Barbara Dukes, wife of Joseph Dukes at the time of his
death, was born Barbara Forster, daughter of Johannes Forster and Elizabeth
Tobler Foster.[1] This was
JosephÕs second wife who came from a group of Carolina settlers who originated
in Appezell Ausserrhoden and St. Gallen, CH. The related Tobler and ZŸblin
families were prominent in both Switzerland and South Carolina. They had many
ties to frontier settlement and Indian trade. Before marrying Joseph, Barbara
was married to Jacob Brunson and then to Robert Lammons, both of whom were also
from families deeply involved in the Indian trade.
BarbaraÕs father, Johannes Forster, was born to Caspar Forster and his second wife Anna ZŸblin on 28 Jan 1692 at Oberuzwil, St. Gallen, Switzerland. Caspar Furster (1646/49-11 Dec 1725) was the son of Georg Furster and Barbara Kruesi. Caspar married 1) Catharina Zwicki, 2) Anna Zueblin, and 3) Anna Baumann.
Elizabeth Tobler, mother of Barbara Forster, was the daughter of Ulrich Tobler of Orangeburgh Township and the sister of Johannes Tobler, former Landeshauptman of Appenzell Ausserrhoden, and founder of New Windsor Township on the Savannah River near modern Beech Island.
In 1735 300 acres were surveyed for John Forster adjacent Ulrich Tobler in Orangeburgh Township (South Carolina Colonial Plat Book 9, page 454).[2] The number of acres that was granted indicates that Forster was accompanied by five others, each receiving a 50 acre head right. The identities of all but one are known: John Forster, his wife Elizabeth Tobler Fuster, son John Fuster, and daughters Barbara Fuster and Salome Fuster.
John Forster and Ulrich Tobler were listed among those receiving 1736 town lot grants in Orangeburg.[3] In 1736 John ÒHysenhoodÓ (Eisenhut) received a 200 acre land grant adjacent Peter FaurŽ and John Forster on the Edisto River (South Carolina Colonial Plat Book 9:494).[4]
After the death of John Forster, on Tuesday 19 Nov 1741 ÒElizabeth Fusterin, widowÓ was married to Christian Swartz, in the presence of Kilian Abecklin, John Fuster and 2 children.[5] Joop GiessendannerÕs translation:
Thursday the 19th of November after one
single announcement were privately married by me
24. Christian Shwartz and Elsbeth Fuster
maiden name Tobler, late Mr. Johannes Fuster's
(dec'd.) widow in the presence of
Kilian Abecklin, Johannes Fuster and all other remaining
children on both sides
The remaining children on the Forster side presumably included Barbara and Salome Forster.
Samuel Davis was married to Salome Forster, sister of Barbara Forster and daughter of Johannes Forster. Rev. Giessendanner performed their marriage before his trip to England.[6]
John Forster, brother of Barbara and Salome, married Sarah Hatcher, daughter of Seth Hatcher, in 1741.[7] After the death of John Fuster, Sarah Hatcher Fuster remarried to John Clayton and was the mother of his many children. By 1749/50, we have the following record:[8]
Sirrah, daughter of John and Sirrah Clayton; born April 30th a. c. Susceptr. William Pendarvis, Sirah, wife of William Cooper, and Mary, wife of David Rumph.
BarbaraÕs first marriage was to Jacob Brunson, from the
Brunson family of Goose Creek, SC.
Joop GiessendannerÕs transcription and translation of Rev. GiessendannerÕs Book of Record reports:
Anno 1738
On 26. January have married Jacob Pruncen to Miss Barbara Furster, daughter of Johannes Furster, Tinter (Hans Ulrich Giessendanner, the elder) FŠrber = tinter, usually dyes color in cloth or leather
Their son Isaac was baptised in 1749/50:[9]
(45.) On Sunday, October 28th Isaac, son of Jacob and Barbara Brunzon; born ____. Susceptr. Abraham Yssenhut. Samuel Davis, and ____ wife of Elias Snell.
Hannah BrunsonÕs baptism was not recorded by Rev. Giessendanner.
