Using the ABC method described in Using Artificial Intelligence In the Ancestor Biography Creation (ABC) Process -- Updated, enhanced by further developments, here is another ancestor couple biography using the Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 AI tool.
3) The Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 biography (lightly edited for accuracy) is:
Philip Jacob König and Maria Barbara Wilhelm
A Family History from Rheinland-Pfalz to
Pennsylvania -- 1738–1792
Philip Jacob König: Early Life in Germany
Philip Jacob König was born on 15 February 1738 in the small village of Niederhorbach, in the Rheinland-Pfalz region of what is now southwestern Germany. Three days later, on 18 February 1739, he was baptized in nearby Edenkoben — a time when the church and family were inseparably intertwined, and baptism was both a spiritual and civic event of great importance.
Philip Jacob was the son of Johann Nicolaus König (1707–1776) and his second wife, Maria Margaretha Stuber (1702–1771), who had married in 1735 in Edenkoben. Nicolaus had previously been married to Maria Ursula Bohringer (1709–before 1735), with whom he had two sons before her early death.
Philip Jacob's Siblings
From his father Nicolaus's first marriage, Philip Jacob had two older half-brothers:
- Johann Gottfried König, born before 24 October 1728 in Edenkoben — he would later marry Anna Christina Ziegler around 1761 in York, Pennsylvania, and lived until 19 October 1805 in Manchester, York County, Pennsylvania.
- Johann Peter König, born December 1730 in Edenkoben — he settled in Hatfield, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, where he died in 1793.
- Anna Elisabetha König, born before 6 March 1737 in Edenkoben — she married Johann Martin Cronemiller on 20 June 1756 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and lived until after 1776 in Manchester, York County.
- Johan Wilhelm König, born about 1745 in Edenkoben — no further record has been found.
- Maria Barbara König, born before 11 February 1750 in Edenkoben — she married Johann Adam Wilhelm about 1770 in York, Pennsylvania.
The Journey to Pennsylvania
In October 1752, when Philip Jacob was about fourteen years old, his entire family uprooted their lives and joined the great wave of Palatine German emigration to colonial America. The Nicolaus König family sailed aboard the ship Kitty, crossing the Atlantic to begin a new chapter in Pennsylvania Colony. They settled in York County, joining a thriving German-speaking community that had established churches, farms, and mills in the fertile Pennsylvania countryside.
This was a time of tremendous movement — tens of thousands of German-speaking families fled economic hardship, religious persecution, and political instability in the Rhine Valley, seeking land and liberty in the New World. The journey itself was grueling: weeks at sea in cramped conditions, with disease an ever-present danger. That the König family arrived together and intact was itself a blessing.
After arriving in Pennsylvania, Philip Jacob König took the important civic step of becoming a naturalized British subject in 1762, in accordance with an act of Parliament — a formal declaration of his commitment to his new home just one year before he would take a wife.
Maria Barbara Wilhelm: Born in the New World
Maria Barbara Wilhelm was born 7 September 1740 in Tulpehoeken, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania Colony — the fifth child and second daughter of Johann Jacob Wilhelm (1698–1773) and Anna Catherina Unruh (1709–1771). Unlike her future husband, Maria Barbara was American-born, though her parents had made their own Atlantic crossing just six years before her birth.
Her parents, Johann Jacob Wilhelm and Anna Catherina Unruh, had married around 1727 in Bavaria and made their voyage to Pennsylvania aboard the ship Saint Andrew, arriving in Philadelphia on 12 September 1734. They settled in the Tulpehoeken region of Lancaster County, where Maria Barbara was born. The Tulpehoeken Valley was a particularly vibrant center of German settlement, its fertile farmland attracting many Palatine families.
Maria Barbara's Siblings
Maria Barbara grew up in a large and close-knit family with five siblings:
- Johann Jacob Wilhelm, born 9 February 1728 in Walsheim, Rheinland-Pfalz — he married Sophia Catharine Schupp in 1754 in Lancaster and died 16 November 1784 in Donegal, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.
- Johann Valentin Wilhelm, born before 2 December 1731 in Niederhochstadt, Rheinland-Pfalz — remarkably, he returned to Europe and died 17 March 1809 at the age of 77 in Harras, Thüringen, Germany.
- Maria Catharina Wilhelm, born about 1736, probably in Berks County — she married Henrich Zanck before 1752 and died 4 February 1793 in Lancaster.
