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Call Number
Albright
Notes
Family files are created for Lancaster County families. They may contain correspondence about a family, short genealogies and charts, photocopies of inventories and accounts, letters, etc. The size of any particular family file varies greatly.
Subjects
Albright.
Albright, Haman
Albright, Jacob
Albright, Charlotte
Albright, Cathrine
Albright, Sylenda
Albright, John
Albert.
Albert, Abraham
Albert, Anna Maria
Albert, Johannes
Albert,Elisabeth
Albert, Jacob
Albrecht.
Albright, Andrew
Albright, John Henry
Albright, Susanna Elizabeth
Albright, Samuel
Albright, Elizabeth
Albright, Ella
Albright, Kate
Albright, Henry
Albright, Eugene
Albright, Nettie
Albright, Fuller
Albright, Read Ellsworth
Albright, John Joesph
Albright, Rebecca
Albright, Charles
Albright, Edward
Albright, William
Albright, Jacob German
Albright, William Orlando
Albright, Cyrus Bachman
Albright, Thomas
Albright, Susan
Albright, Benneville
Albright, Lucian
Albright, Morgan
Albright, Simon Frederick
Albright, Peter Van Buren
Albright, Haines
Albright, Mae
Albright, Paul Young
Albright, Paul James
Albright, John Francis
Albright, Clifton
Albright, Albert V.
Albright, Claire
Albright, Marie A.
Albright, Grace E.
Albright, Paul Russell
Albright, Rodney
Albright, Mary U.
Albright, Augustus H.
Albright, Ruby N.
Albright, Annie
Albright, Harry W.
Albright, Leroy
Albright, Evelyn Virgina
Albright, Henry Llyod
Albright, Marlin
Albright, Herbert
Albright, Miriam
Albright, Richard
Albright, Ellsworth
Albright, May
Albright, Lily
Albright, Cora
Albright, Emma
Albright, Christianna
Albright, Geo
Albright, Sarah
Albright, Jno B
Albright, Emiley
Albright, Terence
Albright, R
Albright, Elias
Albrecht, Anton
Albeech, Andreas
Albright, Jowl
Albright, Wilhelm
Albright, Daniel
Albright, Theodore
Albright, Virginia
Albright, Martha
Albright, Ruth
Albright, Noble
Albright, James Rhea
Albright, Harry
Albright, Newton
Albright, Warren
Albright, Sandra Kay
Albright, Eve
Albrecht, Andrew
Albrecht, Peter
Albrecht, Cathrine
Albrecht, Hans
Albright, Lodawick
Location
Lancaster History Library - Family File
Call Number
Albright
Less detail

Jacob Albright : the evangelical pioneer

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo1121
Author
Wilson, Robert Sherer,
Date of Publication
1940.
Call Number
922.7 A342w
Responsibility
by Robert Sherer Wilson.
Author
Wilson, Robert Sherer,
Place of Publication
Myerstown, Pa
Publisher
Church Center Press of Evangelical Congregational Church,
Date of Publication
1940.
Physical Description
109 p., [1] leaf of plates : ports. ; 21 cm.
Notes
"Jacob Albright was born May 1, 1759 to John Albright (Johannes Albrecht) and his wife, in the region of Fox Mountain (Fuchsberg) in Douglass Township (now Montgomery County) northwest of Pottstown, Pennsylvania and was baptized into the Lutheran Church. His parents were German immigrants from the Palatine Region of Germany, but sources disagree on when they immigrated to the United States. (Johannes Albrecht and his wife, Anna Barbara, both born in either Austria or Palatine depending on the source, came to America on the ship Johnson in 1732...During the American Revolution, Jacob Albright served in Captain Jacob Witz's Seventh Company, Fourth Battalion, Philadelphia Militia as a drummer boy and later as a guard for the Hessian prisoners at Reading, Pennsylvania. Although uncertain, several sources indicate that he served through 1786.In 1785, he married Catherine Cope and they had six (or nine) children. Only three children survived to adulthood: Sarah, wife of Noah Ranck; Jacob, who died childless; and David, married to Mary Riedenbach (Raidenbach or Raidabaugh), who had children. There are descendants of Jacob Albright through his son David living today. The young family moved to Earl Township, Lancaster County, and they lived near Ephrata, Pennsylvania[permanent dead link], where the young Jacob took up farming and was in the business of manufacturing tiles and bricks...The movement did not take the name of Evangelical Association until after Jacob Albright's death. The church spread to various parts of the United States. In 1894 the Esher-Dubbs dispute occurred and 1/3 of the church left to form the United Evangelical Church. In 1923, most of the disputing congregations returned and the church was renamed the Evangelical Church. The remaining churches became the Evangelical Congregational Church. The Evangelical Church united in 1946 with the United Brethren in Christ (New Constitution) to form the Evangelical United Brethren Church and that body in turn united with the Methodist Church in 1968 to form the United Methodist Church." [from Wikipedia]
Subjects
Albright, Jacob, - 1759-1808.
Evangelical Association of North America - Clergy - Biography.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
922.7 A342w
Less detail