Chris & Julie Petersen's Genealogy

Anna Veronica Lung

Female Abt 1702 - Aft 1755  (~ 54 years)


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  • Name Anna Veronica Lung 
    Born Abt 1702  Zollingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    Died Aft 1755  of Lebanon Township, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I2003  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Father Jacob Lung,   b. Bef 1675, of Zollingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1746, Zollingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age > 71 years) 
    Mother Anna Elizabetha Wildermuth,   b. Bef 1676, of Zollingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1754, of Zollingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age > 78 years) 
    Married Bef 1695  of Zollingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F1226  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Hans Peter Wampfler,   b. 1701, Sparsbach, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 24 Apr 1749, Lebanon Township, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 48 years) 
    Married Abt 1719  Zollingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Anna Magdalena Wampfler,   c. 7 Jun 1720, Keskastel, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1789, of North Annville Township, Lebanon, Pennsylvania, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 68 years)
     2. Hans Peter Wampfler,   c. 4 Aug 1722, Keskastel, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Bef 30 Jun 1792, , Frederick, Maryland, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 69 years)
     3. Hans Michael Wampfler,   c. 19 Nov 1724, Keskastel, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Dec 1789, Wythe, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 65 years)
     4. Anna Veronica or Fronica Wampfler,   b. 5 Nov 1726, Hinsingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Abt 1789, of, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 62 years)
     5. Hans Adam Wampfler,   b. Abt 1728, of Hinsingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location
     6. Anna Barbara Wampfler,   c. 24 Jul 1729, Altwiller, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location
     7. Anna Elisabeth Wampfler,   c. 3 Dec 1732, Altwiller, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 26 Dec 1732, Hinsingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 0 years)
     8. Anna Catherina Wampfler,   c. 21 Dec 1734, Altwiller, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 9/09 Jan 1734/5, Hinsingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 0 years)
     9. Hans George Wampfler,   b. 1736, Hinsingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. From 14 Feb 1815 to 10 May 1815, Rural Retreat, Wythe, Virginia, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 79 years)
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F776  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. Name shows in some records as Fronica which probably is a variant of Veronica.

      2. Book, "Wampler Family History 1500s - 1700s," by Fred B. Wampler, Ph.D., pp. 56-57 contains the following geographical information on Alsace: "No place in Europe has been subjected to more boundary changes than Alsace (in German this region is called Elsass). Today Alsace is part of France. It has changed hands between Germany and France many times. The culture of Alsace is German. Although it is part of France today, German is stll spoken freely in the smaller vallages... Alsace consists of the departments [states] of Bas-Rhin and Haut-Rhin... It is the department of Bas-Rhin [Low Rhine] that will be of particular interest to us... [The book includes maps.] ...the distance between Keskastel to Hinsingen is about 2 miles. The French government has changed some of the German sounding village names to something that is easier to pronounce in French. The only name change that will concern us is Altweler. Today this village is called Altwiller. After wars between Germany (or, to be more exact, what was to become part of unified Germany) and France, boundaries in Alsace were often ill-defined. It is more meaningful to speak of our ancestors as being Alsatian, rather than German or French. To state that they were French is misleading, because their culture and language were German. To state that they were German is not in accord with the present boundaries of Germany. Please note that Alsace does border on the German states of Rheinland-Pfalz (Rhineland-Palitinate) and Saarland. Thousands of Swiss emigrated into the Rheinland (including Alsace) following the Thirty Years War (1618-1638). Most of this movement took place in the last half of the 1600's. Among these immigrants was Christian Wampfler of Diemtigtal, Zwischenflüh, Switzerland who was to settle in Sparsbach, Alsace." [Note: the villages of Keskatel, Hinsingen, Altwiller, Zollingen, and Diedendorf all appear to be within a 4-5 mile radius of Altwiller; however, this whole grouping of villages appear to be 20 or so miles west of Sparsbach and about 8 miles southwest of Herbitzheim.]

      3. Book, "Wampler Family History 1500s - 1700s," by Fred B. Wampler, Ph.D., p. 64, summarizes his findings of vital information regarding this individual as follows: Johann Peter (Johann Peter), b. 1701, d. 1749 in Lancaster Co., PA., md. Anna Veronica Lung of Zollingen. Her parents were Jacob Lung (died 1746) and Anna Elisabetha Wildermuth (died shortly before Easter, 1754). All of the sons of Christian Senior were linen weavers by trade.

