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         Dunkards:     more books (43)
  1. Close communion, or, Plea for the Dunkard people: In 2 parts by Landon West, 1888
  2. The Dunkard by George; pictures by Peter Lippman Selden, 1968
  3. The Dunkard Series of Ohio, by Clinton R. Stauffer, 2009-04-27
  4. Dunkard Ridge by Norma Jean Venable, 2000-04
  5. Geology of the Dunkard Group (Upper Pennsylvanian-Lower Permian) in Ohio, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania (Bulletin) by Wayne D Martin, 1998
  6. Dunkard Ridge by Norma Jean Venable, 1976
  7. At Dunkard Creek by D.W. Faulkner, 1983
  8. The Dunkard Series of Ohio by C. R. and Schroyer, C. R. Stauffer, 1920
  9. The Dunkard-Dutch Cook Book by Applied Arts Publishers, 1976
  10. The Dunkard-Dutch Cook Book 1970 Softcover by Applied Arts, 1970
  11. THE DUNKARD-DUTCH COOK BOOK [NEARLY FOUR HUNDRED TURN OF THE CENTURY PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH DISHES] by Author not credited, 1980
  12. Dunkard Dutch Cook Book
  13. The Dunkard Series of Ohio
  14. Waynesburg coal in Harrison and northern Belmont counties, Ohio, and revision of Dunkard (Permian) boundary (Report of investigations) by George Willard White, 1947

81. Wittgenstein Genealogy Home Page
They were the core of the dunkards, an important sect within the movement ofGerman Brethren. Wittgenstein was also home to a small population of Jews.
http://www.riedesel.org/wittpage.html
Contents
  • General Information About Wittgenstein
    • Defining the Area Political Organization Religion Associations and Societies ... Some Online Resources Miscellaneous
      General Information
      Defining the Area
      Introduction. The twin counties of Wittgenstein existed as a distinct geographic/political area from the age of Charlemagne until 1975. At this time, it was merged with the neighboring region of Siegen to form the political unit or Kreis called Siegen-Wittgenstein. Wittgenstein (and we will speak of it as a single area) has had a clear identity and virtually the same boundaries since the 1600s, to the great benefit of the researcher. To confuse matters, the ruling families took the name Sayn-Wittgenstein with a further distinction between the Counts of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg and Sayn-Wittgenstein-Hohenstein (based in Laasphe). Geographically, Wittgenstein lies at the southern tip of the Sauerland in west central Germany. The mountains are called the Rothaargebirge , or "red-hair mountains." The present area is about 188 square miles with a 1994 population of 45,000. It is one of the most-densely wooded area of Germany. At its north is Kahler Asten, the tallest peak in central Germany with a height of 2759 feet.

82. Chapman
a patriarch of the nearby Tunker (or dunkards) settlement. that includedmost of the leading Dunkers (Tunker or dunkards) in the settlement.
http://www.fdu.com/family/chapmansummerscem.htm
Chapman-Summers Cemetery
"Old Dunker"
Prosperity, SC
This very old and tranquil cemetery is located several miles East of Prosperity, SC. Going from Prosperity to Newberry, SC, on State Road 391 turn left across the railroad tracks at a Lutheran Church. Follow this road a couple of miles till it dead ends. Turn left and go a short distance, the old cemetery is along the right side of the road.
The cemetery is located on the grounds where once stood a Universalist Church meeting house. The Rev Giles Chapman preached here.
This beautiful old cemetery has recently been cleared and there is a mailbox there with a sheet for visitors to sign, It also contains a directory of the graves located there.
"The oldest grave that can be identified is that of Mary Summers Chapman (B.10/10/1758-D.10/15/1813), wife of reverend Giles Chapman. This grave is located near the right and center portion of the Cemetery. The most recent grave is that of Idalia Dennis Cousins (B. 6/22/1870-D7/13/56). This grave is located in the left and back portion of the Cemetery. Burials earlier than 1813 most surely occurred but the stone or other identification has been lost.

