Generation One


Unknown LÖFFLER
was born ABT 1520 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

Children of Unknown LÖFFLER are:

 

 


 

i

Johannes LÖFFLER was born ABT 1545 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

ii

Jeronimus LÖFFLER was born ABT 1540 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.  He married Anna BERG. She was born ABT 1540 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany. He married Katarina GRUBER. She was born ABT 1545 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.



Generation Two

Johannes LÖFFLER
(Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born ABT 1545 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany. He married Katharina HAUBER. She was born ABT 1550 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

Children of Johannes LÖFFLER and Katharina HAUBER are:

 

i

Jeronimus LÖFFLER was born 29 Jul 1571 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

ii Wolfgang LÖFFLER was born 10 May 1573 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

iii

Hans LÖFFLER was born 10 May 1573 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.


 

Generation Three

Hans LÖFFLER
(Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 10 May 1573 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

Children of Hans LÖFFLER and unknown are:

 

i

Margaretha LÖFFLER was born Jan 1593 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.
ii Agnes LÖFFLER was born 22 Jan 1595 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.
  Anna LÖFFLER was born 18 Oct 1595 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.
  Unknown LÖFFLER was born 17 Nov 1600 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.
  Unknown LÖFFLER was born 29 Mar 1607 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

iii

Unknown LÖFFLER was born 6 Jun 1611 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.



Generation Four

Unknown LÖFFLER
(Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 6 Jun 1611 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.  Married unknown.

Child of Unknown LÖFFLER is:

 

i. Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER was born ABT 1640 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.



Generation Three


Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER (Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born ABT 1640 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany. He married Barbara. She was born in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

Children of Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER and Barbara are:

 

i

Irma Barbara LÖFFLER was born 13 Feb 1664 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.
ii Margaretha LÖFFLER was born 8 Feb 1667 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.
iii. Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER was born 17 Feb 1677 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany.

 

 

Generation Four

Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER
(Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER5, Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 17 Feb 1677 in Hohenhaslach, Wurttemberg, Germany. He married Barbara. She was born 1686, and died 9 Oct 1717 in Hohenhaslach, Germany. He married Unknown.

Children of Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER and Barbara are:

 

i

 Johann Christian LÖFFLER was born 1711 in Hohenhaslach, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, and died ABT 1748 in York Co., PA.
ii Johann Adam LÖFFLER was born 1713 in Hohenhaslach, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, and died in Orange County, NC.  He married Anna Margaretha TRINCKEL 8 Jun 1736 in Sinsheim, Germany, daughter of Christoph TRINCKEL.

Children of Johann Adam LÖFFLER and Anna Margaretha TRINCKEL are:
+ 13 i. Johann Georg LÖFFLER was born 4 Sep 1736 in Sinsheim, Germany.
14 ii. Magdalena Catarina LÖFFLER was born 16 Nov 1739 in Lancaster County, PA.
+ 15 iii. Georg Ludwig LÖFFLER was born 5 Apr 1742 in Lancaster County, PA.
8. Johannes LÖFFLER (Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER6, Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER5, Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 1722 in Hohenhaslach, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, and died ABT 1785. He married Sally in Pennsylvania. He married Sarah.
Child of Johannes LÖFFLER and Sally is:
+ 16 i. Adam SPOON.



Child of Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER and Unknown is:


 

i. Johannes LÖFFLER was born 1722 in Hohenhaslach, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, and died ABT 1785.



Generation Five


Johann Christian LÖFFLER
(Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER6, Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER5, Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 1711 in Hohenhaslach, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, and died ABT 1748 in York Co., PA. He married Anna Maria Barbara WITTMER 20 Jun 1737 in Codorus Township, Lancaster Co., PA.

Children of Johann Christian LÖFFLER and Anna Maria Barbara WITTMER are:

 

i

Anna Margaretha SPOON was born 23 Feb 1738 in York County, Pennsylvania. She married Georg Adam COBLE 13 May 1754 in PA, son of Johann Georg COBLE and Maria Barbara GEISLER. He was born 13 Apr 1727 in Sinsheim, Germany, and died ABT 1774 in Orange County, NC.
ii Peter SPOON was born 2 Jan 1741 in York County, Pennsylvania.
iii. John SPOON was born 8 Apr 1743 in York County, Pennsylvania.
iv. Christian SPOON was born ABT 1745 in Pennsylvania, and died BET. 1790 - 1848 in Randolph County, NC.

 



Generation Six

 

Johann Adam LÖFFLER (Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER6, Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER5, Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 1713 in Hohenhaslach, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, and died in Orange County, NC.

Children of Johannes LÖFFLER and Sarah are:

 

i

John SPOON was born 17 Jul 1766 in Guilford County, NC, and died 11 Mar 1849 in Guilford County, NC.
ii Adam SPOON.
iii.  Christian SPOON.

 



Generation Seven


Christian SPOON
(Johann Christian LÖFFLER7, Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER6, Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER5, Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born ABT 1745 in Pennsylvania, and died BET. 1790 - 1848 in Randolph County, NC. He was buried in Richland Lutheran Church Cemetery, NC. He married Barbara MORETZ between 1770-1772, daughter of John I. MORETZ and Margaret UNKNOWN. She was born Aug 1752, and died 26 Jan 1847 in Randolph County, NC. She was buried in Richland Lutheran Church Cemetery, Randolph Co., NC.