      4. Book, "Wampler Family History 1500s - 1700s," by Fred B. Wampler, Ph.D., pp. 88-91 notes that the ship Lydia arrived in Philadelphia carrying passengers identified as being from the Palatine (the present German state of Rhineland-Palatinate or Rheinland Pfalz in German. The book "Pennsylvania German Pioneers," by Ralph Beaver Strassburger, as cited above, points out that vertually all German speaking people coming to America during this era were identified as Palatines. Part of the passengers could be Palatines and the remaining passengers could be German speaking people from adjacent areas to the Palatine. This was the case for the passengers aboard the ship Lydia. The following Wampflers were listed on the ship:
      Hans Peter Wampfler, 40 years of age.
      Hans Peter Wampfler, 18 years of age.
      Hans Michel Wampfler, 16 years of age.
      There were assuredly more of the family aboard but only the males age 16 and older were listed. Considering the list was made by the captain prior to the departure of a voyage that took about 3 months, the ages work out exactly. The book as photocopies of first two males who signed their names but Hans Michel did not since he probably could not write yet. The christening records for Anna Magdalena Wampfler, Hans Peter Wampfler, Jr., and Hans Michael Wampfler all indicated the family left for America May 3, 1741. Also in the record books of Zollingen (the home of Anna Veronica Lung, the wife of Hans Peter Wampfler, Sr., the following words were written on 12 Apr 1755: "Peter Wampfler married Veronica Lung, the heiress of Jacob Lung, who was a citizen of Zollingen. They have for about 15 years been moved to the new land." This was probably written since she was an heiress to her mother who was the last of her parents to die in 1754. Also on the list of arriving passengers was a Johannes Mettauer (age listed as 25) who was the son of Samuel Mettauer and Anna Magdalena Wampfler and a nephew to Hans Peter Wampfler, Sr.
      Another book by the same author, "Wampler Family History, 1701-1980," pp. 1-4, adds additional insight into the voyage to America. In the late 1600's and concurrent with the internal conflicts within continental Europe, there was a visit by William Penn of Pennsylvania to the inhabitants of the German States of the Rheinland. He assured these very productive farmers, whose farming efforts were now largely in vain because of political and religious wars, that if they were to come to his Province of Pennsylvania, they would be free to worship according to their own beliefs and they would have the civil liberties they desired. By 1683 there began a steady influx of German immigrants. By 1729 the new German immigrants were required by law to take an oath of allegiance to the British Crown and also an oath of abjuration and fidelity to the laws of Pennsylvania Province. The actual voyage itself began when families left their German homeland by boarding a boat on the Rhine River around the first of May and journeyed down the Rhine through many custom inspeciton stations. The ships were often detained at each station and each family had to spend money there for essential items. This trip from their homeland to where the ship departed in Holland usually took about 4-6 weeks. There was usually also another wait in Holland of 4-6 weeks before the English ships sailed. After embarking in Holland, the ship usually had a 1-2 week layover in England awaiting proper winds for the 8-12 week transatlantic voyage. In the case of the ship Lydia, James Allen was shipmaster and they sailed from Rotterdam, Holland, with an english port stop in Deal. The ships were crowded with not enough food and water. Disease was prevalent and many passengers died. Once the ships arrived n Philadelphia, health officers from the city inspected the ships for persons with infectious diseases and if such persons were identified, the ship was ordered to be removed one mile from the city. The Wampfler family swore allegiance to the British Crown upon arrival on Sep. 29, 1741. These foreigners had faith that their new homeland would allow them to farm, prosper, and worship God in peace.

      5. Book, "Wampler Family History 1701-1980," by Fred B. Wampler, 1980, p. 91, has a photocopy of Veronica Wampfler's signature which was signed in conjunction with her husband Hans Peter Wampfler, Sr.'s probate on 24 Apr 1749.

