Immigrant Ships
Transcribers Guild

Unspecified Ship


Original Georgia Salzburger Settlers
3rd Swabian Transport
Arrival - November 1752
Unknown Ship - Captain Brown

Columns represent: Passenger number*, surname, given name, relationship, date of birth, date of death, comments*.
 
Please scroll to view all columns.
1 Daumer Michel from Langensee 2 Eberhard Johann grant 1752 3 Eckhart Martin from Nerenstetten, serv. to Daumer 4 Eckhart Ursula 5 Ehrhard Johann from Altheim 6 Fischer George from Langenau 7 Fischer Anna Catharina wife b. 1728 8 Fischer Michael grant 1752 9 Fischer Nikolaus grant 1752 10 Frey Abraham from Bermeringen 11* Greiner Barbara from Altheim 12 Gross Michael from Leutzhausen, grant 1752 13 Hagemeyer Juliana from Blaubeyern, grant 1752 14 Hagemeyer Euphrosyna child d. 1753 15 Hasenlauer Sebastian from Langenau 16 Hirschmann (Johann) Caspar II grant Halifax 1752 17 Hirschmann (Johann) Caspar II child grant Halifax 1752 18 Hirschmann Barbara child 19 Lange Georg grant 1752 20 Lange Gottlieb grant 1752 21 Lange Johann I grant Briar Creek 1752 22 Lange Johann II child 23 Lohrmann Johann from Ulm 24 Mack Bartholomaus b. 1730 25 Mack Maria wife 26 Mack Thomas grant Bethany 1759 27 Mack Wolfgang from Langenau 28* Neibling Bartholomaus from Langenau 29 Niess (Johann) Georg grant Bethany 1753, serv. to Boltzius 30 Niess (Johann) Leonhard grant 1752 31 Niess Margaretha b. 1707 32 Niess Martin grant 1752 33 Pfluger Johann I grant 1752, from Langenau 34 Piltz Sigismund grant 1754 35 Piltz Anna wife 36 Rabenhorst Christian b. 1728 from Poggenkop in Hinterpommern 37* Rau Anna Catharina b. 1697 grant 1752 38 Rau Barbara child m. Hans Pfluger 39 Rau (Johann) Georg child from Leipheim, grant 1752 40 Salfner Matthias I from Moergelstetten grant 1752 41 Salfner Agatha wife b. 1712 42 Salfner Matthias II child b. 1737 43 Salfner (Georg) Leonhard child b. 1739 grant 1752 44 Salfner Anna Margaretha child b. 1740 45 Salfner Jacob child b. 1745 46* Salfner (Johann) Adam grant 1752 47* Salfner Michael grant 1759 48 Schneider Andreas from Freudenberg, grant BlackCreek 1752 Not clear if the following came on this Transport. They may have arrived and settled in Purrysburg, SC (across the the Savannah River from Ebenezer) before this date. They were: 49 Greiner Johann Caspar I 50 Greiner Johann Caspar II child 51 Greiner (Johann) Martin I 52 Greiner (Johann) Martin II child 53 Greiner Maria Magdalena m. Michael Weber 1754 Other Settlers at Ebenezer(12) 54 Berry James O. from North Carolina 55 Berry ? wife 56 Berry John Berry child b. 1757 d. 1817 57 Biddenbach Christian b. 1710 d. 1770 To Georgia about 1750 58 Biddenbach Sophie wife 59* Burgholder Matthew 1735 at Hampstead 60 Conway Charles before 1818 at Effingham Co. (from Ireland) 61 Courvoisie John Francis William French ancestry 62 Fryermouth John Peter m. Anna Catherine Goll, 1769 to Ebenezer from Saxe-Gotha, S.C. 63* Greiner John Casper came on 3rd Swabian Transport and settled in Purysburg, SC. 64* Grabenstein John Justus d. after 1789 about 1760 from Charleston, S. C. Probably on the 3rd Swabian Transport. 65 Gugle/Gugel John Christopher d. ca 1788. About 1750. Probably on the 3rd Swabian Transport. 66 Gugle/Gugel Anna Maria wife 67 Keiffer Theobald 1737 from Purysburg, S. C. 68 Keiffer Maria Catherine wife 69 Kessler Adam 70 Kessler Hannah Kieffer wife 71 Kessler Valentine child 72* Kramer Christian b. ca 1679 October 1738 73 Kessler Clara wife b. ca 1695 74 Kessler Anna Maria child b. 1724 75 Kessler Christopher child b. 1726 d. 1777 76 LeBey Andreu J. arrived with Count d'Estang 1779 to Savannah, then Ebenezer 77 Count d'Estang 78 Mallette Gideon, II b. 1759 d. 1822. 79 Metzger Jacob 1743 from Purysburg, S. C. 80 Metzger Margaret child d. ca 1741 81 Metzger Jacob, Jr. child b. ca 1718 d. 1781 82 Metzger Phillip child 83 Morgan Lewis b. 1742 d. 1808 Before 1783, from S. C. 84 Nease John Martin About 1750. 85 Neidlinger John About 1750. 86 Neidlinger ? wife 87 Neidlinger John Ulrich son 88* Ochsle Melchior from Langenau, b. 1727. 1752 89 Ochsle Maria Niess wife b. 1725 90* Taesher Christian from Switzerland. 