Pennsylvania Records

Annals of the Oley Valley, by Bertolet — Yoder Chap

Archive identifier: OLEYANAL.DOC

General Courthouse and Area Records

Fragments of the Past, Historical Sketches of Oley and Vicinity

by Peter G. Bertolet, MD

Typing complements Marli Yoder, for the Yoder Archives, 1996

Chapter 6- Sketches of the Yoder Family

But say you, to the Yoders. We will drive on to Pleasantville,
and then we are in the very midst of the settlement of these families.

Pleasantville is a village of some half a dozen dwelling houses
all of which are neatly built of brick, a public school house
belonging to the independent sub-district of the place, and a
tavern. A post office affording the advantages or two mail routes,one
biweekly to reading, the other tri-weekly from Kutztown to Pleasantville
and Norristown. These are carried by good coaches accommodating
passengers at the same time. Besides there is an Odd Fellows Hall,
probably the finest building of the kind in the county,outside
of Reading. It was built in 1856, was superintended by Daniel
B.Yoder, and a cost about $6,000.The inhabitants are principally
mechanics, supplying the wants of the surrounding communities.

We hardly know where to begin, but will first pay our respects
to Mrs. Charlotte Yoder, now over eighty years of age. But what
is here recorded was mainly transmitted by her Aunt Reppert, with
whom we had the pleasure of meeting at this place on a former
occasion.

Yost Yoder (or Judder as the name was originally written in
German) came from Switzerland we are told accompanied by his brother
Hance or John. They were the first settlers of whites in that
section of the valley, and the first of this name in this county,
though others distantly related subsequently found their way hither.
They left Switzerland and went to England and from thence came
to this country. They were religious fugitives , as appears from
the fact that everything was left behind when they fled their
country except a copy of the Bible which they brought along and
is still preserved among the family.

We have on a former occasion adverted to Yost Yoder. He had
settled the farm now the property of Mrs.Charlotte Yoder, and
played quite a conspicuous part among the early pioneers. He was
very fond of hunting and trapping, a passion freely transmitted
to his son John, who in the course of time became his successor
on this homestead.Yost Yoder had the following children, viz.:
three sons and one daughter. His oldest son was named John, generally
nicknamed Yost Hannes, a name, by the way he did not like. His
second son was Jacob, who moved to the other side of the Schuykill.
The daughter was married to Lazareth Weidener, and the third son
was Samuel and lived near Lobachsville.*

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*The following note is an awful recital of true facts; but,of
course, for the pity of highly respectable living connections,
unpublishable: many of these children proved worthless. John Yoder
hung himself at Reading, but used to live with his sister Mrs.
Cunius, at the old homestead.--Samuel was intemperate, and died
in the woods. His body laid out about three weeks before it was
found, and the animals had defaced it considerably. He lived and
owned the place now the property of George Kerr, which he got
from his father.---Jacob was a little lame and short-witted, became
a drunkard and at last died. (They had no poorhouse then and each
township had to maintain its own poor.) He left a son who was
known by the name of "Irish Pete", who also committed
suicide by hanging himself.

---Samuel Yoder, a son of George Yoder, the Revolutionary War
soldier, also hung himself.

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The wolves used to annoy his flocks very much. These wily marauders
had their scenting places in the adjacent hill from which they
would sally forth at night, giving the pigstys and sheepfolds
of the settlers regular inspections and when their bloody thirsts
was satiated, retired to their dens. Yoder, though an excellent
hunter, found all his ordinary modes frustrated in capturing these
thieves,who cautiously avoided all his traps. He bethought himself
a plan for their destruction. Close by one of their trails, he
dug a hole in the ground about eight feet deep. The sides were
made smooth and even. At the bottom he placed some mutton, and
covered the opening of the hole lightly with brush. The wolves,
attracted by their olfactories of this favorite morsel, followed
the scent of the bait and , before becoming aware of the stratagem,
were precipitated into the pit from which they could not escape.
It was thus that he captured five in one night and finally succeeded
in ridding the neighborhood of these depredators. (However, no
immortal honors have been attached to his name, like that of General
Putnam, for killing but a single she wolf.)

He was a man full of courage, but in his demeanour, rough and
course. Indeed, he became in consequence a byword, which is not
yet quite absolute in the neighborhood, "like Yost Hannes",
meaning to imply as rough and uncouth as he. He was fond of making
fun at the expense of the Indians. At a time when these tawny
neighbors were celebrating a wedding, he resolved to have his
bit of jest. There was quite a company of them and Mr. Y. approached
them secretly, having first provided himself with a good hickory
switch. He watched them closely for a while and, just when they
were in the height of their glee and jubilation, he pounced in
their midst. While they were far from dreaming any harm, he commenced
switching most awfully and cruelly the whole company until it
was entirely dispersed. This was done without any provocation;
as he said, "Just for the simple sport of the thing."

This shows in part the character of his disposition. He loved
sport, but his tastes in matters of this kind were evidently rough
and no doubt adapted to his time. He was also fond of athletic
exercises. He was of a wiry frame and remarkably health constitution,
and all of his children who died a natural death were distinguished
for their longevity.

