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− | [[File:1990_12_4.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Jacob & Salome Gross, ca. 1860. MAO photo 1990-12.4 | + | [[File:1990_12_4.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Jacob & Salome Gross, ca. 1860. MAO photo 1990-12.4'']] Jacob Gross: farmer and minister; was born 22 December 1780 in Plumstead Township, [[Bucks County (Pennsylvania, USA)|Bucks County]], [[Pennsylvania (USA)|Pennsylvania]] to [[Gross, Jakob (1743-1810)|Jacob Gross]] (1743-12 December 1810) and Maria Krall Gross (ca. 1752-10 February 1816). He was the fourth son and fifth child in a family of seven children (some records say six children). His father immigrated to Pennsylvania from Germany about 1763, and became a minister and bishop at the [[Deep Run Mennonite Church East (Perkasie, Pennsylvania, USA)|Deep Run Mennonite Church]]. Four of Jacob (Sr.) and Maria Gross's sons became Mennonite ministers. Jacob, Jr. moved to [[Ontario (Canada)|Upper Canada]] soon after the War of 1812 and lived on a farm near Beamsville. There were strong connections to the community at [[First Mennonite Church (Vineland, Ontario, Canada)|The Twenty]]; Jacob Sr. had written the 1801 letter from Pennsylvania authorizing the settlement to ordain a minister without the presence of a bishop. On 17 December 1817 Jacob Jr. married Anna Moyer (17 July 1799-22 June 1827); they had five children. On 23 August 1830 he married Salome Moyer (9 September 1796-10 April 1878); they had three children. Jacob Gross died 25 November 1865. |
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− | '']] Jacob Gross: farmer and minister; was born 22 December 1780 in Plumstead Township, [[Bucks County (Pennsylvania, USA)|Bucks County]], [[Pennsylvania (USA)|Pennsylvania]] to [[Gross, Jakob (1743-1810)|Jacob Gross]] (1743-12 December 1810) and Maria Krall Gross (ca. 1752-10 February 1816). He was the fourth son and fifth child in a family of seven children (some records say six children). His father immigrated to Pennsylvania from Germany about 1763, and became a minister and bishop at the [[Deep Run Mennonite Church East (Perkasie, Pennsylvania, USA)|Deep Run Mennonite Church]]. Four of Jacob (Sr.) and Maria Gross's sons became Mennonite ministers. Jacob, Jr. moved to [[Ontario (Canada)|Upper Canada]] soon after the War of 1812 and lived on a farm near Beamsville. There were strong connections to the community at [[First Mennonite Church (Vineland, Ontario, Canada)|The Twenty]]; Jacob Sr. had written the 1801 letter from Pennsylvania authorizing the settlement to ordain a minister without the presence of a bishop. On 17 December 1817 Jacob Jr. married Anna Moyer (17 July 1799-22 June 1827); they had five children. On 23 August 1830 he married Salome Moyer (9 September 1796-10 April 1878); they had three children. Jacob Gross died 25 November 1865. | ||
Jacob and Anna Moyer worked their farm in the Beamsville area, an apparently were prosperous. In 1833 Jacob was ordained as a minister for the congregation at The Twenty; he served with [[Hoch, Daniel (1805-1878)|Daniel Hoch]]. He was likely ordained by [[Eby, Benjamin (1785-1853)|Benjamin Eby]] after the sudden death of [[Moyer, Jacob (1767-1833)|Bishop Jacob Moyer]] in Pennsylvania in June 1833, but the exact date of the ordination is unknown. In 1834 he was ordained as bishop, again by Benjamin Eby. In 1842 the ministerial team was joined by brothers Abraham Moyer and Dilman Moyer, both sons of the late Bishop Jacob Moyer. The congregation thrived for a time, but early in the 1840s some members began to be attracted by the outreach of the [[Evangelical Association|Evangelical Association]]. | Jacob and Anna Moyer worked their farm in the Beamsville area, an apparently were prosperous. In 1833 Jacob was ordained as a minister for the congregation at The Twenty; he served with [[Hoch, Daniel (1805-1878)|Daniel Hoch]]. He was likely ordained by [[Eby, Benjamin (1785-1853)|Benjamin Eby]] after the sudden death of [[Moyer, Jacob (1767-1833)|Bishop Jacob Moyer]] in Pennsylvania in June 1833, but the exact date of the ordination is unknown. In 1834 he was ordained as bishop, again by Benjamin Eby. In 1842 the ministerial team was joined by brothers Abraham Moyer and Dilman Moyer, both sons of the late Bishop Jacob Moyer. The congregation thrived for a time, but early in the 1840s some members began to be attracted by the outreach of the [[Evangelical Association|Evangelical Association]]. | ||
