Baron Christoph DeGraffenried

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Baron Christoph DeGraffenried

Birth
Worb, Verwaltungskreis Bern-Mittelland, Bern, Switzerland
Death
27 Oct 1743 (aged 81)
Worb, Verwaltungskreis Bern-Mittelland, Bern, Switzerland
Burial
Worb, Verwaltungskreis Bern-Mittelland, Bern, Switzerland Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Christoph DeGraffenried was a Swiss nobleman, who established a colony of Swiss and Germans in North Carolina. He was born Christoph von Graffenried in the German speaking region of Switzerland. In 1709 the Lords Proprietors of Carolina granted to him ten thousand acres on the Neuse and Cape Fear rivers, and soon afterwards a large number of Palatines and Swiss followed him to the confluence of the Trent and Neuse, where they founded a town which they called New Bern in his honor, Bern, Switzerland, having been his birthplace. While he and John Lawson, the surveyor-general of the province, were exploring the Neuse River in 1711 they were captured by the Tuscarora Indians, who had become incensed at the encroachments of the colonists, and Lawson was soon put to death, though DeGraffenried, after many weeks, was allowed to return on condition that no settlements should be made without the sanction of the native chiefs. DeGraffenried soon afterwards sold his possessions in North America and returned to Switzerland. Married to Regina Tscharner daughter of Noble Beat Lewis Tscharner of Bern, Switzerland.
Christoph DeGraffenried was a Swiss nobleman, who established a colony of Swiss and Germans in North Carolina. He was born Christoph von Graffenried in the German speaking region of Switzerland. In 1709 the Lords Proprietors of Carolina granted to him ten thousand acres on the Neuse and Cape Fear rivers, and soon afterwards a large number of Palatines and Swiss followed him to the confluence of the Trent and Neuse, where they founded a town which they called New Bern in his honor, Bern, Switzerland, having been his birthplace. While he and John Lawson, the surveyor-general of the province, were exploring the Neuse River in 1711 they were captured by the Tuscarora Indians, who had become incensed at the encroachments of the colonists, and Lawson was soon put to death, though DeGraffenried, after many weeks, was allowed to return on condition that no settlements should be made without the sanction of the native chiefs. DeGraffenried soon afterwards sold his possessions in North America and returned to Switzerland. Married to Regina Tscharner daughter of Noble Beat Lewis Tscharner of Bern, Switzerland.

Gravesite Details

His remains were removed in 1983 from the church and are now stored at the University of Bern. The same was done for all the remains in the church.