Montgomery County PA Archives Biographies.....Bickel, Rev. Lewis J. July 7, 1857 - 
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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

REV. LEWIS J. BICKEL, pastor of St. James' and St. Peter's 
Lutheran churches of Pottstown, was born in Lower Pottsgrove 
township, Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, July 7, 1857.

The founder of the Bickel family came from Mosbach on the 
Rhine, near Mayence, Germany, and emigrated to this country 
in 1732, being a passenger on the good ship Mary. His son 
Ludwig, who was seven years old when his father emigrated, 
settled in Falkner's Swamp, New Hanover township, Montgomery 
County and he and his wife, Eva Barbara Bickel, were the 
parents of the following named children Anna Maria, born 
July 2, 1732; Jacob, born December 15, 1754, baptized 
December 20, 1754, married by Rev. Henry Melchior Muhlenberg 
to Elizabeth Schitler, and he was the great-grandfather of 
the Rev. Lewis J. Bikel; Johannes, who was the 
great-grandfather of John W. Bickel, Esq., of Norristown; 
Ludwig, who died when seventeen years of age; Magdalene, and 
Daniel. Ludwig Bickel, father of these children, died 
November 4, 1801, aged seventy-six years, seven months and 
one day. He was one of the victims of a very severe plague 
of dysentery. He left an estate valued at eight thousand 
pounds.

Lewis Bickel (grandfather), son of Jacob and Elizabeth 
Bickel, followed farming in Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, 
during all the years of his active career. He married 
Susanna Reigner, and their children were: Elizabeth, who 
became the wife of Joseph Reifsnyder, and after his death 
became the wife of Samuel Levengood; John; Susan, who became 
the wife of George Yohn; George; Maria, who became the wife 
of Henry Yohn; Sarah, who became the wife of James 
Gilbert;Lewis, mentionedhereinafter; Lydia, who became the 
wife of Solomon Fegely; Esther who became the wife of 
William Gilbert. All of these children are now deceased. 
Both Mr. Bickel and his wife lived to an advanced age. Their 
remains are interred in the old church yard at Hanover and 
Walnut streets, Pottstown.

Jacob Erb (maternal grandfather) was a son of Caspar Erb 
(maternal great-grandfather), who started a mill on the Erb 
farm in Lower Pottsgrove township, which he sold for $40,000 
just before his death; the mill was afterward destroyed by 
fire. His father, George Erb, came to America from Germany, 
but died soon after his arrival. The estate in Germany has 
never been settled, but is being attended to at the 
presenttime (1904). Jacob Erb (grandfather) was born and 
lived all his life on the farm in Lower Pottsgrove township, 
where his son Israel M. Erb now lives. He married Elizabeth 
Miller, whose father, Peter Miller, was a soldier in the war 
of 1812, a member of the Pennsylvania legislature in 1836, 
and who belonged to, a prominent Montgomery county family. 
He and his wife were members of the Lutheran church, and 
buried in the Lutheran church-yard in New Hanover township. 
He was a Democrat. Mr. Erb was the owner of one of the 
earliest and finest apple distilleries in the country. He 
died in 1864 at the age of seventy-three years, and his wife 
died in 1877 at the age of eighty-six years. 

Their children were: Maria, who became the wife of James 
Missimer, of Pottstown both deceased. Leah, who became the 
wife of Isaac Shalkop, of Linfield: both deceased. Rebecca, 
mother of the Rev. Lewis J. Bickel; Hannah, who became the 
wife of Peter Henricks, and after his death the wife of 
Isaac Hatfield, of Limerick township; both deceased. 
Elizabeth, who became the wife of Conrad Snell, of Lower 
Pottsgrove. Sarah, who became the wife of Isaac Geist, of 
Pottstown; both deceased. Solomon, deceased, was a resident 
of Philadelphia. Israel M., of Lower Pottsgrove township. 
Jacob F., deceased, was a resident of Pottstown.

Lewis Nickel (father) was born in Montgomery county and 
lived there all his life. He was a farmer in Lower 
Pottsgrove township until within sixteen years of the time 
of his death, when he removed to Pottstown and lived 
retired. He died September 17, 1902, at the age of 
eighty-three years, five months and seventy-one days. His 
wife, Rebecca (Erb) Nickel, also a dative of Montgomery 
county, died January 16, 1898, aged seventy-five years and 
six days. They were Lutherans in religious faith. Mr. Nickel 
was a school director for a number of years, always took an 
interest in educational matters, and was an active man both 
in politics and the church. Lewis and Rebecca Nickel had 
seven children, three of whom are now living: Sarah A., wife 
of Henry G. Rahn; Rev. Lewis J.; Mary C., wife of Irvin A. 
Kepner.