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Fretz, A. J. <em>A Genealogical Record of the Descendants of Christian and Hans Meyer and Other Pioneers: Together with Historical and Biographical Sketches, Illustrated with Eighty-Seven Portraits and Other Illustrations</em>. Milton, N.J.: A.J. Fretz, 1896. [http://www.archive.org/details/genealogicalreco00fret3 http://www.archive.org/details/genealogicalreco00fret3] (accessed 16 February 2010): 112-114. | Fretz, A. J. <em>A Genealogical Record of the Descendants of Christian and Hans Meyer and Other Pioneers: Together with Historical and Biographical Sketches, Illustrated with Eighty-Seven Portraits and Other Illustrations</em>. Milton, N.J.: A.J. Fretz, 1896. [http://www.archive.org/details/genealogicalreco00fret3 http://www.archive.org/details/genealogicalreco00fret3] (accessed 16 February 2010): 112-114. | ||
− | "Jacob Gross Jr." SAGA (Swiss Anabaptist Genealogical Association) Genealogical Website. [http://saga.ncweb.com/TNG71/getperson.php | + | "Jacob Gross Jr." SAGA (Swiss Anabaptist Genealogical Association) Genealogical Website. [http://saga.ncweb.com/TNG71/getperson.php <span class="link-external">http://saga.ncweb.com/TNG71/getperson.php?personID=I7302&tree=Smith-Bishop</span>] (accessed 16 February 2010) |
Kauffman, Daniel. <em>Mennonite Cyclopedic Dictionary</em>. Scottdale, Pa: Mennonite Pub. house, 1937: 140. | Kauffman, Daniel. <em>Mennonite Cyclopedic Dictionary</em>. Scottdale, Pa: Mennonite Pub. house, 1937: 140. | ||
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Steiner, Samuel. "Assurance of Salvation or Faithful Living: Ontario Mennonites Disagree About Renewal." Unpublished paper, 2010. | Steiner, Samuel. "Assurance of Salvation or Faithful Living: Ontario Mennonites Disagree About Renewal." Unpublished paper, 2010. | ||
− | {{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=February 2010|a1_last=Steiner|a1_first= | + | {{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=February 2010|a1_last=Steiner|a1_first=Samuel J|a2_last=|a2_first=}} |
Latest revision as of 11:27, 25 October 2019
Jacob Gross: farmer and minister; was born 22 December 1780 in Plumstead Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania to Jacob Gross (1743-12 December 1810) and Maria Krall Gross (ca. 1752-10 February 1816). He was the fourth son and fifth child in a family of seven children (some records say six children). His father immigrated to Pennsylvania from Germany about 1763, and became a minister and bishop at the Deep Run Mennonite Church. Four of Jacob (Sr.) and Maria Gross's sons became Mennonite ministers. Jacob, Jr. moved to Upper Canada soon after the War of 1812 and lived on a farm near Beamsville. There were strong connections to the community at The Twenty; Jacob Sr. had written the 1801 letter from Pennsylvania authorizing the settlement to ordain a minister without the presence of a bishop. On 17 December 1817 Jacob Jr. married Anna Moyer (17 July 1799-22 June 1827); they had five children. On 23 August 1830 he married Salome Moyer (9 September 1796-10 April 1878); they had three children. Jacob Gross died 25 November 1865.
Jacob and Anna Moyer worked their farm in the Beamsville area, an apparently were prosperous. In 1833 Jacob was ordained as a minister for the congregation at The Twenty; he served with Daniel Hoch. He was likely ordained by Benjamin Eby after the sudden death of Bishop Jacob Moyer in Pennsylvania in June 1833, but the exact date of the ordination is unknown. In 1834 he was ordained as bishop, again by Benjamin Eby. In 1842 the ministerial team was joined by brothers Abraham Moyer and Dilman Moyer, both sons of the late Bishop Jacob Moyer. The congregation thrived for a time, but early in the 1840s some members began to be attracted by the outreach of the Evangelical Association.
