time to Sarah Snook, by whom he had two children — Esther and Isaac — who lived to maturity. For his second wife, Ephraim was married. May 12, 1848, to Margaret Slear, and three children were born to them, two of whom died in infancy, and Mary E. (Mrs. Brungart). Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Long are both deceased, he having passed away January in, 1856, and she on July 27, 1863.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper R. Brungart are active members of the Reformed Church. In politics he is a Democrat, and has filled various township and school offices.  
Brungart, Daniel (I716)
 
3453 Page 277 COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.

Jasper R. Brungart, the only living child of our subject, received his education in the schools of the township, after which he followed teaching some five years. In 1879 he entered mercantile business in Rebersburg, buying out J. Spiglemyer, and continued same for five years, at the end of which time he commenced farming, which vocation he followed up to 1890, when he built his pleasant home at Rebersburg, where he has since lived retired. In December, 1894, he graduated from the Chautauqua University at Syracuse, N. Y. , and is at present taking a reading course from that institution.
On October 3, 1876, Jasper R. Brungart was married in Union county, Penn., to Mary E. Long, who was born June 28, 1850, a daughter of Ephraim and Margaret (Slear) Long, highly respectable farming people. Her father was a native of Berks county, Penn., born April 8, 1814, and died January 13, 1856, a son of Ludwig and Hannah Long, natives of Pennsylvania. Ephraim Long was twice married, first time to Sarah Snook, by whom he had two children — Esther and Isaac — who lived to maturity. For his second wife, Ephraim was married. May 12, 1848, to Margaret Slear, and three children were born to them, two of whom died in infancy, and Mary E. (Mrs. Brungart). Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Long are both deceased, he having passed away January n, 1856, and she on July 27, 1863.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper R. Brungart are active members of the Reformed Church. In politics he is a Democrat, and has filled various township and school offices.  
Brungart, Jasper R. (I718)
 
3454 Page 321 COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
A. J. STOVER, a prominent citizen of Coburn, Centre county, is a retired agriculturist who after many years of well-directed labor can gather the rewards thereof at leisure. He was born January 27, 1846, in Haines township. Centre county, where his ancestors settled at a very early day, his grandfather, Adam Stover, having been a pioneer farmer.
Andrew Stover, our subject's father, was born and reared there and learned the carpenter's trade. His parents having a small farm and a large family, he was obliged to make his own way in life from the start. He was industrious and frugal, and won a high place in the esteem of the community. In politics he was a Democrat, and he was a leading member of the Lutheran Church. At an early age he married Miss Polly Moyer (or Meyer, as the name was originally spelled), a daughter of George Moyer, a well known farmer. They began housekeeping near Coburn, and for a number of years Andrew Stover was engaged in general carpenter work, but when nearly forty years old he purchased forty acres of land in Haines township, Centre county, and followed farming until his death. He died at the age of fifty-four, and his mortal remains were laid to rest in Wolfe's Chapel cemetery. His widow, who was born January 20, 1814. and is consequently eighty-four years old, is now living with our subject.
They reared a large family, as follows:
Julia is Mrs. Enoch Kramer, of Haines township. Centre county;
George M. is a carpenter of Aaronsburg;
Daniel M. is a carpenter of Haines township, Centre county;
Israel M. lives in Berrien county, Mich.;
Catherine married Franklin Detwilder, and died at Aaronsburg;
John is a resident of Berrien county, Mich.;
A. J. is our subject;
Benjamin lives in Haines township, Centre county;
Jacob,
Monroe,
Jeff
and James, all resided in Berrien county, Mich.;
Henrietta died at the age of twenty-one years;
and Elizabeth, who married Henry Kramer, went west, and for twelve years has not been heard from.
A. J. Stover's early education was such as the common schools of his day afforded. As his parents had but limited means most of the children left home early to make a living, and he was the only one of the boys who remained until of age. He was eighteen years old when his father died, and the will confided to his care the mother and younger children. This commission he fulfilled, all his work at the homestead being done for the mother and family. At twenty-one he was married in Haines township, Centre county, to Miss Annie Stover, a native of the township and a daughter of Martin Stover. His savings at this time amounted to nearly $150, and he made a beginning as a farmer by renting forty acres of land in Penn township, Centre county, where he spent six years. Having prospered, he rented a larger farm in Haines township. Centre county, and lived there three years. In the spring of 1878 he purchased his first farm, a tract of eighty-seven acres in Haines township. Centre county, and although he went $3,600 in debt, he enjoyed at last the satisfaction of having a home that he could call his own. He remained there until the spring of 1895, when he removed to his present home in Coburn. He now owns over 240 acres of land, and is regarded as one of the substantial citizens of the locality.
Mr. Stover's four children by the first marriage are all residents of Centre county: Ammon A. is a farmer of Haines township; Warren F. is a farmer of Gregg township; William resides in Haines township; and Katy married John Hess, of Haines township. The mother of this little family died in February, 1886, and was buried in Wolfe's Chapel cemetery. On February 16, 1888, Mr. Stover was married in Haines township to Miss Eve Stover, a sister of his first wife, and there is one child by this union, Martin A., who is at home.
Mr. Stover has not only proved himself a successful business man, but he has always taken a prominent part in the local work of the Democratic party, and has held the office of supervisor for three terms. He is a member of the Reformed Church, in which he has been a deacon, and he is interested in all that tends to promote the good of the community.  
Stover, Andrew (I1113)
 
