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An American Family History

Henry Kibler

 
“Remember, remember always, that all of us, and you and I especially, are descended from immigrants and revolutionists."
— Franklin D. Roosevelt
 
Many settlers in the Shenandoah Valley were Germans from Pennsylvania called the "Shenandoah Deitsch."

Henry Kibler (Heinrich Kuebler)  was born on August 15, 1746  in Germany.

He married Mary Amelia Pierce about 1760, probably in Germany. Their children and life together are described in detail in the section on Henry and Mary Kibler

Henry did not fight in the Revolution, but he donated mutton and money to the cause.

He died on September 9, 1796 in Luray, Page (was Shenandoah) County, Virginia. He is buried on the Robert T. Kemp farm outside Luray.

Henry Kibler's Tombstone
Henry Kibler's Tombstone

In 1831 Page County, Virginia was created from Rockingham and Shenandoah Counties. Originally it was part of Frederick County.

Children of Henry Kibler and
Mary Amelia Pierce
  • Magdalene Kibler Baker
  • Barbara Kibler Pence
  • Adam Kibler
  • John Kibler
  • Philip Kibler
  • Martin Luther Kibler
    Henry Kibler Homestead
    The Henry Kibler Homestead
    photo taken about 1926
    a few miles east of Luray, Virginia
  • Europeans who made the voyage to America faced a difficult journey of several months.
     

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    DNA match with other descendant in this line.
    Henry Kibler
    Magdalene Kibler Baker
    Philip Baker
    Elizabeth Baker Branstiter
    Sarah Branstiter Taylor
    Louisa Taylor Long
    Viola Long Bertrand
    Emma Ethel Bertrand
    Virginia Smith Miller

    from Life, Character, Death Dr. Benjamin Henry Kibler

    A single incident will serve to show what dangers he was exposed to. Upon one occasion, having earned a few pounds he started to his home. Mounted upon a fine fleet horse, he made considerable progress the first day, during which nothing remarkable occurred until the dusky shades of evening drew around him. He had yet more than twenty miles to ride before reaching an English settlement. His horse was hungry and jaded, and he was quite hungry and tired; and as he rode on, contemplating with gloomy forebodings, the dangers of the approaching night, he suddenly came upon an encampment of about fifty Indians. The Indians immediately surrounded him and invited him, in their own native tongue, to alight and partake of the repast, which they were then preparing at their camp-fires. He knew that if he accepted their invitation he would be detained and scalped before the next morning; and he knew, too that an attempt to escape would be attended with almost equal danger; and thinking the earliest opportunity the most favorable, he sought to divert their attention from him for a moment that he might make the trial.

    In order to this he requested them first to furnish him with a pipe and tobacco that he might enjoy a smoke of their "gold old American" while considering their proposition. They immediately dropped the reins of the bridle, which they had held all the while, and hastened to the camp fire to prepare the favor, when he applied spur and whip to his horse, and the whole company of Indians set out in full chase after him, making the forests ring with their hideous yells. Tomahawks were hurled at him in rapid fury, and arrows were flying thickly around him. Two very tall and fleet Indians ran by his side for more than two miles, and several times attempted to seize his bridle reins, but the race was too long, they began to lag behind; but for ten miles, or more, from the point at which the race commenced, he could distinctly hear the frightful yelling of the savages. He reached the English settlement about 1 o'clock the next morning. Many other incidents of similar character might be related in connection with the history of this venerable Virginia pioneer; but we pass on.

    European and indiginous American fought fierce battles as the Europeans expanded their territory.
    Colonial Maryland
    Colonial New England
    Colonial Virginia & West Virginia
    Quakers & Mennonites
    New Jersey Baptists
     
    German Lutherans
    Watauga Settlement
    Pennsylvania Pioneers
    Midwest Pioneers
    Californians
    Jewish Immigrants

    ©Roberta Tuller 2023
    tuller.roberta@gmail.com
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