Children of Christian SPOON and Barbara MORETZ are:

 

i

John SPOON was born 8 Oct 1775 in North Carolina, and died 15 Dec 1855 in Randolph County, NC.  20. John SPOON (Christian SPOON8, Johann Christian LÖFFLER7, Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER6, Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER5, Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 8 Oct 1775 in North Carolina, and died 15 Dec 1855 in Randolph County, NC. He was buried in Mount Tabor Cemetery, Randolph County, NC. He married SOPHIA. She was born 1782, and died 1859 in Randolph County, NC. She was buried in Mount Tabor Cemetery, Randolph County, NC.
Children of John SPOON and SOPHIA are:

 i. Mary SPOON was born 22 Feb 1801 in Franklinville, Randolph County, NC, and died 30 Mar 1871 in Randolph County, NC.
ii. Sarah SPOON was born 1803 in North Carolina. She married Reubin ALLRED 1 Apr 1819.
iii. Eli SPOON was born 1815 in Randolph County, NC.
iv. Joseph SPOON was born 1 Dec 1817 in Randolph County, NC, and died 28 May 1886 in Randolph County, NC. He married Sarah FREE 25 Nov 1840, daughter of Solomon FERREE and Matsy ALLRED. She was born 16 Dec 1823 in Randolph County, NC, and died 1 Sep 1899 in Randolph County, NC.
 v. William SPOON was born 1818 in North Carolina, and died 1898 in North Carolina.
vi. Agnes SPOON was born 1820 in North Carolina, and died 1891 in Randolph County, NC.
ii Barbara SPOON was born 7 Aug 1784 in North Carolina, and died 7 Mar 1846.
iii Christian SPOON was born 1788 in North Carolina, and died BET. 1785 - 1887.
iv. Adam SPOON was born 1 Aug 1788 in North Carolina, and died 26 May 1849 in Randolph County, NC.




Generation Eight

Barbara SPOON
(Christian SPOON8, Johann Christian LÖFFLER7, Hans Leonhard LÖFFLER6, Johannes Leonhard LÖFFLER5, Unknown LÖFFLER4, Hans LÖFFLER3, Johannes LÖFFLER2, Unknown LÖFFLER1) was born 7 Aug 1784 in North Carolina, and died 7 Mar 1846. She was buried in Richland Lutheran Church Cemetery, Randolph Co., NC. She married Daniel APPLE in Alamance County, NC. She married Elisha ALLRED 15 Jan 1824.

Child of Barbara SPOON and Daniel APPLE is:

 

i.

David Apple, born circa 1783, he married twice, Mary Thackson was his second wife.  He went to Tennessee.  Children by first wife, Milton T., Anthony and Madison.  Children by Mary:  Jackson Carroll, Margaret M., Mary Jane, Frances S. Martha Washington, Catharine and Hampton.

ii.

Catherine Apple, born circa 1785, she married Martin Isley Remained in North Carolina.

iii.

John Apple, born circa 1786, he married Mary Barbary Waggoner.  Children:  Winnie, Alfred, Isabelle, Martha, Priscilla, Mary, George, Pinckney, Henry and Peter.

iv.

Milley? Apple, born circa 1788

v.

Daniel Apple, Jr., born about 1790; he married Barbara Elizabeth Garrett and had son Henry Apple.  Daniel Jr. migrates to Tennessee.

vi.

George Washington Apple, born ?, he married Mary McDonald and later migrated to Tennessee.  From a descendant:  George W. Apple married Mary McDonald and had Ridley McDonald Apple who married Margaret Ann Stewart and had William Sampson Apple who married Mariah King McDonald and had Herman Mack Apple who married Ida Sullins and had Lillie Ethel Apple who married Horace Larkin Morgan and had Etta Berneice Morgan who married Kenneth J. Aday and had Linda Gayle Aday who married Douglas Wayne Hatcher and had me, Shara Hatcher.

vii.

William Apple (our line) was born circa 1796-1800 in Guilford County, North Carolina and died in Orange County, Indiana between 1844 and 1849 when his widow (second wife, Anna Allstot) remarries. On July 13, 1819 in Guilford County when William was abt 23 years old he married Caty Smith. William and Caty migrated to Indiana sometime after the 1830 census in Davidson Co., NC.  Their son, John W. Apple (my line) states in every census he is listed in that he was born in Indiana (1833/34).  His older brother, born in 1825 indicates on all of the census that he was born in NC.  I believe my William went ahead of the rest of the Apples to Indiana, perhaps in 1832 or 33 when John was born.  Several uncles and cousins of Williams' moved in masse around 1839 from NC to Indiana.  William married for a third time to Anna Allstot 24 Dec 1844 in Orange County, Indiana.

viii.

Adam Apple - John Apple of Tucson, AZ thinks he is descended from this son, and his name is Adam and he ended up in Tennessee with George and David above.  John's line goes Daniel, Adam, Jackson, John Dealus, David Ray and then him, John David Apple.

ix.

Elisabetha Apple was born June 22, 1804, she married John Rhodes

x.

Henry Apple died on April 24, 1875.  He married Elizabeth Apple, his first cousin.

xi.

Daughter Apple, born circa 1808 (could her name be Barbara?)

xii.

Manervy Apple, born circa 1810; she married Thomas Gant.  I believe they remained in North Carolina, and Manervy died young.



See the Apple History here.

__________________

 

History of the Spoon Family The story of a true pioneer family, from its humble beginnings in Germany to its journey to America and adventures leading the way to California By Doug Spoon Second Edition, 2003 PREFACE

Family history research has always fascinated me, but never more so than when I began work on this second edition of the story of the Spoon family. As interesting as the facts uncovered for the first edition were, it soon became evident over the course of the last two years that much of the still was still untold. The motivation to add to an already fascinating story came on a trip to the Family History Library in Salt Lake City. There, in 450-year-old church documents written in German, was the answer I’d been looking for – the origin of the Spoon family, which so many of us had only been guessing at for all these years. For one thing, I learned that the original surname was not Loeffel, but Löffler, as you will read in these pages. I learned much about the family’s hometown in southern Germany and is rich history.

