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Lester Lahr and the Lost Ausbund : A reader's ancestry

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo21556
Author
Lahr, Denise Witwer
Date of Publication
2018.
Call Number
905.748 PMH v.41 n.3
Responsibility
by Denise Witwer Lahr and Joseph Wilson Lahr.
Author
Lahr, Denise Witwer
Place of Publication
Lancaster, Pa
Publisher
Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society,
Date of Publication
2018.
Physical Description
98-105 p.
Series
Pennsylvania Mennonite Heritage ; v. 41, no. 3
Summary
Excerpt: "[Lester] spotted an old leather book with a brass clasp in a box of other items...Lester then took the book to Earl Groff at the Hans Herr House. Earl took it to Noah Good, who translated the first part of the instription as follows: 'This book belongs to Hans Herr. If lost, would the finder return it to me because the book means so much to me. 1724.'...One cannot state absolutely that the 1710 immigrant Hans Herr owned this book. However, the Ausbund itself was definitely printed in Europe and brought to this county...The Ausbund is based on fifty-one songs written by Anabaptists imprisoned in Passau castle between 1537 and 1540...The first American printing in 1742 added more hymns for a total of 140. Today, the Ausbund is still used as a song book in Amish congregations."
Subjects
Herr family.
Lahr family.
Hymns, German.
Ausbund
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
905.748 PMH v.41 n.3
Less detail

"To the church at the Hans Herrs"

https://collections.lancasterhistory.org/en/permalink/lhdo21561
Author
Garber, Allan
Date of Publication
2018.
Call Number
905.748 PMH v.41 n.4
Responsibility
by Allan Garber.
Author
Garber, Allan
Place of Publication
Lancaster, Pa
Publisher
Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society,
Date of Publication
2018.
Physical Description
130-131 p.
Series
Pennsylvania Mennonite Heritage ; v. 41, no. 4
Summary
Excerpt: "In February 1744, 1710 immigrant Martin Mylin donated an Ausbund published by Christopher Saur in 1742 'to the church at the Hans Herrs'...The foregoing facts compel the conclusion that Martin Mylin's 'Church at the Hans Herrs' was not the Strasburg congregation which met at 503 Twin Elm Road. In 1744, Preacher Hans Herr did not live there, and he most likely was not yet ordained to the ministry. Moreover, it is highly unlikly that Martin Mylin attended church services there. The 'Church at the Hans Herrs' could only have been the 1719 house built by Bishop Christian Herr. And the 'Hans Herr' could only have been Christian Herr's father, patricarch Hans Herr."
Subjects
Mylin family.
Herr family.
Location
Lancaster History Library - Book
Call Number
905.748 PMH v.41 n.4
Less detail