3455 Page 321 COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
A. J. STOVER, a prominent citizen of Coburn, Centre county, is a retired agriculturist who after many years of well-directed labor can gather the rewards thereof at leisure. He was born January 27, 1846, in Haines township. Centre county, where his ancestors settled at a very early day, his grandfather, Adam Stover, having been a pioneer farmer.
Andrew Stover, our subject's father, was born and reared there and learned the carpenter's trade. His parents having a small farm and a large family, he was obliged to make his own way in life from the start. He was industrious and frugal, and won a high place in the esteem of the community. In politics he was a Democrat, and he was a leading member of the Lutheran Church. At an early age he married Miss Polly Moyer (or Meyer, as the name was originally spelled), a daughter of George Moyer, a well known farmer. They began housekeeping near Coburn, and for a number of years Andrew Stover was engaged in general carpenter work, but when nearly forty years old he purchased forty acres of land in Haines township, Centre county, and followed farming until his death. He died at the age of fifty-four, and his mortal remains were laid to rest in Wolfe's Chapel cemetery. His widow, who was born January 20, 1814, and is consequently eighty-four years old, is now living with our subject.
They reared a large family, as follows:
Julia is Mrs. Enoch Kramer, of Haines township. Centre county;
George M. is a carpenter of Aaronsburg;
Daniel M. is a carpenter of Haines township, Centre county;
Israel M. lives in Berrien county, Mich.;
Catherine married Franklin Detwilder, and died at Aaronsburg;
John is a resident of Berrien county, Mich.;
A. J. is our subject;
Benjamin lives in Haines township, Centre county;
Jacob,
Monroe,
Jeff
and James, all resided in Berrien county, Mich.;
Henrietta died at the age of twenty-one years;
and Elizabeth, who married Henry Kramer, went west, and for twelve years has not been heard from.
A. J. Stover's early education was such as the common schools of his day afforded. As his parents had but limited means most of the children left home early to make a living, and he was the only one of the boys who remained until of age. He was eighteen years old when his father died, and the will confided to his care the mother and younger children. This commission he fulfilled, all his work at the homestead being done for the mother and family. At twenty-one he was married in Haines township, Centre county, to Miss Annie Stover, a native of the township and a daughter of Martin Stover. His savings at this time amounted to nearly $150, and he made a beginning as a farmer by renting forty acres of land in Penn township, Centre county, where he spent six years. Having prospered, he rented a larger farm in Haines township. Centre county, and lived there three years. In the spring of 1878 he purchased his first farm, a tract of eighty-seven acres in Haines township. Centre county, and although he went $3,600 in debt, he enjoyed at last the satisfaction of having a home that he could call his own. He remained there until the spring of 1895, when he removed to his present home in Coburn. He now owns over 240 acres of land, and is regarded as one of the substantial citizens of the locality.
Mr. Stover's four children by the first marriage are all residents of Centre county: Ammon A. is a farmer of Haines township; Warren F. is a farmer of Gregg township; William resides in Haines township; and Katy married John Hess, of Haines township. The mother of this little family died in February, 1886, and was buried in Wolfe's Chapel cemetery. On February 16, 1888, Mr. Stover was married in Haines township to Miss Eve Stover, a sister of his first wife, and there is one child by this union, Martin A., who is at home.
Mr. Stover has not only proved himself a successful business man, but he has always taken a prominent part in the local work of the Democratic party, and has held the office of supervisor for three terms. He is a member of the Reformed Church, in which he has been a deacon, and he is interested in all that tends to promote the good of the community.  
Meyer, Mary (I1161)
 
3456 Page 379
JOHN S. KLINE, farmer, P.O. Benton, was born in Luzerne County, Huntington Township, December 18, 1840, a son of A. J. Kline, of Fishingcreek. He married February 1, 1870, Mary E. Appleman of Benton Township. She was born July 31, 1844, a daughter of Samuel Appleman. They were married in the house they now occupy, and the farm of 100 acres, which Mr. Kline owns, was a part of the old Appleman homestead.
They have had four children: Rosa M. born September 24, 1871, and died January 6, 1872; Lillian M., born February 9, 1876; Samuel R., December 26, 1879, and Otis C, October 8, 1884. Mr. Kline enlisted, January 1, 1862, in Battery F, Second Pennsylvania Heavy Artillery. One Hundred and Twelfth in the line; was mustered in Philadelphia as a private, and mustered out as first lieutenant, January 29, 1866, in City Point, Va. His company joined Grant's army at Cold Harbor, and operated with him until the close of the war, when he came home. He then traveled six months in the west, and on returning hired on his father's farm. Mr. Kline has also been engaged in teaching school; is a good penman, and favors the modern modes of education. He is an experienced business man and has been connected with many of the enterprises of the town, as will be noticed else-where.

 
Kline, John S. (I327)
 