This helped me confirm a relationship to the family members who first traveled to America, enabling the family history to reach back many more generations than the first edition of the book did. As a result, we now have the account of a family that has been traced back to the 1500s and is linked generation by generation directly to my son, Darren Wesley Spoon, the last male of this line with the Spoon surname. Most of the additional information for this second edition is found in the first few chapters, although much detail has been added to later chapters as well. In addition, many new photos and maps have been added.

I would like to thank Wanda Drown, Donna DeMayo, Laura Frost Nugent and Marilyn Spoon for their contributions, not only for the first edition but in adding information for this second edition. Wanda provided many of the names, dates and documents that helped get me started. Throughout my research, she has continued to update me with facts and remembrances, filling in the blanks and digging out valuable old photos. I’m also grateful to all of them and to Mari Jane Jackson-Hildenbrand for providing family priceless family photos from their personal collections. This project would not have been complete without the assistance of many professional and amateur genealogists who helped me learn many interesting facts about our earliest ancestors in this country and in Germany. I am especially indebted to the staff at the Family History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Salt Lake City; Michael Boyles, a distant cousin from North Carolina who has an extensive Spoon family history of his own; Arthur Erickson, genealogy librarian at the Greensboro, N.C. public library; the Guilford County, N.C. Genealogical Society; the State of North Carolina Dept. of Cultural Resources; Phyllis Walters of the Plainfield, Ind., public library; Stephen E. Towne of the Indiana State Archives; and Bill Nelson, a resident of Amo. Ind., who answered my inquiry on the internet, discovered the location of Henry Spoon's grave in Amo Cemetery and visited it, describing the surroundings and headstone to me. I am also grateful to my wife Kristen, who has a true appreciation of the value of genealogy and who has encouraged me throughout this project. Doug Spoon Temple City, Calif. Christmas Eve, 2003

~

CHAPTER 1: The Löfflers of Hohenhaslach Deep in the heart of southern Germany, nestled in the rolling hills just northeast of the Black Forest in the state of Baden-Württemberg, lies the village of Hohenhaslach. Today this small town and its neighboring municipality, Saxonia Home, make up a quiet rural community of some 16,000 villagers. It is part of the greater community of Sachsenheim in Ludwigsburg County. Stuttgart is approximately 25 miles to the southeast, with Munich another 225 miles further east. This mountainous region is known as the northern Kraichgau, an area bordered by the Rhine River to the west and the Neckar River to the north. Home to small businesses, tradition-rich churches and a popular soccer club, Hohenhaslach is perhaps best known in the region for its lush vineyards. For centuries, workers have toiled in its fields to make Hohenhaslach one of the country’s most successful wine producers.

It is also the first known homeland of the family Löffler, which we have come to know in modern times by the surname Spoon. The German translation of "spoon" is "Löffel," and genealogists interpret the surname Löffler to mean "spoon maker." This suggests a possible occupation for our Spoon family ancestors. Further evidence indicates that family members were involved in food preparation of some kind. A 1736 church record from nearby Sinsheim identifies a man since proven to be a Spoon ancestor as Leonhard Löffler, "citizen and baker at Hohenhaslach." The man referred to in that church document is listed in Hohenhaslach baptismal records as Hans Leonhard Löffler, born Feb. 17, 1677. Hans, also referred to as Johannes, is the earliest ancestor with a proven direct connection to the Spoon family at this time. Even so, church records in Hohenhaslach indicate that the Löffler family lived in that village at least as far back as the mid-1500s. As Werner Holzhäuer, a current resident of the town, wrote in correspondence with the author, "An ancient Hohenhaslach family was called Löffler." Information about the Löffler family in Hohenhaslach can be found in a microfilm entitled "Evangelische Kirche Hohenhaslach" (Protestant church records of Hohenhaslach) at the Family History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Salt Lake City, Utah.

This microfilm of the original German church documents reveals many references to the name Löffler, with naming customs and generation gaps suggesting that we have many ancestors in the area dating back well before Hans Leonhard Löffler. These records begin in the 1550s, which was probably the time the church in Hohenhaslach was established. Historians note that the Reformation had come to the area around 1555, with shifts in political power establishing most German communities as one of two religious faiths: Roman Catholic or Lutheran. It is likely that prior to that time, no organized church in the area remained intact long enough to preserve such records. It is also possible that church records were destroyed during the centuries of religious and political upheaval that preceded the 1500s.

The village of Hohenhaslach dates back to the ninth century, when a land owner named Ruther Lorsch gave property in a region known as Hasalahe to a local monastery. The name Hohenhaslach was first mentioned in historical documents in the year 1283. In 1356, Count Heinrich von Vaihingen bequeathed his entire possession – which included Hohenhaslach and Donkey Castle Mountain, possibly the site of the monastery – to the house of Württemberg. The village had begun to prosper as a quiet community of vineyards by the 16th century. It is in the first few pages of the records of the Lutheran church in Hohenhaslach that the first entry of the name Löffler is found. On Oct. 13, 1566, a boy named Martin Löffler is listed as the newborn son of Jeronimus Löffler and his wife, the former Anna Berg. It is likely that the dates entered in the church records are those of the actual baptism rather than the birth. Baptisms were performed soon after the birth of a child, however, so for our purposes we will refer to the date listed as the birth date. There is no further mention of Martin Löffler in the church records of Hohenhaslach. For now, we must assume that either Martin had no children or that he moved away from the area.

