The Hochstetler massacre was an attack on a farmstead at the Northkill Amish Settlement in September or October 1757, in which three Amish settlers were killed and three others taken into captivity. The attack was one of many assaults by French-allied Native American warriors on Pennsylvania settlements during the French and Indian War. For religious reasons, the Amish settlers refused to defend themselves, and everyone in the homestead was either killed or captured.[1] One of the captives, 45-year-old Jacob Hochstetler, escaped captivity after about eight months, and his two sons were later returned through a peace agreement brokered in 1763.[2][3]
^Beth L. Mark, "Our flesh and blood: A documentary history of the Jacob Hochstetler family during the French and Indian War period, 1757-1765, Elkhart, IN: Jacob Hochstetler Family Association, 2009.
^"Examination of (Jacob) Hochstattler," in Richard MacMaster, Samuel Horst and Robert Ulle, Conscience in Crisis: Mennonite and Other Peace Churches in America, 1739-1789, Interpretation and Documents. Wipf & Stock Publishers, 2001; pp 125-26
^Joan M. Hochstetler, "History of the Jacob Hochstetler Family"
and 28 Related for: Hochstetler massacre information
The Hochstetlermassacre was an attack on a farmstead at the Northkill Amish Settlement in September or October 1757, in which three Amish settlers were...
time, the massacre of Hochstetler's family members, and the kidnapping and subsequent escape of Jacob and his sons. The HochstetlerMassacre is also covered...
Richards, 1886 Konstantin 2002, p. 224 Dan Hochstetler, "The HochstetlerMassacre," Descendents of Jacob Hochstetler website, 2024 Robert B. Bamford, "Strausstown...
Regiment to assist residents in that area. The massacre is frequently confused with the Hochstetlermassacre, which occurred at the nearby Northkill Amish...
During the French and Indian War, the HochstetlerMassacre occurred: Local tribes attacked the Jacob Hochstetler homestead in the Northkill settlement...
Christian Hochstetler, a 13-year-old Swiss settler who was taken prisoner after Lenape warriors burned his family's home during the Hochstetlermassacre on September...
Longfellow and Whitman as well as the stories of Dirk Willems and the HochstetlerMassacre.: 216+ Illustrations in the series contain no images of people....
State Printer of Pennsylvania, 1896 Dan Hochstetler, "The HochstetlerMassacre," Descendents of Jacob Hochstetler website, 2024 David B. Brunner, The Indians...
of villages and sometimes individuals, and strive to preserve these" (Hochstetler 2004:18). The best-studied Dogon language is the escarpment language...
Gazette, Thu, Nov 11, 1756; p. 3 Dan Hochstetler, "The HochstetlerMassacre," Descendents of Jacob Hochstetler website, 2024 David B. Brunner, The Indians...
Languages and Linguistics An (sic) Comprehensive Annotated Bibliography Hochstetler, J. Lee, Durieux, J. A. & E. I. K. Durieux-Boon (2004) Sociolinguistic...
area, and Kamma So Kamma sɔ also known as Kamba So, in the Kamba area. Hochstetler confirms that these are intelligible with each other, but not with the...
have a final -m." Hochstetler thinks they may be the same language. It may be close to Yanda Dogon (Blench) or Jamsai tegu (Hochstetler). Naŋa dama at Ethnologue...
Introduction To Dogon Religious Ideas , p. 198, ISBN 978-0-19-519821-8 Hochstetler, J. Lee; Durieux, J. A.; Durieux-Boon, E. I. K., eds. (2004). "Sociolinguistic...
traditionally subsumed under the name Tene kã (Tene Kan, Tene Tingi), but Hochstetler separates them because the three varieties are about equidistant. There...
(link) "Hostelter is a descendant of the Amish-Mennonite immigrant Jacob Hochstetler." "Jacob Jablonsky". tripod.com. Retrieved September 19, 2023. 1900 Census...
published in 1926) The Captivity of Charles Stuart, 1755-57: 58 Jacob Hochstetler (1758) "Examination of (Jacob) Hochstattler" Marie Le Roy and Barbara...
Ure, a language of the Dogon group in Northern Mali and its affinities Hochstetler, J. Lee; Durieux, J.A.; E.I.K. Durieux-Boon (2004). Sociolinguistic Survey...