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Conrad Keicher Kyker Kiker

Conrad Keicher Kyker Kiker

Male Abt 1758 - 1826  (~ 68 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Conrad Keicher Kyker Kiker was born about 1758 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA (son of Johann Christian Keicher Kyker Kiker and Unknown); died on 2 Nov 1826 in Washington County, Tennessee; was buried in Nov 1826 in Old Dutch Cemetery, Washington County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    "Title: Thompson, Throckmorton, Meade, Willis, and More
    ID: I05623;http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=geep99&id=I05623
    Name: Conrad KIKER 1
    Sex: M
    Birth: ABT 1758 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania
    Death: 2 NOV 1826 in Washington County, Tennessee
    Burial: Old Dutch Cemetery, Washington County, Tennessee
    Father: Johann Christian KIKER b: ABT 1728 in Germany
    Mother: Elizabeth LINEBERGER b: 1728 in Germany
    Sources:
    Title: LDS
    Text: Family Group Record FamilySearch? Ancestral File v4.19,AFN:1GLG-150
    2007-01-18 03:03:13 UTC (Thu)
    Gary; GThompson5@satx.rr.com"; [Transcribed 01 June 2007, SLJuhl,compiler]

    Title: "Relatives of Ralph and Pat Roberts
    Updated: 2006-02-10 14:56:15 UTC (Fri) Contact: Ralph Robertsralph@abooks.com
    http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ralphroberts&id=I080248
    ID: I080248
    Name: Conrad "Coonrod" Keicher 1 2
    Sex: M
    Title: Sr.
    Birth: 1750 in Germany 1 2
    Birth: in Emanuel Lutheran (Row 4 unmarked), Washington County,Tennessee 1 2
    Death: 2 NOV 1826 in May Day Community, Washington County, Tennessee 12
    Note:
    [ralphroberts.ged]
    [1639605.ged]
    Name Suffix: Sr.
    Information provided by Richard E. Kyker.
    Marriage 1 Margaret "Margaretha Layrle" Lyerle b: BEF 1760 inCulpepper County, Virginia
    Married: ABT 1773 in Rowen County, North Carolina 1 2
    Catherine Keicher b: ABT 1773 in Rowan County, North Carolina
    John "Johann" Keicher\Kiker b: 14 JUN 1775 in Dutch Second Creek,Rowan, North Carolina
    Joseph Keicher\Kyker b: 9 JUN 1779 in Dutch Second Creek, Rowan, NorthCarolina
    Ann Marie Keicher b: 19 OCT 1781 in Rowan County, North Carolina
    Conrad Keicher b: 17 AUG 1784 in Dutch Second Creek, Rowan, NorthCarolina
    Marguerite Ann Keicher b: 9 JUN 1787 in Dutch Second Creek, Rowan,North Carolina
    UNKNOWN Keicher b: BEF 1790 in Rowan County, North Carolina
    Susannah Keicher b: 15 MAY 1791 in Rowan County, North Carolina
    Barbara Keicher b: 7 OCT 1794 in Dutch Second Creek, Rowan, NorthCarolina
    Peter Keicher b: 25 NOV 1797 in Washington County, Tennessee
    Title: 1639605.ged
    Repository:
    Media: Other
    Text: Date of Import: Nov 17, 2001
    Title: ralphroberts.ged
    Repository:
    Media: Other
    Text: Date of Import: Dec 15, 2003"