Every fall he made hunting excursions over the Blue Mountains,
when he would be absent from home for weeks, threading his way
through the trackless forest, solitary and alone, save for his
favorite dog and rifle. He had several depots along his line in
hollow trees, wherein he often left stores from year to year.

One day John Yoder and his wife went on some errand, a distance
that took them nearly all day, and left home in charge of their
children until they should return.The good parents were detained
on their way and did not return as soon as they had expected.
During their absence two Indians paid them a visit, as they often
did,and inquired for whiskey from the children. they told them
their parents were not at home, and so could not give them any.
This refusal was quite a disappointment, especially to one of
the Indians, who at once commenced menacing and abusing the little
girls, even insinuating that he would have "him" before
he left the house. This threat much alarmed the children. The
passive Indian took offense at the other's conduct and protected
them. Words soon ran high between them and they withdrew from
the house. The children, though frightened, followed them stealthily
in their wake, to observe their movements, not knowing what might
follow. About ten rods from the house stands a sassafras tree.
Under this the Indians halted. With uplifted tomahawks they faced
each other. It was an awful moment, for a desperate conflict ensued
between the two, in which one was killed and scalped.

This is a true story recorded verbatim from an eyewitness,
one of those children who beheld the bloody trudge with her own
eyes. They had concealed themselves in a thicket, almost terrified
to death. However, no further harm accrued to them. This happened
in 1756. The narrator was Mrs. Y. Reppert.

Mrs. Reppert was quite familiar with the Indian dialect and
could speak it well in her old days. A Delaware Indian happened
to call at her house once, a few years before her death, and she
was able to converse with him. It shows her excellent memory.

We must next call on our especial friends Messrs. John and
David Yoder. They have a fine house and an excellent farm. We
will have the pleasure of finding these two gentlemen quite intelligent,
who understand to do the polite, as well as the right, in every
respect. There is also a grist and clover mill on the property,
doing a good business in this way.

The farm of the brothers, David and John Yoder, was first settled
by their ancestor Hance, or John Yoder, a brother of Yost, and
has ever since remained in the family.

They showed us a number of old papers from which we learned
that the first survey of this estate was returned in the Secretary's
office at Philadelphia for Hance Yoder, dated March 25th, 1714.
This survey included many of the beautiful farms along the road
toward the Oley churches.

From another paper we learned that Anthony Lee returned into
the Secretary's Office, June 21st, 1717, the survey of a large
tract comprising over 300 acres, adjacent to the north of Yoders.

We were shown other interesting family relics among which was
a German Bible, unquestionably the oldest copy to be found near
and far. It bears the date 1530, showing that it was printed while
Martin Luther was living and was perhaps one of the first specimens
issued by the German press. It is nicely printed and somewhat
illustrated. The text is not divided into verses.

In referring to church history, it appears that but very few,
if any, Bibles were printed before 1540, and this date may be
nearer the age of it than the former. It had been in the Yoder
family for an long time in the old country yet, and was the only
thing regarded of special value brought by them in their flight
to this country.

John or Hance Yoder was a brother to Yost Yoder and it is said
that they came over together. Mr. D. Yoder thinks that they did.
Hance Yoder had four sons: Hans, Samuel, Daniel, and Peter. (Daniel
died 1747, August 21, age 31 years, 8 months.) Second Hans had
three sons: Daniel, Martin and Jacob. His wife, Sarah Shenkle
died in 1798 and was buried on a Whitsuntide holiday at Phillip
DeTurk's graveyard. The gravestones at the cemetery are of very
fine sandstone and extra workmanship, and Y. thinks, as they differ
in texture from our own, were in all probability brought from
the old country.

On or near the spot where now stands the stately mansion and
other excellent building, was first erected a small house, the
home of Hance Yoder and his family. The precise date of this I
was not informed; but this is certain, that at the time all around
was yet a mere wilderness inhabited by Indians and wild beasts.
His only neighbor was Yost Yoder.

One day Mr. Yoder, accompanied b his wife (a helpmate of those
days), was engaged in extending their farmland by clearing away
more of the forest in the field lying opposite the Pleasantville
Hotel. The industrious parents had closed up their cabin with
all of their children in order to protect them from harm from
the beasts which occasionally straggled along, and engaged themselves
the more earnestly to their arduous toil, being assured that all
was safe and secure at home.

Yoder and his wife were however not long at work in the field
that day before they were alarmed by the report of a gun in the
direction of their house. They hastened to the house and found
a gang of neighboring Indians, who were intoxicated. They had
come to the house to see Mr.Yoder who, by the way, was an intimate
friend of theirs. But when they came to the house they found the
door locked and yet somebody within, they thought they were intentionally
refused admittance.The became enraged and indignant and, being
drunk, without forethought fired through the door with a rifle.
Mr. Y was one of those who lacked not courage and was speedily
amongst them and found them very boisterous and threatening, but
without giving them time he gave them a thorough switching. With
this the whole party left with threats of revenge. neither was
he kept long in suspense for soon the whole company, with quite
an accession, returned demanding satisfaction. The latter portion
fortunately were sober. Yoder coolly told them all that transpired
and showed them the hole in the door of the house and the helpless
children within, and how easily they might have killed some of
his very dear children. This had the desired effect. The Indians
became enraged at the perpetrator, so that they would have murdered
him outright had it not been for the kind intervention of Mr.
Yoder, who had difficulty persuading them to desist inasmuch as
no harm had occurred. He advised them to go home in peace and
do no more, which they agreed to do. The rifle ball fortunately
had done no harm within.

