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MOSER BIBLIOGRAPHY

This is a living blog post: new sources will be added. This regards the series of blog posts on German Immigration and the MOSER family. Please feel free to email me with additions or corrections. Hotlinks are included as available. BOOKS Barber, Edwin Atlee; Tulip War: Pennsylvania- German Potters 1903 Basset, John Spencer; The Regulators […]

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German Immigrants to North Carolina: Pioneer Georg “Frederick” MOSER (1722-1800) Part Three

AFTER THE REVOLUTION As we ended the last chapter the North Carolina General Assembly at the close of the Revolutionary War had passed Confiscation Acts to confiscate the property of Loyalists. It may be in this way that Frederick MOSER reacquired his lands or gained clear title to them. We have many anomalies in the land […]

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German Immigrants to North Carolina: Pioneer Georg “Frederick” MOSER (1722-1800) Part Two

TROUBLE IN ORANGE COUNTY While we read in the last post that settlers were lured to North Carolina with advertisements of inexpensive land and no taxes, the speculators had other ideas. The settlers came, cleared the land and made improvements: cabins, fences, pastures and fruit orchards. They raised rye, barley, oats, hemp and flax as […]

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German Immigrants to North Carolina: Pioneer Georg “Frederick” MOSER (1722-1800) Part One

The Lure of Cheap Land Notices like the one below appeared in Pennsylvania newspapers. One might ask why did the MOSER’s move from Pennsylvania to North Carolina? “Lands are so very cheap,” one Carolina resident wrote, “that . . . Six Hundred and Forty Acres . . . will cost three or four pounds Sterling […]

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German Immigrants to Pennsylvania: Pioneer Georg “Frederick” MOSER (1722-1800)

The earlier parts of this story can be found here. This is a common German immigrant story so perhaps you will find some connections to your own story. BRIETENAU, BAVARIA Our Frederick MOSER had a very interesting life. He was baptized Georg Frederic MOSER in the small village of Breitenau, Bavaria, Germany the 3rd of […]

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THE MOSERS IN BAVARIA: Wißenkirchberg, Hetzweiler, Kloster Sulz, Altengrueth

If you haven’t read the previous blog post BAVARIAN Hans MOSER c1623-1696 was from Austria, not Switzerland you should read it first. When last we met Hans MOSER he was part of a mass migration of “exulanten” or exiles having been expelled from Catholic Austria and resettling in a Lutheran part of Mittlfranken or Middle […]

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BAVARIAN Hans MOSER c1623-1696 was from Austria, not Switzerland

Please excuse my rant. You can’t do proper genealogy without historical context. You shouldn’t go connecting people to your tree willy-nilly without evidence. A few years back my friend Paul Chiddwicks had a blog post Are you a Genealogist or Family Historian? As I go about teaching genealogy and writing about family history I would […]

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German Migration to America: Johan Martin MOSER 1693-c.1743 Part Four

There are No coincidences!!! At least in this case, it is all connected. Back in Chapter One, remember that it was Daniel Falckner who wrote Accurate Tidings from Pennsylvania published in 1703. It was part travel information and part advertisement for Germans to immigrate to Pennsylvania. It may also be one of the “missives” referred […]

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German Migration to America: Johan Martin MOSER 1693-c.1743 Part Three

Please read the following Preamble and Part One and Part Two before reading this one. If you have been following this saga we left the Martin and Magaretha MOSER family in Rotterdam about to board a ship to America. The year is 1728. Martin is 35 and Margaretha 37. I failed to mention that Martin’s […]

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The Three Brothers Story, Retold: Johan Martin MOSER

The “Three Brothers Story” is so prevalent in Family History Circles that it is often recounted smugly by experienced genealogists as a sign of family mythology. Some of you know my contrarian nature causes me to poke holes in establishment edicts. Nowhere is that more fun than with my own “Three Brothers Story.” More on […]

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