Since we know that our ancestors were still living in Hohenhaslach more than 100 years later, it seems likely that the Spoon family descended from another member of the Löffler family. Fortunately, the author didn’t have to look far to find one. Church records list the July 29, 1571 birth of a boy named Jeronimus Löffler. The entry is made under the date Oct. 1, the day of the baptism. Obviously, this is not the same Jeronimus as the one mentioned earlier, but it certainly could be his nephew and a cousin of Martin. The first name of the father in the church document is difficult to read; neither the author nor a translator at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City were able to decipher the handwritten German script. As mysterious as this entry in the church documents is, it very well could be the oldest surviving record of a Spoon ancestor.

One thing is certain – the name of Jeronimus’ mother, Katharina Hauber. The name Hauber, clearly legible on the document, is a famous name in the history of Hohenhaslach. Johann Hauber, a Dr. of Theology, is pictured holding a Bible in the book "Hohenhaslach im Zeitlauf der Geschichte," a history of the village available at the Family History Library. He is listed as the father of Michael Hauber, a pastor in Hohenhaslach in the 1650s. Another prominent Hohenhaslach citizen who was certainly a descendant of Katharina is Eberhard David Hauber (1695-1765). After studying at Germany’s Tubigen University, he received the degree of Dr. of Theology in 1727. At the request of King Christian IV of Denmark, Hauber moved to Copenhagen in 1746 to serve as a priest at St. Petri Church. According to a biography of Hauber, "Because of his great knowledge and authorship, he became a member of the Royal Scientists’ Society and was promoted in 1753 as consistorial advisor. His private library contained 16,000 to 17,000 books; he had a famous collection of Bible translations of almost every language on earth." Hauber is buried in the St. Petri Church graveyard. Given the religious fervor of her descendants, it is likely that Katharina Hauber and her husband raised young Jeronimus in a loving home with scriptural teachings.

Obviously, they attended church in Hohenhaslach. In the records of that church is listed the May 10, 1573 birth of twin sons, Wolfgang and Hans, to the same "Unknown" Löffler and Katharina Hauber. Assuming that this branch of the Löffler family includes our direct ancestors, we focus on Hans as the next generation in the line that ultimately leads to the Spoons. The recorded births in 1593 and 1595 of Margaretha and Agnes Löffler, respectively, both list a father named Hans (the mother’s name is not listed). Four other children during this time period are listed with a father named Hans; unfortunately, the first names of the last three children in this family, born in 1600, 1607 and 1611, are illegible. The author has determined that one of these children is the father of the next generation in our line of direct ancestors.

This is virtually certain, because there are no documents listing any other Löfflers in Hohenhaslach during this time. Until we have confirmation, we will assume for purposes of this book that it is the "Unknown" Löffler born June 6, 1611. Suggesting that the first name of that child was Hans (or Johannes) would be a good guess. Why? Because the patriarch of the next two generations had that name. Hans Leonhard Loffler, born Feb. 17, 1677, is listed in the Hohenhaslach church records with a father named Johannes. The author could not find a birth record for a Johannes Löffler around 1640-50, the approximate time Hans Leonhard’s father would have been born. But the church record of Hans Leonhard’s birth proves that such a man did exist, and a birth date around 1640 could make this Johannes Löffler the son of the "Unknown" Löffler born in 1611 and the grandson of the Hans Löffler born in 1573. Granted, this is all supposition until we find more detailed information. This, however, we know for sure: Hans Leonhard Löffler, born in Hohenhaslach in 1677, is confirmed as a Spoon ancestor.

The story of his children and their journey to America is well documented and will be told in these pages. It would be another 100 years before the surname was changed to the Americanized "Spoon," but as a member of the fifth documented generation of the Löffler family in Hohenhaslach, Hans Leonard already was part of a rich family heritage.

CHAPTER 2: The final years in Germany Researchers aren’t sure why the Löffler family moved from its longtime homeland of Hohenhaslach about 35 miles northwest to the town of Sinsheim. We aren’t sure exactly what year the move took place, either. It appears to have been in the 1720s, after Hans Leonhard Löffler fathered three sons. The first reference to Sinsheim is an entry in the book "Burgert’s 18th Century Emigrants from the Northern Kraichgau." A Sinsheim Lutheran church document dated June 8, 1736 records the marriage of Johann Adam Löffler to Anna Margaretha Trinckel. Johann is listed as an apprentice potter and son of "the late Leonhard Löffler" of Hohenhaslach. This is the same Johann Adam Löffler born in 1711 in Hohenhaslach. Microfilmed church records in Salt Lake City do not include births from this time period, so we don’t know Johann Adam’s exact birth date. The year was determined from the age he listed on a ship’s passenger list years later.

He had a younger brother, Johann Christian, born in 1713. Following the custom of that time and to avoid confusion, we will refer to the brothers by their middle names, Adam and Christian. The boys’ mother was named Barbara (maiden name unknown). The only evidence we have of this is a 1717 Hohenhaslach church record listing her death at age 31 from tabes (emaciation or starvation). This suggests that the family was living in modest conditions at best, perhaps with little food. We know, however, that somehow the Löfflers carried on. Even though Hans Leonhard Löffler was left a widower with two young sons, we know from ship’s passenger lists and the family history records of many Spoon relatives that he had one more child. Johannes Löffler (we know of no middle name) who was born in 1722. The name of his mother is not known, and we have no record of a second marriage for Hans Leonhard. But the church record listing Barbara Löffler’s death in 1717 justifies the claim made in many Spoon family histories that Johannes was a half brother to Adam and Christian. The identity of Johannes’ mother, as well as the final days of Hans Leonhard in Hohenhaslach, remain a mystery.