83. Claytor Lake VA Real Estate - For Sale By Owner
/Comments,Claytor Lake Home located in dunkards Bottom Subdivision,......Subdivision, dunkards Bottom. State, VA. County, Pulaski
http://claytor-lake.net/real-estate/fsbo/1789.htm
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Address: 4736 Highview Drive Subdivision: Dunkards Bottom State: VA County: Pulaski City: Dublin Zip Code: Listed By: STEVEN KING Office Phone: Home Phone: Listing Id: Listing Status: SOLD Date Listed: Date Sold: Visitors: Property Type: Single Family Home Year Built: Asking Price: Association Fee: Selling Terms: Pets: Adult ( 55+ ): No Bedrooms: Bathrooms: Garage: One Car Levels: Square Footage: Lot Size: Local Schools: Elementary School: Newbern Middle School/Junior High: Dublin High School: Pulaski Residential Features: Cable/Satellite TV, Ceiling Fans, Central A/C, Dish Washer, Garbage Disposal, Tiled Floors, Washer and Dryer Community Features: Boating, Control Access (Security) Description/Comments: Claytor Lake Home located in Dunkards Bottom Subdivision, 1380 sq.ft.finished,900 unfinished in full basement with 3rd roughed in bath. Trane heat pump,stone fireplace,cathederal ceilings with tongue in groove/beams,a lot of glass. Large deck,paved drive,nicley landscaped yard with trees Lake views,lake access with docking rights asking $180,000
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84. THIS WEEK IN THE CIVIL WAR
dunkards and Mennonites are exempted from military duty in the Confederate Supplemental report on the case of the Tunkers dunkards and Mennonites.
http://www.civilweek.com/1862/mar3062.htm
1862 Calendar HEADLINES ** HEADLINES ** HEADLINES banner("",70) THE MAP ROOM
[Sunday]
[Monday] [Tuesday] ... [Saturday] March 30 1862 (Sunday)
Flag-Officer Andrew Foote strongly believes that running 'his' gunboats past the Confederate guns in and around Island #10 in the Mississippi River is too risky and dangerous. However, the commander of the gunboat Carondelet , Commodore Walke, is willing to take that risk. Accordingly, Foote gives Walke permission to run the batteries "under the first fog or rainy night." Foote further instructs Walke that should he meet with disaster to do all in his power to sink or destroy the gunboat to "prevent her from falling into the hands of the rebels." UNITED STATES FLAG-STEAMER BENTON, Off Island No. 10, March 30, 1862. Commodore H. WALKE, Commanding Carondelet : COMMODORE: You will avail yourself of the first fog or rainy night and drift your steamer down past the batteries on the Tennessee shore and Island No. 10 until you reach New Madrid....(I)t is vitally important to the capture of this place that a gunboat should soon be at New Madrid for the purpose of covering General Pope's army while he crosses to...the Tennessee side of the river.... I must enjoin upon you the importance...of using every...precaution to prevent the rebels suspecting that you are dropping below their batteries. I am, very respectfully, your obedient servant, A. H. FOOTE, Flag-0fficer. P. S.Should you meet with disaster...destroy the steam machinery, and, if possible to escape, set fire to your gunboat or sink her and prevent her from falling into the hands of the rebels.

85. Jewell County, Part 3
there was a revival, which secured forty members to the church. The dunkards,or German Baptists, were organizers in October, 1870, by Rev. Allen Ives.
http://www.kancoll.org/books/cutler/jewell/jewell-co-p3.html
KANSAS COLLECTION BOOKS William G. Cutler's History of the State of Kansas
JEWELL COUNTY, Part 3
BURR OAK.
Burr Oak, at present, is the largest and most prosperous town in the county. Situated at the terminus of the Central Branch, on White Rock Creek, ten miles northeast of Mankato. It is pleasantly located and surrounded by as fine a country as can be found in the county. The first settlers in the town and vicinity were A. W. Mann, F. Gilbert, A. J. and D. H. Godfrey (A. J. Godfrey built the first house on what is now State street), G. Beanblossom, L. N. Tingley, J. M. McCormick and others, who located in the spring of 1870. The postoffice was established in 1871. J. M. McCormick, a faithful public officer, has held the position of Postmaster from that time to the present. The town was laid out in 1875 by A. J. Godfrey on the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of Section 23, Township 2 south, Range 9 west, being a part of his homestead. The first store was that of J. E. Faidley, the second F. Gilbert, and the third T. B. Carpenter. Rev. Allen Ives, in May, 1871, at A. J. Godfrey's, preached the first sermon. The first school was taught in the winter of 1873 by W. H. Kemp. In 1875, a whirlwind of considerable severity passed over the town, but owing to the scarcity of houses did little damage, merely injuring the few that then marked the town. Since 1875 Burr Oak has made a more rapid growth than any place in the county. It is larger in population and does more business, owing to the fact that it is the terminus of a railroad and has the trade of a very rich and well-settled district.