Note that Abraham Eisenhut, father of Joseph DukesÕ first wife Margaret Eisenhut Dukes, was a sponsor for the baptism of the child of Barbara Forster Brunson from her first marriage.
It is not known precisely where Barbara lived when married to Jacob Brunson, but it may have been on Miller Creek in what is now Barnwell County.[10]
Subsequently, Barbara married Robert Lammons in 1751. From Rev, GiessendannerÕs Book of Record:
18. On Tuesday May 28th In Ditto ---- By Ditto Robert Lammon To Barbara, late
Widow of Jacob Brunzon, deceased: Both living upon Edistoe River: Being
present: Michael Christopher Row,
Joseph Grieffous, Samuel Davis
Michael Christopher Rowe was an Orangeburg Indian trader
situated near what isnow Rowesville. Samuel Davis was BarbaraÕs brother-in-law.
There is no Giessendanner record of Lammons children born to this couple.
There is no record of the marriage of Joseph Dukes and Barbara Forster, but three of their children were baptized by Rev. Giessendanner and appear in those records.
Hannah, wife of the Jonathon Johnston mentioned in Barbara DukesÕ will as her daughter, is identified as the grandaughter of Johannes Fuster in Charleston Co SC Deed Book K-3:255, 26 Feb 1765. This was a deed from Jonathon Johnson and wife Hannah to Henry Felder for the 300 acres granted 17 Sep 1736 to John (Johannes) Fuster. This was the property immediately north of that of John Eisenhut. The deed book indicates that Hannah was the ÒonlyÓ grandchild, but this is an obvious error.
On 26 Feb 1765 the following was recorded (Charleston County SC Deed Book K-3, page 255):
Jonathon Johnston and Hannah, his wife, of below Orangeburg to Henry Felder of Orangeburg Township for 35 pounds, sold 300 acres granted 17 Sep 1736 to John Fuster and adjoins SE on vacant land, NW on Ulrich Tobler, SW on Pon Pon River, SE on Ulrich Spice & John Hysenhood. Said Hannah, wife of Jonathon Johnston, being the only grandchild of Fuster. Wit. Isham Clayton, John Simmons, William (x) Aldridge. Before Christopher Rowe, J.P. 2 May 1768. Recorded 7 Jul 1768 by Fenwick Bull, Reg.
Henry Felder recorded a memorial of this transaction on July 8, 1768.[11]
In 1761 Ulrich Tobler Òof New WindsorÓ sold land adjacent John Forster that was granted to him in 1736 (South Carolina Colonial Plat Book 20, page 358).[12]
John Brunson and his first wife, Francis Hills, were early
settlers in the Hartford, CT, area, having arrived there in 1635. John
BrunsonÕs son John Jr. moved to South Carolina in 1692, setting near the
Dorchester settlers from MA in the area below Goose Creek. Brothers Abraham and
Isaac Brunson, sons of John Brunson Jr., and Hannah Scott, filed for land
grants in Berkeley County, 100 acres each, on the same day on 15 Sep 1705.[13]
Jonathan Fitch II (brother of Tobias Fitch) and his wife Ann Elliott Fitch
subsequently referenced the Brunson land in a 1715 sale of adjacent property.[14]
One parcel was at the head of ÒYeamanseeÓ Creek (Goose Creek) bounding S and E
on lands of Abraham ÒHoree delaplan.Ó [Abraham Fleury de la Plaine; father of
Marianne DuguŽ, widow of Jacques DuguŽ].
The other parcel was described as bounding NE and SE on Dr. Isaac
Porcher, SW on Gabriel Glaze, dec., NW on Isaac Brunson, Abraham Brunson and
Moses Way, and on lands of Dorchester called ÒRosueÓ Land (Rose Land).
Rev. Giessendanner recorded the marriages of ÒJonathan
Brimstone and Martha Pickings.Ó Jonathan Brimstone is Jonathan Brunson, brother
of Jacob Brunson and brother-in-law of Barbara Fuster Brunson Lammons (later
Dukes).
The name of the ÒPickingsÓ was actually Pickering. The
Pickering family appears in several contexts associated with the Dukes family.
