The Bonnet-t-e's & Kin, Vol. 18, pp. 1-7, 1994. Marriage. http://members.stratos.net/mikeandcindy/idxb.htm, January 1998. Marriage in Fredrick County, Maryland -- certainly an error. The Bonnet-t-e's & Kin, Vol. 18, pp. 1-7, 1994. Records of the Reformed Church at Friedrichstal, near Karlsruhe, Germany, list this family: Jacques Bonnet, born 1702, married 19 October 1723 to Marie Desreux, also born 1702. Children Marguerite born 24 May 1725; Johan Isaac 22 February 1727; Susanne Magdalene 11 June 1729; Christine 23 June 1731; and Johann Martin Simon 1 April 1733. The Bonnet-t-e's & Kin, Vol. 18, pp. 1-7, 1994. Strassburger & Hinke 1966, Pennsylvania German Pioneers, List 30A of Appendix 1, Captain's List of passengers on the ship Elizabeth, arriving in Philadelphia 27 August 1733: Jacob Bunnet, age 32, with wife Mary 32, children Margret 8; Susanna 4, died en route; Christina 2, died en route; and John Simon 3/4. The Bonnet-t-e's & Kin, Vol. 18, pp. 1-7, 1994. O. Hornung, Geschichte einer Huguenottengemeinde zur 250-Jahrfeier 1699 shows that the farmer Jacques Bonnet and his family emigrated in 1734 to the New World. The Bonnet-t-e's & Kin, Vol. 18, pp. 1-7, 1994. This family sailed from Friedrichstal, Germany (near Karlsruhe), to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, arriving 27 August 1733. There were four children of whom two died en route to the New World. They appear to have settled at Paoli, Chester County, Pennsylvania (but this is speculation). In Recollections of Lewis Bonnett, Jr. (1778-1850), Lewis stated that his unnamed immigrant grandparents died at Peola [sic], 'I think in Maryland,' and died within a few years of each other. Sons Samuel and Lewis and others then went to Virginia around 1753/1754. A Jacob Bonnet is listed for a survey of 400 acres on 15 December 1737 in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania (see Pennsylvania Archives, 3rd series, vol. 54, p. 358). Jacob also received a certificate 28 May 1742 (Grace L. Tracey and John Dern 1987, Pioneers of Old Monocacy, 1721-1743, give the date as 28 May 1743 when Jacob Bonnett received the land certificate from Daniel Dulaney) for 'Wine Garden' in the Monocacy valley from a 28 December 1741 survey; on 28 May 1742, he assigned this land to Martin Wetzel; this land was subsequently sold in 1753. On 28 May 1744 from a survey of 'Battleham' in the Monocacy settlement, on the west bank of Hunting Creek below its fork (this would be between Lewistown and Creagerstown), Jacob received another certificate; this land was enlarged from 100 to 250 acres, then transferred in 1753 to John Hoofman. The Bonnet-t-e's & Kin, Vol. 18, pp. 1-7, 1994. Grace L. Tracey and John Dern 1987, Pioneers of Old Monocacy, 1721-1743: Martin Wetzel received the patent for 'Bonnett's Resolution' in 1743 (apparent a second instance of a transaction between Jacob Bonnett and Martin Wetzel), a parcel of land which he enlarged to 400 acres, and then conveyed to Daniel Lafever in 1753. This source also states, from family records, that Jacob Bonnett was twice married. Most of the Bonnetts subsequently moved on to Rockingham County, Virginia. Crystal V. Wagoner 1995, John Waggoner (1751-1842) Nad Margaret (Bonnet) Wagonner: Ancestors, Families, and Descendants. The Bonnet and Wetzel (Hans Martin Wetzel arrived in 1731 with his wife and three children) families met in Chester County, Pennsylvania, and moved to Maryland together. Several of their children married and moved to Virginia where they met and intermarried with the Waggoner family (Wilhelm Waggoner immigrated to America in 1748 with his wife and two children). Jackson County, West Virginia, Past and Present, 1990, pp. 127-128. Jean Jacques Bonnette, born Friedrichstal Baden, Germany, 1702, married 19 October 1723 Anna Marie (Ancien) Desreux, born 1701. They emigrated to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, arriving on the ship Elizabeth out of Rotterdam 27 August 1733. They settled near Paoli, Chester County, Pennsylvania, on Ceders Creek. Botn are buried in the Chester County Cemetery. File CRUK6CA on GenServ, May 1997. Jean Jacques Bonnett, born France, died Frederick County, Maryland. Married 19 October 1723 Frederick County, Maryland. Died there 1752. File DUEQ6KB on GenServ, May 1997. Jacques (Jacob) Bonnett, 1701 Baden - 1741. http://members.stratos.net/mikeandcindy/idxb.htm, January 1998. Children: Marguerite Catherine, Susanne Magdeline, Christine, Johan Martin, Mary, Lewis, and Samuel.
From the "selvage1" database at WorldConnect. Please contact PetersonC@missouri.e
Infomation from Thomas Parker's GEDCOM file, Note: not all infomation has been verified. Contact: Email: twparker@sprynet.com Postal address: 11300 N. Central Ave., Tampa, Fl 33612 URL: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~twparker Should you find a connection please contact me.