Happenings in Christine's World

Short stories of life, thoughts, and feelings

Joseph Clepper Genealogy

Joseph and Floetta Beistline Clepper March 1915

And it began . . .


On the morning of Friday, November 30, 1750, the ship “Sandwich”, Capt. Hazelwood, Master, docked at the port of Philadelphia with a crew of perhaps thirty. Of the 200 “whole freights” aboard, the ninety-seven men and boys 16 years and older were led off the ship and marched to the mayor’s office where, in the presence of the mayor, the “worshipful Wm. Plumstead”, they were required to sign two oaths, one an oath of allegiance to his majesty, the King of England, the second an oath of abjuration, or renunciation of allegiance to any other sovereign, most especially the pope of Rome and the pretender to the throne, James III.
Among those signing that day were some of our earliest ancestors, Joseph Klopfer and his sixteen-year-old son, Lorenz (b. 1733) and aboard the “Sandwich”, Joseph’s wife Anna Christina, daughter Dorothea (b. 1744), daughter Elisabeth Catharina (b. 1737), and son, Phillip Jacob (b. 1747). (Lorenz and Elisabeth Catharina were born to Joseph’s first wife, Maria Agnes Rapp; m. January 23, 1731 d. May 8, 1741).
For the Klopfer family it seems most likely that the passage was paid, for in less than four years of arrival in Philadelphia, Joseph owned 100 acres of farmland in Dover township, York County, PA. (4 April, 1754 – warrant #415-draft #699 – York County Recorder’s office). Incredibly though, only seven weeks after arrival Anna Christina gave birth to another daughter, Marie Catherine, on January 19, 1751 (bapt. St. Michael’s church, Philadelphia).ninety-seven

There is evidence that shows that Joseph may have been the second of the Klopfer line to emigrate to America. A Matheus, or Mathias, Klopfer and his wife, Rosina, arrived at Dover Delaware on May 8, 1750, from Poppenweiler, near Ludwigsburg, Germany. However, church records show that Joseph and his ancestors lived in the town of Metterzimmern, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany. Poppenweiler and Meterzimmern are both located very near Ludwigsburg, although on opposite sides of the city. Joseph and Matheus could possibly be related in some way, since the coincidence of their arrival dates and the facts of their settlement in York County at virtually the same time (Matheus crops up in public records almost more often than Joseph) leads to the conclusion that they were not strangers to each other. In addition, a third possible brother, Johan Max Klopfer, arrived at Philadelphia on Wednesday, 27 September 1752 on the ship “Nancy”, Capt. John Ewing.
On the 12th of January, 1753, another son, Simon, was born and baptized at Trinity Lutheran Church in Lancaster, PA, and again a daughter, Eve or Eva, was born on 6 April, 1754 and baptized at Trinity. The connection to Lancaster shows that the family located there between January 1751 (the birth of Marie Catherine) and Easter 1752, for it is known that Joseph and his wife attended Easter communion services at Trinity in 1752 and again, Joseph, Anna Christina, Lorenz, and Elisabeth Catherine were present at this church the Sunday after Christmas, 1752. This is the last recorded evidence for Lorenz found and it may be that, since he was eighteen years old in 1752, he may have chosen to begin his own life, either in Lancaster or some other locale.
Another son of Joseph and Anna Christina, Frederick, was born on October 4, 1755.
In the spring of 1754, a deed (the aforementioned warrant #415, draft 699, for 100 acres) was recorded at Yorktown. This land must be the same property that Joseph was taxed at 4 shilling-sixpence in 1762 since it is unlikely he would have sold one property and bought another during these eight years (there is no record of such a transaction). Therefore it can be said with some certainty that the first ownership of land in America by the Klopfer-Clepper family originated on April 4, 1754.
On an uncertain date in February 1757 our ancestor, George Sr. was born. It is most certain that his birth was in a rough cabin of logs in a sparsely populated area of Dover Township, York County that was his father’s new land. This cabin and its surrounding 100 acres were located along what is now the Dover-Carlisle road, about one-half mile north of the town of Dover, probably on the west side of the road. It was impossible to determine the exact plot of land, due to development and the lack of accurate survey information, but the 1754 land warrant locates it generally in this area.
On the 30th of May, 1757, Joseph and twenty-seven of his neighbors signed an agreement combining the Reformed and German Lutheran congregations into the Salem Union church, which has come to be known as the Dover, or Strayer’s church. This church, which stands about three-quarters of a mile southwest of the town of Dover, is named for Peter Streher who, along with two other local landowners, sold a parcel of land to the congregation to establish the church and cemetery. The original church, a large, dirt-floored log building, is long since gone, replaced by a fine brick structure built for the one-hundredth anniversary of Strayer’s founding.
Two days before Christmas, 1773, Joseph died at age sixty-three. A will and inventory of his possessions exist in the York County Recorder’s office and these give a most interesting insight of the man and his position in the society of the time. He never learned to read or write and, interestingly, signed his will with a hand-drawn symbol of a radiant sun with his initials in the center. While far from wealthy, he seems to have been a moderately successful farmer of that day who must have worked very hard to acquire the goods and land and raise such a large family. Anna Christina died on March 21, 1796.
Joseph and Anna Christina are buried in the front row just west and south of the front door of the Old Strayer’s Church Cemetery in Dover PA.. Their grave markers have recently been uncovered and are photographed on their memorials. Cited: Salem Union Cemetery aka Strayers Cemetery

Joseph Klopfer
BIRTH
14 Jan 1710
Baden-Württemberg, Germany
DEATH
23 Dec 1773 (aged 63)
Dover, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
BURIAL
Salem Union Cemetery
Dover, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
This is a copy of the record that shows the christening of Joseph Klopfer son of George Adam Klopfer and Johanna Catherine Rowland on January 14 1710 Evangelische Kirche Metterzimmern (OA. Besigh, Metterzimmern, Besigheim, Württemberg, Deutschland
This is the marriage record for Joseph Klopfer (Clepper) and Anna Christina Schopffen that also lists her father Hans Jacob Schopffen on 11/28/1741
Anna Christiana Schlopffen Klopfer
BIRTH
8 May 1722
Germany
DEATH
21 Mar 1796 (aged 73)
Dover, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
BURIAL
Salem Union Cemetery
Dover, York County, Pennsylvania, USA
PLOT
stone “sunken”