Giessendanner also married Samuel ÒPickingsÓ and N[name unknown] Patton in
1747. Om 1749 Samuel Pickering was a witness to the marriage of John Fitch and
Ann Holmes.
1748/9. Januar: 16th.
Matrimonio copulati Sunt:
John Fitch et
Ann Holmes: Presentibus: Will.m Clement
Samuel Pickings
William Clements, who witnessed the wedding of John Fitch
and Ann Holmes, along with Samuel
Pickering, was also married by Giessendanner: ÒWilliam Clement January 28th. To
Mary Callyhon, Widow, 1747Ó
An earlier Samuel Pickering of Charleston was a merchant and
was involved in transactions with Edward Weekley of Goose Creek, whose son
Thomas later settled in Amelia.
References in Joop GiessendannerÕs transcription of the Book
of Record (http://www.xs4all.nl/~sail/orange/a-index.html)
reflect the many parish listings for the Brunson family in Orangeburgh in the
1750s:
mar = marriage; bapt = baptism; bur = burial; comm =
communion date = ddmmyy
mar jonathan brimstone x martha pickings BEF 1749
bapt isaac Brunzon 28.10.1750
bapt abraham brunson 27.01.1751
mar robert lammon x barbara brunzon (widow) 28.05.1751
bapt alexander Brunzon 30.06.1751
bapt rachel Brunzon 30.06.1751
bapt sirrah Brunzon 30.06.1751
bapt peter brunson 17.02.1755
bapt elizabeth Brunzon 02.11.1755
bapt william Brunzon 02.11.1755
bapt rebeccah Brunzon 02.01.1757
bapt martha Brunzon 02.01.1757
bapt susannah Brunzon 02.01.1757
bapt joshiah cantey 24.03.1760
The Lammons family had connections with the Indian trade. Francis Lammons, apparently brother of BarbaraÕs husband Robert, was recorded as Francis Lemmon, member of the 7th Company, Beach Hill District, St. PaulÕs Parish, militia of 1756, in the Cherokee wars.[15] Francis Lammons incurred regular expenses arising from supplying goods to Indians, expenses that were subsequently reimbursed by the House of Assembly. Expenses appear in House records of 19 Jan 1748-29 Jun 1748, accompanied by claims by Joseph and Samuel Wragg, George Haig, and Herman Geiger, among others.[16] He was also approved for partial reimbursement on 8 Mar 1748 and 22 Mar 1748 for provisions for the men who accompanied the Governor on his interview with the Indians at Ninety Six.[17] On 26 Jan 1750 the House considered his claims for provisions supplied to the Creek Indians, another for provisions supplied to the ÒNotchee, Chickesaw, and Chactaw IndiansÓ, another claim for provisions supplied the ÒChactawÓ, and another for provisions to the ÒChikesaw.Ó These claims were found to be excessive, and were reduced to £104 17S 6p.[18] Francis LamonsÕ claims continued through 1752.[19]
From the 1747 baptismal records by Rev. Giessendanner:
March 1st. In the House of Mr. Thomas Fort
John, Son of Leonhard and Sarrah Warnedow
Goss: John Fitz, Mrs. Lammons and for Want of another Me
ÒWarnedowÓ is Varnedo. From the OGSGS website: ÒVarnadoe -
Limouise, France. *On 1 Aug 1758 Leonard Vernadeau granted 200 acres
Orangeburgh (SC) Township.Ó Leonard Varnado began his career in South Carolina
as a fur and whiskey trader, having obtained his license in 1736. He married
Sarah Hutto, daughter of Isaac and Mary Catharina Hutto (later Mell) on 25 May
1742 and became a soldier at Ft. Moore adjacent New Windsor, the township
founded by Johannes Tobler, uncle of Barbara Fuster. In 1758 he was granted
land on the south fork of the Edisto River in Orangeburgh Township; he later
moved to Rocky Swamp Creek in Orangeburgh District.[20]
Mary Catharina Hutto Mell, Leonard VarnedauÕs mother-in-law, was a baptismal
sponsor for Barbara FusterÕs first child with Joseph Dukes, George Alexander
Dukes.
