Last year I posted a question on this forum about information on Swiss gunsmiths. Joe Puleo was kind enough to post a response and supply some information. Thanks Joe. That information opened the door to the sources I needed for an article I was preparing. The resulting article appeared in the October 2010 issue of Pennsylvania Mennonite Heritage. I'll give a short synopsis of the article as it applies to Swiss gunsmiths and early Pennsylvania.
Hans Rudolf Bundeli arrived in Pennsylvania late in 1703 from Bern, Switzerland. In 1704 he purchased 100 acres of land in Germantown but sold it four months later at a profit of 33%. By 1708 he purchased ten acres in Cheltenham Township outside Philadelphia. In 1704 a traveling Swiss promoter of land deals, Franz Ludwig Michel, reported he had meet the son of the gunsmith Bundeli. Who was his father? As it turns out Hans Rudolf came from quite a family of gunsmiths. His father, David, worked in the Zeughaus or armory in Bern and made ordinary rifles and swivel-breech (Wender) guns. The grandfather Abraham Bundeli was also a gunsmith working at the armory in Bern. He became a master gunsmith in 1648. Hans Rudolf's maternal grandfather, Rudolf Dick, was also a gunsmith working in Bern. Numerous gunsmiths apprenticed with Rudolf Dick and two of his sons, David and Hans Rudolf became gunsmiths. David Dick also worked in the armory in Bern, but in 1680 moved to Kassel, Germany. His brother, Hans Rudolf, also moved to Kassel, Germany and from 1692 to 1719 worked as the court gunsmith in Kassel. Hans Rudolf Dick is credited with making regular guns and Windbüchsen or air guns. Four of Hans Rudolf Dick's sons became gunsmiths in Kassel. So Hans Rudolf Bundeli of Pennsylvania had both grandfathers, father, two uncles and four cousins who were gunsmiths.
No evidence has been found that Hans Rudolf Bundeli was also a gunsmith. Why the interest in Hans Rudolf Bundeli? In October 1710, Hans Rudolf Bundeli was instrumental in helping a group of recently arrived Mennonites acquire land in what would become Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. One of the members of that group was Martin Meylin. Yes, that Martin Meylin, the so called progenitor of the Pennsylvania rifle. Is there any connection between Bundeli and Martin Meylin? That is unknown at this time but is under investigation. Just a note, in most Pennsylvania records Bundeli appears as John Rudolph Bundeli or Bondeli.
Mart Keen