John
Glessner had a long-standing interest in genealogy. In 1881, he purchased a
large leather-bound journal in which to record his findings, making entries for
nearly half a century. Although John Glessner was only the third generation
born in America, he noted that details of the Glessner family emigration from
Europe were sketchy. He penned “An Account of the Early Glessners” in 1881, but
what he wrote we now know to be only partially correct. Fortunately, work by
other Glessner descendants and resources made readily available through Ancestry.com
make a more accurate and complete account possible.
The
story of the Glessner family begins in Bingen am Rhein (Bingen on the Rhine),
located in what is now the Mainz-Bingen district of the Rhineland Palatinate in
southwestern Germany. For hundreds of years, the town, located at the
confluence of the Rhine and Nahe rivers, was controlled by the Elector of
Mainz, who served as both Archbishop and prince. The economy of the town was
supported by its function as a port, and by the surrounding region known for
its winemaking.
Bingen am Rhein, Germany (Wikipedia, posted by Fourdee, 2006)
Today,
the town is a popular tourist destination, as it sits at the southern end of
the UNESCO Rhine Gorge World Heritage Site. Many people go specifically to
visit the Mouse Tower, an ancient Roman
structure rebuilt by Hatto II, Archbishop of Mainz, whose legend involves the
cruel leader being eaten to death by mice there in 970 A.D. Bingen was also the
home of Hildegard von Bingen, a 12th
century Benedictine abbess, important composer of sacred music, and the founder
of scientific natural history in Germany.
In the
summer of 1763, two brothers, Johann Heinrich Glasener (John Glessner’s
great-grandfather, hereafter referred to as Henry) and Jacob Glasener, made the
decision to immigrate to America. Henry was born in 1728 or 1730 (sources vary)
to Johann Georg and Barbarae Glaesener; Jacob was born in 1732. Their mother
died just as her sons were preparing for their voyage.
Why they
chose to leave Bingen at this time is unknown, but they made the journey of
more than 250 miles to Rotterdam, The Netherlands, where they booked passage on
the Richmond. Henry was accompanied
by his wife Anna Elizabeth (Adam) who he had married in 1760, and their
daughter Maria Margaret, born in 1761. Jacob was also married by this time. The
ship picked up additional passengers in Portsmouth, England and arrived in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on October 5, 1763. During the voyage, Anna gave
birth to a healthy baby boy, which they named Henry. The passenger list for the
Richmond shows the last name as Glasener,
but the brothers thereafter adopted the spelling of Glessner that we know
today.
Philadelphia waterfront, circa 1760 by George Heap (New York State Library)
By 1766,
and perhaps earlier, the brothers had settled in Cumberland County in
southwestern Pennsylvania. George Washington had passed through this area in
1753 during the French and Indian War and five years later Forbes Road was cut
through to Pittsburgh, being one of the two great western land routes through
the “wilderness”. Forbes Road made the area accessible for settlement and was
later used for pioneers traveling west to the Ohio country (where later
generations of the Glessner family would move in the 1830s).
The area
in which the Glessner brothers arrived was incorporated as Brothersvalley
Township in 1771, the same year Bedford County was carved out of the original
much larger Cumberland County. The main town of Berlin was laid out in 1784,
reflecting the dominant presence of German immigrants, and the present-day
Somerset County was created in 1795.
Aerial view of Berlin, Pennsylvania
(Berlin Area Ministerium Facebook page)
(Berlin Area Ministerium Facebook page)
Henry
and Jacob both purchased large tracts of land for farming, John Glessner noting
that his great-grandfather was a farmer, as Henry’s father had been in Germany.
Henry purchased over 230 acres. The land was gradually cleared of timber and used
for growing crops as opposed to pastureland, as a tax list from 1783 notes that
Henry only owned three horses, four head of cattle, and six sheep. Jacob owned
considerably more land and also operated a grist mill and a sawmill.
Henry
and Anna had a total of nine children – four daughters and five sons –
including a son Jacob born on July 8, 1774; this was John Glessner’s
grandfather. All of the children spoke
both German and English and survived into adulthood, quite remarkable for the
time, with John Glessner noting:
“The
Glessner men were all large, frequently standing a full head above other men –
they were all kind-hearted and mild mannered and all respected, not all
educated, but all of ability and character.”
The
family was active in the Reformed church, with ministers of that faith visiting
the area as early as 1770. In 1777, Henry and Jacob Glessner were among the
original members and first officers of the Berlin Reformed Church which built a
combination log church and schoolhouse that year. The first record of a baptism
is dated October 9, 1777 when Sophia, a daughter of Henry and Anna Glessner,
was baptized.
