BIOS: The BAER Family, Somerset County, PA

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History of Bedford and Somerset Counties, Pennsylvania; Bedford 
County by E. Howard Blackburn; Somerset County by William H. Welfley; v.3, 
Pub. The Lewis Publishing Company, New York/Chicago 1906, ppg. 26-29

The BAER Family.

The Baer family of Pennsylvania is of German origin, and among its members 
have been many prominent characters in the business and professional world.
(I) Christopher Baer, the American founder of the family, spelled the name 
B??r.  He was born in Zweibrucken, Germany.  The date of his birth is not now 
known to his descendants.  He came to this country and effected a settlement 
in White Hall township (near present Unionville), Lehigh county, 
Pennsylvania.  He died in 1786, when between eighty and ninety years of age. 
His will, dated November 16, 1784, probated August 15, 1786, is recorded at 
Easton, Pennsylvania, in will book No. 1, page 448.  He married Catherine 
Wingert, of Brockweiler Zweibrucken, Germany.  They came to this country in 
1743 in the ship, Phoenix, from Rotterdam.  He took the oath of allegiance 
September 30, 1743.  He purchased some eight tracts of land, one for each of 
his children, who were married, as follows: Melchoir, John, Henry, Salome, 
Appolonica and Jacob.
(II) Jacob B??r, the grandfather of the Somerset Baers, was the youngest son 
of Christopher and Catherine (Wingert) B??r, the first of the name in this 
country.  He was born in White Hall township, Lehigh county, Pennsylvania, in 
1761.  Mr. married a Miss Findlay, by whom he had four children: John, Nicholas, 
Jacob and Daniel.  The mother died prior to 1790.  In 1791, Jacob, the father of 
these children, married Mary Elizabeth Hersch, by whom four children were 
born--Peter, Solomon, Adam and Dinah Baer.  In 1800 Jacob B??r and family 
removed to Maryland, near Mount Savage, Allegheny county.
(III) Solomon Baer, son of Jacob and Mary Elizabeth B??r, married Anna Maria 
Baker, in 1820, and to them were born the following named children: Margaret, 
born May 17, 1822; Elizabeth, April 2, 1824; William Jacob, January 20, 1826; 
Herman Ludwig, March 20, 1828; Ruffena, July 19, 1830; Henry Giesey, May 5, 
1835; Mary Ann, April 25, 1840; George Frederick, September 16, 1842; Neven 
Solomon, April 25, 1845.  Solomon Baer and family resided at Berlin, Somerset 
county, Pennsylvania.  He was a house carpenter and cabinet maker.  He served 
as constable for several years and was later a justice of the peace.  He was 
elected to every office in the militia, from captain to brigade inspector.  He 
died January 12, 1882, aged eighty-seven years, six months and twenty-nine 
days.  Of the Baker family to which Anna Maria (Baker) Baer belonged, it may be 
stated that Geroge Baker settled in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and his 
children were: George, Frederick, Richard, Michael and Ludwig.  The last named 
was Anna Maria's father, born in 1762, and settled at Berlin, Somerset 
county, Pennsylvania.  He married Maria Margaret Glessner, born 1761 and died 
in 1839.  He died in 1840.  Their child was: Anna Maria, born February 2, 1797, 
died October 5, 1888.
(IV) Herman Ludwig Baer, son of Solomon and Anna Maria (Baker) Baer, was born 
in Berlin, Somerset county, Pennsylvania., March 20, 1828. The subjoined is 
his autobiography:
When I was about fourteen years of age my father left Berlin, and moved to 
a farm four miles from Somerset, where I now reside.  I worked on the farm for 
seven years; the last two years I taught school in the winter.  My father sold 
his farm and removed to another close to Somerset.  The idea of going to 
college was frequently talked of and when it was finally decided that I 
should go I left the plough standing in the field where I had been ploughing 
on Saturday evening and left for Franklin and Marshall College, Mercersburg, 
Pennsylvania, in 1848.  I entered the preparatory department, was there one 
session.  The next session I entered college and continued to the junior year, 
then I remained at home and taught school one winter to raise some funds.  I 
returned to college, stood the required examinations and was reinstated in my 
class and graduated in 1853.  I returned to my home and within a few days 
thereafter received a call to take charge of Elmwood Institute in Norristown, 