The baptismal
sponsors above are John Fitch, son of Tobias and Marianne DuguŽ Fitch of Goose
Creek, and ÒMrs. Lammons.Ó Barbara Fuster Brunson did not marry Robert Lammons
until 1751, so this must be the wife of Francis Lammons, Elizabeth Baird
Lammons, originally of Goose Creek.[21]
Francis and Elizabeth were married by Giessendanner in about 1747. John Fitch,
son of Tobias Fitch and Marianne Dugue Fitch, was involved in trade with
Indians in western South Carolina. In 1755 he wrote to George Cadogan regarding
encounters with the Chickasaw near Augusta.[22]
He lived at Augusta, where he was a substantial landowner, and was at times
accused of selling liquor to the Creeks.[23]
The Giessendanner Book of Record for the parish centered in
Orangeburgh shows that John Fitch married Ann Holmes on 16 Jan 1748/49 in
Orangeburgh County. William Clement and Samuel Pickings were listed as
witnesses (the best translation is found in the Orangeburgh Book of Record at http://www.xs4all.nl/~sail/orange/17490116.html).
The original:
1748/9. Januar: 16th.
Matrimonio copulati Sunt:
John Fitch et
Ann Holmes: Presentibus: Will.m Clement
Samuel Pickings
The original page on which this record appears contains the
notation ÒJonathan Brimstone and Martha Pickings.Ó This marriage is that of
Jonathan Brunson, brother of Jacob Brunson and brother-in-law of Barbara
Forster Brunson.
LemonÕs/LemmonÕs Creek might have been the location of the Varnado wedding. A Jacob Valk deed of 10 Dec 1779 transfered 500 acres "in Colleton County on a branch of the little Saltcatcher Swamp known by the name of Lemons's Swamp, adj. land granted to Thomas Ford known by the name of Cedar Springs."[24] The 1775 Mouzon map pinpoints the location of five plantations owned by Fords, but only one on the Little Salkehatchie. It's around Denmark, SC, just south of South Fork of Edisto, and it is indeed near LemonÕs Creek. LemonÕs Creek is a major tributary of the Little Salkehatchie, and extends from the vicinity of Denmark, SC, south and east to enter the Little Salkehatchie about 10 miles below the modern town of Bamberg, SC. ÒBrunstonÓ Swamp is immediately west of LemonÕs Creek.
The LemonÕs Creek area is familiar in another important
Dukes family context. It is the location from which the James Dukes family,
accompanied by the Tuckers and Mileys, moved on to Mississippi. The 1810
Barnwell County tax return (SCMAR summer 1991, No. 3) lists neighbors Paul
Johnson (who married one of Barbara ForsterÕs daughters), James Tucker (who
immigrated to MS with James Dukes), William Pendarvis (who owed money to
Barbara Forster at the time of her death), ÒArickÓ (Eric) Johnson (probably a
son of one of the Johnson-Brunson couples), and Robert Miley (who went to MS
with the Dukes and Tuckers), all close associates of Barbara Fuster and Joseph Dukes.
Abraham Brunson, son of Jonathan Brunson and Martha Pickering Brunson, also
lived in the LemonÕs Creek area.
In 1735 Ulrich Tobler immigrated to Orangeburgh Township,
where his daughter Elizabeth became the bride of Johannes Forster. He received
250 acres and Lot No. 267 in Orangeburgh Township. His property was immediately
above that of Johannes Forster and near those of John Eisenhut, John
Sturzenegger, and the first Orangeburgh settler, the Òhatmaker of James
IslandÓ, John Hearn.[25]
In 1736 UlrichÕs son Johannes Tobler left Switzerland to found New Windsor Township on the Savannah, accompanied Rev. BartholomŠus ZuberbŸhler. The Toblers were from Rehetobel, Appenzell, while ZuberbŸhler was from nearby Gais, Appenzell (also home of the Eisenhut family). (The Toblers and ZuberbŸhlers were related through the 17th century marriage of Heinrich Tobler and Barbel ZuberbŸhler of Herisau.) Johann Tobler had been Landeshauptmann (approximately a governor) of Appenzell Ausserrhoden and leader of the aristocratic party, but was deposed. ZuberbŸhhler had lost his Reformed church post for opposing French influence in the canton.[26] John ToblerÕs 1753 description of Carolina is available on-line at http://www.rootsweb.com/~scogsgs/toblr.htm.
