Stucky, Jacob (1824-1893)
Jacob Stucky (1824-1893), pioneer, educator, minister, and elder of the Volhynian Swiss Mennonites in Poland and in America, was born in Volhynia, Russian Poland, on 25 October 1824, the eighth child of Christian and Katharina Mündelheim Stucky. He married Anna Waltner in 1849; eight of their children grew to maturity. His wife died shortly before the trek to America and on 2 May 1879, he married Barbara Kaufmann Voran. His descendants total over 1,335, of whom more than 1,200 are living in the United States and Canada.
Stucky was baptized in 1840 and elected into the ministry on 29 May 1851, and ordained as elder on 29 September 1862. During that year his congregation moved from Eduardsdorf eastward some 160 miles toKotozufka and Neumannovka, in Russian Poland, where they were permitted to own land on condition that they clear it and build their homes in true pioneering. The Swiss Mennonites established the churches of Zahorez, Horodyszcze, Waldheim, and Kotozufka in Volhynia. Kotozufka, the largest, was known as the Stucky Church. When they were barely established the policies of Russification and militarization dictated another move for conscience' sake. With the assistance of Jacob Goering, Stucky led his entire congregation (except two bachelors) of 73 families from Poland to America. They left their homes on 6 August 1874, and arrived at Peabody, Kansas, in approximately one month. They later settled in the region around Moundridge, Kansas.
The congregation organized under the name Hoffnungsfeld (General Conference Mennonite Church). Here Stucky served faithfully until his death. He had a warm personality and was held in high esteem by the Swiss Mennonites of the settlement. He served various kinds of Mennonite groups from Western Kansas to South Dakota. During the first six years in Kansas he baptized 142 persons, 60 of these in his home church, 56 at the Emmanuel Church, then known as the "Cantongemeinde," 20 at Pawnee Rock, and at Hartford in Lyons County, Kansas.
Elder Stucky was also concerned with bringing about orderly church life among many groups of Mennonites in Kansas, and played a part in the organization of the Kansas Conference. He promoted the cause of relief and Christian charity, especially regarding widows and orphans. He was also interested in Christian education, and pleaded in the press for a living wage for the instructor so that he could devote his full time to the cause. In 1877 he was elected to a "Committee of Seven" at Alexanderwohl to plan for a "Fortbildungsschule." He served on Kansas (now Western District) Conference committees. He was a member of the Christian Education Committee from 1877 to his death. In 1887 he was one of the thirty-three who signed the Bethel College Corporation Charter. He died at Moundridge on 25 Apri 1893, and was buried in the Hopefield cemetery.
Bibliography
Goering, Jacob M. and Anna J. The Rev. Jacob Stucky Family Record 1824-1953. North Newton, 1954.
Neufeld, I. G, "Jacob Stucky—Pioneer of Two Continents." Mennonite Life IV (January 1949): 46 f.
Author(s) | Harley J Stucky |
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Date Published | 1959 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Stucky, Harley J. "Stucky, Jacob (1824-1893)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 22 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Stucky,_Jacob_(1824-1893)&oldid=85412.
APA style
Stucky, Harley J. (1959). Stucky, Jacob (1824-1893). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 22 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Stucky,_Jacob_(1824-1893)&oldid=85412.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, pp. 647-648. All rights reserved.
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