Jacob Gross and Daniel Hoch both were receptive to aspects of the spiritual renewal movements that were influencing the Mennonite community, though they differed in the degree of their openness. They encouraged Sunday school, family worship and evening prayer meetings in which leadership was sometimes taken by lay persons. Hoch, however, was concerned to keep the reforms "Mennonite," and rejected Gross's greater openness to inclusion of members of other denominations in the prayer meetings and services held at the meetinghouses. Indeed it appears Jacob Gross opened his home to ministers of other denominations in a way that would have offended more traditional members. The Canada Conference cautiously approved prayer meetings in 1847 if they were held "in an orderly manner." However the congregation at The Twenty divided in 1848 between the "praying" and "non-praying" parts of the church; the latter led by the Moyer brothers. Since there were three meetinghouses in the area, it was possible for each group to worship in peace. On the advice of Benjamin Eby, the two factions also held communion separately in fall 1848.
In late 1848 Jacob Gross and many members sympathetic to renewal attended evening meetings held in Mennonite homes but led by an Evangelical Association minister. There were a number of conversions, including one of Gross's daughters. These persons then joined the new, local, Evangelical Association congregation. Benjamin Eby silenced Jacob Gross and Daniel Hoch (along with Deacon Jacob Albrecht) in May 1849. Jacob Gross and his family then withdrew from the Mennonites, and joined the Evangelical Association along with a significant portion of the congregation. Daniel Hoch went to found the New Mennonite Church of Canada West. Thus the local Mennonite community was broken into three parts, with a minority staying with the Canada Conference.
Jacob and Salome Gross continued in the Evangelical Association until their deaths. Although often reported otherwise, it is not correct that Jacob Gross served as an Evangelical Association minister; he was in his late 60s at the time of his move. A younger, unrelated, Jacob Gross from Pennsylvania served the Evangelical Association briefly in the Niagara area in the late 1840s.
By some measures Jacob Gross failed as a Mennonite leader in the Niagara Peninsula. His congregation splintered, and he was often overshadowed by the more dynamic Daniel Hoch. However his life and the decisions he made reflected the religious turmoil that increasingly afflicted the Mennonite community in Upper Canada. He and Salome were buried at the Evangelical cemetery at Campden, Ontario.
Bibliography
Burkholder, L. J. A Brief History of the Mennonites in Ontario: Giving a Description of Conditions in Early Ontario, the Coming of the Mennonites into Canada, Settlements, Congregations, Conferences, Other Activities, and Nearly 400 Ordinations; 100 Pictures of Men and Churches. [Waterloo, Ont.]: Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario, 1986: 146-147, 290.
Fretz, A. J. A Genealogical Record of the Descendants of Christian and Hans Meyer and Other Pioneers: Together with Historical and Biographical Sketches, Illustrated with Eighty-Seven Portraits and Other Illustrations. Milton, N.J.: A.J. Fretz, 1896. http://www.archive.org/details/genealogicalreco00fret3 (accessed 16 February 2010): 112-114.
"Jacob Gross Jr." SAGA (Swiss Anabaptist Genealogical Association) Genealogical Website. http://saga.ncweb.com/TNG71/getperson.php?personID=I7302&tree=Smith-Bishop (accessed 16 February 2010)
Kauffman, Daniel. Mennonite Cyclopedic Dictionary. Scottdale, Pa: Mennonite Pub. house, 1937: 140.
Steiner, Samuel. "Becoming Canadian: Settling on the New Frontier, 1786-1849." Unpublished paper, 2010.
Steiner, Samuel. "Assurance of Salvation or Faithful Living: Ontario Mennonites Disagree About Renewal." Unpublished paper, 2010.
Author(s) | Samuel J Steiner |
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Date Published | February 2010 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Steiner, Samuel J. "Gross, Jacob (1780-1865)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. February 2010. Web. 24 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Gross,_Jacob_(1780-1865)&oldid=165081.
APA style
Steiner, Samuel J. (February 2010). Gross, Jacob (1780-1865). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 24 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Gross,_Jacob_(1780-1865)&oldid=165081.
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