    Family/Spouse: Margaret Margaretha Layrle. Margaret and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. *Joseph Keicher Kyker Kiker was born on 9 Jun 1779 in Rowan County, North Carolina; died on 13 Jul 1855 in Washington County, Tennessee.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Johann Christian Keicher Kyker Kiker was born about 1728 in Germany; died about 1800 in Rowan County, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    "A Colonial History of Rowan County, NC - 1917
    http://www.rootsweb.com/~ncrowan/rowanhis.txt; USGENWEB ARCHIVES
    Submitted by: William N. Greer greerswest@aol.com
    Excerpt: CHAPTER II
    THE SETTLEMENTS AND BOUNDARIES OF ROWAN COUNTY
    The exact date of the appearance of settlers in Rowan County cannot be
    determined. We have already seen that long before the cabin of a
    permanent settler was erected traders from Virginia frequented theregion
    in order to barter with the Indians. The chief contributors to thepopulation
    were the Scotch-Irish Presbyterians from the north of Ireland, the
    Germans, usually known as Pennsylvania Dutch, who adhered to thetenets of
    the Lutheran and German Reformed Churches, and the Moravians, orUnited
    Brethren, from Moravia and Bohemia. From time to time men belongingto no
    one of these groups came to the frontier, but such settlers formed a
    small part of the total number of inhabitants. The Scotch-Irish werethe
    most active and probably the most numerous part of the population.These
    people were Scotch in blood, being descendants of the Scotch whom the
    English rulers had placed on the confiscated lands of Irish rebels inthe
    Province of Ulster, in north Ireland, during the seventeenth century.To
    distinguish them from the natives of Scotland they have received thename
    of Scotch-Irish.l Some forty years prior to the outbreak of the
    Revolutionary War they began to flock to America. Foote, in his
    "Sketches of North Carolina," assigns their migration to three causes,
    namely: religion, politics, and property.2 Disabilities were imposedupon
    them because they were not members of the established church ofIreland;
    they desired more political liberty than they enjoyed in the oldworld; and the ease with which land
    could he obtained in America was a third powerful incentive to their
    coming hither.3 Some came to Charleston and pushed into the frontier
    country from that place, but most of them landed in Pennsylvania and,
    after making some settlements in that. province, turned southward, andby
    1739 located in the Valley of Virginia.
    The Scotch-Irish were soon followed by another stream of immigrantsthe
    Germans who had previously located in Pennsylvania. The route whichthe
    German and Scotch-Irish settlers took in making the overland journeyfrom
    Pennsylvania to western North Carolina is described by ColonelSaunders as
    follows:
    On Jeffrey's map, a copy of which is in the Congressional Library at
    Washington City, there is plainly laid down a road called "the GreatRoad
    from the Yadkin River through Virginia to Philadelphia, distant 435
    miles." It ran from Philadelphia through Lancaster and York to
    Winchester, thence up the Shenandoah Valley, crossing the FluvannaRiver
    to Looney's Ferry, thence to Staunton River, and down the riverthrough
    the Blue Ridge, thence southward, crossing Dan River below the mouthof
    Mayo River, thence still southward near the Moravian settlement to the
    Yadkin River, just above the mouth of Linville Creek and about tenmiles
    above the mouth of Reedy Creek.9
    The Germans did not extend their settlements quite so far west as the
    Scotch-Irish did. They were industrious and economical in theirhabits
    and formed a valuable part of the population. As the laws werewritten
    and expounded in English and all public business was transacted inthat
    language, the Germans were incapable, in most instances, ofparticipating
    in public affairs.l0 The process whereby they were naturalized wasthe
    taking of several oaths prescribed by law and the repeating and
    subscribing of the test. The test, as entered on the court records of
    the county, was in this form:
    I, do believe in my conscience that there is not any
    transubstantiation in the sacrament of the Lord's Supper or in the
    elements of bread and wine at or after the consecration thereof by any
    person whatsoever.
    Other settlers from Virginia and the north came by a route furthereast
    that passed through the section now embraced by Caswell County.12
    Immigrants poured into the western country very rapidly. etc..."
    [Transcribed 01 June 2007, SLJuhl, compiler]

    "Title: Thompson, Throckmorton, Meade, Willis, and More
    ID: I05621;http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=geep99&id=I05621
    Name: Johann Christian KIKER 1 2
    Sex: M
    Birth: ABT 1728 in Germany
    Death: ABT 1800 in Rowan County, North Carolina
    Marriage 1 Elizabeth LINEBERGER b: 1728 in Germany
    Married: 12 MAR 1751/52 in Rowan County, North Carolina
    Children
    George Adam KIKER b: 1754 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania
    John KIKER b: ABT 1756 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania
    Conrad KIKER b: ABT 1758 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania
    Mary KIHER b: 6 MAY 1759 in Pennsylvania
    Nancy KIKER b: 1768 in North Carolina
    Catherine KIKER b: 1777 in North Carolina
    Sources:
    Title: LDS
    Text: Individual Record FamilySearch? Ancestral File v4.19, AFN:1GLF-073
    Title: World Family Tree
    Text: Volume 11, Tree 3807
    Title: LDS
    Text: Individual Record FamilySearch? Pedigree Resource File, CompactDisc #19, Pin #303715; Submitter: Brynjulf E. Hulleberg (BRIAN), 524South 900 East Salt Lake City, Utah, 84102-2917, Submission Search:170344-0826100091224
    2007-01-18 03:03:13 UTC (Thu)
    Gary; GThompson5@satx.rr.com" [Transcribed 01 June 2007, SLJuhl,compiler]

    Johann married Unknown on 12 Mar 1752 in Rowan County, North Carolina. Unknown and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Unknown and died.

    Notes:

    Previously listed as Elizabeth Linebarger

    (Research):Richard Earl Kyker writes:
    is no record of any sort that names the mother of Conrad Keicher. For sure she was not Linebarger. Conrad's father comes from the "famous 1911 Letter" from family folk lore (not a record. Just writes the name Christian. There is no other record to date for Conrad's parents.

    Children:
    1. George Adam Kiker was born in 1754 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA; and died.
    2. John Kiker was born in 1756 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA; and died.
    3. 1. Conrad Keicher Kyker Kiker was born about 1758 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA; died on 2 Nov 1826 in Washington County, Tennessee; was buried in Nov 1826 in Old Dutch Cemetery, Washington County, Tennessee.
    4. Mary Kiker Kiher was born on 6 May 1759 in Pennsylvania; and died.
    5. Nancy Kiker was born in 1768 in North Carolina, USA; and died.
    6. Catherine Kiker was born in 1777 in North Carolina, USA; and died.



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