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His brother Isaac R. Pennypacker edited his <em>Autobiography of a Pennsylvanian</em> (Philadelphia, 1918). He died 2 September 1916. Whatever merit Daniel K. Cassell's <em>History of the Mennonites</em> (1888) possessed was based largely on the materials he used from Pennypacker's research. Pennypacker's grandfather Matthias, son of the bishop, paid for the reprinting of the [[Dordrecht Confession of Faith (Mennonite, 1632)|Dordrecht Confession of Faith]] at West Chester, PA in 1814. Most of the Mennonite section of the Pennypacker book collection was purchased at auction by the Schwenckfelder Library at Pennsburg, PA in 1924, where it still remains. | His brother Isaac R. Pennypacker edited his <em>Autobiography of a Pennsylvanian</em> (Philadelphia, 1918). He died 2 September 1916. Whatever merit Daniel K. Cassell's <em>History of the Mennonites</em> (1888) possessed was based largely on the materials he used from Pennypacker's research. Pennypacker's grandfather Matthias, son of the bishop, paid for the reprinting of the [[Dordrecht Confession of Faith (Mennonite, 1632)|Dordrecht Confession of Faith]] at West Chester, PA in 1814. Most of the Mennonite section of the Pennypacker book collection was purchased at auction by the Schwenckfelder Library at Pennsburg, PA in 1924, where it still remains. | ||
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Revision as of 18:55, 20 August 2013
Samuel W. Pennypacker (1843-1916), governor of Pennsylvania 1903-1907, was a great-great-great-grandson of the Mennonite immigrant Hendrick Pannebecker (b. 1674), who was in Germantown, Pennsylvania by 1699 and settled in the Skippack Mennonite settlement of Montgomery County, PA in 1702. Hendrick's grandson was the Mennonite bishop Matthias Pannebecker (1742-1808), and the latter's grandson was Dr. Isaac P. Pennypacker, a physician and teacher of medicine. The doctor's son, Samuel Whitaker, was born at Phoenixville, PA on 9 April 1843. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1866, became Judge in Common Pleas No. 2 in Philadelphia in 1889, Presiding Judge in this court in 1896, and served as Republican governor of Pennsylvania 1903-1907. He was also a historian and bibliophile (collected 10,000 items), and wrote voluminously on the history of eastern Pennsylvania and on his Mennonite forebears and their faith. Worthy of note are his essays on David Rittenhouse, Christopher Dock, and the <em>Martyrs' Mirror</em>, in Historical and Biographical Sketches (Philadelphia, 1883), also his book, The Settlement of Germantown (Philadelphia, 1899).
His brother Isaac R. Pennypacker edited his Autobiography of a Pennsylvanian (Philadelphia, 1918). He died 2 September 1916. Whatever merit Daniel K. Cassell's History of the Mennonites (1888) possessed was based largely on the materials he used from Pennypacker's research. Pennypacker's grandfather Matthias, son of the bishop, paid for the reprinting of the Dordrecht Confession of Faith at West Chester, PA in 1814. Most of the Mennonite section of the Pennypacker book collection was purchased at auction by the Schwenckfelder Library at Pennsburg, PA in 1924, where it still remains.
Author(s) | John C Wenger |
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Date Published | 1959 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Wenger, John C. "Pennypacker, Samuel W. (1843-1916)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 22 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Pennypacker,_Samuel_W._(1843-1916)&oldid=76963.
APA style
Wenger, John C. (1959). Pennypacker, Samuel W. (1843-1916). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 22 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Pennypacker,_Samuel_W._(1843-1916)&oldid=76963.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, p. 144. All rights reserved.
©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.