The Moll-Newhard-Kuntz Triangle Timeline
1731, 1732, 1737, 1738. The Moll, Newhard and Kuntz families migrate to Pennsylvania from three villages within a 50-mile circle in the Palatinate-Alsace region of Europe, settling within a 30-mile circle in Berks and Northampton Counties. They are skilled farmers and tradesmen from the most advanced farming area of Europe, and are Pietists of the German Reformed faith. Relationships within family and members of their church congregations play a dominant role in their lives.
1732, 1737. The Newhard migration is exceptionally well-planned, and includes five families in two increments using pooled resources, establishing a strong pattern of mutual assistance that continues in the new world.
1740’s-1770’s. Establishing farms and businesses from wilderness proceeds slowly until the first generation of sons reach adulthood. The limiting factor is the time and labor required to convert forest to productive farmland.
November-December, 1755. French and Indian War raids by Delaware and Shawnee war parties from the Wyoming Valley into Northampton County kill or capture over a hundred settlers, including Newhard and Kuntz family members.
1762. The streets are laid out in the new settlement of Allentown (then called Northampton Town).
May, 1763. Pontiac’s Rebellion Indian violence begins west of the Alleghany Mountains and progresses eastward.
1-7 September, 1763. In Berks County, 16 settlers are killed or captured in Indian raids near Reading.
5 September, 1763. “Johannes Moll, Gunsmith” sells his 50-acre farm and shop in Rockland Twp of Berks County, and appears on the 1764 Allentown tax rolls as a gunsmith. The distance between Moll’s farm and Allentown is 30 miles.
8 October, 1763. The Whitehall-Allen Township Massacre by Wyoming Valley and local Indians near Allentown, with 23 settlers killed and others seriously wounded.
10 October, 1763. Allentown reports a severe shortage of arms; requests guns and ammunition from the governor and organizes a local militia company with farmer Abraham Rinker as lieutenant.
22 October, 1763. Based on the recent Berks and Northampton massacres, the Pennsylvania General Assembly raises 24,000 English Pounds to raise and arm temporary militia companies on the frontier.
Circa November, 1763. Nineteen-year-old farmer
Peter Newhard (1743-1813) probably joins
Johannes Moll (B1746-1794) as an assistant making and servicing guns in Allentown, bartering training for labor.
July, 1764. The Franklin County Schoolroom Massacre adds urgency to the Northampton community effort to arm themselves.
1767. Peter Newhard marries and probably takes in his 3-year-old nephew
David Kuntz (1764-1834) after David’s father dies unexpectedly at age 32 on his Berks County farm leaving his wife with 8 small children to raise alone.
28 April, 1772. Johannes Moll marries Lydia Gertrude Rinker in Allentown’s Zion Reformed Church. Lydia is the younger sister of Whitehall Massacre militia lieutenant Abraham Rinker.
June, 1775-April, 1776. Family members Philip Newhard, Christopher Neuhart and Frederick Kuntz join Thompson’s and Miles’ Rifle Regiments, probably using rifles made by Peter Newhard.
1777. As Philadelphia was about to fall to the British, armory operations were moved to Allentown, Lancaster and Harrisburg. As these were large operations, local tradesmen were probably employed as subcontractors, including gunmakers Johannes Moll, Peter Newhard and Allentown joiner
Jacob Neuhard (1752-1835), Peter’s younger brother.
1777-1783. Johannes Moll, Peter Newhard, and Jacob Neuhard serve in the Northampton County militia, probably as gunsmiths, serving in different companies to distribute their skills. Jacob serves until 1789 after he was selected for company command.
Circa 1779. Twenty-three-year-old war veteran
Herman Rupp (1756-1831) probably goes to work for Johannes Moll as an assistant, perhaps joining his younger brother
Johannes Rupp (1762-1840) already serving in the Moll shop as a wartime apprentice.
1780. Peter Newhard becomes a trustee of Zion Reformed Church where Moll was married.
Circa 1784. Gunmaker David Kuntz relocates back to Berks County, probably to support his remaining family there.
Circa 1787. Johannes Moll’s oldest son and namesake
John Moll II (1773-1834) joins his father as an apprentice gunmaker in their Allentown shop.
