Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Henry Bohn: Birth: 20 MAY 1809. Death: 25 APR 1890

  2. Nellie Bohn: Birth: 13 OCT 1811. Death: BEF 1911

  3. Benneville Bohn: Birth: 15 AUG 1812 in Heidelberg, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA. Death: 23 SEP 1888

  4. Thomas Bohn: Birth: 2 JUL 1814 in Pennsylvania. Death: 11 JUL 1883 in Illinois

  5. Elizabeth Bohn: Birth: 16 MAR 1817 in Pennsylvania. Death: 9 MAY 1894 in Pennsylvania

  6. Susanna Maria Bohn: Birth: 1818 in Pennsylvania. Death: 30 MAY 1890 in Lewisburg, Union Co. Pennsylvania

  7. Hezekiah Bohn: Birth: ABT 1820 in Union Co, PA. Death: BEF 1920

  8. Charlotte Bohn: Birth: ABT 1828 in New Berlin, Union, Pennsylvania, USA. Death: BEF 1928


Sources
1. Title:   Public Member Trees
Page:   Database online.
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: The Generations Network, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;
2. Title:   Public Member Trees
Page:   Ancestry Family Trees
Author:   Ancestry.com
Publication:   Name: The Generations Network, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;

Notes
a. Note:   Pronounced "Lark"
 "Our shared heritage is in the name Lerch, generally spelled in Germany as Lörch. Lörch evolved in the United States as Loerch, with the e after the o taking the place of the umlaut. Because the pronunciation of Lerch is close to the German Lorch, the o has all but disappeared from the name in the United States, leading to the widespread spelling of Lerch. Lörch in German means lark (a bird). Prior to the Revolutionary War when the Berks County Courthouse records were recorded in English, the English translation "Lark" is generally used for Lerch, such as Caspar Lerch’s (Lark’s) will in 1766."
  Pronounced "Lark"
 "Our shared heritage is in the name Lerch, generally spelled in Germany as Lörch. Lörch evolved in the United States as Loerch, with the e after the o taking the place of the umlaut. Because the pronunciation of Lerch is close to the German Lorch, the o has all but disappeared from the name in the United States, leading to the widespread spelling of Lerch. Lörch in German means lark (a bird). Prior to the Revolutionary War when the Berks County Courthouse records were recorded in English, the English translation "Lark" is generally used for Lerch, such as Caspar Lerch’s (Lark’s) will in 1766."



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