At some point before 1736, Adam Löffler relocated to Sinsheim. His brothers either came with him or followed him at some point. Perhaps they left for new beginnings following the death of their father, or maybe they simply sought the opportunities a larger town offered. Today, Sinsheim is a city of 32,000. It maintains its historic feel with the remains of a castle on the hill and quaint dwellings nestled in a valley bordering Elsenz Creek. At the same time, it is known for its automobile manufacturers and is home to a large auto and technology museum. Its history dates back to the year 770, when it was first named in official documents as "Sunnisheim." About the year 1000, a group of Benedictine monks established residence on a hill outside the village. The cloister buildings, still standing today, are now used as a youth hostel. Most of the town burned to the ground in 1689, but reconstruction was well underway by the time the Löffler brothers arrived. Another possible motive for their move to Sinsheim is religious persecution. It is well documented that the fight for religious freedom in many parts of Germany was forcing many to flee their homeland during this time period. The Thirty Years’ War, a series of battles between 1618 and 1648, and was the final step in a military attempt to settle the religious division the Reformation had caused. One of the great conflicts of early modern European history, the Thirty Years’ War led to the destruction of many villages and countless deaths. As a result, few church records before 1650 survive to this day.

On one side of the conflict was the House of Austria, which included the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperors Ferdinand II and Ferdinand III, together with Philip IV of Spain. These rulers sought to re-establish the Catholic church throughout Europe. They were opposed by several nations, including Denmark, Holland, France and Sweden, many representing the Calvinist and Lutheran faiths. Perhaps most of all, however, the conflict became a civil war in Germany, where various principalities took up arms against each other, some for and others against the Habsburgs. It was an ugly period in German history and a costly one for followers of the Lutheran faith. In the years following the end of the war, Lutherans received minimal privileges in practicing their religion.

While Catholic and Reformed congregations flourished, Lutherans found few opportunities for organized worship. Under the terms of the Palatine Church Division of 1705 in the Palatinate region of the northern Kraichgau, 5/7 of the parishes became Reformed and 2/7 became Catholic. None were established as Lutheran. In order to preserve the faith, Lutherans were forced to raise funds in other parts of Germany. Their small congregations struggled to survive.

The three sons of Hans Leonhard Löffler were part of this persecuted group of Lutherans. Whether for this reason, or for other reasons unknown to us for perhaps or a combination of both, Sinsheim became a favorable option for them. Located in a more populated area, it offered the security of an established Lutheran church, as the 1736 marriage record of Adam Löffler proves. It was also closer to the Rhine River, a means of travel already being used by Germans migrating north to the Netherlands.

In search of a place to practice their religion freely, many had heard of the opportunities available in America. Word of a settlement of German Lutherans in the colony of Pennsylvania was received with enthusiasm. Ships full of German immigrants left the port of Rotterdam (Netherlands) for America on a regular basis.

By the time of Adam’s wedding in 1736, his younger brother Christian had already set out for a new life in a new land. Following the lead of many Germans fleeing their homeland, Christian set sail on the Rhine River, a scenic trip north and west to Rotterdam. There he boarded the ship Samuel, bound for America. Risking the months-long journey with its virtual guarantee of dangerous storms and exposure to disease, Christian became the first of our ancestors to set foot on American soil. He disembarked from the Samuel at the port of Philadelphia on Aug. 17, 1733. His signature can be found on the passenger list from the journey. We have no record of any correspondence between Christian and his brothers in Germany, and we don’t know why the three didn’t travel together. Perhaps Adam and Johannes waited for Christian to send word from America before they decided their own fate. At any rate, we know that Adam and his wife Anna Margaretha followed the same route shortly after their marriage, arriving in Philadelphia on the same ship Samuel, captained by one Hugh Percy, on Aug. 30, 1737.

Perhaps it was decided that Johannes was too young to make the journey with either of his brothers. After all, he was only 11 when Christian set sail and 15 when Adam left. Finally, at the age of 25, the youngest of the Löffler brothers made the long journey, sailing out of Rotterdam on the ship Restauration, Captain James Hall in charge. The name Johannes Löffler is one of the first to appear on the passenger list of the Restauration, which arrived in Philadelphia on Aug. 9, 1747 . This youngest brother, the last of the Löffler immigrants to leave Germany for the promised land, has a special place in the history of the Spoon family. For Johannes Löffler represents the next generation in the direct line of ancestors of our Spoon family tree.

CHAPTER 3: "John the Immigrant" Johannes Löffler must have thought he had sailed right into the land of opportunity when he walked off the ship Restauration that summer day in 1747. America was still nearly 30 years from becoming the United States, but already the colonies offered immigrants the kind of freedom most had scarcely dared to dream about. Pennsylvania, which offered the same type of climate and natural surroundings as their homeland, particularly appealed to German immigrants of that time.

Pennsylvania was granted a charter as a British colony in 1681, but the history of the white man in the region more realistically dates back to 1708. In that year, Conestoga Indians living in the area complained to the Provincial Council in Philadelphia about the conduct of five Europeans who had built a house along the Potomac River. One of the Swiss, a man named Franz Ludwig Michel, explained that he had been sent by his countrymen to search for a suitable tract of land. Despite efforts by the Provincial Council to curtail the construction, the efforts of the Swiss eventually led to the settlement of the area by immigrants from Switzerland, Germany and Holland.

