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Monday, July 27, 2015

Stauffer Family History

Mennonites from eighty nations gathered in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, last week for Mennonite World Conference. The crowd of about 7,500 that assembled there were largely from more liberal branches of the church. If the local conservative branches of the church had attended, the crowd could easily have doubled.
Although this was seen as a historic event and in my back yard, I had no desire to attend. However, one of the benefits the event brought was that it drew some of the people we met when we toured the Netherlands (Holland) and Germany in 1997. One of these was the Daniel Bergholdt family who live in the ancestral Stauffer home in Ibersheim, Germany.
The Stauffer story begins in the village of Eggiwil in the Emmental, Switzerland.

Niclaus Stauffer owned Luchsmatt farm in 1547, and the property was passed down to several more generations of Stauffers.
 
  
The Stauffers were Mennonites who were persecuted for their faith. Near the end of 1671, a group of 450 Mennonites were rounded up and exiled from the country. They were put on boats on or near this spot on the Aare River and shipped north into Germany.
 
 
Ninety-year-old Christian Stauffer and 66 of his family members were part of this large group of refugees who fled to the Palatinate and were aided by the Mennonites already living there. In 1672, Christian Stauffer and his family were reported to be living in Ibersheim, Germany. (The country was not unified into a nation until much later, but we know it as Germany today.) The records show he had left large possessions behind in Switzerland and brought nothing with him.
 
 
This plaque, which hangs in the Stauffer ancestral home in Ibersheim, was carved by a descendant of Christian Stauffer. It depicts him leading his family into Ibersheim. The names carved above the people are the places his descendants have gone from there.
 
 
This old building in Ibersheim dates to the early 1700s and was used as an inn for poor travelers. It was probably not yet built when the Stauffers arrived in the village. They slept in barns or wherever they could find a place to lie down at night. Christian Stauffer's family were reported to all be living in one large house with 21 children among them.
 
 
Eventually, the Stauffers found a place to live in Ibersheim. This is the German ancestral home of the Stauffers as it appears today. The oldest section is the part with the red roof which was built in 1747. The newest section on the opposite end was added in 1902. The last surviving person in Ibersheim who bears the Stauffer name lives here. She is a 102-year-old widow of a Stauffer and the grandmother of Annette Bergholdt who also lives here with her husband and two children.  
 
 
Some of the Stauffers emigrated to Pennsylvania in the early 1700s but others stayed. This home has been passed down through many generations of the descendants of Christian Stauffer. It stands next to the Mennonite church in Ibersheim. The Bergholdts are members of this church.
 
 
When we were there in 1997, they were expecting their first child. When we saw them this weekend, that baby is now almost eighteen years old. Time passes as rapidly on that side of the ocean as it does here! It was good to connect with them again and know they are doing what they can to preserve their Stauffer family history.

7 comments:

Marshall Stover said...

Thanks so much for this post. I have the 1899 original Stover/Stauffer Family History and am a descendant of Henry who settle on the Delaware River, but never saw the Swiss aspect of the family. Fascinating!

Marshall Stover
Woodbury, Vermont

I. Henry
II. Ulrich
III. Jacob
IV. John Z.
V. Zeno
VI. Arthur T.
VII. Arthur Z.
VIII. Richard A.

Unknown said...

This was a wonderful find. I am related to the Stauffer's via Jacob Brunk who was married to Anna Maria Stauffer. I would love to visit, but the pictures will have to do for now.
Clara Brunk

Harry Marshall Stover said...

Interesting - I was at the house in in 1996 and spoke with a young man who was the only one who could speak English. We did meet an 83 year-old Grand mother who was an 11th generation Stauffer. I have a picture showing the sign on the Hoff
Rohrhof
Stauffer-Kehr-Lanc
1656-1975
I am a descendant of Heinrich Stauffer 1724-1777 arriving Sept 9, 174. .and two of his sons Jacob and Ralph.
Jacob married a Catherine Clemens Stauffer who was descended from Christian Stauffer 1680-1735 - from Ibersheim as was Heinrich.
Harry Marshall Stover, Jr.
hmstover@att.Net

Ron said...

Gruess Gott!
I am Ronald Duane (McElwee) Stauffer, now living in Groveland, Florida, USA, but my father Ronald Reller Stauffer hails from Hatfield, Pennsylvania, USA, and I've done a little bit of research. Possibly descended from Niclaus Stauffer (born 1495, Luchsmatt Farm, Eggiwil, CH) but I cannot verify that far back yet. I have travelled in der Schweiz years ago and would love to return there to visit these places. I can speak high German at a basic level, but get lost with Swiss German, LOL. Thank you so much for this blog. May God bless all of you.
I am a pastor for our church Calvary Chapel of Leesburg (FL), we are small operation dairy goat farmers, and I work in construction too.
I'd be happy to hear from any of you. -- Ron Stauffer pastorron@ccleesburg.org

Randall Stauffer said...

This is a great piece of family history. Does anyone know how many children Christian Stauffer had when they were exiled?

Scribbler said...

The children of Christian and Aldeheld (Opplinger) Stauffer were:
1. Madlena Stauffer, christened Oct. 6, 1611, married Hans Neukommet of Eggiwil.
2. Hans/Johannes Stauffer, christened April 18, 1613, married Madlena Neuenschwander, died in Switzerland after 1695.
3. Christian Stauffer, christened March 19, 1615, married Margret Anthoni.
4. Anna Stauffer, christened April 13, 1617, married Michael Neuenschwander of Eggiwil. She was with her father in Ibersheim, Germany, with three of her children but her husband kept the other three in Eggiwil.
5. Elsbeth Stauffer, born about 1620, married Wolfgang Neukommet. They stayed in Switzerland.
6. Peter Stauffer, christened April 28, 1622, married Christina ___. They stayed in Switzerland.
7. ___ (son) Stauffer, born about 1624
8. Barbara Stauffer, born about 1625
9. Margaret Stauffer, born about 1627
10. Ulrich Stauffer, born 1629, married Barbara ____.
11. Daniel Stauffer, born 1631, married Barbara (Newkommet) Galli. They left Switzerland with his father in 1671 and moved to Geroldsheim, Germany, in 1682, where they still lived in 1698. Some of their nine children and grandchildren immigrated to Pennsylvania.

Anonymous said...

I am a descendent of Christian Stauffer and Anna Eby. Christian was fathered by Jacob Stauffer who was fathered by Daniel Stauffer who was fathered by Christian Stauffer (1579-1671) fathered by Niclaus Stauffer, fathered by Ulrich Stauffer, fathered by Niclaus Stauffer, fathered by Peter Stauffer, fathered by Wolfgang (Stover) Stauffer 1412-1460.
It’s been so fascinating finding all this history!