Person:Jacob Wildfong (1)

Watchers
Jacob Wildfong
b.Abt 1753 United States
 
  1. Jacob WildfongAbt 1753 -
  2. Mary WildfongEst 1760 -
m. Est 1785
  1. Michael WildfongEst 1786 -
  2. Elias WildfongEst 1788 -
  3. Jonas Wildfong1790 - 1860
  4. Benjamin WildfongAbt 1793 - Bef 1871
  5. Joseph Wildfong1796 - 1870
  6. Elizabeth WildfongAbt 1803 - 1891
  7. Sarah Wildfong1807 - 1867
Facts and Events
Name Jacob Wildfong
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] Abt 1753 United States
Marriage Est 1785 to Susannah Ruth
Living[1] Abt 1796 Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States
Immigration[1] 1802 Waterloo County, Ontario, Canada
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Eby, Ezra E. A biographical history of Waterloo township and other townships of the county ... (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1971)
    2:641.

    'WILDFONG, JACOB [son of George Wildfong], was born in 1753. After he had attained the age of twenty years he was married to Susannah Ruth. During the latter part of the last [18th] century when the question of slavery was brought up and sanctioned by the [North Carolina] state government, these Moravians were strenuously opposed to the measure, so much so that numbers of them left the state and moved to Pennsylvania, "the Quaker State," while others left some years later after the independence of the thirteen colonies was declared. Among the latter number was old Jacob Wildfong, the pioneer settler (of that name) in this country. About the year 1796 he, with his wife and family of three or four children, moved north to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where he resided for six years, then he, in company with others, moved to Canada in 1802 and settled in Waterloo County, Ontario, on the west bank of the Grand River a little below the Toll Bridge, on the farm now owned by Ferdinand Miller. Here he resided until his son, Jonas, took possession of the farm then he moved a little west of what is now Strasburg where he died probably as early as 1830. His family consisted of seven children, ...'

  2. He was probably born in Pennsylvania, where the Moravians originally settled, or North Carolina, where his father moved about 1753.