One of the crafts for which the German immigrants were well known was the construction of the Conestoga wagon, a covered wagon named for the Indians native to the area. This drew the attention of Benjamin Franklin, who secured a large number of wagons for use by the colonial forces during the French and Indian War in 1755. This represented a new appreciation of the Germans by Franklin, who just four years earlier had written, "Why should the Palatine boors be suffered to swarm in our settlements and, by herding together, establish their language and manners to the exclusion of ours? Why should Pennsylvania, founded by the English, become a colony of aliens?" Neither the opposition of native Indians nor the early complaints of colonists like Franklin could stop the settlement of the area by the Germans.

The immigrants became known as Pennsylvania Dutch, a term taken from the translation of the word German (Deutsch) and the fact most of these immigrants came to America via Holland. Until recently, many Spoon descendants believed that the family was originally from Holland, knowing only the story of the ship’s arrival from Rotterdam. It is likely that Johannes and his brothers first lived in Lancaster County, an area settled by a colony of Swiss Mennonites. Immigrants from the mountains of Switzerland, they settled first in the German Palatinate region before moving on to Holland, England and finally to America.

Followers of Menno Simons, they believed in the complete separation of church and state – a belief that caused them tremendous grief in Europe. Beginning in 1710, they began to settle this area of Pennsylvania together with a group of Swiss settlers who were followers of Jacob Ammon – a group today known as Amish. These people, known for their strict domestic discipline and distinctive form of clothing, can still be found in Lancaster County today.

The most detailed evidence of a Löffler brother in Lancaster County involves Adam, who is listed three times in the records of the Lancaster Trinity Lutheran Church, one of the oldest churches in a U.S. inland city. Twice in 1743, Adam donated gifts to the church – a napkin for the baptismal table and pews for the chapel. Adam appears to have been a very active member of the congregation, which is known as a major force in the establishment of the Lutheran faith in this country. Under the direction of Henry Melchoir Muhlenberg, Patriarch of the Lutheran Church in America, and the Rev. John Casper Stoever, members of Trinity Lutheran Church contributed greatly to a population that quickly spread to other parts of colonial America.

Very little is known about Johannes Löffler’s time in Pennsylvania. Most of the information on this subject comes from the research of Michael Boyles, a dentist in Winston-Salem, N.C. Taking information provided by his ancestors and after studying documents in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, Boyles has pieced together a likely scenario regarding Johannes’ early years in this country. First, Boyles notes that Johannes Löffler was soon known in American documents by the name John Spoon, the English translation of his name. This supports the research of many others who have found evidence that the Löffler brothers first changed their surname to Löffel, then adopted the English meaning by changing the name to Spoon. Since many other John Spoons followed in future generations of the Spoon family tree, Boyles refers to the former Johannes Löffler as "John the Immigrant."

Boyles acknowledges that it appears John the Immigrant spent the least amount of time of the three brothers in Pennsylvania before moving south. He has, however, uncovered some interesting facts. First, John Spoon married a woman named Sally (maiden name unknown). The couple had a son named Adam. Sources indicate that John the Immigrant also worshiped in a Lutheran church, perhaps the same congregation as Adam, with Henry Melchoir Muhlenburg as his pastor According to family records and Boyles’ research, John Spoon left Pennsylvania sometime in 1763 to start a new life in North Carolina, a colony where land was readily available and affordable to immigrants. He traveled in a group that included Michael Shoffner, Adam Moser and his nephew Fredrick, and a man named George Fogleman – whose surname would become a significant part of the Spoon family history in the coming years.

All appear to have been members of the same Lutheran congregation. They were lured by yet another promise of a home where they could practice their religion and pursue their lifestyle without fear of persecution. Joining other German Lutheran immigrants who had perhaps grown weary of the crowds pouring into Lancaster County, John Spoon headed for North Carolina and a new chapter in Spoon family history.

CHAPTER 4: A new life in North Carolina Although it was fast becoming a popular route, the path followed by John Spoon and other members of his party as they headed south must have been a rugged and lonely road. The one thing that kept them going was the promise of good farm land available in North Carolina, much of it reasonably priced by the agents of an opportunistic land owner named Henry McCulloch. A settlement referred to in 1750 land documents as McCulloch Tract 11 was most likely home to the Löffler/Spoon brothers, since it covered portions of Orange and Randolph counties (land that later became parts of Guilford County and Alamance County) in which the brothers are listed as residents in the ensuing years.

The trip to North Carolina carried the immigrants through Virginia on the only road south at that time, the Great Wagon Road. It ran through a valley nestled between the Appalachian Mountains and the Blue Ridge Mountains. This road was first carved through the rugged landscape by wild animals searching for food and attracted to the salt licks in the area. Native Americans later traveled the animal pathway, which became known as the Great Warrior Path because of its frequent use by the Iroquois Indian tribe to assault other bands of woodland natives. Years later, when settlers from Europe began using the overgrown footpath, this became the main route of mass migration south. Foot traffic gave way to simple carts, then two-wheeled carriages, then Conestoga wagons. The Treaty of Lancaster officially recognized this path – which by that time stretched 700 miles and was traveled by tens of thousands -- as the Great Wagon Road in July, 1744.

We don't know whether our ancestors walked, rode in carts or traveled in Conestoga wagons, but somehow they arrived in Big Lick -- which in 1882 became Roanoke, Virginia -- and took the southeastern fork in the road. The final leg of their trip, covering some 80 miles or so, took them to McCullough Tract 11 in the wide-open spaces of northwest North Carolina.

All three Löffler/Spoon brothers arrived in this region eventually. We don’t know exactly when Adam and Christian settled there; perhaps they arrived before John. The names of all three appear in land documents by the 1770s, however. Our Spoon ancestors ended up on land that is now right on the border of Guilford and Alamance Counties, just a few miles east of Greensboro and just south of Interstate 85.

