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Johan Wilhelm “William” Best III

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Johan Wilhelm “William” Best III Veteran

Birth
Germany
Death
1823 (aged 89–90)
Venango County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Beaver City, Clarion County, Pennsylvania, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.2044222, Longitude: -79.5548694
Memorial ID
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On 13 Oct 1812 Johan Wilhelm received a deed for 370 acres in what was then Venango (now known as Clarion County, Beaver Township), Pennsylvania. On 11 Sept 1813 he conveyed 125 acres to his brother Henry Best of this land. St. Paul's Lutheran Church, now in Beaver Twp., Clarion County, was built on 2 acres of this plot donated by Henry Best.

Later, leaving the homestead to his brother, Henry, William III moved to western Pennsylvania, Westmoreland County, where he cleared and cultivated a large farm and had a grist and saw-mill on the north branch of the Sewickley River. He was Captain and Court Marshall of a Westmoreland County military company to defend the frontier settlements against raids of the British and Indians during the Revolution. He was a member of the Harrold Lutheran community, and later a deacon and elder of the Lutheran Church in Greensburg. He lived in Greensburg, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, until he was quite old and then, about 1821, he went to Venango (now Clarion) County, Pennsylvania, where most of his children had already settled. The Venango/Clarion County Bests were the nucleus of St. Paul's Lutheran Church near Knox, Beaver Township, which was at one time called "Best's Church."

There is some controversy about the women to whom William Jr. was married. Historically he was married twice, first in 1763 to Anna Catherine (perhaps nee Kuster, daughter of Ludwig Kuster, or perhaps Anna Catherine Haag, or Hawk). She died about 1776 and William remarried about 1778 to his much younger cousin, Anna Catherine Dorn. Five children are known of the first marriage, seven by the second.

However, a son who is our direct ancestor, Cornelius Best, is known in none of the histories or records left in Pennsylvania. He was supposedly born in 1762, but all church birth and marriage records from around this time were burned in a fire in 1812. It is possible there was another wife, presently unknown, who would have been the mother of Cornelius. Two children have never been located by name in the Best research, one was possibly our ancestor, Cornelius.

William Best Jr. died in 1823 at the age of 90 and was buried in St. Paul's Lutheran Cemetery, Beaver Township.

From the Journal of Gabriel Adams Reichert, Traveling Minister on Sept. 22, 1823 AM with Wilhelm Best in the sick communion and the celebration with 44 communining there was a total of 45.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Listed in the Daughter's of the American Revolution as a verified Patriot, Service Source, PA ARCH, 6th Ser, Vol 2, P 305. Service Description: 1. Court Martial Man, 8th Co, 2nd Batt; 2. Commanded by Christopher Truby

Contributor: Kim K. (51070568)
On 13 Oct 1812 Johan Wilhelm received a deed for 370 acres in what was then Venango (now known as Clarion County, Beaver Township), Pennsylvania. On 11 Sept 1813 he conveyed 125 acres to his brother Henry Best of this land. St. Paul's Lutheran Church, now in Beaver Twp., Clarion County, was built on 2 acres of this plot donated by Henry Best.

Later, leaving the homestead to his brother, Henry, William III moved to western Pennsylvania, Westmoreland County, where he cleared and cultivated a large farm and had a grist and saw-mill on the north branch of the Sewickley River. He was Captain and Court Marshall of a Westmoreland County military company to defend the frontier settlements against raids of the British and Indians during the Revolution. He was a member of the Harrold Lutheran community, and later a deacon and elder of the Lutheran Church in Greensburg. He lived in Greensburg, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, until he was quite old and then, about 1821, he went to Venango (now Clarion) County, Pennsylvania, where most of his children had already settled. The Venango/Clarion County Bests were the nucleus of St. Paul's Lutheran Church near Knox, Beaver Township, which was at one time called "Best's Church."

There is some controversy about the women to whom William Jr. was married. Historically he was married twice, first in 1763 to Anna Catherine (perhaps nee Kuster, daughter of Ludwig Kuster, or perhaps Anna Catherine Haag, or Hawk). She died about 1776 and William remarried about 1778 to his much younger cousin, Anna Catherine Dorn. Five children are known of the first marriage, seven by the second.

However, a son who is our direct ancestor, Cornelius Best, is known in none of the histories or records left in Pennsylvania. He was supposedly born in 1762, but all church birth and marriage records from around this time were burned in a fire in 1812. It is possible there was another wife, presently unknown, who would have been the mother of Cornelius. Two children have never been located by name in the Best research, one was possibly our ancestor, Cornelius.

William Best Jr. died in 1823 at the age of 90 and was buried in St. Paul's Lutheran Cemetery, Beaver Township.

From the Journal of Gabriel Adams Reichert, Traveling Minister on Sept. 22, 1823 AM with Wilhelm Best in the sick communion and the celebration with 44 communining there was a total of 45.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Listed in the Daughter's of the American Revolution as a verified Patriot, Service Source, PA ARCH, 6th Ser, Vol 2, P 305. Service Description: 1. Court Martial Man, 8th Co, 2nd Batt; 2. Commanded by Christopher Truby

Contributor: Kim K. (51070568)

Inscription

his wife lies by his side

Gravesite Details

Rev. War Vet.



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