Henry
Bender is NOT the son of Johan Georg Bender of Mount Joy Township,
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania:
Hey, I said
that's what I'd call it, didn't I? And, honestly, I can't say
it's a 100% factual statement, but I'm confident that the
preponderance of evidence backing me up will be enough to convince
you, as it has me. As I mentioned at the end of yesterday's
snorefest of my genealogical journey you undoubtedly needed
toothpicks in your eyelids to finish, it was about this time (several
years ago now) that I happened upon a message board and was contacted
by a Mark Painter, a descendant of one of the old Bender families in
colonial Pennsylvania. Mark and I have no shared ancestry, so far as
we can tell, he belonging to a separate DNA Haplogroup than I do
meaning any shared ancestry we have (on a direct father to son line
that is) would be tens of thousands of years old (at least). Mark and
a few of his genealogical cohorts have done painstaking research for
years on the various Painter families of Eastern Pennsylvania in an
attempt to maneuver the web of their own families, and as such were
acutely aware of many of the flaws in Joseph Marino's posthumous
project for which, again, I cannot stress enough, I don't judge the
man. As the primary source of all my initial research, and probably
the primary source of all of my cousins building a family tree which
extends beyond Henry, it's the source I'll reference the most and
point out the most errors. A fond wish of mine is that some distant
grandchild, grandnephew or niece, or cousin many times removed of
mine may care enough to do their own research, which may inevitably
mean they eviscerate mine. I can only hope they'll appreciate my
efforts and intentions, despite my misconceptions and failings,
genealogical and otherwise.
Mark
Painter had several records on Johann Georg Bender's family from
the Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church,
Elizabethtown, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, including this one:
December 25, 1771 - Christ
Evangelical Lutheran Church, Elizabethtown, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Today, viz, Christmas day [1771] the
following were confirmed and received the Lord's Supper the first
time. 7 people listed.
#3. Joh. Geo. Bender and wife
Elizabeth's son Henrich aged 15.
#4. Joh. Geo. Bender dau. Maria
Elizabeth, aged 16.
#5. Joh. Geo. Bender dau Anna
Elizabeth, aged 13.
You'll notice the discrepancy
right away with Henrich's age here, putting his birth date about
1756. But I figured the only "proof" of my Henry's age was from
his gravestone which documented his age at death. I had no other
source of his birthday, and I assumed that's probably where Joseph
Marino had gotten the birthdate as well. So, I figured this could
still be our Henry, they just got his age wrong later in life. Given
the census data before 1850 only gave the age range in increments of
5 or 10 years, there was no way to determine if Henry Bender should
have been born 1756 or 1759 by those. The other thing I noticed was
that Henry's mother was listed as Elizabeth. Per Marino, Henry's
mother was Regina Kraemer who had died April 23, 1767 at Mount Joy,
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Johann Georg Bender had subsequently
married to an Anna Elisabeth (last name unknown). I figured that made
sense that she would have considered him her son after being married
to his father half his life, so it didn't bother me that she should
be listed as Henry's mother. I'm not sure about the stringency of
the Evangelical Lutheran Church in those times with regards to
parental accuracy. In contemporary Catholic records at the time, I
find mostly that any document about a person in the church will
usually say child of deceased so and so, if one or more of their
parents are deceased, even if the surviving parent of the child had
remarried. What's more, there were records of the militia in Mount
Joy Township during the Revolutionary War, including one Henry Bender
from the latter 1770's (I'm too lazy to look it up again) until
1783. Given the militia would have been made up of men who were
living within that township and that there are no Henry Benders
besides the son of Johann Georg Bender listed within Mount Joy
Township around that time, I assumed then, as I assume now, this was
the son of Johann Georg Bender of Mount Joy Township, Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania. Having learned that, and learning he was in the
militia and had volunteered for at least one excursion, I was once
again relieved that I had given life once again to my Henry Bender's
Revolutionary War record.
I've suggested a couple days
ago that when something seems too good to be true, it usually is. As
I traded e-mails and research with Mark Painter, and he provided me
with some copies of land records, and more research data in to Johann
Georg Bender, the Pennsylvania tax records from colonial times were
uploaded to the ancestry.com site, and I was able to locate Henry
Bender in the tax records of Milford Township, Bedford County (now
Somerset), Pennsylvania as early as November 1780. But... wait, how
could my Henry be paying taxes as a resident of Bedford County when
he's also being enumerated in the muster rolls of the Mount Joy
Militia in Lancaster County, which, in case you were curious, or even
if you weren't, is about 165 miles away, as the crow flies. In
1780, as the person walks or the horse trots, that wasn't a 3 hour
journey. That was a several days, if not weeks, long and dangerous
path (assuming there was an established road by that point)
surrounded by all manner of dangerous persons and creatures which
would probably very much like to shuffle loose the mortal coil of a
witless pedestrian traversing back and forth in order to pay taxes
one day and show up for militia duty the next. In other words, it
didn't happen, nor would the militia roll be forged to make it look
like Henry Bender was still living and enrolled there. These were two
different Henry Benders, and the one in Mount Joy Township was not my
5x grandfather. That is not to say that he couldn't be the son of
Johann Georg Bender, and the Henry Bender in the militia was someone
else, relative or not, but it's hardly likely. The tax records and
land records show a paper trail which leaves no doubt that the Henry
Bender who appears in 1780 is the same Henry Bender who died in
Fayette County, Ohio, 1845.
The nail in the coffin came when
a descendent from Johann Georg Bender's son John, with a paper
trail to back it up consented to a DNA test, in coordination with
Mark Painter and I, Mark wanting to know how Johann Georg Bender may
have fit into the other Bender families in Pennsylvania. The results
came back that this individual had a completely different Haplogroup
than I did, but that it almost certainly put Johann Georg Bender into
some of the established Bender families from Kirchardt, Baden,
Germany. Later another descendant of Johann Georg Bender, this time
through is son William was a match for the descendant of John Bender.
Neither of them were related to me through our direct paternal
ancestors. This all but confirms that my branch of the Benders is not
descended from Johann Georg Bender of Mount Joy Township, Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania.
This new timeline, which also
seemed to dispute the one established by Joseph Marino's book, had
greater implications than just getting his parents wrong. As of now,
I don't really know if my ancestors name was Johann Heinrich
Bender. It's very likely he would have been Christened as such, but
I do know that his name was at least Henrich or Heinrich Bender, as
he signed his name as such in the old German script style called
"Kurrent". I've attached an example of Henry's handwriting in
this script style. Notice his wife, Elizabeth signs with an X. Next
I'll challenge the marriage record of Henry (Heinrich) Bender as
stated by Marino's book, and provide a bit more insight onto the
pathway forward.
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