Barbara (Ifert) Linker
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Barbara (Ifert) Linker (abt. 1774 - abt. 1825)

Barbara Linker formerly Ifert aka Efird
Born about in Berks, Pennsylvaniamap
Ancestors ancestors
Wife of — married about 1794 in the Old Dutch Buffalo Creek Meeting House, Cabarrus County, North Carolina USAmap [uncertain]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 51 in Cabarrus, North Carolina, United Statesmap
Problems/Questions Profile manager: Carolyn Pinkerton private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 26 May 2017
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Biography

Barbara Ifert "Efird" was born in about 1774 in Berks County, Pennsylvania. She died in about 1825 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina. Her parents were Hans Joggi "Jacob" Ifert and Maria "Mary" Schaffner. Her siblings were Anna Ifert, Ursula Ifert, Hans Jacob Ifert, who died when he was only three months old, Maria Ifert, Verena Ifert, and Jacob Ifert, later known as Jacob Efird. She married her older sister Anna's widowed husband Heinrich "Henry" Linker in about 1794 in the Old Dutch Buffalo Creek Meeting House in Concord in Cabarrus County, North Carolina.

Children of Barbara Ifert "Efird" and Heinrich "Henry" Linker - - David Linker - born 9 April 1795 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, and died on 7 November 1850 in Cabarrus County. He married Nancy Shore in 1809 in Cabarrus County. She was born on 13 July 1809 in Stokes County, North Carolina, and died on 5 November 1850 in Cabarrus County. Her parents were Jacob Shore and Margaret Scanlin. - Daniel Linker - born on 9 April 1798 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, and died in 1875 in Cabarrus County. He married Mary "Polly" Fischer on 6 July 1824 in Cabarrus County. She was born in 1806 in Cabarrus County and died after 1880 in Cabarrus County. Her parents were Johann Ludwig "Lewis" Fischer and Christina Hause. - Infant Girl Linker - born and died in 1800 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina. - Infant Girl Linker - born and died in 1802 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina. - Jacob Linker - born in 1805 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, and died in 1855 in Cabarrus County. He married "Sarah Sally" Tucker on 11 March 1830 in Cabarrus County. She was born in 1813 in Cabarrus County and died after 1860 in Cabarrus County. Her parents are not known. - Sarah "Sallie" Linker - was born in 1807 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, and died in 1882 in Cabbarrus County. She married Charles Hagler on 25 August 1823 in Cabarrus County. He was born in 1793 in Cabarrus County, and died in 1875 in Cabarrus County. His parents were John Hagler and Catharina Seitz. - John Linker - born 4 September 1808 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, and died on 13 July 1864 in Dover, Pope County, Arkansas. He married Martha "Patsey" Whitley, in about 1830 in Montgomery County, North Carolina. She was born in 1813 in Cabarrus County, and died in 1875 in Dover, Pope County, Arkansas. Her parents are unknown. - Rosanna Linker - born on 14 August 1811 in Cabarrus County, North Carolina, and died in 1865 in Cabarrus County. She married John Henry Biggers on 4 September 1826 in Cabarrus County. He was born in 1804 in Cabarrus County, and died after 1880 in Cabarrus County. His parents were John Biggers and Dorothea Petree.


Sources

  • "History and Genealogy of the Efird Family" by Judge Oscar Ogburn Efird.
  • "Residents of Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, 1762-1790" by Kathaleen Marler.
  • "Baptismal Records, 1797-1847, Saint John's Lutheran Church, Concord, Cabarrus County, North Carolina" by Adam Nicholas Marcard, and Adelaide and Eugenia Lore.