86. Pennsylvania History Day Topics
Chester Counties, including the Moravians (United Brethren), Schwenkfelders,dunkards (Church of the Brethren, Conservative dunkards), and Sabbatarians.
http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/hdaytopics.htm
PHMC Web Site Contact Us Home Research/Genealogy ... How to Find Us 2002 Theme "Revolution, Reaction, Reform in History" Topics Government
Religion

Environment

Transportation
...
Women's History

Government RG-21
Records of the PROPRIETARY GOVERNMENT

William Penn assumed proprietary rights over the Province of Pennsylvania under the Charter granted him in 1681 by King Charles II. Basic charters or frames of government adopted in 1682, 1683, 1696 and 1701 largely determined the organization and administration of the colonial government. The last of these constitutions, the Charter of Privileges, remained in effect until the Revolution. The 1701 Charter provided for a unicameral assembly composed of four members from each county. A Provincial Council, which had exercised powers associated with all three branches of government, no longer functioned as a legislative body. Originally an elective body, the Council continued in existence as an appointed board in an advisory capacity to the Provincial Governor. The Council exercised executive powers in the absence of the Governor. Provincial Council, 1682-1776

87. BECOMES A CHURCH MEMBER
United Brethren Church, while near by, in another direction was a colony ofdunkards. by both denominations, the United Brethren and the dunkards.
http://www.geocities.com/moses_hull/4.htm
BACK HOME CONTENTS NEXT BECOMES A CHURCH MEMBER. From the time of the rise of the Baptist sect Moses Hull's ancestors had belonged to it, and there had been a minister of that denomination in nearly every Hull family down to the generation preceding his birth. On his mother's side, also, they had been Baptists as far back as could be traced until his Grandfather Brundage, who "apostatized" and became a Universalist. It would seem that the old stock had a habit of being on the unpopular side of some subject, generally an Ecclesiastical one and it was not strange that MosesÂ’ only question when an idea was presented to him, was, Is it True? Popularity and the effect his advocacy of it would have upon his pocket book were secondary. No doubt, the Hulls left England because of persecution. John Bunyan had been imprisoned in Dedham jail in England for preaching his views. George Hull and his son Cornelius were driven out of Massachusetts, at the same time that Roger Williams was banished from that State. BACK HOME CONTENTS NEXT

88. Weeks, Church And State In North Carolina. Ch. V.
A sixth is satisfied that Quakers, Mennonites, and dunkards are disqualified,because their doctrine, that arms cannot lawfully be used in defense of the
http://www.dinsdoc.com/weeks-1-5.htm
Dinsmore Documentation presents Classics of American Colonial History Author: Weeks, Stephen Beauregard. Title: Church and State in North Carolina. Citation: Baltimore, Md.: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1893. Subdivision: Chapter V HTML by Dinsmore Documentation * Added June 16, 2003 Directory of Files CHAPTER V.
EPILOGUE.
Little more remains to be said on the history of Church and State in North Carolina. In 1774 the Assembly now calling itself a Provincial Congress, took charge of and controlled the government; but there is nothing in the proceedings of these Congresses disturbing the status quo. There were five Provincial Congresses. The first met in Newbern in August, 1774. The fifth met in Halifax in November, 1776. This Congress adopted, on December 17, the Bill of Rights, and on the next day a State Constitution. These instruments contained the provisions for religious freedom which have been already mentioned. It now only remained for the laws of the new State to be brought into conformity with her new Constitution. The Established Church fell with its adoption. An ordinance was passed securing to the different churches such glebes, lands and tenements as they already possessed. Marriage was put on a new footing in 1778 by a law giving the privilege of performing the ceremony to all ministers alike. The terms of the affirmation for Quakers, Moravians, Mennonites, and Dunkards were fixed.