- Philip Jacob Wilhelm, born 10 January 1738 in Tulpehoeken — he married Maria Elisabeth Haberstich on 25 May 1762 in Lancaster and died 20 October 1795 in Lancaster.
- Johann Adam Wilhelm, born before 24 November 1742 in Tulpehoeken — he married Maria Barbara König (Philip Jacob's sister!) around 1770, a charming intertwining of the two families. He died 20 July 1824 in Lancaster.
On 1 April 1763, Philip Jacob König and Maria Barbara Wilhelm were joined in marriage in a ceremony performed by the Reverend John Waldschmidt of the Reformed faith. The wedding took place in the parlor of the bride's family home in Lancaster County — an intimate and personal setting befitting the close family ties of the German Reformed community. The Lancaster church records capture the moment simply but warmly:
"König, Philip Jacob, s. of Nicolaus König, and Maria Barbara, d. of Jacob Wilhelm; Apr. 1, 1763; in Jacob Wilhelm's house."It is a tender detail that their wedding took place in Maria Barbara's childhood home, surrounded by family. The couple made their home in York County, Pennsylvania, where they would raise their family. The note that Philip Jacob's sister Maria Barbara König would eventually marry Maria Barbara Wilhelm's brother Johann Adam Wilhelm speaks to the depth of connection between these two families.
Philip Jacob and Maria Barbara had seven children together between 1764 and 1777, the first four baptized in the First Reformed (Trinity) Church in York, and the last three in Manchester Lutheran Church:
- Philip Jacob König, born 24 February 1764 in York, York County — he married Catherine Ruth before 1789 (12 children together), and after her death married Christina Miller on 8 March 1814 (three more children). He died 2 March 1829 in Spring Garden Township, York County.
- Elizabeth König, born 17 May 1767 in York, York County — she married Bernard Pentz in York; no known children.
- Henry König, born 8 January 1770 in York, York County — he married Elizabeth Diehl about 1790; they had one child. He died about 1805 in York.
- George König, born 4 July 1774 in York, York County — he married Catherine Mary Stickle in 1794 in Somerset County; they had 11 children. He died 4 October 1844 in Perryopolis, Fayette County, Pennsylvania.
- Peter König, born 18 December 1775 in Manchester, York County — he married Susanna Miller on 3 March 1800; they had nine children. He died May 1847 in York.
- John König, born 16 May 1776 in Manchester, York County — no further record has been found.
- Barbara König, born 30 November 1777 in Manchester, York County — she married John Rouse in 1796 in York; they had six children. She died 13 February 1805 in York.
Philip Jacob König was a man of industry and civic energy. As early as 27 December 1763 — just months after his wedding — he purchased 200 acres of his parents' farm, including the family home. He worked the land as a farmer for several years, building a foundation for his growing family.
Then, in 1771, his path changed. His brother-in-law Martin Cronemiller (husband of Philip Jacob's sister Anna Elisabetha) died that year, leaving behind a grist mill and his widow. On 10 June 1771, Philip Jacob became the owner of the grist mill and 13 acres of adjoining land — stepping into both a new livelihood and a responsibility to the family. The transition from farmer to miller was a significant step up in both economic standing and community importance; a grist mill was the beating heart of any agricultural settlement, where neighbors brought their grain and debts were settled.
By 1779, Philip Jacob had expanded his operations further, purchasing a large lot in York for 1,500 pounds from Henry and Catharine Wolf. A sawmill was built on the property and was operational before 1781, giving the König family a remarkable dual enterprise of milling both grain and timber.
The scale of his success is reflected in the 1780 Tax and Exoneration List for York County, where Philip Jacob King (as the name was increasingly Anglicized) was recorded in Manchester Township with:
- 256 acres of warranted land
- 3 horses and mares
- 4 horned cattle
- 1 grist mill and 1 sawmill
- A total assessed value of £132 7s 6d
A Patriot in the American Revolution
Philip Jacob König was no mere bystander when the colonies rose against British rule. In 1775, he emerged as a public figure in York County, first appointed as Supervisor of Highways for Manchester Township and then, in November 1775, chosen by popular vote as a member of the York County Committee of Safety. This was a position of real power and real risk — the committee functioned as the local government in all matters relating to the war effort, selecting officers for the Sixth Pennsylvania Battalion, organizing and training troops, and overseeing the local militia.
