I'm very excited because as soon as this post goes live and I take care of a few other details related to it, like updating the Facebook page, I'll be heading out on a long-expected road trip. It's my best friend Andrea's birthday, and to celebrate, she and I are making a trek to York County to visit our friends who operate Moon Family Studios - we haven't seen them in nearly two years because of the pandemic. Naturally, the plan is for me to collect some markers while we're in the vicinity, because all of my travel now has an ulterior motive.
Before we get into the actual quest, which takes us back to Berks County for the first time since last summer, I want to direct your attention elsewhere in the same county. I'm a member of the Berks History Buffs group on Facebook, and I was asked to share this with my readers in hopes of giving the matter a wider audience. The historic Kemp Family Burial Grounds is being threatened by a developer, who wants to put a warehouse on the land where some of Berks County's earliest settlers are buried. Their plan is to disinter the remains and transfer them to another cemetery, but the people buried there have descendants in the area still and these descendants are not happy about this. The Berks History Center has put out a call for help with the struggle to come to a mutually satisfying agreement with the developer; you can read the details here. You can learn about the burial grounds and the people interred there by visiting the official website, where you will also find links to the petition and a donation page, as well as photographs of the grounds.
Meanwhile, in a different part of Berks County, I was able to capture a couple of markers on a recent run, and this is one of them. Here's what I can tell you about a lovely church on a rolling hillside, which as of this writing is still covered in snow.
The marker is found at the intersection of Groff and Christmas Village Roads, near the entrance to the church property |
John was born on December 21, 1707, the only son of John Stoever, Sr. and the former Gertraude Friesse. Gertraude died in Germany in 1728, which may be why that was the year in which John Jr., his father, and his younger sister Anna all voyaged to the New World and docked in Philadelphia. John Jr. had already received some private theological training back in Germany, and in Philadelphia he was ordained in the Lutheran faith. John Sr., meanwhile, became a schoolteacher, but passed away in 1738. That same year, John Jr. presided over the marriage of his sister Anna to Johannes Kuntz; they eventually relocated to Virginia.
John Jr. lived in Lancaster County for almost a decade before moving to Lebanon County, which he called home for the rest of his life. He didn't stay put very much, however. Although he and his wife, the former Maria Catharina Merkling, settled in Lebanon County and raised eleven children, John spent a lot of his time going out into the world to minister to other Lutheran immigrants. Pastors in those days were somewhat few and far between, so there was a great need for religious leaders to perform baptisms, marriages, and funerals, as well as lead regular worship services. John eventually joined Henry Melchior Muhlenberg's ministerium, but nevertheless remained an independent pastor, serving whomever needed him out in the Pennsylvania wilderness. He kept diligent records which indicate that he performed more than 2,000 baptisms and 1,400 marriages - and those are just the ones he did on his own, as there were many others he entered into congregational registers rather than his own personal lists. He was a little controversial for the time, being strong-willed and stubborn, but he performed a deeply vital service in the early days of the colonies and his work was appreciated.
As for the good reverend who started the church, John Stoever continued to minister to Lutherans - and anyone else who needed a shepherd - all throughout Pennsylvania and even as far south as Virginia for many years. He established a number of other churches in the course of his career; one of these was Hill Church, which has been a center of worship in Lebanon County since 1733, and which seems to have become his home congregation. After serving more than sixty years in the roving pulpit, John tragically collapsed while performing a confirmation ceremony. He died on May 13, 1779, and is buried in the cemetery of Hill Church. His widow, who outlived him by more than fifteen years, never remarried and is buried beside him. Their original headstones, inscribed in German, have been preserved within a brick wall, along with English translations of each.
It was a cold and somewhat cloudy day when I drove up the hill to have a look at Christ Little Tulpehocken Church. It was a weekday; no one was around to ask the lady with the camera what she was doing, so I had a good look at the exterior. The stone building is somewhat square, with simple stained glass windows and a pleasant welcoming sign over the door. A modern extension has been added to the rear of the building sometime in the last few decades, probably giving it a fellowship hall and some Sunday School classrooms. Due to the pandemic, in-person worship has been curtailed (a common story), but signage invites members and visitors alike to visit the church website and download the weekly virtual sermons of the past year. "The Little Church with a Big Heart" survives even in these trying times, and no doubt looks forward to their 300th anniversary in a few years.
Sources and Further Reading:
Except where indicated, all writing and photography on this blog is the intellectual property of Laura Klotz. This blog is written with permission of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. I am not employed by the PHMC. All rights reserved.
What is your faith statement? And do you do full Emersion baptism. ?
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry, but you would need to contact the actual church for that information. I'm just a history blogger with no affiliation.
DeleteWell-written and informative
ReplyDelete