The Greulich Farm Using Deeds to Prove Henry Snyder Was Joseph Snyder's Father

When I last wrote about Joseph Snyder, I was on the trail of his father and believed he was the same Henry Snyder whose mortgage indenture I had in my possession. The 1850 census for Henry Snyder of Upper Hanover Township included Henry, Sarah, Joel, Joseph, Louisa Anna, and Sophie Schnider.1 Although I can infer a relationship between the household members, it is not directly indicated in this record.

I also postulated that Joseph Snyder received his father’s farm sometime before Henry’s death. Based on the metes and bounds as outlined in Henry Snyder’s mortgage, it sounded like the location of the farm that I’ve always known as the “Greulich farm” which was located just outside East Greenville in Upper Hanover Township, diagonally opposite the New Goshenhoppen Church. Since I have two deeds—one for Henry Snyder’s farm and one for the farm my great great grandfather Henry Deischer Snyder purchased from his father’s estate—I figured I would compare the metes and bounds to determine once and for all if they were the same farm.

Henry Snyder farm Upper Hanover Township

Henry Snyder’s farm

Henry Snyder (1830)

Henry Snyder purchased 62 acres from Jacob Stoyer, the administrator of Godfrey Wissler’s estate.2 Godfrey Wissler was Henry’s father-in-law.3

Henry and Sarah Snyder sold pieces of this land in 1839 (to Peter Strunk4) and 1850 (to George Gery5 and George Seasholtz6). These sales totaled about 7 acres.

Henry D. Snyder (1899)

Henry D. Snyder farm

Henry D. Snyder (aka Greulich) farm

Joseph Snyder died in 1895. His sons Henry D. and Amandus D. Snyder served as executors of his last will and testament, proven 7 December 1895, which required that his land be sold and the proceeds divided into seven equal shares and divided amongst: Henry, Irwin, Clement, Amandus, Mary, Sally, and Ida.7 On 1 April 1899, Henry and Amandus sold 55 acres to Mahlon Snyder.8 On 1 July 1899, Mahlon and his wife Clara sold 55 acres to Henry D. Snyder, except 40 square perches that Henry and Amandus sold to the Upper Hanover school district.9

The northwest sections of these maps, I believe, are a very close match—likely with miscellaneous additions to and subtractions from the original tract between 1839 and 1899.

This farm was in Henry’s possession until his death in 1931 when it passed to his only child Lillian Witmer (Snyder) Greulich. It passed to her only child, Russ, after her death in 1949. The remains of the house and farm buildings can be seen on Google Maps’ satellite image along School House road, up to the corner with Third Street and Church Road.

Joel and Joseph Snyder

On 13 May 1861, the spring following Henry Snyder’s death, Joel Snyder and his wife Catharine and Joseph Snyder and his wife Judith sold a piece of land in East Greenville to Lucianna Mock, widow, and Sophia Schneider, spinster.10 This deed states that Henry Schneider died intestate with four children: Joel, Joseph, Lucianna intermarried with Peter Mock (now deceased), and Sophia, and that Joel and Joseph had agreed to sell the plot to their sisters.

Evidence doesn’t get much clearer than this. Joel, Joseph, Lucianna, and Sophia were the children of Henry Schneider of Upper Hanover Township. Thus, the 1850 census entry for Henry shows him, his wife, and their children.

Either Henry sold his farm to Joseph prior to his death or Joseph’s siblings sold it to him after his death. I haven’t found a deed or other reference to this transfer, but the deed maps show that the land Joseph’s sons sold after his death contain at least part of the original land that Henry Snyder purchased in 1830 from his father-in-law’s estate. In 1860, Joseph owned $5000 worth of real estate11, his father only $150012, and brother only $1,000.13 Joseph was a farmer in 1860, and this—with the value of his real estate—indicates to me that he already owned a farm by 1860. It seems probable that it was his father’s farm.

Addendum

In looking for the photo I’ve used as the feature image for this post, I found a treasure trove of family deeds. Check in next time to see what they tell me.