They had also carried off a bundle of Yoder's deerskins which
were returned by the latter company, but Y. refused them, on the
ground that he was in full satisfaction. They, however, insisted
on returning them to Yoder.

In making inquiry in regard to Captain Jacob Yoder, noticed
in I. Rupp's work, page 181, the Messrs. Yoder told us "He
was our uncle." They say he was born here on this spot, and
not at Reading. They also recollect him well when he paid them
a visit, now over fifty years ago. They say he was of a lively
disposition and had imbibed considerably of the liquor. He was
anxious to take Daniel along, who was then a small boy, and told
how he raised hemp and tobacco in Kentucky. Mr. Y. says he recollected
this very distinctly. He also told them many of the Revolutionary
incidents, as well as those of the Indian wars in which he had
engaged. He had travelled all the way from Kentucky and back again
on horse back. He stayed here for some time.

In Rupp's "Berks and Lebanon" occurs the following,
page 181:

"Capt. Jacob Yoder was born in Reading 1758. He is a highly
respectable and wealthy farmer of Spencer County, Kentucky. To
him belongs the honor of having descended the Mississippi River
in the first flatboat, and if no other powers than those of time
and wind and storm shall assail the tablet, of which an account
is given below, it will preserve the fact, recorded in deep indentations
upon it, through a series of ages to come.

"The iron tablet was cast by Hanks and Niles of Cincinnati
in 1834, and now marks the spot where remain the bones of Capt.
Yoder. It is one of the first of the kind ever executed west of
the Alleghenies. It has this inscription:

"Jacob Yoder

Was born in reading, Pennsylvania

August 11th, 1758

And was a soldier in the Revolutionary Army

in 1777 and 1778;

He emigrated to the West in 1780, and in May

1782, from Fort redstone, on the

Monongahela River

in the

First Flat Boat

That ever descended the Mississippi.

He died April 7, 1832, at his farm in Spencer

County, Kentucky and lies here

Interred beneath this tablet."

"No one who has any pretentions as to the possessions
of a soul can contemplate this tablet without a variety of emotions.
A brilliant series of associations enchain the mind of the gazer;
as with a spell to it. That the man who navigated the first flatboat
that ever descended the Mississippi should have lived to see a
magnificent steamboat ploughing the same watery tract, is a truth
which affords a subject of admiration. When he launched his little
ark on the Monogahela, what were his anticipations? Luck, as time
had proved! No, he thought of the wily savage, whose cover was
a wide and untrodden wilderness. He proceeded on his precarious
voyage. Instead of cheering aspects of busy cities, flourishing
villages, and cultivated farms, which now call the voyager's attention,
he saw a range of hills unshorn of their primeval wilderness,
whence the lugubrious howl of the wolf proceeded, the vast wilderness
which the foot of the civilized man had not trodden. Instinct,
'tis true, with life; but it was the life of the forest denizen,
the trembling fawn, and the myriad songsters of the wild. He reached
his destination, but his safety was a manual to himself; and his
dangers hereafter recited, awakened up a fear-stricken excitement
in the minds of those who listened to his tale of perils "by
field and flood". He lived to see the country change masters,
the wilderness blossom as the rose, and human energy achieve a
conquest over a thousand obstacles.

"This is the greatest triumph that man has yet achieved.
History records no parallel. To the future generations of America,
it will be what the fabulous age of the Titans was to the ancient
Greeks."

Capt. Jacob Yoder is a direct descendant of this family in
Oley and, in many traits of his daring adventures and general
character, bears a striking resemblance to the elder Yoders.

Hanse Yoder was the builder and owner of Griesemer's Mill property
as well as the homestead of the Yoders, and had trouble with his
neighbor Lesher. neither did his domestic affairs glide along
very smoothly. He was intemperate and, as might be expected, had
a good many domestic squabbles. One day, after he was absent from
home, he returned in the evening to find his house deserted by
his wife, with everything that could be carried off except his
three children, leaving them in a most deplorable condition, not
even the means with which to feed them. Her brother, Mr. Martin
Shenkle, took advantage of Mr. Yoder's absence and carried off
all that he could with his sister. She subsequently removed to
Reading where she had an illegitimate son, who later lived at
Susquehanna, a respectable man. When she died she left some property.
She was unfaithful. She lies buried at the family burial place
at DeTurks in Oley. The burial took place at Easter.

(Note: Hance Yoder lived at what is now Griesemer's Mill, and
it was here that Capt. Jacob Yoder was born in 1758.)

Yoder Newsletter OnLine © Chris Yoder, 1992,
1994