First colony The first colony consisted of the family surnames: Albrecht, Brombach/Brumback, Fischbach/Fishback, Hager, Friesenhagen, Heide/Heite/Hitt, Heimbach, Hofmann, Holzklau/Holtzclaw, Huttmann, Kemper/Camper, Cuntze/Koontz, Merdten/Martin, Otterbach/Utterback, Reinschmidt, Richter/Rector, Spielmann, Weber/Weaver • 1710 May 18: Incorporation of the George Ritter Company in
London, a joint stock company to be in business for 20 years; partners include Christoph de Graffenreid and Franz Ludwig Michel; the agent for the George Ritter Company is Johann Justus Albrecht, sent to the Siegerland to recruit miners in the
Carolinas or Virginia • 1711 August 15: Johann Justus Albrecht signs a contract with the ministers of Siegen • 1711 September 5: Hermannus Otterbach requests permission to immigrate, first of the group • 1712 May 12: Johann Justus Albrecht composes the Union Book for the George Ritter Company • 1713 July 12: Pastor Knabenschuh goes to
Oberfischbach to find that Pastor Haeger is gone and the schoolteacher, Hans Jacob Holtzklau "is also willing to travel away" • 1713 July 17: Jacob Holzklau requests permission to immigrate • 1713 July 31: Philip Fischbach/Hans Jacob Richter; Jost Cuntz request permission to immigrate • 1719, January to 1720: Pastor Haeger and the members of the First Colony moved to an area in
Stafford County that is now in present-day
Fauquier County; the three naturalized members of the group, John Fishback, John Hoffman, and Jacob Holtzclaw, secured 1805 acres for distribution to the group to be divided equally
Second colony • 1717: Eighty-odd Germans from Wuerttemberg, Baden, and the Palatinate agree with Capt. Tarbett in London to sail to
Pennsylvania on the ship
Scott • 1717/1718: Capt. Tarbett redirects the Germans to Virginia, where they become
indentured servants of Lt. Gov. Spotswood • 1719/1722: Some of the Germans who left in 1717 arrived in Virginia at a later time • 1723/1725: Spotswood sues many of the Germans over land and labor disputes • 1725: Most of these Germans move to the
Robinson River Valley, in present-day
Madison County • 1733: Johann Caspar Stöver becomes their Lutheran pastor • 1740: The German Lutheran Church (now
Hebron Lutheran Church) is built with funds raised in Germany ==Sources==