On 7 July 1776 — just three days after the Declaration of Independence was signed in Philadelphia — the five militia battalions of York County were on the march toward Perth Amboy, New Jersey, to prepare for battle against General Howe's forces threatening New York City. The campaign that followed was a sobering one: after New York fell to the British, the catastrophic Battle of Fort Washington on 16 November 1776 resulted in the near-total capture of many American forces, as the American troops were outflanked by the enemy. Many of the York County troops were not captured and returned to York.
Yet from disaster came triumph. The York County troops were at the vanguard of Washington's legendary crossing of the Delaware River on the night of 25–26 December 1776, and were among those who struck at Trenton and Princeton — the victories that revived American spirits and changed the course of the war.
Upon returning home, Philip Jacob resumed his work with the Committee of Safety and served as Assessor for Manchester Township in 1777 and 1778. In 1779, he began a three-year enlistment as Commanding Officer of the Fourth Company, Third Battalion, holding the rank of Captain and commanding 72 men. His company served until it was disbanded after the war's end in 1783. Philip Jacob König was a Patriot in both word and deed.
No death or burial record for Maria Barbara (Wilhelm) König has been found, and the silence of the historical record speaks to how invisible women's lives could be in this era. She likely died sometime before 1779, probably in York County, Pennsylvania — a young woman in her late thirties, having borne seven children in fourteen years. Her death would have left Philip Jacob with children ranging from infants to teenagers.
By around 1781, Philip Jacob had remarried. His second wife was Maria Catherina Ziegler, born 10 March 1749 in York and baptized at Christ Lutheran Church. She was the daughter of John and Anna Ziegler — and notably, Philip Jacob's own brother Johann Gottfried had married an Anna Christina Ziegler, suggesting the two families were already well acquainted. Philip Jacob and Maria Catherina had three children:
- John Adam König, born 20 January 1783 in York — he died 7 May 1835 at the age of 52 in York.
- Catherine König, born 1787 in York — no further record.
- Anna Maria König, born 10 August 1791 in York — she married Johan George Slouch on 12 November 1809 in York, had two children, and died 16 July 1859 in York.
In 1786, Philip Jacob King was enumerated in the Pennsylvania Septennial Census in Manchester, York County. In April 1787, he petitioned to take up 50 acres of additional land in Manchester Township, and the warrant was signed by none other than Benjamin Franklin, then President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania — a remarkable detail that places Philip Jacob in direct contact, however bureaucratically, with one of the Founding Fathers.
The 1790 United States Census found the household in Manchester Township with one free white male over 16 (Philip Jacob himself), three free white males under 16, four free white females, and one other free person — possibly a mill or farm laborer. It was a busy and productive household.
Philip Jacob King drafted his will on 29 November 1791, a thorough and thoughtful document that reveals both the scale of his estate and his care for his family. The will was probated on 25 February 1792 in York County, indicating he had died shortly before that date, at the age of approximately 53.
The will's provisions tell us much about the man:
- His widow Catherine was to receive a house in York (not to exceed 100 pounds), 600 pounds annually from the estate, and a careful list of household goods — including a cow, beds, pewter plates and basins, a copper kettle, a clothes press, and linens — ensuring she and the younger children would be comfortable.
- His son Henry inherited the grist mill and sawmill together with 50 acres, on the condition that he make payments to equalize the inheritance among all nine children.
- Sons Adam, Peter, and George received equal shares of land in Westmoreland County.
- Fifty pounds was bequeathed to the First Reformed Church in York — a lasting expression of his faith.
- The remainder of his property was to be sold at public auction and the proceeds divided equally among his nine children, with a modest additional sum to his eldest son Philip Jacob.
The public sale of Philip Jacob's estate took place in the first week of May 1792. Two plantations of approximately 200 acres each sold for nearly 1,600 pounds apiece — a testament to what he had built from the ground up over four decades in Pennsylvania.
A Family Remembered
Philip Jacob King, his two wives, and several of their children are believed to be buried at Prospect Hill Cemetery in York, Pennsylvania. Sadly, no gravestones for them survive today — their markers lost to time, weather, or the simple passage of generations. Yet the record they left behind in church registers, court documents, census rolls, tax lists, military rosters, and property deeds tells the story of an extraordinary family.
From a village in the Rhineland Palatinate to the farms and mills of York County, Pennsylvania, Philip Jacob König and Maria Barbara Wilhelm lived lives that embodied the immigrant experience: the courage to cross an ocean, the labor to build something new, the faith that sustained their community, and the patriotism that helped forge a nation. Their seven children and the families they founded carried that legacy forward for generations.
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