Barbara (Baer) Zewitz
Privacy Level: Open (White)

Barbara (Baer) Zewitz (1710 - 1766)

Barbara Zewitz formerly Baer aka Zavitz, Bär
Born in Strasbourg, Alsace, Francemap
Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 56 in Bucks, Pennsylvaniamap
Problems/Questions Profile managers: Chase Peeler private message [send private message] and David Zavitz private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 2 Mar 2017
This page has been accessed 490 times.

Biography

Barbara (Baer) Zewitz has roots in the region now known as Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany.
Barbara (Baer) Zewitz was a Pennsylvanian.


Barbara was born about 1690 or 1710 in Strasbourg, Alsace, France. She married Jurgen “George” Zevitz/Zavitz. They immigrated to the American Colonies by 1723.

They were the parents of the following eight known children (all born in Pennsylvania):

  1. Henry Zevitz (1723-1771)
  2. Abraham Zewitz (1724-1777)
  3. Mary Zavitz (1727-1764)
  4. Jacob Sewitz (1728-1797)
  5. Esther Zavitz (1730-1797)
  6. George Savitz (1731-1780)
  7. John Sevitz (1732-?)
  8. Joseph Savitz (1734-1792)

Notations on Jurgen “George” S.and Barbara (Baer) Zevitz/ Zavitz: “ George S. Zavitz, the first to come to America, is reported to have "lived within sight of the spires of the famous cathedral in Strasbourg, France." As a Protestant he and his family were part of a flood of immigrants to the William Penn Colony where rights to religious freedom had been included in the founding constitution as early as 1681. There is no specific documentation that the Zavitz's were Mennonites on arrival although they were part of that community once in America and after 1797 in Canada. Strasbourg seemed to be a "safe haven" for many years to Anabaptists like the Mennonites. There is no record of the death sentence against these individuals in Strasbourg. Nevertheless, Protestants in that city felt the pull from the new world. The Rhine was just two miles away with its access to Dutch religious freedom, ships to America and there was news of British support for settlement. Undoubtedly the Zavitz's had heard much about the migration of tens of thousands of Palatine Protestants down the Rhine to Holland and Britain and then on to settlement areas in the Pennsylvania and New York colonies. Promoters were advertising the "good life" in these coloniesand Anabaptists, much attracted to the prospect of escaping the harshness of European society, the lack of productive farm land and the security to raise a family. They must also have been aware of the long waits in refugee camps before ships would be available to take them, the thousands who embarked who never made it to the new world, many as forty percent of those attempting the crossing died of disease at sea ]and the settlement mismanagement that plagued many who did survive the Atlantic crossing. There is no record of GEORGE ZAVITZ, and his wife BARBARA on the immigrant ship list nor of his arrival in Philadelphia. Since these records were started in 1727 we may assume he arrived before that time. The first record of him in the new world is his purchase of three hundred acres in 1732 from a Caspar Wistar, near Center Valley about 50 miles north of the city in a new district in a fertile valley along the Saucon Creek, Upper Bucks County, about 6 miles south of what was later to be the site of Bethlehem. As a miller he looked for mill sites. He and the small group of Mennonite settlers he was with were also influenced by the opening of the Durham Iron Works about 15 miles away. The local Indian tribes, Saucon, Lenni-Lenapes and Shawnees were friendly at this time, and did not resist the arrival of these "whites" in their hunting grounds. About 1731, George built a grist mill in Center Valley, PA. He was naturalized on March 29,1735. George and Barbara died on the homestead, he in 1759, she about 1766. George's will was probated on June 13,1759. He is buried in a Mennonite Cemetery less than a mile south of his homestead. As the immigrant progenitor he had lived about half of his life in Europe, and half in PA where he experienced religious toleration. All of their eight children lived to adulthood and married. Most were still in Bucks Co. close to their parents. All probably spoke German exclusively.”…..excerpted


Sources


  • Baptism

Name: Barbara Baer Gender: Female Baptism Date: 26 janv. 1709 (26 Jan 1709) Baptism Place: Sulgen, Thurgau, Switzerland Father: Hanss Baer Mother: Barbara Brueschwiler FHL Film Number: 958109 Source Information Switzerland, Baptisms, 1491-1940. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.

  • Family records




Is Barbara your ancestor? Please don't go away!
 star icon Login to collaborate or comment, or
 star icon contact private message private message a profile manager, or
 star icon ask our community of genealogists a question.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com

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:

Have you taken a DNA test? If so, login to add it. If not, see our friends at Ancestry DNA.



Comments: 2

Leave a message for others who see this profile.
There are no comments yet.
Login to post a comment.
Removed Bär-177 as father as there is no evidence he was her father. In 1709, he was a servant at Bocken in Horgen per Groff Book vol. 2 page 26 married Barbara Frederick 1701
posted by Walter Harrington
Unknown-390072 and Baer-677 appear to represent the same person because: Appear to be the same person.
posted by David Zavitz

B  >  Baer  |  Z  >  Zewitz  >  Barbara (Baer) Zewitz

Categories: German Roots