89. Lorton Family Genealogy Forum
dunkards Connect Robert Israel Lorton Elaine Laux 8/26/00. Re dunkardsConnect Robert Israel Lorton - Thomas T. Thompson 8/28/00
http://genforum.genealogy.com/lorton/
DisplayAdBanner("Top,Right,Bottom!Top", 468, 60 , "boards/") Chat Daily Search My GenForum Community Standards ... Terms of Service Jump to Forum Home Surnames : Lorton Family Genealogy Forum This forum serves all obvious variations Lorton Family Genealogy Forum Search this forum:
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90. EOGN's Other News: February 2005
The dunkards were an outgrowth of the German Baptist Brethren movement The dunkards who settled in what is now Hepburn Township arrived in May 1805 and,
http://eogn.typepad.com/othernews/2005/02/
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91. The Burning: Sheridan In The Shenandoah Valley
killed and dunkards and Mennonites who opposed the war saw their farms burned . was made up of farms inhabited by peaceful Mennonites and dunkards.
http://rockbpubl.com/bks_RPC/burning.htm
The Burning: Sheridan in the Shenandoah
John L. Heatwole
280 pages. Photos. Index. Bibliography. Hardcover. $24.95
ISBN 1-883522-18-8 Cover graphic to come! The burning of the Shenandoah Valley in the fall of 1864 has long been misunderstood, overlooked, or ignored by historians. It was neither a simple raid nor wanton destruction, as have been reported, but a well-planned and brilliantly directed campaign within a campaign. In August 1864 Gen. U. S. Grant sent Gen. Phillip Sheridan to the Breadbastket of the Confederacy to clear it of Confederate belligerents. Sheridan recognized that neutralizing the bounty of the Valley was of utmost importance, the thus the abundance pouring forth from the Valley's hills and bottomlands sealed its fate. For the Southern Cause to die, the Shenandoah Valley had to be ruined during one of its greatest harvest seasons. For thirteen fiery days in September and October Sheridan's soldiers burned barns, mills, factories, and standing crops; livestock were rounded up and driven away or killed where they stood. Erroneous information about a skirmish in which John Rodgers Meigs, one of Sheridan's favorite officers, was killed led to the destruction of thirty homes. Windborne sparks accidently destroyed eighteen more.

92. J. Harvey Gossard's John Winebrenner: Founder, Reformer, And Businessman.
It was probably the United Brethren in Christ, or perhaps the dunkards orMennonites, who first introduced Winebrenner to the practice of feetwashing at a
http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/texts/believers/gossardjwfrb/JWFRB.HTM
J. Harvey Gossard John Winebrenner: Founder, Reformer, and Businessman P E N N S Y L V A N I A
R E L I G I O U S L E A D E R S

Richard Allen
by Cyril E Griffith Johann Conrad Beissel
by E. G. Alderfer Isaac Leeser
by Randall B. Tenor Henry Melchior Muhlenberg
by Charles Glatfelter John Neumann
by Genevieve Blatt Gilbert Tennent
by Milton J. Coulter, Jr. John Winebrenner
by J. Harvey Gossard
Editors: John M. Coleman John B. Frantz Robert G. Crist PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY STUDIES: NO. 16 THE PENNSYLVANIA HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA, Pennsylvania Historical Association Department of History...Oswald Tower University Park, Pennsylvania 16802 Printed by Plank's Suburban Press Camp Hill, Pennsylvania F O R E W O R D The introduction and chapters printed here constitute the keynote address and seven papers presented 15 June 1985 at the fourteenth Rose Hill Seminar. From 1963 through 1982 those Seminars were held at Rose Hill, then the home of Dr. Homer Rosenberger. After his death they have continued as annual events at Wilson College, Chambersburg. Dr. Robert F. Curtis, of the Wilson faculty, chaired the committee of eight persons who planned and executed the 1985 version on the theme "Religious Leaders." The other seven represented various co-sponsors of the Seminar: Nancy Besch and Dr. Robert Crist, the college; Dr. John Frantz, Pennsylvania Historical Association; Francis Rosenberger, the Pennsylvania Junto; Dr. Louis Waddell, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission; Paul Blubaugh, the Waynesboro Historical Society; and Jean Rosenberger, her late husband.

93. History Of Westmoreland County Volume 1, Chapter 8
There were also many dunkards and Omish. These three branches were nearly Neither the dunkards, Mennonites nor the Omish have held their own with the
http://www.pa-roots.com/~westmoreland/historyproject/vol1/chap8.html
History of Westmoreland County
Volume 1
Chapter 8
Scotch - Irish - German Westmoreland county as it now exists in territory was settled largely by Scotch-Irish and Pennsylvania Dutch. The Scotch-Irish was a sturdy race of people in all colonies wherever found. They came from Ireland, but their ancestors had originally been the bone and sinew of Scotland before they had removed to the Emerald Isle. They were scattered over Western Pennsylvania, and were the first to cluster around the forts and blockhouses, where they made money by trading in lands, furs, and skins and other products, rather than by agricultural pursuits. They lived by thrift, rather than by hard labor, yet they did not attempt to live on the unpaid labor of others. They were an extremely aggressive and independent people who made splendid pioneers in a new country. The Germans in Western Pennsylvania did not generally come from Germany, but rather from Berks, Lancaster, Cumberland, Philadelphia, and other eastern counties. Their ancestors, however, had come from the banks of the Rhine, from Alsace and Loraine, from the Netherlands, or Holland. They were called Pennsylvania Dutch, and spoke a language that was a mixture of German and English, with now and then a word or an expression engrafted from other European tongues. It very greatly resembled pure German, so much so that a German scholar can converse readily with a Pennsylvania Dutchman, while the latter has even today no trouble whatever in making himself understood in Germany. This language was even in its best days, almost entirely a colloquial dialect, and consequently has declined very rapidly in the last fifty years.

