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Chiefly, a record of descendants of Michael Schall, who was born in the Palatinate of the Rhine, Germany in 1739. At the age of thirteen, with his parants, his sister and two older brothers, Michael emigrated to Pennsylvania on the ship Neptune, which departed from Rotterdam, Holland and arrived on 4 October 1752. Michael was the son of Nicholas Schall who was born on 26 May 1709. Nicholas died on 27 September 1772 at the age of 64 years, and was buried at Dryland Church, Hecktown, Lower Nazareth township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania. Michael married Anna Maria an unknown date. They moved several times and had seven children. MIchael Schall lived to be ninety-one years of age and died about 1830.
Schall Family
Nicholas Schall (1709-1772) and his family immigrated from Bavaria, Germany (via Rotterdam) to land near Hecktown in what is now Northampton County, Pennsylvania. Descendants lived in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Indiana, Michigan, Iowa and elsewhere.
Show off your last name and family heritage with this Schall coat of arms and family crest shield notebook journal. Great birthday, diary, or family reunion gift for people who love ancestry, genealogy, and family trees.
In the early 1900s, orphanages in the United States housed more than 100,000 children, thousands of those living in Pittsburgh. Buildings that became group homes were constructed through churches and fraternal organizations. The facilities, complete with boarding accommodations, dining halls, schools, playgrounds, and infirmaries, offered accommodations for 100 to 300 orphans at any given time. For the orphans living in such homes, everything was communal and privacy was nonexistent. Young boys and girls slept in overcrowded dormitories, waited in long lines to use the lavatories, and lost their individuality to the uniform appearance of being an orphan. Some children still had a living parent, but due to dire circumstances of the times, their fate was in the hands of those who operated the orphanage.
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