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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Barbara by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known mtDNA test-takers in her direct maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Barbara:

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Comments: 1

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About Judge Oscar Ogburn Efird's book "The History and Genealogy of the Efird Family (revised) -

When Judge Oscar Ogburne Efird wrote his book "The History and Genealogy of the Efird Family", he thought that he used everything that was available to him and the two genealogists who he hired to help him in his research. He already had a lot of information that he had gathered before he began work on his book in 1953. He had to stop his work of gathering more in 1958 because he had to have cataract surgery. It may have been then that the mistake was made, possibly by the hired genealogists, the mistake that gave the wrong information about the parents of Jacob and Martin Ifert "Efird". Judge Efird's book has so much wonderful information in the beginning about Johann Georg and Chatarina Barbara Ehrenfried being their parents, but the Ehrenfrieds weren't Jacob and Martin's parents. Their last name was Ifert and they came from Rümlingen in Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland in 1771, not from Baden-Wurtemburg, Germany in 1773. Their parents were Matthias Ifert (Ifert-6) and Barbara "Barbel" Bürgin (Burgin-425), not Johann Georg and Chatarina Barbara Ehrenfried. Somehow the book "Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies" by Albert Bernhardt Faust and Gaius Marcus Brumbaugh was overlooked, the one book that has the correct information about the Efird family forebears. Maybe, since it seems that Judge Efird was so convinced that the family was German, the book wasn't even considered. It should have been if it wasn't. If Judge Efird had seen the names of Hans Jacob Ifert (Ifert-2) and Martin Ifert (Ifert-4), and their wives, he surely would have come to the conclusion that they were the Original Immigrant Ancestors of the Efird family. In June of 2013 I was looking on the Internet to try to find as much as possible about the early Efird family as I could. I don't remember exactly how but I found a "Sarah Arnfreedt Hays" on findagrave (the memorial has since been changed to 'Sarah Ehrenfried Hays"). There were flowers and a comment about being a Grandmother left by someone whose name was Laura. Taking a chance that this might possibly be the Sarah Ehrenfried from the Baptismal Record from the Church in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, I sent an email to Laura. She answered. We corresponded by email a couple of times and then had a three-hour-long telephone conversation. Laura turned out to be a very nice older lady in her early seventies who has researched her family for over thirty years. She did it the old-fashioned way, by actually going to the different locations and looking for the relevant records herself, with no help from the Internet or genealogy libraries. I asked her questions, she told me what she had found out about her Ehrenfried family. I went away from the conversation convinced that George, as she calls him, and his wife Chatarina Barbara were the parents of only Catharine, Sarah, and, I found out, Mary Ehrenfried (I've since found out that they had another daughter, Anna Margaretha.). She told me about Anna Margaretha Crites, the sister of Andrew Crites, who was the husband of George and Chatarina Barbara's oldest daughter Catharine, who was George's second wife, and their baby David Ehrenfried who was born and also died in in Westmoreland County in Pennsylvania in1792. I had already found something about a Margaret Ehrenfried, and a mention of a Sarah and a Mary Ehrenfried, but I thought that they were "George Jr's" family. It turns out that "George Jr" never existed. He was Johann Georg Ehrenfried himself after he had moved to Westmorland County, Pennsylvania. Laura also told me why that present day Efird female descendants find it to be impossible to get into the Daughters of the American Revolution under Johann Georg Ehrenfried. The DAR has done its' own research about the Ehrenfried/Efird connection, and they found no connection at all. There is a "Red Flag" for Efird descendants who want to join the DAR as descendants of Johann Georg Ehrenfried. Laura IS in it under George, because she can prove that she is descended from him and his daughter Sarah. She has a copy of Sarah's actual Christening Record from Northampton County with George's name on it, a copy of Sarah's marriage record to Abraham Hays, and a copy of George's Will from Westmorland County, Pennsylvania, which mentions Sarah and Abraham as recipiants of some of George's land and property in Westmorland Counnty after he died. She also has a copy of the Baptismal record for David Ehrenfried listing George and Margaret Ehrenfried as his parents. Laura said that she has never found any information supporting the story in Judge Efird's book, nothing at all, so she knows it is a mistake. I have corresponded more with her, and we have talked for several hours several more times. Johann Georg and Chatarina Barbara Ehrenfried had four children only, Catharine, Sarah, Mary, and Margaret. There was never a Jacob or Martin Ehrenfried. Their last name was "Ifert" and they came from Switzerland in 1771. The proof is in the book "Lists of Swiss Emigrants in the Eighteenth Century to the American Colonies" by Albert Bernhardt Faust and Gaius Marcus Brumbaugh. Judge Efird said that there were "rumors" about the Efird family being Swiss but he had no research to prove it. He didn't have that book. That book is the proof. If you have any questions I would love to hear from you! Carolyn Pinkerton

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