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<H2>The Jarvis Family and Other Relatives</H2>
<B>If you have reached us from Ancestry.com or another cached site, <BR>
please go to <A HREF="http://www.fmoran.com/clauder.html">http://www.fmoran.com/clauder.html</A>
to see the latest version of this page.<BR>
We welcome comments and inquiries.  Please <A HREF="mailto:[email protected], [email protected]">write us</A>. </B><P>
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<H3><IMG SRC="coff.gif"> Clauder Family</H3><P>
<HR>

<H4>First and Second Generations</H4>

<B>Carl Gottlieb Clauder (1765-1843) was born in Zwicken, Saxony, son of
Heinrich August Clauder and Anna Maria Knicker.  He came to America in
1797, having been invited to become the business manager (Vorsteher) of the Single Brethren in Salem, and arrived in Salem late in December of that year.  In 1804 he married <A HREF="transou.html">Anna Rosina Transou</A> (1763-1839).
They had one known child, Heinrich Gottlieb Clauder (1805-1880), who married <A HREF="ruede.html">Charlotte
Elizabeth Ruede</A> (1807-?).<P>



<HR>
<H4>Third Generation</H4>
Heinrich Gottlieb Clauder was a teacher in the boys' school as a young man,
and in 1828 went to teach at the Cherokee mission at Oochgeelogy, in
northern Georgia.  When Br. and Sr. Franz and Caroline (Eberhard) Eder, who
were heading this mission, were called to service in the Danish West Indies
in 1829, Heinrich Gottlieb Clauder was promoted from his status as Br.
Eder's assistant.  Directing the mission appears to have been a position
that required a wife, and he returned to Salem in September of that year,
where he married Charlotte Elizabeth Ruede on September 17th, and was
ordained a deacon a few days later.  On September 28th the couple departed
for the Cherokee mission.<P>

In 1831 the mission was disrupted, and the Clauders were forced out of the
Cherokee territory by the Georgia state military authorities.  They
returned to Salem with their son Charles and the widow <A
HREF="gambold.html">Anna Maria (Grabs) Gambold</A>.  Early in 1832,
however, conditions in the Cherokee mission had become calmer, and the
Clauders were able to return.  He was appointed postmaster at Springplace,
the other Moravian settlement among the Cherokees.  This was a position
that was conferred by the Postmaster General in Washington, and apparently
provided some security and protection from the Georgia authorities.
Charlotte's sister Sophia Dorothea Ruede went with them.  Sophia later
married <A HREF="vogler.html">Miles Philip Vogler</A> <P>

In February 1833, however, they were forced out of Georgia again, by three
Georgia families who claimed that they had rented Springplace and the lands
belonging to it from the winner of a ticket in the Georgia lottery, giving
them power of possession of the houses there.  The Clauders moved over the
border into Tennessee, to a location described as 18 miles from
Springplace, on the Connasauqua River, owned by a Captian McNair who is
referred to as a friend of the Moravians.  By this time it was becoming
clear that the Cherokees were to be forced out of their lands and driven to
the west, and an entry in the Moravian diaries, made on December 27, 1833,
concludes with the poignant words written to Br. Clauder by former
missionaries in North Carolina, that he should tell the Cherokees "they
shall not be forsaken by us, with the request that in case of removal they
try to keep together and upon arrival in the land of their sojourn they can
rebuild together with their teachers near them..." [Records of the
Moravians in NC 8:4095]
<P>

After an effort to keep the mission efforts going in Tennessee, the
Clauders returned to Salem in 1836 for several months.  Br. Clauder went
back to the mission in the spring of 1837, but by then the Cherokees were
dispersing to the west (the "Trail of Tears"), and their sorrowful
departure is recorded in the Moravian diaries. <P>

Children of Heinrich Gottlieb Clauder and Charlotte Elizabeth Ruede<BR>
Amos Comenius Clauder<BR>
Mary Sophia Clauder<BR>
Martha Louisa Clauder<BR>
Frederick Augustus Clauder (1838-?)<BR>
Charles Ignatius Clauder (ca. 1830-1863)<BR>
Anna Elizabeth Clauder (1831-1919) m. <A HREF="leinbach.html">Edward William Leinbach</A> (1823-1900)<BR>
Henry Theophius Clauder<BR>
Jane Charlotte Clauder<BR>
Sarah Adelaide Clauder<BR>
Otelia Virginia Clauder<P>


In 1839, the Clauders moved to Staten Island, NY, with Amos, Mary Sophia, Martha, and Frederick.   Although less than 10 years old, the children Charles and Anna Elizabeth remained in Salem "in the bosom of the congregation". The remaining children were born after they left North Carolina.<P>

Charles Ignatius Clauder must have been born in Georgia, in 1830 or 1831,
since the notes on his parents' return to Salem in 1831 mention their
little son.  He was sent to Nazareth PA to school in 1843, and was back in
Salem by 1858, where he appears to have been serving as a church organist.
He was killed at Fredericksburg VA on May 3, 1863.<P>

Anna Elizabeth was born in North Carolina, during the Clauders' return
there in 1832, and remained in Salem when her parents and younger siblings
moved to Staten Island.  In 1844 she was sent to the girls' boarding school
at Bethlehem.  Sometime between 1850 and 1855 she returned to Salem, and
married Edward William Leinbach.  Both are buried at Salem Moravian, as are
two of their daughters who appear not to have married but lived into their
eighties.<P>

<HR>
<H4>Sources</H4>

Records of the Moravians in North Carolina, 12 volumes<P>

Forsyth County census and cemetery records<P>

This page was created on July 15, 2001 and revised on August 26, 2001.  It was initially intended simply as a little page for the husband of Anna Rosina Transou, but the Moravian diary entries about the Clauders turned out to be unexpectedly interesting, especially the look at the Cherokee tragedy through the eyes of people who saw it first-hand.<P>

&copy;, 2001-2007 Faye Jarvis Moran<BR>
[email protected]<P>

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