WebGeorgia Salzburger and allied families. Statement of Responsibility: compiled, edited, and published by Pearl Rahn Gnann Authors: Gnann, Pearl Rahn (Main Author) Format: … WebGeorgia Salzburgers and Allied Families: Volume(s): _____Page(s)_____ List references: Family Bibles, church, courthouse, and cemetery record. Additional resources are available in the Research Library located at the Georgia Salzburger Society Museum. ...
Genealogy Visit Ebenezer GA - Home of the Georgia …
WebGeorgia Salzburgers and Allied Families Southern Historical Press, 20031956. Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2024. WebNov 13, 2014 · The Salzburgers and Their Descendants: Being the History of a Colony of German (Lutheran) Protestants, Who Emigrated to Georgia in 1734 and Settled at Ebenezer, Twenty-Five Miles Above the City of Savannah. Baltimore: T. Newton Kurtz, 1855. First Edition. Purvis, Linda. “Jerusalem (Ebenezer) Church, Near Savannah, GA.” … cache folder edge
Georgia Salzburger and allied families : rev. and corrected …
WebAn organization of Salzburger families is the Georgia Salzburger Society, P.O. Box 916, Rincon, GA 31326-0916. Dr. Jones has also published many other volumes of Salzburger records. Also see Pearl Rahn Gnann, Georgia Salzburger and Allied Families* (Savannah: The Author, 1956) and Works Projects WebJun 3, 2012 · Georgia Salzburger and allied families by Pearl Rahn Gnann, 1970, Georgia Genealogical Reprints edition, in English Georgia Salzburger and allied … WebThe Salzburgers celebrated Land-ing Day on March 14, 2024. The Salzburgers were exiled from their homeland in present-day Austria because of their Protestant be-liefs. King George II of England had sympathy for their plight and allowed them to settle in the new colony of Georgia. There were 37 families that arrived in America on March 12, 1734. clutch size