3457 Page 382 COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.

JOHN K. HOSTERMAN. A problem which has perplexed every soul conscious of its responsibilities on the earthly plane is the find- ing of a right aim in life, a work to which one may safely and with entire contentment devote one's energies; and it is not strange that amid the disappointing and annoying complications of modern life there are those who regard the simple routine of a farmer's calling as furnishing, for them at least, a satisfactory answer. Like Count Tolstoi, they hold that whatever may be said of the value of the work of the poet, the lawyer, the physician, they can at least be absolutely sure that in raising grain and fruits to feed the hungry they are meeting, and meeting wisely, a vital need of humanity. It is doubtless for the best that each should choose his work according to his inclinations, but it is quite in accordance with reason that we should find among our agri- cultural communities some of the best types of manhood and womanhood, whose lives and speech and manners reveal, in their straightforward adhesion to first principles, a grasp of realities which is not always found in more artificial modes of life.
The many friends of 'Mr. and Mrs. John K. Hosterman, of Miles township. Centre county, will be gratified to find in this brief history a permanent record of their useful life. Mr. Hosterman is a member of a pioneer family of Miles township, Centre county, where he was born December 26, 1826. His father, George Hosterman, a native of Haines township, was a tanner by trade, and at the time of his death, which occurred when he was aged thirty-three years, he was residing at Millheim. His wife, Catherine Kramer, was born in Berks county, Penn., and was brought to Miles township, Centre county, by her father, Daniel Kramer, who at one time resided in Kramerville. Our subject was the eldest of four children; Sarah died in childhood before her father's death; Amanda married Samuel Wolfe, and died at Tylersville; William, once a merchant at Madisonburg and Rebersburg, died at St. Louis. The mother married a second husband, Henry Smull, of Brush Valley; she died in Rockville when more than seventy-five years of age, and was buried in Rebersburg. By her second marriage she was the mother of six children.
Mr. Hosterman was but a boy of eight years when his father died, and soon after this event he went to Brush Valley to live with relatives, spending a short time at the home of John Kramer, and then going to an uncle, David Wolfe, near Wolfs Store. He attended the schools of his time, which were decidedly inferior to those of the present day, and was reared as a farmer boy, his work being chiefly clearing land. After several years with Mr. Wolfe he began to learn the tanner's trade under Jeremiah Haines, but the work did not agree with him, and he returned to the farm.
In 1848, Mr. Hosterman was married in Brush Valley to Miss Margaret Brungart, daughter of George Brungart. She bore one child, but it died in infancy, and she passed to the unseen life in less than a year. Later Mr. Hosterman married his present wife, Susanna Gramley, who was born May 15, 1828, in Rebersburg, daughter of Philip and Barbara (Poorman) Gramley. Eleven children were born of this union- Olevia, February 1, 1850, is now Mrs. Uriah Spangler, of Harvey, Kans.; William A., February 23, 1853, died August 29, 1859; George W., February 22, 1855, took the degreee of D. D. S., and is now practicing dentistry at Centre Hall; Emma J., February 3, 1858, married Washington Shaffer, of Brush Valley; Annie V., April 17, 1860, died October 28, 1864; Mary A., July 27, 1862, died November 4, 1864; Edwin G., May 9, 1865, is a farmer of Brush Valley; Ida M. , .April 14, 1867, died March 25, 1870; Ella A., May 12, 1868, is now Mrs. Wallace Kreider, of Brush Valley; Lizzie V., March 22, 1871, is at home; and Thomas C., April 4, 1873, is a dentist at Rebersburg. Mr. Hosterman has educated his sons well, and is in favor of better schools for all. From 1852 until 1886 he rented a farm from his uncle, David Wolfe, which he bought at the latter's death. He lived on the place until April, 1893, when he purchased his present comfortable home at Wolfs Store, and removed there. Even at his advanced age he can often be seen at work on his farm, the habits of in- dustry, strengthened by more than sixty years of active work at his business, being difficult to lay aside.
Mr. Hosterman is well known, and by his courteous manners has made many friends. His methods of doing business have always been such as to secure for him a reputation for the strictest integrity. He is a Democrat in politics, but while taking keen interest in the success of his party he is not a politician. He has served as judge of elections, and for twenty-one years was overseer of the poor. He belongs to the Reformed Church, while his estimable wife is a Lutheran in faith. Both are descended from prominent and highly respected families of Centre county, and both do credit to their ancestry. Kind-hearted and hospitable, their home is a most pleasant place, and the serene influence of their lives has done good which cannot be measured by earthly standard.
 
Hosterman, John Kreamer (I1044)
 
