LANCASTER COUNTY. 97 



liis son, Henry Rennau, and Johanna his wife, and Law- 

 rence and Henry his sons, Susanna Lisboschain, and 

 Mary Johanna Lisboschain; Andrew Volk, and Ann 

 Catharine his wife, and George Heeronimus his son, and 

 ]\Iary Barbara, and Ann Gertrtraude his daughters, Mi- 

 chael Weigand, Ann Catharine his wife, Tobias and 

 George his sons, Ann Mary his daughter, Jacob Weber, 

 and Ann Elisabeth his wife, and Eve Elisabeth, and 

 Eve Mary his daughters, John Jacob Plettel, Ann Elisa- 

 beth his wife, and Margaret, Ann, Sarah and Catharine 

 his daughters, John Fisher, and Mary Barbara his wife, 

 Melchior Gulch, Ann Catharine his wife, Henry his son, 

 and Magdalen his daughter, Isaac Twek, Peter Rose and 

 Joannah his wife, Mary Wemarin, and Catharine We- 

 marin his daughters, Isaac Feber*- Catharine his ivife, 

 and Mrahain his son, Daniel Firre, Ann Mary his 

 wife and Andrew and John his sons, Hubert Hubert- 

 son, and Jacob his son, and Harman Schuneman ; 

 which persons are truly German Lutherans; and who 



^Undoubtedly Isaac Le Fevre who had married Catharine, 

 the daughter of Mary Ferree, and who settled within the limits 

 of this county at the time Daniel Ferree did. According to Mr. 

 Conyngham's statement, "Isaac Le Fevre was born in 1669, 

 and in 1686, came to Philadelphia from Esopus. He married 

 Catharine soon after her arrival." He was but a youth when 

 he left his fays naiaZ, Fatherland. Mr. C. in an eloquent ad- 

 dress on the Early Settlement of the Valley of Pequea, delivered 

 July 4, -1842, speaking of the Ferree family, says : "And nozo 

 let me turn your attention to a youth of fourteen : his parents 

 had perished in the religious wars which had desolated France 

 — an oi'phan — friendless — he travelled through Holland— went 

 to London — came to Kensington where he made known his in- 

 tentions to William Penn. Alone 1 oh no ! he had one com- 

 panion — it was his consolator in Europe — 'it was his comforter 

 in Pcnnsylv-ania^— that companion was his Bible. That young 

 lad was Isaac Le Fevre. That Bible is still preserved by the 

 family of Le Fevres as a most precious relic.'' 



9 