In 1767, Johannes Tobler of New Windsor was dead and his estate was administered by his son-in-law John Zubly and grandson John Jacob Sturzenegger:
Series Number: S136002
Box: 074A
Item: 0547A
Date: 1767
Description: ZUBLY, JOHN JOACHIM AND JOHN JACOB
STURZENEGGER, EXORS. OF JOHN TOBLER VS JOHN SWEET, JUDGMENT ROLL.
ZUBLY, JOHN JOACHIM//STURZENEGGER, JOHN JACOB//TOBLER,
JOHN/SWEET, JOHN/
Type: JUDGMENT-ROLL//
John Sturzenegger owned land in Orangeburgh near that of
Ulrich Tobler, Johannes Eisenhut and Johannes Forster. He was the son of John
Jacob Sturzenegger and Elizabeth Tobler. Elizabeth was the daughter of Johann
Tobler and Ann Zellweger, the granddaughter of Ulrich Tobler, and the first
cousin of Barbara Forster Dukes. Sturzenegger was born in Gais, Appenzell
Ausserrhoden, home town of the Eisenhut family.
Barbara ForsterÕs paternal grandmother was Elizabeth ZŸblin,
and additional maternal ties to the ZŸblin family developed in South Carolina. The
ZŸblin family appeared in South Carolina records with the immigration of
Joachim ZŸblinÕs father. David ÒZublieÓ registered a plat for 600 acres in
Purrysburgh Township on 25 Oct 1737. A grant for this property was dated 14 Dec
1739.[27]
However, it was to be several years before David was joined by his son Joachim,
who remained in Switzerland to complete his studies. He was licensed to preach
while in Switzerland, and while in London was ordained in August 1744 in the
German [Reformed] Church.[28]
He sailed for South Carolina on the John
in July 1745.[29]
Joachim ZŸblinÕs first congregations in the colonies were at
Vernonsburg and Acton, GA. However, in 1746 ZŸblin needed more financial
support, having married Anna Tobler, daughter of Johannes Tobler.[30]
The 1749 will of William Hendrick[31]
shows that ZŸblin moved from Georgia to the Wappetaw Independent Congregation
north of Charleston no later than November 1749.
This is evidence against the assertion that ZŸblin was in
residence as minister of a congregation at Amelia or on the Four Holes in
Orangeburgh District during the late 1740Õs.[32]
Various authors have followed Hazelius[33]
in stating that ZŸblin preached at a church in Amelia during the late 1740Õs.
An alternative version states that he founded a Reformed church at ÒFour Hole
Creek on the Lower Edisto River.Ó[34]
However, it is likely that ZŸblin visited the Amelia and Four Holes areas and
preached occasionally when visiting friends and relatives.[35]
In 1760 ZŸblin accepted a position as pastor of the
Independent Presbyterian Church of Savannah.[36]
After moving to Savannah, ZŸblin continued to visit Charleston. ZŸblinÕs
journal during this period mentions the LegarŽ family of Wappetaw, A. Bacot,
and brothers Henry and Arthur Perroneau.[37]
ZŸblin also was acquainted with the well-known political figure and slave
dealer, Henry Laurens.[38]
ZŸblinÕs personal library is said to have numbered more than
2,000 volumes, and in 1774 he was awarded an honorary doctor of divinity degree
by the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University). On 7 Jul 1775 ZŸblin
was selected to be among those representing Georgia at the Second Continental
Congress. John Adams, who later served as second president of the United
States, commented in his diary that ZŸblin was of Òwarm and zealous spirit.Ó[39]
However, ZŸblin argued that the colonies should remain under the British crown,
but should have their own independent Parliament. In this, he foreshadowed the
ideas that ultimately led to the establishment of the British Commonwealth. In
1776 ZŸblin left Savannah. Much of his property was confiscated. He remained
with friends and relatives in South Carolina until 1778, when the British
capture of Savannah permitted his return there.
