Johan Peter DOPP

Birth:
Chr:
8 Sep 1667
Medard, Germany
Marriage:
24 Feb 1688
Germany
Mother:
Sources:
Internet IGI, Apr 2007
Ancestry World Tree, Apr 2007
Internet IGI, Nil New, Oct 2007
Pedigree Resource File, Oct 2007
Notes:
                   Implied from his baptism date..

In 1666, plague killed 75,000 in London.  In 1667 the Great Fire of London occured and Moliere's "Misanthrope" was published.

                      The Palatinate Emigration

    The Palatinate Emigration describes the movement of thousands of German peasants and artisans from the upper Rhine Valley in Germany to America in 1709-1710.
     According to Lucy F. Bittinger, writing in "The Germans In Colonial Times", the causes of the Palatine Exodus were several, including war, famine and religious persecution. Religious persecution was a minor cause however.
     The Palatinate is an area of Germany along the upper Rhine, Neckar and Main Rivers. It lies just north of France and east of Luxembourg.  Its main city is Zweibrucken.
     The Dopps were part of the migration in which hundreds of families picked up what they could carry and fled their homes due to the devastation of war and weather.  An estimated 15,000 fled to the coast of Holland where Queen Anne of England sent ships to pick up the refugees and take them to London.
     Although the Upper Rhine area was savaged by war over the previous 50 years, the primary problem for the people living there was the high taxes imposed by Eberhard Ludwig, the Elector Palatine, to pay for the wars. The primary industry in the area where the Dopp family lived was wine and more than half the people worked in the vineyards.
     The combination of war and taxes made living very difficult. In 1708 Mother Nature capped matters off with the worst winter in centuries. According to records from the time period, wild animals and birds froze to death in the extreme cold.   Wine froze in the casks, vineyards and orchards were destroyed and hundreds of people died of exposure. The people received no help from the rulers during and after this terrible winter.
     The migration began in May 1709 as hundreds walked to Rotterdam looking for food. As the summer passed, Holland was overwhelmed by refugees. At the peak of the migration, Holland received about 1,000 refugees per week.  By June 1709, England had accepted 5,000 but at least 10,000 remained. By October 1709 some 15,000 refugees were in London in makeshift and temporary shelters. Another 15,000 remained in Holland, unable to find passage out of Europe. After taking in about 32,000 refugees, England refused to accept anymore because of an inability to care for so many homeless people.
     The problems faced by England were huge, mainly how to house and feed so many people. Of the 32,000 refugees, about half were children. The British army erected tents in several camps, including in Blackheath. Queen Anne personally donated food, clothing and money for the refugees. Many churches solicited donations throughout the country and raised several hundred thousand dollars. The Queen provided coal at Christmas and her commissioners issued straw for bedding every 1 1/2 weeks.
     As the number of refugees swelled, public sentiment began to turn against them. The Queen's efforts to resettle them elsewhere in England failed. In the meantime, several hundred men enlisted in the army. Sickness in the camps was pervasive and about 3,000 died, probably of typhus or cholera.
     Many of the refugees were Catholics, a religion unacceptable to the English people.  In an effort to quiet the people, the Queen ordered the refugees to become Protestant. 3,500 refused and were sent back to Germany.  The Queen sent about 4,000 refugees to settle vacant land in Ireland.  This was the most successful settlement. She also sent 650 to North Carolina.
     Another 3,000, including Johannes Dopp and his family, were sent to New York. The Queen provided transportation and settlement fares, support for one year, materials to build houses and 40 acres of land. In return, the refugees agreed to work for the Navy for a term of one or two years.
     Early in 1710, ten ships, including the Lyon and the Henry Frigat, carried the refugees from England. On the voyage, about 500 of the passengers died, nearly all young children under the age of ten. One ship, the Henry Frigat, wrecked on Long Island before reaching New York with the loss of some lives.  (NOTE: Later research suggests that many people survived the wreck.  The true tragedy is this ship carried the arms and temporary tent housing for the refugees.)
The Lyon arrive June 13th and the remaining ships on June 14th.  The passengers on the ships were so sick that they were quarantined on Governor's  Island (Nutten Island before the name changed) where many more died.  Many children were orphaned by these deaths,  The orphans were bonded as apprentices to many colonists in New York and other colonies.  Boys were apprenticed to age 17, girls to age 15.  (See http://olivetreegenealogy.com/pal/pal_kids1710-14.shtml for the list by names.)
     The  remaining refugees established two new settlements.  East Camp, now called Germantown, received half the survivors.  West Camp, near Saugerties, received the remainder. The settlers of East Camp later founded Rhinebeck.
    The Dopp family settled in the East Camp area and prospered.
                  
