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Weyrich Norrente Rudisill

Birth
Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Death
Jun 1764 (aged 68)
Lincoln County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
Iron Station, Lincoln County, North Carolina, USA Add to Map
Plot
Unmarked Grave
Memorial ID
View Source
Reference for Weyrich burial: http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Rudisill-120
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Rudisile-7

Married to Anna Barbara Siegfried on September 13, 1718 in Elsenss der Kellewey Hilspach Germany.

ľ The Rudisill family originated in Switzerland where, in the early 17th century two villages in St. Gallen canton had Rdishli residents. His village lies in southern Germany near Heidelberg. During the Thirty Years War (1618-1848) the Rudisills moved north along the Rhine into Germany. They left the village on May 13, 1737 and arrived in Pennsylvania on August 301737 on the ship "Samuel". He signed the oath of renunciation to the Kingdom of Germany as Weiryrich Ruhsieli. They resided first in York County, PA, and Barbara is assumed to have died there sometime after the 1740 birth of their last known child. On june 4, 1764, his son John executed a deed stating that his father was deceased. Local lore is that Wyrich is buried at the Smith-Dellinger Cemetery on State Road 1309 (Magnolia Grove Road) about seven miles from Loncolnton, NC.
[Dorland Abernathy, 2017]
Reference for Weyrich burial: http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Rudisill-120
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Rudisile-7

Married to Anna Barbara Siegfried on September 13, 1718 in Elsenss der Kellewey Hilspach Germany.

ľ The Rudisill family originated in Switzerland where, in the early 17th century two villages in St. Gallen canton had Rdishli residents. His village lies in southern Germany near Heidelberg. During the Thirty Years War (1618-1848) the Rudisills moved north along the Rhine into Germany. They left the village on May 13, 1737 and arrived in Pennsylvania on August 301737 on the ship "Samuel". He signed the oath of renunciation to the Kingdom of Germany as Weiryrich Ruhsieli. They resided first in York County, PA, and Barbara is assumed to have died there sometime after the 1740 birth of their last known child. On june 4, 1764, his son John executed a deed stating that his father was deceased. Local lore is that Wyrich is buried at the Smith-Dellinger Cemetery on State Road 1309 (Magnolia Grove Road) about seven miles from Loncolnton, NC.
[Dorland Abernathy, 2017]