Pennsylvania, which call I accepted and taught there two years, when I 
returned to Somerset and entered as a student of law in the office of my 
brother, William J. Baer, and was admitted to the Somerset bar in June, 1856, 
and entered into partnership with my brother under the name of Baer and Baer, 
which partnership continued until William J. Baer was elected judge of the 
sixteenth judicial district of Pennsylvania, I continuing the practice alone.
In December 1856, I formed another partnership (my marriage) with Lucy E. 
Schall, of Norristown, Pennsylvania, daughter of General William Schall, an 
iron master and a military man of considerable note in the Pennsylvania 
militia.  My parents and those of my wife were members of the German Reformed 
church, one of the churches of the Reformation now known as the Reformed 
church in the United States, and the children were of the same faith.  I have 
always been a lover of the Sunday school and have been a superindendent for 
fifty years and an elder in the same church for the same time and still 
continue.
I am a Jeffersonian Democrat and never was an aspirant for office, but 
could always give a reason for my faith religiously and politically.  I have 
always tried to do my duty conscientiously.  I have held the position of 
examiner of students at law for over thirty years and still continue. 
In 1881 my wife died.  I kept house with my children for eight years 
thereafter, when I married my first wife's sister, Annie C. Schall. 
William Schall, died in infancy; Caroline Trexler, born April 1, 1859; 
Reuben Edward, born April 2, 1867; George Baker, born March 30, 1863; 
Hermanus Ludwig, born October 4, 1874.
Carrie T. Baer (V) was married to George R. Scull, Esq., of Somerset, 
Pennsylvania, both an editor and lawyer; also at this time president of the 
First National Bank of Somerset, Pennsylvania, and president of the Somerset 
Trust Company.  His wife was a graduate of the common school system and 
attended Greensburg high school.  Four children were born to them: John I., 
Lucy B., Edward and Anna C. George B. Baer (V) graduated in the common 
schools of Somerset borough and then entered the printing office of the 
Herald and Whig, edited by Hon. Edward Scull.  After finishing his trade as 
a printer, he attended the high school at Elders Ridge, Pennsylvania.  On his 
reutrn home he concluded to go to California and finally located at 
Cloverdale, Sonoma county, California, purchasing the Cloverdale Reveille, 
which he edited for several years and then sold to his brother, Reuben Baer, 
he having been appointed postmaster at Cloverdale, which position he still 
holds.  He is also superintendent of a quicksilver mine near the Geyser hot 
spring, eighteen miles distant from Cloverdale.  He married a daughter of Dr. 
William Markell of the same place--Sarah Markell, by whom he had three 
children: Markell C., Lucy S. and Helen.
Reuben E. Baer (V), born April 2, 1867, graduated in the common schools of 
Somerset, Pennsylvania, and entered the printing office of the Herald and 
Whig, and after mastering his trade there went to Tyrone, Pennsylvania, and 
afterwards to Johnstown, Pennsylvania, where he worked at his trade until the 
great flood of 1889, after which he went to California, where he worked for 
his brother.  Later he purchased his brother's newspaper, which some years 
later he sold and purchased the Enterprise at Healdsburg, California.  He 
married Helen Markell, daughter of Dr. William Markell, of Cloverdale, 
California, by whom he had three children--Christina, Elizabeth and Herman 
Ludwig.
Hermanus Ludwig Baer (V) was born October 4, 1874.  After attending and 
graduating from the common schools of Somerset county, Pennsylvania, he 
entered a drug store for a term of three years, after which he attended 
Bordentown college for one year and then entered the Jefferson School of 
Pharmacy in Philadelphia and graduated therefrom.  The next two years to 
operated a drug store.  Having concluded to become a physician, he went to 
Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia and graduated.  He then married Miss 
Mabel McKinley, daughter of Abner McKinley and wife.  He then moved to New 
York city and engaged in the practice of medicine.  He has recently been 
appointed a lecturer in Anatomy in the Post-Graduate Medical College and 
Hospital of New York city.