In 1781 ZŸblin died in Savannah. In
his will (Charleston Will Book WW 1790-1783, p. 190) he speaks bitterly of his
treatment following his departure from the Congress.[40]
This document is copyright © 2007 by Lynn Teague. All rights reserved. The copyright must appear on all copies.
[1] Many thanks to Randy Floyd for identifying her as this individual.
[2] Hendrix, Ge Lee Hendrix. The First Settlers on The North Fork of The Edisto River, S. C. The National Genealogical Society Quarterly. Vol. 73, page192.
[3] Hendrix, Ge Lee Hendrix. The First Settlers on The North Fork of The Edisto River, S. C. The National Genealogical Society Quarterly. Vol. 73, page 179.
[4] Hendrix, Ge Lee Hendrix. The First Settlers on The North Fork of The Edisto River, S. C. The National Genealogical Society Quarterly. Vol. 73, page 193.
[5] Giessendanner Records. In Salley, A.S., Jr. 1898. The History of Orangeburg County, South Carolina, from Its First Settlement to the Close of the Revolutionary War. Orangeburg, S.C.; reprinted Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994. Page 96.
[6] Giessendanner Records. In Salley, A.S., Jr. 1898. The History of Orangeburg County, South Carolina, from Its First Settlement to the Close of the Revolutionary War. Orangeburg, S.C.; reprinted Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994. Page 107.
[7] Giessendanner Records. In Salley, A.S., Jr. 1898. The History of Orangeburg County, South Carolina, from Its First Settlement to the Close of the Revolutionary War. Orangeburg, S.C.; reprinted Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994. Page 107.
[8] Giessendanner Records. In Salley, A.S., Jr. 1898. The History of Orangeburg County, South Carolina, from Its First Settlement to the Close of the Revolutionary War. Orangeburg, S.C.; reprinted Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994. Page 125.
[9] Giessendanner Records. In Salley, A.S., Jr. 1898. The History of Orangeburg County, South Carolina, from Its First Settlement to the Close of the Revolutionary War. Orangeburg, S.C.; reprinted Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, 1994. Page 125.
[10] State Plats. Series No. S213192. Vol. 0038. Page 00172. Item 01. Date 1800/12/08. South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
[11] Colonial Memorials. Vol. 2, Page 520. South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
[12] Hendrix, Ge Lee Hendrix. The First Settlers on The North Fork of The Edisto River, S. C. The National Genealogical Society Quarterly. Vol. 73, page 191.
[13] Series Number S213019. Vol. 0038. Page 00526. Items 02 and 03. Date 1705/09/15. South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
[14] Moore, Caroline T., compiler and editor. Records of the Secretary of the Province of South Carolina 1692- 1721. Pp. 323-324.
[15] Weir, Robert M. 1969. Muster Rolls of the South Carolina Granville and Colleton County Regiments of Militia, 1756. The South Carolina Historical Magazine. Vol. 70 (4): 238.
[16] Easterby, J. H., ed. 1961. The Colonial Records of South Carolina. The Journal of the Commons House of Assembly January 19, 1748-June 29, 1748. Columbia: South Carolina Archives Department. Page 104, 382, 386.
[17] Easterby, J. H., ed. 1961. The Colonial Records of South Carolina. The Journal of the Commons House of Assembly January 19, 1748-June 29, 1748. Columbia: South Carolina Archives Department. Pages 131, 155, 156.
[18] Easterby, J. H., ed. 1962. The Colonial Records of South Carolina. The Journal of the Commons House of Assembly March 28, 1749-March 19, 1750. Columbia: South Carolina Archives Department. Pages 355, 419, 456.
[19] Olsberg, R. Nicholas, ed. 1974. The Colonial Records of South Carolina. The Journal of the Commons House of Assembly 23 April 1750-31 August 1751. Columbia: South Carolina Archives Department. Pages 80, 122.
Lipscomb, Terry W. and R. Nicholas Olsberg, eds. 1974. The Colonial Records of South Carolina. The Journal of the Commons House of Assembly 23 April 1750-31 August 1751. Columbia: South Carolina Archives Department. Pages 60, 90, 101.