Rev. Lewis J. Nickel was reared in Pottsgrove township. He 
received his elementary education iii the district schools, 
and afterward attended the Hill school of Pottstown and the 
Pottstown high school. He entered the academic department of 
Muhlenberg College in the spring of 1878, and in the fall of 
1878 he became a member of the freshman class, and was 
graduated from the same in the classical course in 1882, 
receiving the third honor in his class, and he also 
delivered the historical oration. He also won the prize for 
oratory in the junior prize oratorical contest. While at 
college he was a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. 
In 1885 he received the degree of Master of Arts from his 
Alma Mater; For four terms prior to entering college, he 
taught school in Pottsgrove township.

After studying at the Lutheran Theological Seminary in 
Philadelphia for three years, he graduated in 1885, and was 
ordained June 2, 1885, in St. John's Lutheran church, 
Allentown, Pennsylvania. His first charge was that of 
assistant to Dr. J. Fry, of Trinity church at Reading, where 
he remained five year, and during this time he organized 
three congregations-Hope, Faith and Peace.

He was then called to the pastorate of St. Stephen's 
Lutheran church at Wilmington, Delaware, where he preached 
for the next five years. On removing to Pottstown, in 1895, 
he became the assistant of Rev. D. K. Kepner, of Emmanuel 
congregation, and was largely instrumental in the 
organization in 1896 of the two churches of which he now has 
charge-St. James', with a membership of one hundred and 
seventy-five, and St. Peter's, with a membership Of two 
hundred and twenty-five. For a time he was secretary of the 
Third District Conference, and later of the Norristown 
Conference of the Ministerium of Pennsylvania and adjacent 
states. Politically he has been a Democrat.

On June 27, 1889, Rev. Lewis J. Bickel married Miss Gertrude 
Frick Beideman, of Reading, who was a graduate of the 
Reading high school, and taught for five terms in the Young 
Ladies' Seminar at Reading, and an adopted daughter of 
Daniel H. and Louisa (Willauer) Beideman. They have had four 
children as follows: Louis, died at the age of five years; 
Edgar Clifton, Marion Louise, and Gertrude Mary.

Mrs. Bickel is the daughter of Elhannan W. and Angeline 
(Willatter) Frick; their other children were: Mary H., who 
became the wife of William S. Monyer, of Reading; Samuel 
Edgar, station agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad at Sluing 
City; and Louie, deceased. The mother died while Mrs. Nickel 
was an infant, and the child was adopted by her uncle and 
aunt, Daniel H. and Louisa (Willauer) Beideman.The father of 
Mrs. Nickel, Elhannan W. Frick, was a descendant of 
Christopher Sower, who came from Germany in 1724, locating 
in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he became a 
noted publisher and printer and published the first German 
Bible printed in America. He was the maternal 
great-grandfather of Elhannan W. Trick. The latter named was 
a resident of Frick's Lock, Chester county, where he 
conducted a mercantile business, and later retired. 
 
In the maternal side the grandparents of Mrs. Bickel, Samuel 
and Hannah (Grubb) Willaner, were residents near Kenilworth, 
Chester county, where Samuel was a justice of the peace for 
many years. He was a public-spirited man. In religion he was 
reared in the Quaker faith. He and his wife had a fancily of 
nine children: 1. Elizabeth, died in infancy; 2. Mary, 
married George W. West, of Texas; 3. Anna Louisa, married D. 
H. Beideman; 4. Angeline Married Elhannan W. Frick; 5. 
Seneca G., a prominent citizen of West Chester, 
Pennsylvania, ex-prothonotary, and present inspector of 
soldiers' orphans' homes; he recruited a company for service 
in the Civil War, in which he served for six years; he went 
to the field as first lieutenant, and was promoted to major; 
he was severely wounded at the battle of Fredericksburg, 
December 13, 1862; 6. Jonathan W. was a soldier in the 
Confederate army and was killed in the battle at 
Blutesville, Louisiana ; 7. Samuel served in the Union army 
and received at the battle of Fredericksburg wounds from 
which he died; 8. Catharine, married Jerome Titlow ; 9. 
Samuel Paul died in infancy.

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