Gregorius FREY
Birth:
29 Aug 1610
Kronau, Kanton, Zurich, Switzerland
Death:
10 Mar 1687
Alsace, France
Marriage:
626
Hausan a Albis, Kt Zurich, Switzerland
Father:
Mother:
Sources:
DNA
Notes:
Gregorious family Gregorious worked as a carpenter and had at least 12 children, Jacob was the youngest. Others were Jacob 1, Rudolph ,Thomas, Ulrich (all died young), Hans, Verena, Hans Jacob, Melchior (married Anna Catherina Schmidt), Hans Wolf (died early) Susanna (died young) and George (died when the Rhein overflowed in 1663.) EMIGRATION Emigration The Early Emigrants The Zurich area of Switzerland was the home of our earliest known ancestors, Marti Frey and Ursula Wysy. Marti Frey was born about 1521, and Ursula in 1524. The Freys were Anabaptists, radical Christians who were persecuted by the Roman Catholic Church in the 16th and 17th Centuries. The name Frey meant free and was a common name taken by freemen, those who owed no indenture or loyalty to the aristocratic class. The Freys continued to live near Zurich, in the village of Knonau for several generations, until the end of the Thirty Years War, when the Edict of Nantes promised peace to the protestants. About 1650 Gregorius Frey migrated with his wife Varena (Oberdorfer) and several small children, north down the Rhine to the town of Wingen, Alsace. Alsace, now a part of France, came at that time under protestant control, and was a more hospitable environment for the anabaptist heretics. Beside the Anabaptists, among the settlers in Alsace were French Heugenots, Calvinists (the Reformed Churches) and Lutherans. In 1688, in an effort to expand his territory, King Louis XIV of France declared war on the Palatinate, and most of the German speaking villages of the Alsace were sacked by his troops. In 1689 the war was expanded and became The War of the Grand Alliance. Between 1689 and 1697, the French ravaged the Palatinate, precipitating the first migration of Palatine refugees to America and England. The Alsace territories on the west bank of the Rhine became incorporated into France. The winter of 1709 was another disaster for the war-decimated Palatines. Their homes burned by the French, thousands suffered a season so cold the Rhine froze over for months. The bitterness of that winter caused the second wave of emigration to America. There was a third wave of emigration in the 1730s. This time, it was the promise of land, employment and religious freedom that caused the people of Alsace and the Palatinate to leave their homes for a new land. In 1733, Johan Peter Frey, and his wife, Anna Barbara (Schmidt), set sail from Rotterdam for Philadelphia on the Samuel. With them were children Anna Eva, age 15; Valentin, age 12; Anna Barbara, age 10; Anna Maria, age 8; Hans Peter, age 4; and Christian, age 2. In Pennsylvania, Peter Frey joined the Moravian Church, and in the 1750s he was among a group of a fifteen men who traveled to North Carolina to purchase land from Lord Granville for a Moravian settlement. The men were welcomed and given lodging by a farmer named Johan Jacob Wagner, another ancestor of ours. Anna Eve Frey married Hans George Hage in 1736 at Muddy Creek Moravian Church (Berks County, PA). The Freys themselves did not migrate to North Carolina until 1765. Their daughter, Anna Maria Hege married Adam Hedrick, Sr.
Verena OBERDORFER
Birth:
1610
Hausan a Albis, Kt Zurich, Switzerland
Death:
23 Mar 1681
Alsace, France
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Sources:
DNA
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
5 Nov 1648
Baregg, Knonau, Zurich, Switzerland
Death:
12 Sep 1705
Wingen, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France
FamilyCentral Network
Gregorius Frey - Verena Oberdorfer
Gregorius Frey
was born at Kronau, Kanton, Zurich, Switzerland 29 Aug 1610.
His parents were Johann Heinrich Frey and Anna Hoehn.
He married Verena Oberdorfer 626 at Hausan a Albis, Kt Zurich, Switzerland . Verena Oberdorfer was born at Hausan a Albis, Kt Zurich, Switzerland 1610 .
They were the parents of 1
child:
Johann Jacob Frey
born 5 Nov 1648.
Gregorius Frey died 10 Mar 1687 at Alsace, France .
Verena Oberdorfer died 23 Mar 1681 at Alsace, France .