      6. FHL book 974.8 B4pgp "Eighteenth Century Emigrants from the Northern Alsace to America," by Annette Kunselman Burgert (Camden, ME; Picton Press), pp. 2-3, 520-24:
      A brief description of the area from which the Wamplers came from in the Northern Alsace:
      "In the eighteenth century, the northwestern section belonged to the Counts of Nassau and was known as the Grafschaft of Nassau-Saarwerden. Several of the families mentioned in the Reformed parish records at Diedendorf actually lived in the neighboring territories of Lixheim and Vinstingen, which are today located in the neighboring Departement of Moselle. Members of these families emigrated to Pennsylvania in the eighteenth century and are included in this study, although the villages are not located in Bas-Rhin today. This area is approximately forty miles northwest of the city of Strasbourg.
      As early as 1559, the Count of Nassau granted refuge in Nassau-Saarwerden to Huguenots who were expelled from French territory for religious reasons.
      The Grafschaft of Nassau-Saarwerden was occupied by France and Lorraine from 1649-1670 and during this period the Lutheran religion was forbidden and the Catholic church was the official church. After a brief interval, Louis XIV invaded in 1676. In 1698 the county was returned to the jurisdiction of the Counts of Nassau, and the Lutheran religion was once more the official religion...
      Wampfler, Hans Peter age 40 (Keskastel=67260 Sarre-Union; Altwiller=67260 Sarre-Union)
      Wampfler, Hans Peter age 18
      Wampfler, Michael age 16
      [Immigrated on the ship] "Lydia," 1741; [Source:] S-H, I: 300, 301, 302 [Ralph Beaver Strassburger and William John Hinke, Pennsylvania German Pioneers. 3 vols. (Norristown, 1934)].
      European Records
      Keskastel Lutheran KB [Kirchebook (Church book)]:
      Peter Wampffler, linenweaver at Hinsingen, and wife Veronica had:
      1. Anna Magdalena bp. 7 June 1720; Sp.: Samuel Mettauer, linenweaver at Kastel; A. Magdalena, wife of Peter S__tz of Newhausel; Anna Magdalena ?___. (Record extracted 3 May 1741)
      2. Hans Peter bp. 4 Aug. 1722; Sp.: Hans Peter Klein, Harskirchen; Johannes Wampffler;
      Anna Elisa, wife of Jacob Lang of ?Zollingen; Maria Barbara, ?daughter of Michel Buttner (Ext. 3 May 1741).
      3. Michael b. ca. 1724
      Harskirchen Lutheran KB:
      4. Anna Fronica b. 5 Nov. 1726, bp. 7 Nov. 1726 at Altweyler
      5. Anna Barbara bp. 24 July 1729 at Altweyler [Altwiller]
      6. Anna Elisabetha bp. 3 Dec. 1732 at Altweyler
      7. Anna Catharina bp. __ ___ 1734
      8. possible Georg, bp. not located
      American Records
      Hill Lutheran KB, near Annville, Lebanon co:
      -Mattheis Boger m. 7 Jan. 1746 Anna Magdalena Wampflerin.
      -Jacob Brenneyssen m. 13 Jan. 1747 Anna Veronica Wampflerin.
      [See Burgert, The Northern Kraichgau for Boger and Brenneisen].
      Rev. John Casper Stoever's Records (F. J. F. Schantz, trans. Records of Rev. John Casper Stoever, Baptismal and Marriage, 1730-1799. {Harrisburg, 1896; reprinted Baltimore 1982}. This translation contains errors and omissions.):
      -John Peter Wampler m. 26 Sept. 1743 Anna Barbara Brenneiss(en), Swatara. They had children:
      1. Joh. Michael b. 6 Oct. 1747, bp. 8 Nov. 1747; Sp.: Joh. Michael Wampfler and wife
      2. Joh. Jacob b. 28 Sept. 1749, bp. 1 Nov. 1749; Sp.: Johan Peter Wampfler and wife Maria Barbara
      3. Anna Elisabetha bp. 28 Oct. 1750; Sp.: Michael Wampfler and wife
      -Georg Wampfler and wife were sp. in 1762 for a child of Mattheis Boger.
      Quittopahilla Reformed KB, Lebanon Co.:
      -Hans Adam Wampler and wife had a daughter: Maria Barbara bp. 21 May 1749; Sp.: Valentin Kueffer and wife
      -Michael Wampler and wife Anna Elisabetha had a daughter: Elisabetha bp. 12 Aug. 1752; Sp.: Mathias Boger and wife Magdalena; Jacob Brenneisen and wife.
      Quittopahilla Moravian KB:
      -Georg Wambler and wife Elisabetha nee Stephan had: 1. Maria Elisabetha bp. 18 July 1759."

      SOURCES_MISC:
      1. Book, "Wampler Family History 1500s - 1700s," by Fred B. Wampler, Ph.D.

      2. Rootsweb.com Worldconnect database ":480580" 22 Feb 2003.