3458 Page 59 COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
CALVIN M. BOWER, a prominent lawyer and citizen of Bellefonte, was born in Haines township. Centre county, Penn., April 20, 1849. a son of Jacob Bower, who was a prosperous and well-to-do farmer living near the village of Woodward. The mother was a daughter of Jacob Motz, of Woodward; both parents being members of two of the oldest and most prominent families of that section of the county.
The subject of this sketch spent his early days as a farmer's boy, working on his father's farm during the summers and attending the public schools during the winter months. In November, 1866, he entered the Aaronsburg Academy to prepare for college. In the following spring he went back to his father's farm, and remained there until the fall of 1867, when he re- turned to the academy and spent the winter at his studies. In the spring of 1863 he again returned to the farm, and remained at work (ex- cept for five months spent in teaching a term of school in the neighborhood) until August, 1870, when he entered Central Pennsylvania College, at New Berlin, Penn. During the time spent on the farm he was a faithful student, making use of his spare time in finishing his preparations for college. He remained at college until October, 1871, when he came to Bellefonte to begin the study of law. He entered the law office of Orvis & Alexander, then one of the most noted law firms in central Pennsylvania. There he pursued his studies with the same zeal that characterized his school work, and in December, 1873, he was admitted to the Bar of Centre county.
Immediately upon his admission to the Bar he was offered and accepted an interest in the law firm with whom he had been a student, and in January, 1874, he became a member of the firm of Orvis, Alexander & Bower. When Judge Orvis, the senior member of the firm, was appointed to the Bench, the remaining members of the firm continued the practice under the firm name of Alexander & Bower. This partnership continued for a period of eleven years, during which time they were engaged in most of the important cases tried in Centre county. Mr. Bower was soon recognized as a careful and conscientious lawyer, and soon attained an influential position at the Bar. He early acquired a large practice at the Orphans' Court, and was looked upon especially strong in this class of cases. The firm during its existence had a large practice, and taking an active part in the work soon became one of the
leading lawyers of the county. One of the strongest evidences of Mr. Bower's ability as a lawyer is the fact that when Judge Orvis retired from the Bench he chose him as his law partner. The law firm of Orvis, Bower & Orvis, consisting of Judge Orvis, Mr. Bower, and Ellis L. Orvis. was organized January i, 1885. This partner- ship at once came into prominence, and was recognized as one of the leading law firms of Pennsylvania. Mr. Bower has always taken an active and prominent part in their practice, and his success has placed him prominently among the leading lawyers of the State. For many years he was concerned in the trial of many of the important ejectment cases tried in Centre county, and he is recognized as a well-equipped lawyer in this important branch of the law. The records of the court in the central part of the State show the extent of his practice, and the supreme court reports, for years, attest his prominence at the Bar, showing that he frequently appeared be- fore that tribunal in the leading cases from the the courts to which his practice extended.
Mr. Bower has always been an uncompromising Democrat, faithfully devoted to the principles of his party. These principles,as laid down by Jefferson, Jackson and Tilden, have always found in him an earnest and faithful supporter. As early as 1875 he was chairman of the Democratic County Committee, and by his untiring work succeeded in effecting an organization that brought out a full party vote, resulting in a majority of 1,500 in the county for the Democratic nominee for governor. He has frequently been a delegate to State Conventions, and in 1880 he was honored with a place on the Electoral ticket. In 1894 he was unanimously nominated by his party for President Judge of the 49th Judicial District, then comprised of the counties of Centre and Huntingdon. In the disastrous cam- paign of that year he was defeated with the rest of the Democratic candidates, but he ran 1,529 votes ahead of his ticket in the district. When Mr. Bower was nominated, one of the Demo-cratic papers in the district said: “ The nomination comes to him without a contest. His eminent position at the Bar in this section of the State makes him the natural candidate of his party, and he is conceded by Democrats and Republicans alike to be the strongest Democratic nominee to be found in the district." In the following year the Democratic County Committee instructed the delegates from Centre county to present Mr. Bower's name before the State Convention for the nomination of Justice of the Superior Court, and passed a resolution instructing the delegates to use all honorable means to secure his nomination. Huntingdon and other counties took similar action, and it soon became evident that there was a strong sentiment in his favor in various sections of the State. His friends made a strong fight for his nomination, and he was only defeated by an unfortunate ruling of the chairman of the Convention, which gave the nomination to Judge Magee, of Pittsburg, by twenty-eight majority.
Mr. Bower is a prominent and an active member of the Reformed Church. Frequently he has been a delegate to Classis and Synods, and has filled various Other positions with credit to himself and honor to the Church. While he is thoroughly devoted to his Church, he is interested in the cause of religion without regard to denominational lines. He has also been active in Sunday-school work, and is at present district and county chairman of the State Sabbath-school Association. He has also been an active worker in the cause of education. For years he has been a member of the board of trustees of Franklin and Marshall College, at Lancaster, Penn., and as a mark of appreciation of his work for the college, and his literary attainments, that institution some years ago conferred upon him the degree of Master of Arts. He owns one of the finest libraries in Bellefonte, and by earnest and careful study he has become as prominent in literary circles as he has in his profession. Judge Orvis, when on the Bench, fittingly recognized Mr. Bower's legal and literary attainments by appointing him a member of the examining committee; and he is in point of service the oldest member of that committee, having been reap- pointed by Judges Hoy, Furst and Love, and is the President of the Board.
Mrs. Bower is a daughter of John Meyer, of near Rebersburg, and a lady of culture and re- finement. She is particularly noted for her love of plants and flowers, and the home of the family on the e.xtreme eastern end of Linn street is one of the finest in Bellefonte. The grounds surrounding the house are one mass of vines and flowers, all under the immediate care of Mrs. Bower. The only child, John Jacob Bower, is a student of Franklin and Marshall College, a member of the class of 1898.
Socially, Mr. Bower is of a retiring disposition, absorbed in his books and his profession; yet he has acquired a large circle of acquaintances, and formed strong friendships. He is a representa- tive of one of the oldest families in Centre county, and his ancestors on both sides were some of the earliest settlers in the eastern end of Penn's Valley. Many of the Bowers and Motzes still re- side in that section of the county, and some of them own and occupy the lands where their ancestors settled about the time of the Revolutionary war, the title thereto not having passed out of the family name in which it was originally acquired.

Jacob Bower, the great-grandfather of Calvin M , and the son of John and Catherine Bower, came into what is now Haines township from Hanover township, York county, in 1776. He married Christena Nease, daughter of Philip Nease. John Motz, the great-grandfather of Mr. Bower on his mother's side, came to the site of Woodward from Penn township, in what is now Snyder county, in 1786. He bought land under date of April 29, 1785, and is credited with being the first settler on the town site named. Shortly after locating, he built a mill, and in a small scale manufactured soda. He was highly educated, a sculptor by profession, and had to leave the Fatherland in consequence of his devotion to the cause of liberty. At his death he left quite a valuable collection of books on Church history, astronomy, etc. His wife's maiden name was Mary Whitmer.  
Bower, Calvin M. Esq (I202)
 
3459 Parents of Nicholas Stillwell (1609-1671) - findagrave has Nicholas's birth year as 1603

Genealogy of the Miller and Pursel Families page 143
NICHOLAS STILLWELL 1570-1647
Alice died 1609

Issue:
1. JOHN STILLWELL, born 1590.
2. ERMA STILLWELL, born 1592.
3. ELIZABETH STILLWELL, born 1594, married Peter Derbeje.
4. HENRY STILLWELL, born 1597.
5. TEMPERENCE STILLWELL, born 1598.
6. EDMOND STILLWELL, born 1599.
7. STEPHEN STILLWELL, born 1604.
8. JASPER STILLWELL, born 1608.
9. NICHOLAS STILLWELL, born 1609.
 
