Mertz Genealogy - Person Sheet
Mertz Genealogy - Person Sheet
NameMargaret (Hannes?)
Death1824
Memo(date of estate file)
Spouses
Birth1740
Memo(born perhaps not long after George’s 1732 arrival, adult by 1756)
Death1815
Memo(present in 1810, absent in 1820)
FatherGeorge Mertz (G) (<1702-1768)
ChildrenGeorge (1761-1844)
 William (1770-1807)
 Theobald (Dewalt) (1776-1860)
 Daniel (1773-1802)
Parent-Proof notes for Margaret (Hannes?)
Philip was listed in church records once with wife Hannes and later with Margaret. Were they two wives or two names for the same wife? (Or two different Philips each with one wife?) I don’t know. If there was but one wife, she was likely born about the same time as Philip so clearly lived a long life. If she was his second wife, she might well have been younger.

There is an 1824 Lehigh County estate file for Margaretha Mertz of Heidelberg Township. Jacob Stehley was the administrator with Casper Peter and Henry Roth additional bondsmen. Some money (not specifically an inheritance) was paid to Dewald Mertz (perhaps for caring for his mother in her last years?) and debts to the estate were acknowledged for Charles and George Mertz. The Stehley name comes up again in connection with this family and may be one more link tying these people together. See the discussion of Dewalt’s daughters.

And I think this estate file also is one more demonstration of the connection of George and Charles and Dewalt. If my theories are correct, George and Dewalt were Margaret’s sons and Charles one of her grandsons.
Birth, Parent-Proof, Designation notes for Philip (Spouse 1)
I know that George Mertz, the 1732 immigrant, had a son Philip who ended up with George’s Heidelberg Township land and held onto it until 1791 when he gave it to his own son John George.

In The History of the Counties of Lehigh and Carbon, Chapter XXIV covers Heidelberg Township and has these citations:

1. Philip Mertz was named as a contributor to the 1756 building of the Heidelberg Church.
2. Philip Mertz was named on the 1781 tax list.

I have seen several versions of the records of the Heidelberg Church, which served both the Lutheran and Reformed faiths, and found these citations:

1. Philip and wife Hannes baptized a son Daniel born 28 Sep 1773 [Reformed].
2. Philip (and ?) baptized a child (whose name I didn’t record) born 1 Sep 1778. [Reformed].
3. In 1779, Philip and Margaret Mertz were sponsors at the baptism of Anna Margaretha Ebert, daughter of Johannes and Maria Susanna Ebert. Maria Susanna was Philip’s sister. [Lutheran].
4. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Mertz baptized daughter Anna Margaretha 28 Jun 1784 [Lutheran].
5. In 1806, Philip and Margaretha Mertz sponsored the baptism of Philip, son of Heinrich and Catharina Hartman.

Clearly, Philip was the son of George known from the 1797 property deed and is designated G1.
Relocated and Census Tracking notes for Philip (Spouse 1)
A man named Johann Philip Mertz arrived America on the ship Edinburgh 15 Sep 1749. According to Don Yoder’s Rhineland Immigrants, a Philipp Mertz, locksmith from Nierstein paid the tithe to emigrate 29 Apr 1749. For a long time, I thought both these citations might pertain to the same man and in fact, might well be the man of that name who just “popped up” in Heidelberg Township in 1756. I no longer think that is the case, though I don’t know what happened to Philip the 1749 immigrant.

Now it could be argued that George’s son, Philip, stayed behind in Germany and then came to America later, in 1749. But that seems highly unlikely. I believe George left for America as a young man and brought all his children — all of whom would have been quite young — with him.

I suspect that Philip was born in America not long after his parents arrived in 1732. As he contributed to the church building fund, in 1756, I have guessed at a birth year of about 1735.

Turning to Census, the first thing to note is that there were no Mertz heads of household in Heidelberg in the 1790 Census, though Philip was there in 1800 and 1810 and then “replaced” by Margret, his widow I believe, in 1820. (And other, related I think, Mertzes also were listed in 1800-1820). I think the mystery of why there were no Mertzes in 1790 is explained by spelling. I think Philip was in Heidelberg in the 1790 Census listed as Philip March and there was a George March too in the same place in that year. Father and son.

The name Mertz seems to have been derived from the name of the third month of the year — in German März or Merz — and so I have very occasionally seen where some Census taker, being too smart by half, writes down March as some person’s name, someone otherwise known as Mertz.
Death and Find-a-Grave notes for Philip (Spouse 1)
Philip was listed in the 1800 Census, he and his wife were both over the age of 45. The same, of course, in 1810. And then Philip died sometime before 1820 and his widow Margaret, age 45+ was present in his place. I believe he was born in 1735, I suppose it could have been 1740 or even a little later but that means he gave to the church building fund as a teenager which doesn’t strike me as logical.

The oldest child he had that I know of was George born in 1761 and yet he also seems to have had a daughter Anna Margaretha in 1784, some 23 years later. And he appears to have lived well into his seventies if not to 80. This is why I wonder if Philip had a son Philip, not the John Philip who was born in 1797 and lived his adult life in Carbon County, but another older Philip, maybe born in the 1750’s or so and maybe it was that Philip whose wife was named Margaret while the older Philip was married to Hannes.

It’s possible but there is no real evidence for that scenario so, for now, I am assuming there was just one Philip in Heidelberg and he lived a long life.

Philip was the only son, I believe, of George, the 1732 immigrant. And Philip was, I believe the father of the next generation of Mertzes of Heidelberg Township and associated there with the Heidelberg Church. And then his sons, and their sons — I have come to believe — were the line of Mertzes who later appear in Carbon County (carved from northern Northampton in 1843) and Westmoreland County.

There are still a lot of links to firmly establish in this line and I may have a few relationships scrambled. I may have someone as the son of his grandfather, for example, missing a generation. Or I may have someone listed as the son of his uncle. But I strongly believe that I am on the right track by claiming all of these people are of the same overall family line.
Last Modified 5 November 2018Created 19 June 2022 using Reunion for Macintosh
19 June 2022
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