Montgomery County PA Archives Biographies.....Buckwalter, Jacob December 28, 1834 - 
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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

JACOB BUCKWALTER, one of the leading farmers of Skippack 
township, is a descendant of an old family in eastern 
Pennsylvania. He was born in Lower Providence, Montgomery 
county, December 28, 1834, the son of William and Anna (Fry) 
Buckwalter,

William Buckwalter (father) was the son of Jacob and Mary 
(Essick) Buckwalter, and was of German descent. He was born 
and reared on a farm, and after his marriage farmed the old 
homestead two years, then removing to Lower Providence, 
where he bought a small tract of land to which he added a 
larger tract, making substantial improvements to the 
buildings and remaining there many years. He devoted his 
attention to general farming and attended market, being a 
practical and successful business man. In politics he was a 
Whig and later a Republican, but never aspired to public 
office. Late in life he sold the farm and retired to 
Norristown for two years, removing later to Evansburg, where 
he made his home with his son. Both he and his wife died at 
the home of our subject, he at the age of eighty-six years, 
his widow surviving him ten years and dying at the age of 
eighty-six years. Both belonged to the German Reformed 
church, he filling a number of important offices therein, 
including deacon, trustee, etc. Mrs. Buckwalter was a 
daughter of John Fry, a farmer of Lower Providence township, 
of German descent, and a member of the Reformed church at 
Trappe.
 
The children of John Fry: Mary, Mrs. F. Alderfer; Anna 
(mother); Hester, Mrs. Cook; Abraham, a farmer. The children 
of William and Anna Buckwalter: Elizabeth, Mrs. Isaac Fry, 
whose husband removed later to Norristown, where he was 
coroner of the county and held other positions; Jacob, the 
subject of this sketch; Abraham, a prominent farmer of 
Collegeville; Sarah A., Mrs. H. Foley; Emma, married F. Law. 
All are living.

Jacob Buckwalter (grandfather) was a farmer by occupation. 
He was a member of the Muhlenberg Lutheran church at Trappe. 
He had several brothers, among them Joseph, who served in 
the war of 1812. Jacob reared a large family and lived to an 
advanced age. He married Mary Essick, and their children 
were Abraham, who settled in Chester county, was a 
millwright and machinist by trade and operated a saw mill, 
born in 1797, married Rachel Ortlip, died in 1878, his wife 
dying in 1898, at the age of ninety-two years; she was the 
daughter of Henry and Mary Ortlip. 

Their children were: Samuel, William, Elias, Henry, 
Franklin, J. Addison, whose sketch appears elsewhere; I. 
Newton, David R., Lewis, Theodore and John W. The other 
children of Jacob and Mary Buckwalter were: Joseph, a widely 
known and popular business man and hotel proprietor; Jacob, 
a farmer who settled in Cass county, Indiana; William 
(father); David, a stone mason, who settled in Upper 
Providence; George, a shoemaker by trade, who located in 
Upper Providence; Mary, Mrs. Cressinger; Hannah, Mrs. Kramb; 
Sarah, Mrs. A. Coulston. The first ancestor of the 
Buckwalters in this country was Francis Buckwalter, who came 
to America from Switzerland early in the eighteenth century, 
locating near where Phoenixville is now situated, and taking 
up a large tract of land.

William Buckwalter (father) was a man of the highest 
integrity and accumulated a considerable estate.

Jacob Buckwalter remained with his parents until he was 
about thirty years of age, when he married and farmed the 
homestead for two years. He then bought a farm in Upper 
Providence, remaining upon it seven years. He then sold it, 
worked at his trade of wheelwright for two years, and in 
1872 bought the farm on Skippack Creek, near Keyser's Mill, 
on which he now lives. It contains seventy-five acres. He 
has remodeled the house and added to it, besides putting the 
land in good condition and building a large barn and 
convenient outbuildings. He has given attention to general 
farming, and attended market for fourteen years. He raised 
some stock. Of late years he has lived retired from active 
labor, his son attending to the farm work. At one time he 
engaged at Norristown with Jacob G. Landis in the feed 
business, but later sold his interest and gave attention to 
his farm. Politically Mr. Buckwalter is a Republican. He has 
filled many township offices, having been township 
supervisor for ten years, and could have continued but 
declined to serve longer. He was school director for nine 
years, filling all these positions creditably to himself and 
with satisfaction to the public. He is a member of the 
Reformed church at Trappe, and is a trustee there. During 
the rebellion he served in the state militia four months, 
doing guard duty in Maryland and Virginia. He was in several 
skirmishes, but did not participate in any battle. He was 
honorably discharged when he had served his time, having 
enlisted when the rebels proposed to invade Pennsylvania.

Mr. Buckwalter married, February 6, 1864, Elizabeth 
Longacre, born in Upper Providence township, November 23, 
1834. She is the daughter of Daniel and Hannah (Landes) 
Longacre, both of German descent, Daniel being a millwright 
and later a farmer and market man. They were members of the 
Reformed church at Trappe, and both died on the homestead 
which he owned and where his wife was reared. He died in his 
seventy-first year, and his wife survived ten years longer 
and died in her seventy-first year. The brothers and sisters 
of Mrs. Daniel Longacre: Abram, settled as a farmer near 
Royersford; John, settled near Gratersford; Jacob, a brick 
manufacturer of Upper Providence township.
 
The children of Jacob and Elizabeth L. Buckwalter: William 
H., who manages his father's farm; he married Kate Hallman, 
and they have three daughters: Elizabeth, Cora and Eva. 
Elmer, a clerk in a store. Daniel, a contractor and builder, 
died November 28, 1899, leaving a wife and one child, Jennie 
May, who is deceased. Emanuel, a prominent farmer; he 
married (first) Esther Anderson, and they had one son, 
Jacob; he married (second) Ella Anderson, sister of his 
first wife; no issue. Jacob, a contractor and builder of 
Skippack township; he married Amanda Hallman, and they have 
one child, Catherine.

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