Stillwell, Nicholas (I2594)
 
3460 Part owner of grist mill at Linden Hall, Centre County, PA. Meyer, Jacob (I457)
 
3461 Paul Wolf purchased in 1811 from Tobias Pickle
the mill property and large tract of land lying north
across the valley, known later as the John Forster
property, containing nearly four hundred acres, and
now divided up into several separate farms. The
amount paid for the whole was ten thousand three
hundred (£10,300) pounds (Pennsylvania currency).
In the following year Mr. Pickle bought back a small
plot for a burial-ground. Mr. Wolf was a native of
Bethel township, Berks County. His father and Col.
Henry Royer's father lived on adjoining farms there;
but after his marriage Paul Wolf moved to his father-
in-law's, in Bethel township, Lebanon County, thence
to Brush valley in 1812. He soon was extensively
engaged in business in his new home, keeping store
and operating a grist-mill, saw-mill, fulling-mill, oil-
mill, and distillery. The last three named were situ-
ated on his land near Shroyer's Gap, at the foot of Nit-
tany Mountain. These have long since disappeared.
His store was kept in his dwelling-house, the old
stone house at Centre Mills. Mr. Wolf was for a
number of years a justice of the peace, and his name is
frequently met with in old deeds and documents of
other kinds. He was an enterprising citizen, and as a
man universally esteemed.

He had brought a large amount of money into the
valley, but becoming involved in debt to some extent
through his various business enterprises, and dying
at a time of financial depression, his large estate had
to be sold at a great sacrifice, and very little remained
after the liabilities were met.

Mr. Wolf was born July 30, 1772; died June 6,
1822. The funeral rites on the occasion of his burial
were the first religious exercises in the brick church
at Rebersburg. The church was then not finished,
but was dedicated soon after. Mr. Wolf leaves a nu-
merous train of descendants, most of whom reside in
Centre and Union Counties. He had seven children, —
Jacob (see notice of); Paul died Dec. 22, 1866, aged
sixty-two; George died about the year 1835, aged
twenty-eight; Catharine married J. A. Gast; Sarah
married George Walker; Margaret married Henry
Freeze; and Mary died single. Hon. S. S. Wolf, son
of Paul, Jr., was a grandson of Paul Wolf.  
Wolf, Paul (I2464)
 
3462 Paula R. Ruhl Himmelberger, 90, formerly of South Fifth Avenue, Lebanon, died of natural causes Tuesday, June 20, 2000, in ManorCare. She was the wife of the late Lloyd H. Himmelberger, who died Nov. 12, 1973. Born July 10, 1909, in Harrisburg, she was a daughter of the late Moses S. and Viva L. Crites Ruhl. She was a presser for various local dry cleaners and was a member of Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church in Lebanon. Surviving are sisters Eleanor Book of Lebanon, Elizabeth Wright of Daytona Beach, Fla., and Barbara Doyle of Richmond, Va.; a brother, Calvin C. Ruhl, Santa Barbara, Calif.; and several nieces and nephews. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday in Christman's Funeral Home, 226 Cumberland St., Lebanon, preceded by a viewing beginning at 1. Private interment in Ebenezer "Covenant" Cemetery, Lebanon.

Lebanon Daily News, Wed., 21 June 2000 
Ruhl, Paula Ellen (I3232)
 
3463 PDF of Missouri death certificat
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1935/1935_00029740.PDF 
Dunbar, George W. (I2793)
 
3464 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1914/1914_00013909.PDF 
Wolfe, James Lee (I692)
 
3465 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1933/1933_00036666.PDF 
Barkley, Louise Catherine (I2094)
 
3466 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1937/1937_00022104.PDF 
Ferrick, May (I700)
 
3467 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1945/1945_00030232.PDF 
Achenbach, Charles Clarence (I2096)
 
3468 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1959/1959_00012515.PDF 
Paugh, Louetta (I2870)
 
3469 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1961/1961_00036101.PDF 
Achenbach, William (I2097)
 
3470 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1962/1962_00031201.PDF 
Moyer, Daniel Sechrist (I1510)
 
3471 PDF of Missouri death certificate
https://www.sos.mo.gov/images/archives/deathcerts/1963/1963_00028545.PDF 
Moyer, Ida Minerva (I1508)
 
3472 Pennsylvania and New Jersey church and town records, 1669-2013.
Name: Daisy May Risser
Baptism Age: 0
Event Type: Baptism
Birth Date: 19 Feb 1887
Baptism Date: 6 Nov 1887
Baptism Place: Schaefferstown, Lebanon, Pennsylvania, USA
Denomination: United Church of Christ
Organization Name: St Paul's United Church of Christ
Father: John F Risser
Mother: Lizzie Schram
 
Risser, Daisy May (I3093)
 
3473 Pennsylvania and New Jersey church and town records:
Name: Georg Fessler
Baptism Age: 0
Event Type: Baptism
Birth Date: 6 May 1827
Baptism Date: 1 Jun 1827
Baptism Place: Schaefferstown, Lebanon, Pennsylvania, USA
Denomination: Lutheran
Organization Name: St Luke's Lutheran Church
Father: Daniel Fessler
Mother: Catharina Fessler 
Fessler, George (I3067)
 
