"1683-1920"
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.
This is an OCR edition with typos.
Excerpt from book:
fes ;£ .= fr-Xrti civ ;;,:£3 3 --( ,.. "e : Jl T§. £.,,- . ,- ev StsTl S|-r J -' H 'J ' -: Vfv" S.MU.I ± —w - ;" , — , j - i, Ct? . ?© ::,5-.-- s tf0I% I ffii'Sirw lS.l 5pl ! ojcs 2 c IT) a .2 S XT' "y i! ' -3 JL ?/- S ' S-s '/ .% : -2L -: . ±. Va. £ ss j i-r O.s -. o. t - sa ! L O.H 6 t- . . / S.-4.ji' ISii,, -,- -. Cwk v v ,t£ . ';--.Jl?fJtMf4, m i and: o o m V (S) chapter{Section 4of so many names in the German counties of Pennsylvania. When Koester is anglicised into Custer, Hauk into Hawke, Reyer into Royer, Greims into Grimes and Brauer into Brower, as evidenced by many tombstones of lond-dead ancestors, it is a most plausible inference that the same process evolved "Lincoln" from "Linkhorn." A bit of interesting collateral evidence in favor of the Linkhorn hypothesis is supplied the editor of the present book by Mrs. G. W. Garvey, who resided in Hoboken, N. J., until 1919, when she removed to California. Mrs. Garvey's maiden name was Bennett. Her grandparents resided in close proximity to the family of the Lincolns in Illinois. Her grandmother, Mrs. Dameron, often spoke of the Lincolns as neighbors who were referred to as "Dutch" people, "because the Lincolns were in the habit of killing a hog in the fall and making sausages and sauerkraut," which were among the delicacies exchanged among their neighbors and friends, a typical German custom. Leutze, Eugene Henry Cozzens.—Rear Admiral, U. S. N., born in Dusseldorf, Germany, 1847. Appointed to U. S. Naval Academy by President Lincoln, 1863; graduated 1867. While on leave of absence from academy volunteered on board "Monticello" on N. Atlantic Squadron in 1864. Served on numerous...
1100837893
"1683-1920"
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.
This is an OCR edition with typos.
Excerpt from book:
fes ;£ .= fr-Xrti civ ;;,:£3 3 --( ,.. "e : Jl T§. £.,,- . ,- ev StsTl S|-r J -' H 'J ' -: Vfv" S.MU.I ± —w - ;" , — , j - i, Ct? . ?© ::,5-.-- s tf0I% I ffii'Sirw lS.l 5pl ! ojcs 2 c IT) a .2 S XT' "y i! ' -3 JL ?/- S ' S-s '/ .% : -2L -: . ±. Va. £ ss j i-r O.s -. o. t - sa ! L O.H 6 t- . . / S.-4.ji' ISii,, -,- -. Cwk v v ,t£ . ';--.Jl?fJtMf4, m i and: o o m V (S) chapter{Section 4of so many names in the German counties of Pennsylvania. When Koester is anglicised into Custer, Hauk into Hawke, Reyer into Royer, Greims into Grimes and Brauer into Brower, as evidenced by many tombstones of lond-dead ancestors, it is a most plausible inference that the same process evolved "Lincoln" from "Linkhorn." A bit of interesting collateral evidence in favor of the Linkhorn hypothesis is supplied the editor of the present book by Mrs. G. W. Garvey, who resided in Hoboken, N. J., until 1919, when she removed to California. Mrs. Garvey's maiden name was Bennett. Her grandparents resided in close proximity to the family of the Lincolns in Illinois. Her grandmother, Mrs. Dameron, often spoke of the Lincolns as neighbors who were referred to as "Dutch" people, "because the Lincolns were in the habit of killing a hog in the fall and making sausages and sauerkraut," which were among the delicacies exchanged among their neighbors and friends, a typical German custom. Leutze, Eugene Henry Cozzens.—Rear Admiral, U. S. N., born in Dusseldorf, Germany, 1847. Appointed to U. S. Naval Academy by President Lincoln, 1863; graduated 1867. While on leave of absence from academy volunteered on board "Monticello" on N. Atlantic Squadron in 1864. Served on numerous...
39.95 In Stock