94. LOCAL HISTORY Tarring S. Davis, History Of Blair County, Volume I
The dunkards play an important part in the Indian attacks of this and the later They played conspicuous parts after the murders of the dunkards in
http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/pa/blair/history/tdavis1-3.txt

95. Define Dunkards : Powered By In Dictionary (InDicitonary.com)
Faith of our Fathers!They joined a religious movement called the dunkards or Dunkers (from The Funk Wagnell Encyclopedia says, They get their name dunkards from the
http://www.indictionary.com/define/Dunkards.html

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96. Obituary Of John C. Metsker, Douglas County, KSGenWeb Digital Library
of the dunkards. Southwest of Lawrence is one Star and crowning hill, there isa large tract of land, beautiful land including some of the most fertile
http://skyways.lib.ks.us/genweb/archives/douglas/obits/jmetsker.htm
NEWSPAPER UNKNOWN, 12 September 1911 Obituary of JOHN C. METSKER John C. Metsker
18 Sep 1826 - 12 Sep 1911
He Was A Striking Figure
J.C. Metsker Was 85 Years Old and
Has Son About Sixty
Had Been Married 63 Years
Lived On Same Homestead Ever Since
He Came to Kansas in 50's
Lived In Big Home Built Originally
With the Big Oven in the
Rear of the House To have lived to the age of 85 years, to have been married 63 years, to be survived by a family, the oldest "child" being about 60 years and to have lived always a life according to his creed - that is part of the history of J. C. Metsker who passed away in Lawrence yesterday at Simmons Hospital. Back, away back in the early 50's J.C. Metsker came to Kansas to try his luck with the many others who saw great things in the Land of Promise. He was a Dunkard, was Mr. Metsker, and he came to Kansas bringing with him all the faith in his creed, determined to live the life set down by the prophets of the Dunkards. Southwest of Lawrence is one Star and crowning hill, there is a large tract of land, beautiful land including some of the most fertile

97. Ancestry Message Boards - Message [ Germans In Ohio ]

http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/message/an/topics.ethnic.ohgermans/7
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Topics Ethnic / Race ... Germans in Ohio Germans in Ohio List Messages Post New Message Add Board To Favorites Add Board To Notifications ... Next Dunkards of Ohio Author: eileen johnson Date: 5 Jan 2005 2:45 AM GMT Surnames: Miranda Shane Classification: Query Post Reply Mark Unread Report Abuse Print Message My great grandmother was born in Christiansburg, Ohio in 1858
she was a member of the Dunkards her surname was Carlista
Miranda she married George Shane she was was a member of the Kings Creek Baptist Church in her married years near Urbana
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98. Folders Of Brethren Information
Learn to know us better through these articles. Timeline of the Church ofthe Brethren traces our development from a very small circle of eight
http://www.cob-net.org/folder.htm

Timeline
of the Church of the Brethren traces our development from a very small circle of eight Anabaptist-Pietist believers in Schwarzenau, Germany, until the present 1,100 congregations in 36 states with mission projects around the world. Discover many external religious events that significantly contributed to our formation. Included are many secular historical markers to more properly frame Brethren activity in relation to world events.
European Origin
Alexander Mack, son of a German miller was greatly influenced by Pietism, especially it's emphasis on faith as something to be experienced apart from ritual and form. After befriending members of the Separatist wing of the Pietistic movement, Mack and seven others proceeded to the Eder River at Schwarzenau, Germany, in the autumn of 1708, and (re)baptized themselves into a community of faith rooted in both Pietism, and Anabaptism from an earlier period. This was an illegal action for which they had "counted the cost" (Luke 14:28).
Honors to Alexander Mack
is a newly written article about the founder of the Brethren, written especially for COB-Net by noted author William G. Willoughby. He is also the author of "Counting The Cost" and "Beliefs of the Early Brethren." Unlike these two excellent works that have become treasures to fellow Brethren readers, "Honors" tells the story of Mack to the non-Brethren web visitor from the global community. It is written with a gentle sensitivity to the modern audience that wants a hero, and explains why the beliefs of Alexander Mack fills that need. We especially want to thank Mr. Willoughby for donating his time and literary talents, to help COB-Net tell the Brethren story through this evolving online technology of web communication.

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