3474 Pennsylvania and New Jersey church and town records.
Name: Ada Melissa Benner
Death Age: 7
Event Type: Burial
Birth Date: abt 1882
Death Date: 1889
Burial Date: 6 Nov 1889
Burial Place: New Berlin, Union, Pennsylvania, USA
Denomination: Lutheran
Organization Name: Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church 
Benner, Ada Melissa (I694)
 
3475 Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Church and Town Records, 1669-2013
Name: Samuel David Clair
Baptism Age: 0
Event Type: Baptism
Birth Date: 13 Nov 1862
Baptism Date: 27 Mar 1863
Baptism Place: Boalsburg, Centre, Pennsylvania, USA
Denomination: United Church of Christ
Organization Name: St John's United Church of Christ
Father: Geo W Clair
Mother: Cath H Clair 
St. Clair, Samuel David (I1526)
 
3476 Pennsylvania church records

Name: John George Meyer
Event: Baptism
Baptism Date: 27 Mar 1758
Baptism Place: Heidelberg, Lancaster Co., PA
Church: Millbach Reformed Congregation
Role: Baptized
Household Members:
Name Role
Susanna Meyer Mother
Jacob Meyer Father
John George Meyer Baptized
Mary Zimmerman Sponsor
Sebastian Zimmerman Sponsor


 
Meyer, John George (I390)
 
3477 Pennsylvania Death Certificate #87731

Name: Guy Zwingli Stover
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 55 years 1 month 20 days
Occupation: photographer
Marital Status: married
Birth: 3 Sep 1889 in Coburn
Death: 23 Oct 1944 in State College, Centre, Pennsylvania, USA
Cause of Death: Carcinoma of Esophagus, Stomach and Liver
Father: John C Stover
Mother: Olivia Smith
Spouse: Helen C Frisk
Burial: 26 Oct 1944 in Millheim, Pennsylvania
Informant: Helen Stover, State College, Pennsylvania 
Stover, Guy Zwingli (I2411)
 
3478 Pennsylvania Death Certificate #92712

Name: Daniel Meyer
Gender: Male
Race: White
Age: 63 years 21 days
Occupation: farmer
Marital Status: married
Birth: 21 Aug 1852 in Pennsylvania
Death: 11 Sep 1915 in Penn Twp., Centre, Pennsylvania, USA
Cause of Death: Valvular Disease of the Heart - Nephritis
Father: Phillip Meyer
Mother: Margaret Stover
Burial: 15 Sep 1915 in Aaronsburg, Pennsylvania
Informant: Irvin A. Meyer, Coburn, Pennsylvania 
Meyer, Daniel (I1132)
 
3479 Pennsylvania Death Certificate:
Name: May Rosella Krieder [May Rosella Kreider]
Age: 82
Birth Date: 2 Jul 1870
Birth Place: Centre County, Pennsylvania
Death Date: 14 Oct 1952
Death Place: Rural Logan, Clinton, Pennsylvania, USA
Father: Phillip Kreider
Mother: Isabelle Royer
Marital Status: Never married
Certificate Number: 85151
 
Kreider, May Rosella (I1837)
 
3480 Pennsylvania House of Representatives - 1860
Clinton, Lycoming Counties - Achenbach, George A. Dem
From Pennsylvania Daily Telegraph (Harrisburg), 26 October 1859
Pdf at http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/harold.cox/legis/84H.pdf

Pennsylvania House of Representatives - 1875
Clinton County - Achenbach, George A. Dem
Pdf at http://staffweb.wilkes.edu/harold.cox/legis/99H.pdf 
Achenbach, George A. (I2286)
 
3481 Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963
Name: Caroline B Hilbish
[Caroline B Moyer]
Gender: Female
Race: White
Age: 90
Birth Date: 3 Oct 1837
Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Death Date: 10 Dec 1927
Death Place: Freeburg, Snyder, Pennsylvania, USA
Father: Fredrick C Moyer
Mother: Mary A Boyer
Certificate Number: 114927 
Moyer, Caroline (I1637)
 
3482 Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963
Name: Sarah S Doebler
[Sarah S Moyer]
Gender: Female
Race: White
Age: 60
Birth Date: 30 Mar 1861
Birth Place: Freeburg, Pennsylvania
Death Date: 26 Mar 1922
Death Place: Freeburg, Snyder, Pennsylvania, USA
Father: Phillip Moyer
Mother: Sarah Treon
Certificate Number: 29316 
Moyer, Sarah Susan (I1339)
 
3483 Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963 for Clara Jane Meyer:
Name: Clara Jane Meyer
[Clara Jane Wolf]
Gender: Female
Race: White
Marital Status: Married
Age: 76
Birth Date: 2 Jun 1854
Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Death Date: 5 Dec 1930
Death Place: Miles, Centre, Pennsylvania, USA
Father Name: John Wolf
Father Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Mother Name: Sara Cramer
Mother Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Spouse Name: Jerome Meyer
Informant: Mrs. Mary C Frank, Rebersburg, PA [Sister]
Certificate Number: 114093 
Wolf, Clara J. (I452)
 
3484 Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1963 for Isabelle Royer
Name: Isabelle Royer
[Isabelle Harper]
Gender: Female
Race: White
Marital Status: Widow
Age: 88
Birth Date: 26 Aug 1830
Birth Place: Centre County, Pennsylvania
Death Date: 10 Dec 1918
Death Place: Porter Township, Clinton, Pennsylvania, USA
Father Name: Johnathan Harper
Father Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Mother Name: Kreamer
Mother Birth Place: Pennsylvania
Informant: C.C. Royer, Mill Hall, PA
Certificate Number: 188630 
Harper, Isabelle (I775)
 