"1683-1920"

by Frederick Franklin Schrader

"1683-1920"

by Frederick Franklin Schrader

Hardcover

$39.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 1-2 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.
This is an OCR edition with typos.
Excerpt from book:
fes ;£ .= fr-Xrti civ ;;,:£3 3 --( ,.. "e : Jl T§. £.,,- . ,- ev StsTl S|-r J -' H 'J ' -: Vfv" S.MU.I ± —w - ;" , — , j - i, Ct? . ?© ::,5-.-- s tf0I% I ffii'Sirw lS.l 5pl ! ojcs 2 c IT) a .2 S XT' "y i! ' -3 JL ?/- S ' S-s '/ .% : -2L -: . ±. Va. £ ss j i-r O.s -. o. t - sa ! L O.H 6 t- . . / S.-4.ji' ISii,, -,- -. Cwk v v ,t£ . ';--.Jl?fJtMf4, m i and: o o m V (S) chapter{Section 4of so many names in the German counties of Pennsylvania. When Koester is anglicised into Custer, Hauk into Hawke, Reyer into Royer, Greims into Grimes and Brauer into Brower, as evidenced by many tombstones of lond-dead ancestors, it is a most plausible inference that the same process evolved "Lincoln" from "Linkhorn." A bit of interesting collateral evidence in favor of the Linkhorn hypothesis is supplied the editor of the present book by Mrs. G. W. Garvey, who resided in Hoboken, N. J., until 1919, when she removed to California. Mrs. Garvey's maiden name was Bennett. Her grandparents resided in close proximity to the family of the Lincolns in Illinois. Her grandmother, Mrs. Dameron, often spoke of the Lincolns as neighbors who were referred to as "Dutch" people, "because the Lincolns were in the habit of killing a hog in the fall and making sausages and sauerkraut," which were among the delicacies exchanged among their neighbors and friends, a typical German custom. Leutze, Eugene Henry Cozzens.—Rear Admiral, U. S. N., born in Dusseldorf, Germany, 1847. Appointed to U. S. Naval Academy by President Lincoln, 1863; graduated 1867. While on leave of absence from academy volunteered on board "Monticello" on N. Atlantic Squadron in 1864. Served on numerous...

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781023182522
Publisher: Anson Street Press
Publication date: 03/28/2025
Pages: 488
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.06(d)

Read an Excerpt


fes ;£ .= fr-Xrti civ ;;,:£3 3 --( ,.. "e : Jl T§. £.,,- . ,- ev StsTl S|-r J -' H 'J ' -: Vfv" S.MU.I ± —w - ;" , — , j - i, Ct? . ?© ::,5-.-- s tf0I% I ffii'Sirw lS.l 5pl ! ojcs 2 c IT) a .2 S XT' "y i! ' -3 JL ?/- S ' S-s '/ .% : -2L -: . ±. Va. £ ss j i-r O.s -. o. t - sa ! L O.H 6 t- . . / S.-4.ji' ISii,, -,- -. Cwk v v ,t£ . ';--.Jl?fJtMf4, m i and: o o m V (S) chapter{Section 4of so many names in the German counties of Pennsylvania. When Koester is anglicised into Custer, Hauk into Hawke, Reyer into Royer, Greims into Grimes and Brauer into Brower, as evidenced by many tombstones of lond-dead ancestors, it is a most plausible inference that the same process evolved "Lincoln" from "Linkhorn." A bit of interesting collateral evidence in favor of the Linkhorn hypothesis is supplied the editor of the present book by Mrs. G. W. Garvey, who resided in Hoboken, N. J., until 1919, when she removed to California. Mrs. Garvey's maiden name was Bennett. Her grandparents resided in close proximity to the family of the Lincolns in Illinois. Her grandmother, Mrs. Dameron, often spoke of the Lincolns as neighbors who were referred to as "Dutch" people, "because the Lincolns were in the habit of killing a hog in the fall and making sausages and sauerkraut," which were among the delicacies exchanged among their neighbors and friends, a typical German custom. Leutze, Eugene Henry Cozzens.—Rear Admiral, U. S. N., born in Dusseldorf, Germany, 1847. Appointed to U. S. Naval Academy by President Lincoln, 1863; graduated 1867. While on leave of absence from academy volunteered on board "Monticello"on N. Atlantic Squadron in 1864. Served on numerous...

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews