Montgomery County PA Archives Biographies.....Bertolet, Benjamin 1836 - 
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Source: Biographical Annals of Montgomery County Pennsylvania, T. S. Benham & Company and the Lewis Publishing Company, 1904
Author: Ellwood Roberts, Editor

BENJAMIN BERTOLET. The Bertolet family were among the early 
French Huguenot settlers in Pennsylvania. Jean Bertolet 
arrived in the colonies in 1726, and his brother, Peter 
Bertolet, eight or ten years earlier. The descendants of 
Peter are not able to give an authentic account of his 
arrival in the colony, but he signed a petition to 
incorporate Oley township, in Berks county, which bears date 
1720, and is on the at Reading. He was a married man, and 
left a family, a son Jonathan becoming a physician and 
marrying Charlotta, daughter of Dr. George de Benneville. 
The couple were second cousins, as Dr. Benneville's wife 
Esther was the daughter of Jean Bertolet.

Dr. Jonathan Bertolet practiced medicine at Pottsgrove, now 
Pottstown, in Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, and later at 
New Hanover Square, where he died at the age of thirty-five 
years in 1789. His remains lie in Bertolet's burying-ground 
in Frederick township, Montgomery County. His preceptor was 
evidently Dr. George de Benneville, also of a French 
Huguenot family, who lived in Oley to the time that he 
located at Branchtown, near York road and Green lane, 
Philadelphia, in 1755. He purchased a farm of twenty acres 
of land at Branchtown with a mansion, and practiced medicine 
there for many years Dr. De Benneville reserved from this 
farm about an acre of land for a burial place for himself 
and his family. It is located at the corner of York road and 
Green lane, extending by a parallel line Green lane from 
York road to Broad street. At the corner of Broad street Dr. 
de Benneville and his wife Esther were buried. He died in 
1793, in the ninetieth year of his age. He became an 
inspired religious teacher and leader, preaching in French, 
German and English, a fact which furnishes additional 
evidence of his thorough education.

Jean Bertolet was born in Chartieu Deux, in Alsace-Lorraine, 
at that time a part of France. His ancestors had resided in 
Flanders and were exiled therefrom during the Reformation, 
they being what are known as French Huguenots refugees. The 
Huguenots carried on an unequal contest against the dominant 
Catholic church from 1500 to 1595, the period generally 
known as that of the French Reformation. The first of the 
Huguenots martyred perished at Metz in 1525. One of the most 
dreadful features of the conflict was the massacre of twelve 
thousand Huguenots who were prisoners, at Amboise, in 1560. 
The Bertolet family still have in their possession the 
French Protestant Bible which was printed in 1557.

Jean Bertolet removed from the canton of Chartien Deux to 
Berne, in western Switzerland. It had been from this country 
that the doctrines of the Reformation originally extended 
into France where they took such deep hold. It might seem as 
though those almost inaccessible Alpine regions-mountains 
and valleys-were placed in the heart of Europe in order that 
they -night afford a refuge for these religious exiles. 
Hundreds of persecuted French Protestants betook themselves 
to Switzerland and applied themselves to the various 
pursuits of life. Some of them became tenants on the 
congregational estates then just acquired. Among these was 
Jean Bertolet. He and his wife Susanna took charge of one of 
these in 1712. As nearly as can be ascertained, he was thus 
engaged as a farmer for a period of fourteen years, after 
which time he, with his wife and five children, emigrated to 
America, for the purpose, as he phrased it, of bettering 
their temporal condition. French was his mother tongue and 
that language was at first almost exclusively spoken in the 
family but it was lost in the second and third generations 
in Pennsylvania, owing to intermarriages with 
English-speaking neighbors. Jean Bertolet was an adherent of 
the Zwinglian and Calvinistic doctrines. After coming to 
Pennsylvania he associated himself with the Moravians with 
whom the Huguenots had much in common. He was a pious, 
honest man, as is proved abundantly by contemporary 
evidence. A good name was given him when he left 
Switzerland, by a passport from the church, townspeople and 
law officers. It read as follows:

"We, the undersigned, High Bailiff of the Church of the 
illustrious Count Palatine of Gutenburg, attest herewith in 
virtue of this belief that the bearer hereof, worthy, 
honorable and discrete Jean Bertolet, born at Chartien Deux 
in Switzerland, in the district of Berne, together with his 
wife he has for 14 years resided constantly in this place as 
a tenant on the high estimable bishopric or estate with its 
appertaining farm, as a pious, honest, upright ant 
reasonable and in such a manner as becomes an honest man of 
laudable conduct so that we know nothing to say after him, 
as well as his housewife, otherwise than all love and 
goodness. Besides these married people have with them their 
five children and in prospect for their better advantage and 
opportunity they wish to repair to the new land of 
Pennsylvania, and there peaceably settle themselves, being 
fully resolved and disposed.

"By virtue of our office we command respect toward, also 
service and friendly salutations and order the aforesaid 
Jean Bertolet with his housewife Susanna and their five 
children, not only to pass free and unmolested but also by 
side roads, besides their commendable good demeanor of all 
just intent and assistance be rendered them.

"In such are we by similar occasion cheerful to reciprocate, 
so with the assurance, as before mentioned, they have this 
as their true passport (unarkundt) to which we have with our 
own hand subscribed our customary Palatinate, which is 
hereunto appended.

"Given and executed at the place of Chief justice 
Wimpfeldten the nine and twentieth day of the month of April 
as we count One thousand seven hundred and twenty-six. 
(April 20, 1726).
"Attest: Hanz Erhard Beyer.
 "J. G. Wimpfeldten.( Seal.)
 "Nicholas Schoernblant, Atty." ( Seal. )

It can be seen in the above that jean Bertolet is spoken of 
as being a native of Switzerland, although it is found on 
investigation that Chartien Deux is located in 
Alsace-Lorraine, then a part of France. To this document 
were attached two seals, one of them in wax. It is not alone 
from this official document that the character of Jean 
Bertolet is known. He has left his footprints as it were, in 
the path that he passed along, which are plainly visible to 
those who come after him. Benjamin Bertolet, his descendant, 
has three other official documents which show that he was 
the official Christian leader of the French Huguenot 
settlement of Oley, in Berks county, Pennsylvania.

On arriving in Pennsylvania in 1720, Jean Bertolet resided 
temporarily in the upper part of Germantown, now Mount Airy, 
Philadelphia. Later he settled at Oley, where he purchased 
two hundred acres of land on quit rent on which he built a 
house in 1731. The date was cut upon the sill above the 
doorway. He erected his house on the log cabin plan, 
although it was roomy and durable. It was taken down in 
1826, sold and re-erected at Stonersville, where it will 
stand in good condition for several generations more.
 
Jean Bertolet held prayer meetings every Sabbath to which he 
kindly invited his Indian neighbors, some of whom soon 
became regular attendants. As the services were conducted in 
his native tongue, French, his neighboring Huguenot brethren 
also attended. The Indians told him that they could 
understand little of his prayers; yet they believed them to 
be good because of the fervent and sincere manner in which 
they were expressed. He generally knelt in prayer, and the 
Indians, by way of showing their profound reverence in their 
own fashion, prostrated themselves on the ground.

Jean Bertolet directed his attention to the cultivation of 
the soil in his new home as in his own country. He not only 
cultivated the soil, however, but also the minds of his 
children. For this purpose he engaged the most capable 
teachers he could find, in order that the young people might 
grow to be useful citizens of their adopted country. He 
employed a nobleman, the young Count George de Benneville, a 
Huguenot, to teach them.

Count Zinzendorf visited Jean Bertolet at Oley. When the 
Moravian church held its one hundred and fiftieth 
anniversary at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, on December 21, 
1801, an account of it was given in one of the papers read. 
When Zinzendorf left his home in Saxony to join the 
Moravians in this country he was accompanied by his 
daughter, the Countess Benigan, then sixteen years of age, 
and Rosina, the wife of Bishop Neitchman, and also by 
Abraham and Judith Meinnue and Henry Miller, a printer. They 
landed in New York, December 10, 1741, reaching Philadelphia 
on the 21st of the same month.

They occupied a three-story brick house on the east side of 
Second street, above Race, which had been secured for them. 
Without any delay the Count instituted a series of religious 
meetings in this house which became very popular German and 
English people attended them, in order that no suspicion of 
unlawful teaching might be aroused. On December 18, the 
Count and his companions began their notable journey to 
Bethlehem, going first to Germantown, where the Count 
remained over night with Rev. John Bechtel, a member of the 
Reformed church. On the following day they set out for 
Wagner's, where they passed the night, and the next day 
journeyed on.

 They arrived, on the 24th, at the forks of the Lehigh and 
Monocacy rivers. Count Zinzendorf, whose energy was 
remarkable, did not make a protracted stay in Bethlehem, but 
on Christmas day, a few hours after thus impressive services 
in the log house at which Bethlehem was named, he set out 
and journeyed to Oley, where he preached at the house of 
Jean Bertolet. Thence he journeyed to Ephrata to investigate 
the case of one Habrecht who had left the Brethren. He 
immediately returned to Germantown. The Oley church-book 
shows that Henry Antes preached there in 1736.

The Moravian, Spangenberg, was introduced by Henry Antes in 
1737, and preached his second sermon at the house of Jean 
Bertolet in 1741.In a list of persons given in the 
Church-book as leaving taken part in a great revival at 
Oley, are the names of Jean Bertolet and his sons, as well 
as that of his wife.

Julius F. Sachse, in his "German Sectarians," Vol. I, page 
123, describes the part taken by Jean Bertolet in spreading 
the gospel among the early settlers in Pennsylvania. Their 
gatherings resulted in the organization of a religious 
society independent of any denominational creed, known as 
the Vereinigte Skippack Bruden (Associated Brethren of the 
Skippack).

The leading members of this new sect were Henry Frey, John 
Cooper, George Merkel, Christian Weber, John Boun, Jacob 
Wenzen, Joshua Schmidt, William Bossen and Joshua Becker, of 
Skippack; Henry Antes, William Frey, George Stiefel, Henry 
Holstein and Andrew Frey, of Frederick township; Matthias 
Gemaehle and Abraham Wagner, of Matetsche (Methacton); Jean 
Bertelot, Francis Ritter and William Potts, of Oley; John 
Bechtel, John Adam Gruber, Blasius Macknet and George 
Benzel, of Germantown.

The following is the inscription on the memorial stone 
erected to Jean Bertolet

IN MEMORIAM 
JEAN BERTOLET
AND HIS WIFE
SUSANNA, NEE DE HARCOURT, 
EMIGRATED TO AMERICA 
A. D. 1726.
ERECTED BY HIS DESCENDANTS
SEPT. 4TH, 1902.
A PIOUS, UPRIGHT FRENCH 
HUGUENOT BISHOP.

The location in which Jean Bertolet settled at Oley was 
about one mile west of what is now known as Yellow House. He 
died about the year 1743. His oldest son Abraham (2) was 
born December 11, 1712, married Esther De Turk in 1750, and 
died in July, 1766. He was a blacksmith by trade, and a very 
good mechanic. He built entirely with his own hands a saw 
mill, complete in all its arrangements, on a branch of the 
Manatawney creek. It is still in running order on the old 
farm.

His other children were (2) Maria, born 1715, died 1802, 
married Stephen Barnet; (3) John, born 1717, died 1789, 
married a daughter of Peter Ballio; (4) Esther, born 1720, 
died 1796, married Dr. George De Benneville; (5) Susanna, 
born 1722, married Jacob Frey, son of William and grandson 
of Henry Frey, who arrived in America in 1675. Susanna died 
in 1805; (6)Frederick, born 1727, died 1779, the only child 
of Jean and Susanna Bertolet born in America, married 
Esther, daughter of Abraham Le Van, and lived all his life 
on the Bertolet homestead, one of his sons operating the 
charcoal forge and furnace for many years.

The children of Abraham and Esther Bertolet: John, born in 
1731; Mary, born 1737, married Daniel Hoch; Daniel, born May 
9, 1741, married Maria Yoder, and resided on his father's 
farm; Elizabeth, born in 1742, married John De Turk; Samuel, 
born in Oley, September 14, 1743, married Esther Frey, his 
first cousin, daughter of Jacob Frey of Falkner Swamp, and 
died January1, 1805; Esther, born in 1746, married George 
Yoder.

Among the children of Daniel Bertolet, oldest son of Abraham 
and Esther Bertolet, was Daniel Bertolet, Jr. He was born on 
the old homestead in Oley, near Friedensburg, January 11, 
1781. He married Mary Griesemer. He died September 1, 1868, 
aged eighty-eight years. He became the Pietist, and was very 
eccentric, forbidding all smoking in his house. He was one 
of the earliest to join the Evangelical Methodist church, 
and erected a church building for the organization on his 
farm at Friedensburg. His family became one of the most 
popular in Berks county in those days.

His children were as follows: Daniel G., born January 17, 
1809, married Hettie Bertolet. He was a merchant 
miller.Maria, married Moses Miller, who was one of the early 
coal operators in Schuylkill county, Pennsylvania. Isaac, 
born April 11, 1810, became an iron manufacturer; operating 
a rolling mill in Reading. He had two sons, Jonathan and 
Daniel N., both of whole became physicians and served in the 
United States navy. Jonathan died in Berlin, Germany, in 
1863. He was sunstruck while serving with General N. P. 
Banks' Division, then operating on the Mississippi river, 
and, partly recovering, went abroad to recuperate his 
health. Dying, as stated, he was buried at Berlin. Dr. 
Daniel N. Bertolet is still serving in the navy, standing at 
the head of his profession.

Jacob became a minister in the Evangelical organization and 
was popular among that people. He had a son Israel who still 
owns the old Abraham homestead and sawmill, and is also 
interested in financial affairs at Reading. The farm in 
question was originally owned by Isaac De Turk, a 
brother-in-law of Jean Bertolet. Abraham's wife Esther took 
it as her share of her father's estate.

 Of the children of Jacob Bertolet, Israel has two sons, 
Haman and Samuel. Haman is a civil engineer in the employ of 
the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Samuel is an 
attorney-at-law, and is engaged in practice at Reading. J 
Samuel Bertolet, the second son of Abraham and Esther 
Bertolet, married his cousin, Esther Frey, and removed to 
Falkner Swamp. Benjamin Bertolet, subject of this sketch, is 
one of his descendants. 
 
Samuel served during the Revolutionary war in Colonel 
Frederick Antes' Regiment, in 1777, from May to December, in 
the Philadelphia County Militia. He followed his commander 
from Newton in Bucks county, to Falls of Schuylkill. From 
that place the army marched to the Brandywine where the 
battle of the Brandywine was fought, September 11, 1777. 
That night the army retreated to Chester and the next day to 
the old camp at Falls of Schuylkill. Two days later the army 
moved to Muck Tavern and White Horse Tavern, where some of 
the militia had a skirmish with the British, September 16, 
1777. When the rainy season, the autumnal equinox, set in, 
the army moved to Chester Springs, and again to Warwick 
Furnace, and then to Parker's Ford, recrossing the 
Schuylkill. From that point the army marched to Trappe. It 
was about this time that General Wayne's division was 
surprised in the night by the British troops at Paoli, and 
many of his men killed. In that engagement Samuel Bertolet 
with his team narrowly escaped being taken prisoner by the 
British. Samuel and Esther Bertolet had several children: 
Abraham, the eldest, born August 26, 1773, married Elizabeth 
Hunsicker who was born September 7, 1775, they having three 
sons, Henry, Samuel and Abraham, the father dying March 28, 
1862.

This Henry was the father of Abraham R. Bertolet, the 
provost marshal who was shot and killed by a deserter, 
William Howe, in 1863, during the Rebellion, while Abraham 
was endeavoring to arrest him, the occurrence causing much 
excitement in Montgomery county at the time. 

Samuel H., the second son of Abraham and Elizabeth Bertolet, 
born in July, 1805, died in 1852, married Elizabeth 
Pennypacker, born 1803, died in 1863, of the same family as 
Governor Samuel W. Pennypacker. Samuel H. was a justice of 
the peace in Frederick township for many years, spelling his 
name Bartolet. He had five sons and three daughters. 
Samuel's sons were Abraham P., Samuel P., Albert G., 
Benjamin F. and Ephraim. 

Jacob, second son of Samuel and Esther (Frey) Bertolet, born 
in March, 1776, died in March, 1843, married Hannah Leidy, 
and had three sons and two daughters, the sons being John 
L., Samuel and Jacob. 

Samuel, third son of Samuel and Esther Bertolet, born in 
May, 1779, died February 28, 1845, married Hannah Urick, who 
was born in 1784, and died in 1861. They resided near 
Pughtown, in Chester county, Pennsylvania, he being engaged 
in the milling business on French creek, and had four sons 
and three daughters, the sons being Benjamin, John, Samuel 
and Jacob. 

John Bertolet, son of Samuel and Elizabeth (Frey) Bertolet 
(second wife), born November 5, 1790, died January 12, 1864, 
resided on the Frey-Bertolet homestead. It was at this place 
that General Washington established his army office, and it 
was used as such by his officers while he established his 
headquarters with Colonel Frederick Antes on the adjoining 
farm, the army being encamped at Fagleysville, in New 
Hanover township, Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, known in 
history as Camp Pottsgrove, September 18th to 26th, 1777.He 
has seven daughters and one son. 

Of the daughters who reached womanhood, Elizabeth married 
Silas Grubb, and was the mother of Rev. N. Bertolet Grubb; 
Catharine married John Hartzel; Mary married Edward 
Willauer; Esther married Noah Fagley; Susanna married Jacob 
Bergey; Lydia married John Longacre. John, the only son, 
died young. 

Daniel Bertolet (father), the youngest son of Samuel and 
Elizabeth, born April 20, 1796, and died February 26, 1868, 
married Catharine Gabel, born in 1803, and died in 1887. 
They had eleven children: Elizabeth married Elias Fagley; 
Esther married Jacob Bleim; John married Elizabeth Borneman; 
Ezra married Eleana Knipe; Susanna married H. B. Nace; 
Daniel married Eleanor Dunn; Abraham married Amanda More; 
Benjamin married Amelia Heberling; Maria married Michael 
Diehl; Samuel married Mary Barndt, and (second wife) Mary 
Borneman; and Abner married Maggie Davidson.

Daniel Bertolet, son of Samuel, was allotted one-half of the 
old Frey-Bertolet homestead which consisted of two hundred 
acres. He improved it and became a noted farmer, brick 
manufacturer and builder. In the deed to him a half acre was 
reserved for the Bertolet burying ground. He was in the 
habit of purchasing unimproved land and erecting buildings 
them, and selling it for farms. The most important building, 
he erected was the Frederick Institute, a school for higher 
education, which he built for a company composed of 
prominent citizens of that locality.This building was bought 
by the Mennonite church on behalf of their eastern district 
conference, in 1806, and has ever since been used by them 
for their Home for the Aged. Five of Daniel Bertolet's sons 
settled in Philadelphia, and all entered into business of 
different kinds. Ezra and Abraham carried on the iron 
business for a number of years. Benjamin engaged in brick 
manufacturing and extensive building operations. Samuel and 
Abner also engaged in the manufacture of brick. John 
remained in Frederick township, and followed farming. He had 
two sons, Amos B. and John B. Ezra had four sons: Conrad K. 
and Charles H., both of whom died after they had reached 
manhood; William, who is engaged in the sand business; and 
Ira B., who is engaged in selling dyes; Daniel removed to 
Brooklyn. He has no children. Abraham has two sons, Calvin 
M. and Abraham Lincoln. Both are printers and unmarried. 
Benjamin has two sons, Daniel H., of Pottstown, engaged in 
the real estate and building business, and Walter Benjamin, 
who is a real-estate and insurance broker in Philadelphia. 
They are both, like their father, the subject of this 
sketch, active businessmen. Walter Benjamin has a son, 
Benjamin 2d.

In the foregoing genealogy of the Bertolet family, only- two 
of its branches have been brought down to 1904. The family 
has had many medical men among its members: Jean Bertolet's 
son John became a physician, and also Peter's son Jonathan, 
and in every generation there have been representatives in 
the learned professions. Dr. Peter Bertolet, son of the 
second Daniel, was noted as a historian and much of his 
manuscript is found with the Historical Society of 
Pennsylvania. At the present time there are five Reading 
physicians who belong to the family.

Benjamin Bertolet attended the common pay schools and for a 
short term the Frederick Institute in Montgomery county. He 
was married, October 24, 1864, to Miss Amelia Heberling, a 
daughter of Daniel Heberling, a prominent citizen of Carbon 
county, who for twenty years was a justice of the peace and 
was also associate judge. Mrs. Bertolet died April 16, 1859. 
In politics he was a Republican but never sought or desired 
office. He was ever loyal in citizenship and as business 
prevented him from joining the army he sent a substitute to 
the war. 

In his early business career he became connected with the 
iron industry, and after ten years he turned his attention 
to the manufacture of brick, in which he continued until the 
spring of 1902, covering thirty-five years. He still owns 
the old homestead near Fredrick, Montgomery county, and 
spends his summers thereon. He belongs to both the 
Pennsylvania and the Montgomery County Historical 
Societies. 

He has three daughters Minnie E., who is the wife of Boyd 
Macmerty, and has a daughter, Harriet. Anna B., who married 
Charles F. Hillegass and has two sons, Charles F. and 
Jonathan B. Catherine B., who married Dr. Byron F. Porter, 
of Lincoln, Maine.

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