Anna Margaretha BERNHARDT
Birth:
Abt 1667
of Germany
Chr:
5 Jan 1668
Medard, Rheinland, Germany
Mother:
Notes:
                   Implied from baptism date.

DFNL 13-3 Baptism date, parents' names, marriage date.


Copyrighted by D.C.Dopp.  Permission granted for free distribution only.  Data from this GEDCOM not to be used in commercial data base or CD compilations.  If you find this on a commercial database, please notify ddopp@prodigy.net.
                  
Children
Marriage
1
DOPP
Birth:
1 Mar 1689
Medard, Zweibrucken, Germany
Death:
1 Mar 1689
Medard, Zweibrucken, Germany
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   DFNL 13-3.  Child was stillborn.
                  
2
Birth:
15 Feb 1691
Medard, Zweibrucken, Germany
Death:
6 Jul 1764
Beekman, Dutchess Co, New York
Notes:
                   DFNL 10-4 parent's and sibling's names.  Children's names (10-5) DFNL 13-3 Extract from "The Palatine Families of New York."
                  
3
Chr:
5 Jan 1695
Medard, Rheinland, Germany
Death:
Feb 1734
Rheinbeck, Dutchess, New York
Marr:
4 May 1717
Kingston, Ulster, New York 
Notes:
                   NAME:
Johannes aka Hans Peter

Some early researchers spelled the name Dopff.  The actual christening records for Johannes (Hans Peter) Dopp from the Reformed Lutheran Church in Medard, Germany spell the name Dopp.
Hans Peter was about 11 years older than Benjamin Franklin who was born in 1806.

                  The Family Legend

Johannes is a son of the original immigrant. He and his family fled Germany in 1709  as part  of the Palatinate Emigration.  He and thousands of others went first  to Holland.   They left Germany seeking relief from war and famine and  religious freedom. Most of those with him were Quakers.
Queen  Anne of England offered the refugees a safe haven in London.  In  1709, Johannes  and  his family accepted the offer and went to London.   They  were housed in refuge camps and empty warehouses.  So many died due to poor  living conditions (probably typhus) that the illness was called "Palatinate Fever."
In 1710, Johannes signed indenture papers pledging his and his family's  labor for  a period of two years.  The British Navy owned the indenture and, in  return, provided transportation to New York at no additional cost.
In  the colonies, Johannes helped provide supplies, principally flax for  rope and  logs for masts. He was recorded on Governor Hunter's Subsistence List  as receiving food and shelter.
After fulfilling his indenture period, Johannes and his family settled on virgin land around what is today the Poughkeepsie area and began farming.
In 1711, he signed up from Queensbury as a Palatine Volunteer for the  Expedition  against Canada. Queensbury was the palatine settlement on the east side of the Hudson River. There were 350 people there on May 1, 1711.
He was naturalized, along with many other people, at Kingston, Ulster  County, New York, in 1715.  Thus begins the story of the Dopp family in America.
Although most of the families were Quakers, Dopps fought on both sides of  the Revolution. Dopps fought in the War of 1812, both sides of the Civil War, and in all wars since then.  Dopps have been farmers, merchants, bankers, lawyers, politicians and educators.
(Story compiled from the Dopp Family Newsletter.  Although some may have been Quakers, church affiliations would indicate that most families were Lutheran.)
It is an interesting historical note that the War of the Spanish Succession (known in America as Queen Anne's War) began in 1701 and ended in 1714.  Great Britain came into being in 1707 when the English parliament passed the Act of Union that united England, Scotland, and Wales.
                  
4
Maria Margaret DOPP
Chr:
21 Mar 1697
Medard, Rheinland, Germany
Death:
 
Marr:
 
5
Anna Catharina DOPP
Chr:
3 Oct 1701
Medard, Zweibrucken, Germany
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   DFNL 10-4 baptismal date.
                  
FamilyCentral Network
Johan Peter Dopp - Anna Margaretha Bernhardt

Johan Peter Dopp was christened at Medard, Germany 8 Sep 1667. His parents were Johann Peter Dopp and Catarina .

He married Anna Margaretha Bernhardt 24 Feb 1688 at Germany . Anna Margaretha Bernhardt was born at of Germany Abt 1667 daughter of Leonardt Bernhardt and Margreta .

They were the parents of 5 children:
Dopp born 1 Mar 1689.
Anna Margaret Dopp born 15 Feb 1691.
Johannes Dopp christened 5 Jan 1695.
Maria Margaret Dopp christened 21 Mar 1697.
Anna Catharina Dopp christened 3 Oct 1701.