Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Henry William Stiegel

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Other names
  
'Baron' Stiegel

Years active
  
1752 - 1774


Ethnicity
  
German

Name
  
Henry Stiegel

Henry William Stiegel 3bpblogspotcom6ZiiPB1szcSvjLg2GLIAAAAAAA

Full Name
  
Heinrich Wilhelm Stiegel

Born
  
May 13, 1729 (
1729-05-13
)
Cologne

Spouse(s)
  
Elizabeth Huber Elizabeth Holtz

Died
  
January 10, 1785, Pennsylvania, United States

Citizenship
  
Germany United States

Occupation
  
Glassmaker, Ironmaster

Henry William Stiegel (May 13, 1729 in Cologne, Germany – January 10, 1785 in Pennsylvania, USA) was a German-American glassmaker and ironmaster.

Henry William Stiegel Henry William Stiegel Ironmaster and Glass Maker Visit The

Stiegel was the eldest of six children born to John Frederick and Dorothea Elizabeth Stiegel in the Free Imperial City of Cologne. He immigrated to British North America in 1750 with his mother and younger brother, Anthony (his father and other siblings had died). The Stiegels sailed on a ship known as the Nancy, and arrived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on August 31, 1750.

Henry William Stiegel Henry William Stiegel Ironmaster and Glass Maker Visit The

After arriving, Stiegel took a job in Philadelphia with Charles and Alexander Stedman, most likely as a clerk or bookkeeper. In 1752, Stiegel moved to what is now Lancaster County, Pennsylvania to work with Jacob Huber, an ironworker. He married Huber's daughter, eighteen-year-old Elizabeth, the same year. The couple had two daughters, Barbara (born 1756) and Elizabeth (born 1758). Elizabeth Huber Stiegel died on February 13, 1758, only ten days after giving birth to their second daughter. Stiegel married his second wife, Elizabeth Holtz, within a year. They had a son named Jacob.

When Jacob Huber died in 1758, Stiegel and several business partners from Philadelphia assumed ownership of Huber's foundry and renamed it Elizabeth Furnace (in honor of his wife). Stiegel later purchased a forge in Berks County called the Tulpehocken Eisenhammer. He called the place Charming Forge, another iron forge near Lancaster.

An active lay Lutheran and associate of Henry Melchior Muhlenberg, he donated the land on which the Lutheran church in Manheim, Pennsylvania is now built. Stiegel was also a founding member of the German Society of Pennsylvania, formed in 1764 to aid newly arrived German immigrants. He led the fundraising efforts to secure the plot of land on which the Society's first building was eventually erected. Stiegel reportedly died in poverty.

References

Henry William Stiegel Wikipedia