A
notable and tragic event took place at the church in March 1794. At this time,
the congregation was led by Rev. Cyriacus Spangenberg, whose character and credentials
as a minister were both brought into question, causing a faction in the
congregation. A meeting was held on March 19, with a vote to be taken on
whether or not to retain the services of Spangenberg. According to a recounting
of the incident in the Bedford Gazetteer
in May 1883:
“Jacob
Glessner, brother of Henry, was an Elder in the Reformed Church in Berlin, Pa.
and ‘one of the most prominent members of the church, of unimpeachable
character and possessed of great influence with his fellow members’. . . Jacob
Glessner remained silent until just before the ballot was to be taken. He then
rose and made a strong speech in favor of a change of ministers. Whereupon
Spangenberg, ebullient with rage, sprang to his feet, drew his knife from
beneath his clerical robes (the ‘sheep’s clothing’ under which he concealed his
wolfish nature) and rushing upon the Elder, drove the glittering blade to his
heart. With blood gushing from his wound, he fell to the floor beside the altar
and there expired.”
Another
account, considered more accurate, noted that after Glessner’s speech,
Spangenberg invited him into his home, where he stabbed him three times, and
that Jacob Glessner expired two days later. He was buried in the Reformed
Church cemetery, with a Biblical passage, Acts 7:58-59, engraved on his slate
headstone, recounting the stoning of Stephen and his asking God for forgiveness
for his killers.
Jacob Glessner's headstone in the Reformed Church Cemetery, Berlin, PA. (The newer ground level stone in the foreground was added in recent years to commemorate his service during the American Revolution)
Following
the attack, Spangenberg hid in the marshland outside of Berlin, but was quickly
apprehended, and subsequently tried and found guilty of murder. The Gazetteer article concluded:
“On
Saturday October 11, 1795, Spangenberg was led from his jail and the
unfortunate man, seated upon his coffin, was driven to the place of execution.
A scaffold was erected on the commons and upon it he expiated his crime before
a large crowd.”
The year
of 1794 was important for another reason in the town of Berlin. In 1791, the
federal government had imposed a tax on all distilled spirits, the first time
the new government had taken such action. The response from farmers in western
Pennsylvania, who typically distilled their excess rye, barley, wheat, and corn,
was significant, leading to what became known as the WhiskeyRebellion. In June 1794, following subpoenas being issued for sixty
distillers who had not paid the tax, a riot took place at the Berlin
schoolhouse. By fall, the Pennsylvania
state militia was sent to the area, and Governor Thomas Mifflin set up his
headquarters in the home of a Berlin physician. Washington rode at the head of
the army to put down the insurrection, but the rebels went home before the army
arrived, so there was no confrontation. (An annual Whiskey Rebellion Festival
is held in Washington, Pennsylvania, which includes the “tarring and
feathering” of the tax collector.)
Whiskey Rebellion, showing the tax collector tarred and feathered
Henry
Glessner’s wife, Anna, died in March 1802.
Anna Glessner's headstone
In November of that year, their son
Jacob married Margaret Young of Hagerstown, Maryland, in a ceremony at the Berlin
Reformed Church. Jacob and Margaret Glessner moved to the town of Somerset,
nine miles north of Berlin, where their thirteen children were born and raised.
One of those children, Jacob II, was born in 1809 – he was the father of John
Glessner, who said of his grandfather:
“He was
a cabinet maker by trade and followed the business all his life. He was devoted
to the religion of his church (the Presbyterian minister was Rev. Ross and was
likely the source of this name which occurs in the family), domestic in his
habits and tastes, was a lover of music and in early and middle life performed
creditably on the flute and violin. He also sang sacred music in his family a
great deal. He owned the first piano that was brought into Western Pennsylvania
and for a great many years the only one known in that section of the country .
. . His was a quiet and comparatively uneventful life.”
Henry Glessner's headstone
Henry Glessner
died early in 1814 and he was buried near his wife at the Berlin Reformed
Church cemetery. His estate was filed for probate on March 9 of that year, with
his sons Jacob and Peter being listed on the administration bond.
Administration bond for Henry Glessner, deceased, dated March 9, 1814
In May
of 1839, Jacob and Margaret Glessner moved to Norwich, Ohio to be near their
son, Jacob II, who had moved to nearby Zanesville upon his marriage to Mary
Laughlin in 1837. After a period of more than seventy-five years, this ended John
Glessner’s ancestors’ residency in southwest Pennsylvania. Descendants of other
branches of the Glessner family continued to live in the area, and there are
still Glessners living in the county to this day.
Jacob and Margaret Glessner in the 1850s. The cane upon which he
rests his hands was passed down to his grandson, John Glessner,
and is displayed today in his dressing room at Glessner House.
and is displayed today in his dressing room at Glessner House.
Next
week: John Glessner and his father visit Berlin in 1888 to learn about their
immigrant ancestors. Plus, the surprise discovery of an artifact left behind by
Henry Glessner.
Note added March 2021: The Jacob Glessner house, probably built around 1770, still stands at 501 Main Street in Berlin, Pennsylvania.
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