 

Footnotes

  1.  Henry Schneider household, 1850 United States Federal Census, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, population schedule, Upper Hanover Township, page 217B (stamped), dwelling 191, family 198; image, Internet Archive, “Population schedules of the seventh census of the United States, 1850, Pennsylvania” (https://archive.org/stream/populationschedu0799unix#page/n431/mode/1up : accessed 8 Feb 2014); citing NARA micropublication M432, roll 799.
  2.  Henry Snyder and George Hillegas mortgage, 3 Apr 1830; privately held by Kristen Hocker, Boston, Massachusetts, 2001, from the family papers of Russell Roy Greulich.
  3.  Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Will Book 6:575, Godfrey Whisler, 21 Oct 1829; digital images, FamilySearch.org, Pennsylvania, Probate Records, 1683-1994 (http://www.familysearch.org/search : accessed 8 Feb 2014); citing Montgomery County Register of Wills, Norristown.
  4.  Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Deed Book 32: 79, Henry Snyder & wife to Peter Strunk, 5 Apr 1839; digital image, Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds, Historic Land Records Online Access (http://imagesyncweb.montcopa.org/imagesync : accessed 21 Sep 2105).
  5.  Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Deed Book 32: 81, Henry Snyder & wife to George Gery, 1 Apr 1850; digital image, Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds, Historic Land Records Online Access (http://imagesyncweb.montcopa.org/imagesync : accessed 21 Sep 2105).
  6.  Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Deed Book 147: 509, Henry Snyder & wife to George Seascholtz, 1 Apr 1850; digital image, Montgomery County Recorder of Deeds, Historic Land Records Online Access (http://imagesyncweb.montcopa.org/imagesync : accessed 21 Sep 2105).
  7.  Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Will Book 24:60, Joseph Snyder, 10 Jul 1894; digital images, FamilySearch.org, Pennsylvania, Probate Records, 1683-1994 (http://www.familysearch.org/search : accessed 8 Feb 2014); citing Montgomery County Register of Wills, Norristown.
  8. Deed, Mahlon Snyder et ux to Henry D. Snyder, 1 Jul 1899; privately held by Kristen Hocker, Boston, Massachusetts, 2015, from the family papers of Russell Roy Greulich.
  9.  Deed, Mahlon Snyder et ux to Henry D. Snyder, 1 Jul 1899.
  10.  Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Deed Book 531:230, Joel Schneider et ux et al to Lucianna Mock et al, 13 May 1861; digital image, Recorder of Deeds, “Historic Land Records, 1784-1971”  (http://imagesyncweb.montcopa.org/imagesync : accessed 23 Sep 2015).
  11. Joseph Snyder household, 1860 United States Federal Census, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania,Upper Hanover Township, page 958 (stamped), dwelling 119, family 130; image, Internet Archive, “Population schedules of the eighth census of the United States, 1860, Pennsylvania” (https://archive.org/stream/populationschedu1144unix#page/n464/mode/1up : accessed 8 Feb 2014); citing NARA micropublication M653, roll 1144.
  12. Henry Schneider household, 1860 United States Federal Census, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, population schedule, post office: Pennsburgh, Upper Hanover Township, page 946 (stamped), dwelling 40, family 44; image, Internet Archive, “Population schedules of the eighth census of the United States, 1860, Pennsylvania” (https://archive.org/stream/populationschedu1144unix#page/n452/mode/1up : accessed 8 Feb 2014); citing NARA micropublication M653, roll 1144.
  13. Joel Snyder household, 1860 United States Federal Census, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, population schedule, post office: Pennsburgh, Upper Hanover Township, page 946b (stamped), dwelling 47, family 51; image, Internet Archive, “Population schedules of the eighth census of the United States, 1860, Pennsylvania” (https://archive.org/stream/populationschedu1144unix#page/n453/mode/1up : accessed 27 Sep 2015); citing NARA micropublication M653, roll 1144.

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, "The Greulich Farm Using Deeds to Prove Henry Snyder Was Joseph Snyder's Father," A Pennsylvania Dutch Genealogy, the genealogy & family research site of Kris Hocker, modified 11 Nov 2016 (https://www.krishocker.com/the-greulich-farm/ : accessed 29 Mar 2024).

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