[20] Mullins, Phillip. 2006. ÒLeonard Vernadeau: Hide Trader and Professional Soldier and FarmerÓ http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~guinevere60/varnado/pafn01.htm#8872
[21] Jervey, Elizabeth H. 1942. Abstracts from Records of Court of Ordinary 1764-1771. South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine. Vol. XLIII (4): 243.
Holcomb, Brent H. 1977. Probate Records of South Carolina, Vol. 3: Journal of the Court of Ordinary 1764-1771. Easley: Southern Historical Press. . Pages 78, 96, 102, 103, 106, 108.
[22] McDowell, William L. Jr. 1970. Documents Relating to Indian Affairs 1754-1765. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press for the South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Pp. 35-37.
[23] Cashin, Edward J. 1992. Lachlan McGillivray, Indian Trader. The Shaping of the Southern Colonial Frontier. Athens and London: The University of Georgia Press.
[24] Charleston
Deed Book Y-5, 365-6
Colonial Plats. Series No. S213182. Vol. 0036. Page 00003. Item 01. Date 1796. South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
[25] Waters, Margaret G. 2002. A Preliminary Study of the Colonial Landowners of Orangeburgh Towonship, SC 1733:1749. Savannah: Waters.
[26] Benz, Rosa Schudel. 1933. Der appenzellische Landhandel 1732-1735. Zeitschrift fŸr Schweizerische Geschichte Vol. 13:65-110.
Schelbert, Leo, ed., and Rappolt, Hedwig, translator. 1996. American Experienced: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Accounts of Swiss Immigrants to the United States. Rockport: Picton Press.
[27] Plats. Series No. S213184. Vol. 0008. Page 00608. Item 03. Date 1737/10/25. SCDAH.
Grants. Series No. S213019 Vol. 0042 Page 00096 Item 00 Date 1739/12/14. SCDAH.
[28] Letter to Dr. Stiles, 10 Dec 1768. Stiles MSS. Yale University Library.
[29] Colonial Records of Georgia. XXX: 598-599.
[30] Howe, George. 1870. History of the Presbyterian Church in South Carolina. Columbia: Duggie & Chapman. P. 266.
[31] Moore, Caroline T., Ed. 1964. Abstracts of the Wills of the State of South Carolina. Vol. II 1740-1760. Columbia: R. L. Bryan. Page 102.
[32] History of the Synod Committee. 1971. A History of the Lutheran Church in South Carolina. Columbia: South Carolina Synod of the Lutheran Church in America. Pp. 55-58.
[33] Hazelius, Ernest L. 1846. History of the American Lutheran Church: From its commencement in the year of our Lord 1685, to the year 1842. Zanesville, Ohio: Edwin C. Church.
[34] History of the Synod Committee. 1971. A History of the Lutheran Church in South Carolina. Columbia: South Carolina Synod of the Lutheran Church in America. P. 56.
[35] History of the Synod Committee. 1971. A History of the Lutheran Church in South Carolina. Columbia: South Carolina Synod of the Lutheran Church in America. Pp. 55-57.
[36] Howe, George. 1870. History of the Presbyterian Church in South Carolina. Columbia: Duggie & Chapman. P. 266.
[37] Hawes, Lilla Mills, ed. 1989. The Journal of the Reverend John Joachim Zubly A.M., D.D. March 5 1770 through June 22, 1781. Georgia Historical Society Collections, Volume XXI. Savannah: The Georgia Historical Society. Pages 7,8,9, 11, 15, 31, 33.
[38] Hawes, Lilla Mills, ed. 1989. The Journal of the Reverend John Joachim Zubly A.M., D.D. March 5 1770 through June 22, 1781. Georgia Historical Society Collections, Volume XXI. Savannah: The Georgia Historical Society. Pages 5, 6, 7.
[39] Butterfield, John and L. H. Adams. 1961. Diary and Autobiography of John Adams. Volume 2: Diary, 1771-1781. Cambridge: Belknap (Harvard) Press.
[40] Moore, Caroline T., Ed. 1964. Abstracts of the Wills of the State of South Carolina. Vol. II 1740-1760. Columbia: R. L. Bryan. Pp. 331-332.