3485 Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1966:
Gender: Male
Race: White
Marital Status: Married
Age: 80
Birth Date: 17 Jan 1848
Birth Place: Gregg Twp
Death Date: 4 Jan 1929
Death Place: Haines, Centre, Pennsylvania, USA
Father: Geo Moyer
Mother: Lydia Harter
Spouse: Dina Moyer - [Diana "Dina" Married 1870 no children]
Certificate Number: 4628 
Meyer, Andrew (I1056)
 
3486 Personal note from a grandson: My grandfather George Ernest Moyer (1878-1956) rebuilt organs as my sisters and cousins may well remember. He loved music whether singing as a soloist in any congregation or choir even if it were something other than his Methodist Episcopal Church.  Moyer, George Ernest (I2672)
 
3487 Peter Beerly Bierly, Peter (I578)
 
3488 Philip Kreider married Leah Bowman, and in April, 1834, removed with his family to the present site of Centre Hall, traveling in a wagon, the journey from Lebanon County requiring three days. He and Christian Hoffer, who with his family made the trip at the same time, purchased what was then known as the James Lyons farm, and divided it, Mr. Kreider taking the lower portion where Centre Hall now stands. Four years later he moved to Linden Hall, and after one year there located in what is now Penn Township. Centre county. He was a carpenter in his younger days, later becoming a merchant and hotel keeper, his thrifty and industrious life enabling him to secure a comfortable competence.
He and his wife were devout members of the Reformed Church, and were highly esteemed in the community. The wife died April 4, 1856, the husband on January 7, 1842, and the remains of both were laid to rest at Aaronsburg. Their children were Malinda A. (Mrs. Stover); William S., who died in 1855 in Penn township. Centre County; Rosanna, who died in infancy; John P., who died in Miles Township, Centre County, at the age of forty-four; George B. and Reuben H., who died in infancy; Jacob B., a physician at Bucyrus, Ohio, and Mary C. , now Mrs. Daniel Weaver, of Miles township. Centre county.  
Bowman, Leah (I1839)
 
3489 Philip Morr was the younger of the two sons of Andrew Morr. He was born Jan 1, 1766; died of hemorrhage of the lungs, April 13, 1826. He lived in what was known as the Morr homestead, where he was engaged in farming. He kept store in one of the apartments of the old log house built by his father. In 1813, Governor Simon Snyder, who was an intimate friend of Philip's father, appointed Philip Morr, with Daniel Caldwell and Frederick Gutelius a Board of County Commissioners for the county of Union, a new county, just formed out of part of Northumberland. The Act for its erection passed the Legislature March 22d of the same year, and the territory embraced that part of Northumberland county lying west of the Susquehanna river. The County Commissioners entered upon the duties of their office November 11. The Courts were held at Mifflinburg; until the Board decided that New Berlin, the most central town in the county, should be the county seat. Here justice was dispensed for forty- two years, or to the time (1855), when Snyder county was carved out of Union. Philip Morr retired from the office as County Com- missioner after one year's service.
Philip Morr was the owner of considerable real estate located within the present limits of the counties of Snyder, Centre and Lycoming, Pa., and like his brother, John George Morr, passed through a severe panic. To meet the obligations incurred by the purchase of the real estate, he sold a large grist mill, together with several hundred acres of land on Middlecreek, to Jacob K. Boyer, of Reading, Pa., for $10,000. This was considered a good sale and he might easily have paid his debts had he not been swindled. The swindle happened in this wise : Sonic time after the sale of this property Mr. Morr traveled to Reading on horse back, the custom of the period, in order to have a settlement with Boyer. The distance was ninety miles and the journey was made in one day. No sooner had he stated the object of his visit when he was handed a paper for his signature. He was informed it was a receipt for $100 and the balance would be paid him in a short time. Mr. Morr, who was unable to read English, had implicit confidence in Boyer that he was dealing fairly and honestly with him, signed the paper and returned home in good cheer. Some time afterward Mr. Morr repeated his visit to Boyer only to learn how the latter had swindled him. When he made his demands for the amount due him he was frankly informed that the paper he had signed during his previous visit to Reading was not for the $100 which he received but "in full for all demands." A lawsuit followed, but the receipt which Mr. Morr had signed was produced in evidence against him and he lost his case. This threw Mr. Morr into financial embarrassment, necessitating the selling of his vast estate which all passed into strange hands, excepting the old homestead near Freeburg which was purchased by his son John Jacob Morr. Philip Morr became greatly distressed through his misfortune and passed many sleepless nights in consequence. In May, 1S29, several years after Mr. Morr's death, this same Boyer, who had dealt so dishonestly with him, came to grief. "Jacob K. Boyer, of Reading, 11 says Linn's Annals of Buffalo Valley, "who had done a large mercantile business and bought a great deal of wheat through Buffalo Valley, was convict- ed of passing counterfeit money. He was said, by the district attorney, to be guilty of the most expert, extensive and whole- sale counterfeiting ever known in the United States.''
Philip Morr's death was sudden. He was a member of the Lutheran Church, buried in the Morr Cemetery. He was twice married. His first wife was Elizabeth Gemberling, who resided in that portion of Northumberland county, Pa., now known as the vicinity of Salem, Snyder county, Pa., She came from a family that was one of the earliest settlers of that neighborhood. She had inherited a strong, robust constitution, yet death claimed her as a victim in the very prime of life. In the Morr Cemetery a tombstone bears the following inscription: "Here rest the mortal re- mains of Elizabeth Morr, wife of Philip Morr, a born Gemberling, was born July 13, 1768; died Aug. 11, 1811, aged 18 years and 28 days." His second wife was Mrs. Mary Ebly, of Sunbury, Pa., who remained his widow a brief period, then married Jacob Kline. She died a widow while living at Freeburg, Pa., November 20, 1856, aged 79 years, 9 months and 22 days. She is buried in the Lutheran and Reformed Cemetery at Freeburg. List of Children with first wife:
Philip.
Infant Son.
Michael.
Catherine.
Elizabeth.
Anna Mary.
Lydia.
John Jacob. 
Morr, Philip (I3307)
 
