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CHAPTER V. 



Moravian community at Litiz — Zlnzendorf in Lancaster — Application tc 

 the conference at Bethlehem — Commencement of Litiz — Parsonage 

 built — School House removed — Rev. B. A. Grube — Present condition, or 



state of Litiz; Improvements; Church, and consecration of it, &c List 



of the names of Pastors — Schools and names of Teachers — Brother and 

 Sister Houses — The grave yard — The spring — Population, mechanics, &c. 



The Moravians, those who embraced the views of 

 Count Zinzendorf, of whom a passing notice has been 

 given in a preceding page, commenced the formation of 

 a community, in this county, about the year 1755 or 56, 

 at Litiz, eight miles north of the city, of which we 

 shall give a detailed account. The subject is interesting,* 



To give a full account of this village, and the first 

 settlement of the Moravians in Lancaster county, we 

 shall begin with the year 174*. It happened, in that 

 year, that Count Zinzendorf, the patron of the renewed 

 church of the United Brethren or Moravians, who being 

 persecuted in Saxony, by such as disliked his attempts to 

 form Christian communities, which were not to be 

 governed by the established church government of that 

 Kingdom, directed his attention and Christian eye to 

 Pennsylvania, where, at a previous period, a great num- 

 ber of German Separatists had emigrated ; accordingly, 

 lie visited Pennsylvania, and believing that his visit 

 might be rendered more profitable, if he could succeed 

 in uniting many of these emigrated Christians, who 

 diffcrco in some particular points, he set out on his tour 

 ihrougli Pennsylvania, and whenever he iiad an oppor- 



*This article has been furnished by a inejubcr of the Mora-- 

 vian Society of Litiz. 



