NameMary Margareta (Maria Magdalena) Eschmann
Birth1711, Oley, Berks, Philadelphia Co., Pennsylvania
Birth Memoanother source say. b. cir. 1710
Death1782, Oley, Berks, Philadelphia Co., Pennsylvania
BurialOriginal Hinckel Cemetery #30, Riverton, Pendleton Co., (W) Virginia
Burial Memoanother source says, buried German Valley, Pendelton Co., WV
Alias/AKAESCHMANIN
FatherAbraham Eschmann (1688-1749)
Spouses
Birth10 Feb 1706, Daudenzell, Mosbach, Baden, Germany
Birth Memo10 Feb 1706/07
Death17 Aug 1778, Germany Valley, Pendleton Co., (W) Virginia
Death MemoGermany Valley, Pendleton Co., West Virginia (near Riverton)
BurialHenkle's Fort, Pendleton Co., (W) Virginia
EducationGraduated from Giessen University in Germany in 1692
MotherMaria Elisabeth Dentzer (1672-1744)
Marriage1730, Philadelphia Co., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
ChildrenJacob (1733-1779)
 Catherine (1735-)
 Rebecca (1736-~1797)
 Mary Anna Margaret (1738-1801)
 Abraham Eschmann (1749-1815)
 Hannah (1750-~1780)
 John Justus (1752-1794)
 Isaac (1754-1824)
 Susanna "Sunna" (1747-1810)
 Marie (1741-)
 Elizabeth (1745-)
 Anna Maria Elizabeth (1731-1824)
Notes for Mary Margareta (Maria Magdalena) Eschmann
born : Philadelphia Co., (Now Near Oley, In Berks Co.),
Pennsylvania
Notes for Johann Justus "Jost" (Spouse 1)
He immigrated in 1717 to to America (Philadelphia) from Germany.(45) He died in 1778. He had an estate probated on 24 Aug 1778 in Rockingham Co., VA. He served in the military in Commander of Hinkle's Fort, Pendleton Co. VA. He was married to Maria Magdalena ESCHMANIN about 1730.
John Justus Henckel lived in PA until 1750 when he sold his property and moved with his family to North Carolina, settling in what is now Davidson Co NC. In 1760 he moved once again and came to Germany Valley which then was on the frontier of West Augusta County, VA. Later it was in Rockingham, and since then has been in Pendleton County, WVA146

156“... Justus, or Yost, went to N.C., and thence in 1761 to the North Fork, settling a little above Harper’s Mill.”

Burial: Place:   Henkle's Fort, West Virginia

Note:    . Johann Justus "John" "Jost", Sr. HINCKEL was born on 10 Feb 1706 in Germany. (45) He immigrated in 1717 to to America (Philadelphia) from Germany.(45) He died in 1778. He had an estate probated on 24 Aug 1778 in Rockingham Co., VA.

John Justus1 built Hinkle's Fort near Senaca Caves in WV. It was used as protection against Indians as well as a fort during the Revolution. Hinkle Family Assn. have erected memorials at Hinkle Fort and the grave of Rev. Hinkle in Philadelphia, and they also erected a memorial at Geissen Univ. to commemorate several Hinkles educated there as Lutheran Ministers. The DAR has recognized John Justus Hinkle, Sr. as a Revolutionary Patriot. He served in the military in Commander of Hinkle's Fort, Pendleton Co. VA. He was married to Maria Magdalena ESCHMANIN about 1730.

147HINKLE'S FORT
(Germany Valley, Pendleton County, VA/WV)

Hinkle's Fort, built 1761-62, was located in Germany Valley, near Riverton. It was built by John Justus Henckel, Sr. (1706-1778), who came in 1760 from North Carolina with most of his twelve children, some with families, in search of a new home where Indians were less hostile and the soil more fertile. After a journey of weeks, they caught sight of their "promised land" when they reached the top of North Fork Mountain. Three sons, Abraham, Sr., John Justus, Jr., and Isaac, and three Teter son-in-laws were with him. John Justus, Sr. son of Rev. Anthony Jacob Henckel, had immigrated to America in 1717 with his parents who settled near Philadelphia, PA. He later moved to North Carolina.

The fort was built as a protection against the Indians not only for the Hinkle family but for other settlers in the area. The settlement became know as Germany Valley because the families, all of German descent, conversed in their native German. Unlike Fort Seybert and Fort Upper Tract, Hinkle's Fort was spared destruction.

During the Revolutionary War, Hinkle's Fort became the only outpost in Pendleton County for the patriot forces. John Justus Henckel, Sr. had been officially recognized for his services as commander of the fort and in furnishing supplies to the troops (detachments of the Virginia Militia) quartered there. The fort was headquaters and training grounds for the North Fork Military Company which had been organized by settlers early in the Revolutionary War and whose first captains were son-in-laws and sons of John Justus Henckel, Sr. After the Revolutionary War and when danger of Indian raids was past, the fort was torn down and some of the timbers used to build a large house on the site.

The family of John Justus Henckel, Sr. became a leading one in the early settlement and history of Pendleton County. Most of his sons and grandsons served in county offices. Isaac Hinkle and his nephew, Moses Hinkle,were two of eleven justices commissioned by the governor of Virginia to organize the new county of Pendleton, 1788. Eleven years earlier, Isaac Hinkle had been similarly commissioned to assit in the formation of Rockingham County, VA.

Markers at the site of the fort and at the graves of John Justus Henckel, Sr. and wife were dedicated on September 19, 1936 at a Henckel family reunion with several hundred descendants from throughout the United States in attendance who came to pay a lasting tribute to the memory of one of their patriarchs.

Written and submitted by Sarah Hinkle Warner
From Pendleton County, WV Past and Present, page 61

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First Ordained German Lutheran Pastor
Added by lcobb67 on 17 Mar 2008
Originally submitted by
SusanGardner61 to Gardner Family Tree on 24 Sep 2007

Said to have been the first ordained German Lutheran pastor in America, having graduated from Giessen University in Germany in 1692.  He was the founder and first pastor of St. Michael's Lutheran Church, Germantown, Pennsylvania. 
Last Modified 13 Jun 2004Created 8 Mar 2016 using Reunion for Macintosh