Various surviving land deeds from that time period describe Spoon family property lines in approximately the same area, on land watered by Beaver Creek to the west and Stinking Quarter Creek to the east. Originally a part of Orange County’s greater boundaries, the land is now for the most part in Guilford County, which has a rich history of its own. Established in 1771, Guilford County actually was settled primarily in the late 1740s and 1750s. The county originally encompassed a large northwestern portion of North Carolina. It extended from the Virginia-North Carolina border south about 75 miles, a huge chunk of land roughly 50 miles wide. At that time it included what is now Randolph County, which separated in 1779, and Rockingham County, which separated in 1785.

Today its central metropolitan area is Greensboro, a city of more than 155,000. In the Revolutionary War era, Guilford County and neighboring Orange County was part of a vast wilderness inhabited by perhaps a few thousand hardy souls.

The first mention of John the Immigrant in North Carolina is in the Orange County deed book dated March 29, 1772. It describes the sale of land by "John Spoon and Sarah his wife of Orange, planter, to James McCarrol of same, 60 pounds, 100 acres." The document was signed by John Spoon in German, probably meaning he used the name Johannes Löffler. Researchers are not sure when John married Sarah, his second wife. Some believe his first wife, Sally, died before John left Pennsylvania. We are certain, however, that John and Sally had one son, Adam, born in Pennsylvania, and that John and Sarah had at least two children born in North Carolina. The first of these was a son, named Johannes like his father but also known as John Spoon.

"John the Younger," as he is referred to by Boyles, was born on July 17, 1766. The German equivalent of his surname used at the time was Löffel, as is seen in a 1779 confirmation certificate. The document, handwritten both in German and English and now in Boyles’ possession, includes the words to the hymn "A Mighty Fortress is Our God" along with the inscription, "Come here my children and I will teach you the fear of the Lord. John Spoon, 1779."

John the Younger was a teenager when his father died. Although researchers are not sure of John the Immigrant’s exact death date, we know from an entry in the Orange County deed book that it happened by 1785, probably earlier. On Sept. 22, 1785, Sarah Spoon received a portion of land from a neighbor as part of an estate settlement. In that document, Sarah is referred to as the widow of John Spoon and a reference is made to "Sarah Spoon and orphan heirs." This land is described as being "on the waters of Stinking Quarter." Boyles, who has walked the shores of this creek many times, insists it does not stink. It is definitely there, however, and the locals know this was once the site of the old Spoon homestead. As Boyles describes it, "From Highway 62 (heading south from U.S. 85) near E.M. Holt School, turn onto Kimesville Road. Travel about three miles, turn left onto Euliss Road, go a half-mile and cross the south prong of Stinking Quarter Creek. Look to your right. That’s it. But don’t expect an old house – that’s long gone."

According to Boyles, an old house near the corner of Kimesville Road and Euliss Road is the renovated former residence of Shoffner, who traveled with the Spoons from Pennsylvania. Boyles’ grandparents lived in that house at one time. He says records indicate Shoffner was by far the wealthiest in the group that traveled to North Carolina in 1763. He speculates that John the Immigrant moved south to work for Shoffner and found he could get his own land grant. By 1785, John the Immigrant was dead. No one knows where John Spoon, aka Johannes Löffler, is buried. Boyles believes he may have died in the Revolutionary War. Boyles says there is a tombstone bearing the name of John Spoon, "native of Germany," at Low’s Lutheran Church cemetery in Guilford County. He is not certain John is actually buried there, for if John was killed in combat, this could simply be a commemorative grave marker. Even if this is the case, the "original" John Spoon left to his descendants a legacy of perseverance and religious conviction that is seen in many Spoon family members in the generations that followed.

CHAPTER 5: The Spoon family spreads its roots - George Fogleman, who accompanied John the Immigrant on the long journey from Pennsylvania to North Carolina, was another early pioneer in the German migration. Born in Widdern, Germany in 1746, George arrived as a child with his family on the ship Shirley at Philadelphia in 1751. In the first few years following his migration to North Carolina, Fogleman married Catherine Curtis, another German immigrant. On Sept. 3, 1766, the couple welcomed into the world a daughter, named Maria Eva. Eve Fogleman was baptized on May 26, 1782, the first recorded baptism of an Evangelical Lutheran in North Carolina. Records indicate she spent a happy childhood on what her father called "the old plantation," which spanned both sides of the Stinking Quarter Creek. In George Fogleman’s will, written in 1785 and executed after his death in 1805, Eve inherited "a spinning wheel, a bed and bed clothes, an iron pot, and as much pewter as I give to either of my daughters when they left me," plus two cows. In about 1786 she married John "the Younger" Spoon, son of the man who had been such a faithful traveling companion to her father.

Researchers aren’t sure whether they received part of their parents’ land or purchased their own, but apparently John made a good living. According to a family history written by Ruth Spoon Sharp, great great great granddaughter of John Spoon, he "came to Orange County and became the owner of vast lands there that later were carved into Alamance County." Ruth Sharp also wrote about fond memories of Sundays and holidays spent at the "old homeplace," which was sold by the Spoon family in the 1930s. Presumably, this was the same property that had been in the family since John the Immigrant first arrived in the 1760s.

It is truly remarkable that people like Michael Boyles still know the location and visit it often. John and Eve and their parents lived during a memorable era of American history. There's little doubt they were affected by, and perhaps even participated in, the Battle of Alamance -- a fight between the militia and rebel farmers upset about the policies of royal Governor William Tryon. That battle was fought in May 1771, just a few miles east of where the Spoon farm was located.