3490 Philip Myers Meyer, Philip (I2723)
 
3491 Philip was born in 1797. He died in 1879. His wife, who died in 1894, at the age of ninety-one years, was Elizabeth Schoch. She was born March 31, 1803, in Snyder county, the daughter of Jacob and Elizabeth (Hendricks) Schoch.
They had the following children:
Henry died in Philadelphia, in February, 1890;
George is our subject; was born August 23, 1823. On August 13, 1846, he was married at New Berlin, to Miss Elizabeth C. Nettle, a native of Carlisle, Penn., and a daughter of Isaac Nettle. They have had three children: William G., now a resident of Philadelphia; and two, George A. and Rosa K., who died in infancy.
Jacob died in infancy;
Jacob (2) died in 1889, in Limestone township;
Phoebe is the widow of Thomas Yearick, of Aaronsburg, Penn.;
Mary J. married John Stauffer, and died in Boyertown, Penn.;
Elizabeth C. is the widow of Rev. George B. Dechant, of Catawissa, Penn.;
Benjamin F. died at the age of nineteen;
John died in childhood;
an infant son died unnamed;
Elmira died in childhood;
Susan married Dr. Jerry Hay, and died in Bloomville, Ohio;
Laura is the widow of Marion Schnure, of Selins Grove, Union county, and John died in infancy.
 
Gross, Philip (I2619)
 
3492 PHILLIP CARMONY MOYER, who for the past four months was confined to his home with cancer of the stomach, died Wednesday morning at 9 o'clock. During his illness Mr. Moyer suffered much but bore all patiently. For several years his health had not been good but only the past few months did the disease cause him much trouble. Death was indeed a welcome relief from his sufferings. Philip Carmony Moyer was born in Brush Valley, Pennsylvania, July 23, 1833. He was the oldest of seventeen children. When he became of age he came west and for a time lived at Rock Grove. On December 7, 1858 he was married to Amanda Gross at Juda, Wisconsin. They moved onto the farm west of town where the family now resides. Here they have lived ever since except for the one year spent at Ridott. Mr. Moyer was the son of Samuel Moyer, who lived for a time in this county. The deceased was baptized August 19, 1833, by Rev. Fisher. On March 22, 1850 he was confirmed by Rev. Jacob D. Zegring and joined the Reformed Church. Mr. Moyer was a faithful church member and held various offices in it. Moyer, Philip Carmony (I1444)
 
3493 Pittsburgh Press, February 26, 1932:

MRS. MARGARET S. MEYER
Mrs. Margaret Spraggon Meyer, 30, wife of former United States Attorney John D. Meyer, of 123 Gordon Street, Edgewood, died yesterday in the Magee Hospital. Born in Braddock, Mrs. Meyer was graduated from Indiana State Teachers' College, and taught in Braddock schools for several years. She was a member of St. Stephen's Protestant Episcopal Church of Wilkinsburg and the Edgewood Country Club. Besides her husband, two sons, John D. Meyer Jr., 3, and George William; her parents Mr. and Mrs. William L. Spraggon; four brothers, Leslie Spraggon of Buffalo, Walter of Erie and John and William Spraggon of New Haven, Conn.; four sisters, Frances and Lucy Spraggon, Mrs. Ethel Gallagher of Brooklyn, and Mrs. Mabel Maccoun of New York, and three stepdaughters, Elizabeth T., Lucile A. and Jean D. Meyer, survive. 
Spraggon, Margaret (I14)
 
3494 Places of Residence: 1900 and 1910 Census Eldred Borough McKean Co., PA. Loganton, PA. Ziegler, Thomas Royer (I2036)
 
3495 Plot: Section 1, Row 11, #26. Near wife and son John Christopher Smull.

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/76075473/henry-smull 
Smull, Henry (I897)
 
3496 Polly Walburn Wolburn, Anna Marie (I1013)
 
3497 Possible first wife: Elizabeth 1644-1675 BIRTH 1644, Devonshire, Bermuda DEATH 1675, Devonshire, Bermuda
 
Dorset, James (I2586)
 
3498 Possible that this is a different cemetery than "Brugnart Cemetery, Miles Township, Centre County, PA", The cemetery read from that cemetery does not include a stone for David or for Ann. Geisewite, David (I858)
 
3499 Probable middle name was Susan. Musser, Lizzie S. (I1800)
 
3500 Probate date 5 May 1851, Northampton County, PA. Will Book v.607, 1839-1865.
His will begins: "I Peter Fehr of Bushkill Township in the County of Northampton and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania" ... "I give and bequeath unto my dear wife, Sara the one sixth part of any estate after my just debts are first pair and the remainder of my estate I give and bequeath unto my five children George Fehr, Henry Fehr, Sara Ann Fehr, and Metilla Fehr." He names his son George Fehr as executor. 
Fehr, Peter (I1850)
 

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