Thanks, Daniel and Michael. This name really gets twisted by students and teachers alike.
We may as well stir the pot and submit for discussion the notion that perhaps Pennsylvania's oldest rifles came from this area. A necessary component in the understanding of the earliest PA guns is the activities and locations of the Moravian community, including Jacob Dickert. Study the interaction, apprenticeships, and intermarriages among the faithful from Christian's Spring, Bethlehem, Nazareth, Lititz and Lancaster, and you will have a good base on the tight associations that existed. Andreas Albrecht was one who worked first in Nazareth and then moved to Lancaster, providing a physical link between the two "schools."
For those unfamiliar with the subject, Moravia is a region of present-day Czech Republic. These Protestants fled their homeland due to internecine religious conflict and a weak economy. Here in America they made it their mission to Christianize the indigenous population. Good gunsmiths were an integral part of the community. Girls and boys separated until marriage. Education and literacy respected and encouraged. Good records kept to the present day, open to all researchers.