Today, a 40-acre battlefield park marks the site of the event. A few miles to the northwest lies the Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, site of one of the last significant battles of the Revolutionary War. On March 15, 1781, a group of colonists -- including many local farmers -- valiantly battled the British forces of Lord Cornwallis. Although the British forced the locals into retreat that day, Cornwallis' troops suffered so many losses through gunfire exchanges and hand-to-hand combat that they withdrew to Virginia, where Cornwallis later surrendered in Yorktown.

John Spoon and Eve Fogleman had seven children. The couple’s third child, born Oct. 16, 1793, was named David Sylvester Spoon. David was a member of the first generation to adopt the American surname Spoon from birth instead of the native family name Löffler. He is also the author’s great great great grandfather and a man about whom very little is known in the short time he spent on this earth.

CHAPTER 6: A life cut short Nothing is known about David Spoon’s childhood years, but it is assumed he helped work the family farm and, like most other men in rural colonial communities, chose from among the women in the few neighboring families for a mate. On Feb. 22, 1820, he married Margaret (known as Peggy) Greeson, whose ancestors came from the same region of Germany as the Spoons and most of the other settlers of Guilford County.

David and Peggy Spoon lived on land deeded them by Peggy’s father. It was a 150-acre parcel bordering Beaver Creek, which crosses what it is now Highway 61 at a point near the intersection of Highway 62, just a few miles southeast of Greensboro. Making use of the rich soil and nearby water source, the Spoons diligently worked a farm that annually reaped harvests of wheat, corn and other crops. Peggy's great grandfather, Isaac Greeson, sailed from Rotterdam on the ship James Goodwill, arriving in Philadelphia on Sept. 11, 1728. His trip south as one of Guilford County's first settlers was surely a difficult one, but it appears Isaac carved out a productive life once he got there. Land grant documents from Sept. 11, 1762 show an Isaac Grayson (probably Greeson) as the owner of 907 acres. And Salisbury District Court


 

I just returned from a trip to Salt Lake City, where I researched the surname Löffler in German church records at the LDS Family History Center. As many of you know, the Spoon surname was originally Löffel (German for spoon or ladle) or, as I discovered, more precisely Löffler (spoonmaker). In searching for the ancestors of the three Löffler brothers (Christian, Adam and Johannes) who came to America in the 1700s, I found the following entries under the surname Löffler in church records in Hohenhaslach. This is a village in Wurttemberg, Germany where, according to a biographical sketch some of us found earlier, the
father of the three brothers lived.

All the following baptism records can be found on the microfilm "Evangelische Kirche Hohenhaslach." It is recorded in old German script, but a little patience and some help from a German woman in the Family History Center enabled me to find and translate the following:

Martin Löffler, born 13 Oct. 1566. Parents were Jeronimus Löffler and Anna
Berg.

Jeronimus Löffler, born 29 July, 1571. Parents were (illegible) Löffler and
Katharina Hauber. I'm still studying the first name of the father in an attempt
to determine what the name is.

Hans Löffler and Wolfgang Löffler (apparently twins), born 10 May, 1573.
Again, parents were (illegible) Löffler and Katharina Hauber.

Margaretha Löffler, born Jan. 1593. Father is Hans Löffler.

Agnes Löffler, born 22 Jan. 1595. Father is Hans Loffler.

Anna Löffler, born 18 Oct. 1595. Father is Hans Löffler.

(illegible) Löffler, born 17 Nov. 1600. Father is Hans Löffler.

(illegible) Löffler, born 29 Mar. 1607. Father is Hans Löffler.

(illegible) Löffler, born 6 June 1611. Father is Hans Löffler.

Georg Löffler, born 1659. Parents were Lorentz and Magdalena Löffler.

Margaretha Löffler, born 1660. Parents were Lorentz and Magdalena Löffler.

Hans Löffler, born 9 Feb. 1662. Parents were Lorentz and Magdalena Löffler.

Irma Barbara Löffler, born 13 Feb. 1664. Parents were Johannes Leonhard and
Barbara Löffler.

Leonhard Löffler, born 6 Mar. 1667. Parents were Lorentz and Magdalena
Löffler.

Margaretha Löffler, born 8 Feb. 1667. Parents were Johannes Leonhard and
Barbara Löffler.

Magdalena Löffler, born 15 Oct. 1669. Parents were Lorentz and Magdalena
Löffler.

Hans Leonhard Löffler, born 17 Feb. 1677. Parents were Johannes Leonard and
Barbara Löffler.

Jacob Löffler, born 8 Oct. 1680. Parents were Lorentz and Magdalena Löffler.

Nicholas Löffler, born 24 Apr. 1685. Parents were Hans Löffler and
(illegible).

Irma Maria Löffler, born 12 Apr. 1686. Parents were Hans Löffler and
(illegible).

Anna Catharina Löffler, born 20 Apr. 1689. Parents were Hans and Irma
Löffler.

I am trying to double check all the first names and identify those I list as
illegible. Even the German translator at the LDS library couldn't decipher a
few of them.

I can't prove the relationship between all these folks and the later Spoon
ancestors, but it seems likely this was all one family. My guess at this point
is that the fathers of the first two children listed, Martin and Jeronimus,
were brothers. I don't find any evidence that Martin had children, but the father
of the Jeronimus b. 1571 and his brothers Hans and Wolfgang could very well
be part of a line that leads down to Hans Löffler b. 1677, whom I believe to be
the father of the three brothers who immigrated to America.

I am continuing the research. Any thoughts?

Doug Spoon

 
Home / Contact Info / Surnames