1741 (paid own passage) 91 Zettler Matthias d. 1769 1738-39 in Ebenezer. Transcriber's Notes: * An asterisk indicates an error on the part of the original recorder, not the transcriber, or is used to call your attention to additional information in the transcriber's notes. * Passenger numbers were added by the formatter. * Items listed in the "comments" column include the date grants were issued, occupations, places to which passengers moved after first settling in the United States, marriage information, and the location at which each passenger lived prior to departure for the United States. Passenger Notes: #11 - The surname was written as Greiner, with Groner being an alternative spelling. #28 - The surname was written as Neibling, with Niebling and Nubling being alternative spellings. #37 - Mother of Georg #46-47 - Sons of Matthias I? #59 - The surname was written as Burgholder, with Burkhalter being an alternative spelling. #63 - The surname was written as Greiner, with Griner being an alternative spelling. #64 - The surname was written as Grabenstein, with Grovenstein being an alternative spelling. #72 - The surname was written as Kramer, with Cramer being an alternative spelling. #88 - The surname was written as Ochsle, with Exley being an alternative spelling. #90 - The surname was written as Taesher, with Dasher being an alternative spelling. Correspondence added July 31, 2007, passenger 27 Wolfgang Mack Wolfgang Mack was born 01 April 1697 in Sontheim, Wuerttemberg, Germany and died Nov 1775 in Bethany Community, Effingham County, Georgia. Wolfgang’s first wife was Barbara Niedersteiner [sp] (b. 1697 Wuerttemberg and d. abt. August 1745 in Langenau, Germany). According to German Church Records, they had at least 10 known children. After the death of his wife, Barbara, Wolfgang left Germany for America, arriving in Savannah on 23 Oct 1751 aboard the ship Antelope, a member of the 2nd Swabian Transport. After establishing a home in America for his children, he returned to Germany. In November, 1752 aboard an unspecified ship of the 3rd Swabian Transport, Wolfgang returned to Georgia with his children, Bartholomew, Thomas and Christina. It is not known at this time what happened to his other children. Some were deceased and others may have already married and elected to remain in Germany. Earlier research done by George Mock of Decatur County, Georgia indicated that Wolfgang was a brother to Bartholomew, Thomas and Christina. In 2005 Beverly Zanon volunteered to do some research for me on my Mack/Mackh/Mock line, and she found records proving that Wolfgang was actually the father to the other three Mack’s who immigrated to Georgia. After arriving in Georgia in November 1752, Wolfgang and children settled in the area known as Blue Bluff which was located along the Savannah River. On February 24 1755, Wolfgang married his second wife Anna Barbara Mayerhoefer but had no children. Wolfgang died in November 1775 and is buried in the Bethany Cemetery in Effingham County, Georgia. Bartholomew Mack married, had a family and remained in the Effingham County, Ga. Area. Thomas Mack* married in Effingham County, GA and moved to Mecklenburg (Cabarrus County), NC where he died in 1807 and is buried in the Cold Water Lutheran Church Cemetery. One of Thomas’s sons (Thomas Jr., my line) returned to Georgia about 1810, married Catherine Rieser and settled in the Decatur Co., Ga. area where descendants still live. Christina Mack married in Effingham County, Ga. but died shortly after the birth of her first child. Thanks to the efforts of Beverly Zanon, I now know the true relationship between Wolfgang, Bartholomew, Thomas and Christina. I had always wondered why four children would come to America without a parent. Everyone had always assumed that Wolfgang was the older brother, when in fact, he was their Father. Thanks, Beverly. Ida K. Boyce Descended from Thomas Mack*
Donated to the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild
Reformatted by Sharon Krisko for the
Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild
13 December 2001



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