1794. John II Moll marries Elizabeth Newhard, Peter’s younger cousin.
3 November, 1794. Johannes Moll dies and is buried at the cemetery at 10th and Linden in Allentown. John II takes over the Moll gunshop.
Circa 1794-1797. Peter Newhard’s nephew
Conrad Newhard (1783-1853) and in-laws
Jacob Kuntz (1780-1876),
Adam Kuntz (1781-1876) and
Peter Kuntz (1782-1862 probably join gunmaker Peter Newhard as teenage apprentices. Perhaps they also assist at Moll’s gun shop, as John II was likely running the shop alone.
1806. Herman and Johannes Rupp’s first cousin Susanna Oury marries
Benjamin Schrecengost (1788-1868) to establish the line of Schreckengost gunmakers in western Pennsylvania. This was the first of at least five Rupp-Schreckengost intermarriages.
1808. Allentown joiner and occasional gunsmith Jacob Neuhard is elected to the state legislature, serving in Philadelphia during legislative sessions.
1810. Gunmaker Jacob Kuntz moves to Philadelphia to ply his trade there, probably living temporarily with in-law Jacob Neuhard.
Circa 1810-1814. John II Moll’s sons
John Moll III (1796-1883) and
Peter Moll (1799-1879) reach apprentice age and begin work in the Allentown gunshop.
1812. Jacob Kuntz marries Jacob’s daughter Barbara Neuhardt, and they establish a home and shop in Philadelphia.
16 September, 1813. Peter Newhard dies and is buried in Egypt Church Cemetery. Gunmakers John Rupp and David and Peter Kuntz are mentioned in his estate inventory as having “notes outstanding”.
1814. Jacob Neuhard leaves the state legislature when he is elected Lehigh County Commissioner, serving in Allentown.
Circa 1818-1828. John II Moll’s nephew
James Moll (1804-1870) and sons
David Moll (1807-1853) and
Nathan Moll (1814-1892) reach apprentice age and begin work in the Allentown gunshop.
11 April, 1820. John III Moll takes over the Moll Allentown gunshop. By 1824 John II Moll at age 51 relocates to Hellertown to assist with 25-year-old son Peter’s gunshop there, with teenage son David as an apprentice.
Circa 1827. Jacob Kuntz’s oldest son
Peter Kuntz II (1813-B1914) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Philadelphia gunshop. By 1860 he is a gunsmith working in Farmington Township in Fulton County, Illinois.
1829. Allentown gunsmith James Moll marries Sarah Neuhart, another of the late Peter Newhard’s younger cousins.
1838. Gunmaker Nathan Moll marries Rosina Lee, older sister of later gunmaker George Lee.
Circa 1839. John III Moll’s son
William Henry Moll (1829-1889) reaches apprentice age and begins at Moll’s Allentown gunshop.
George Lee (1825-1889) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown gunshop doing business as “P & D Moll”.
1839. Jacob Neuhard’s son Peter Newhard (1783-1860), namesake of the master gunmaker and in-law to all the Kuntz and Moll gunmakers, is elected to the US House of Representatives for two consecutive terms.
1844. John III Moll is elected to the Allentown City Council, with former congressman Peter Newhard serving as Burgess. The Allentown gunshop does business as “J. & W.H. Moll”.
Circa 1848. Peter Moll’s son
Reuben C. Moll (1834-unk) reaches apprentice age and begins as a clerk in the Hellertown gunshop.
Circa 1850. David Moll’s son
William H. Moll (1836-1877) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown gunshop.
Circa 1852. John III Moll’s son
Josiah David Moll (1838-1873) reaches apprentice age and begins at Moll’s Allentown gunshop. David Moll’s son
Edwin Moll (1838-1900) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown shop. Nathan Moll’s son
Samuel Moll (1838-1915) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown shop.
Circa 1860. Hellertown gunmaker Nathan Moll with son Samuel relocate to Poweshiek Township, Jasper County Iowa where they work as gunsmiths and farmers.
Circa 1861. Peter Moll’s daughter Elizabeth M. marries gunmaker George Lee of the Moll Hellertown gunshop. Peter Moll’s son
Peter Moll II (1847-1883) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown shop.
Circa 1863. Peter Moll’s son
John Jacob Moll (1849-1909) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown gunshop. David Moll’s son
David M. Moll (1849-1926) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown shop.
Circa 1866. David Moll’s son
Thomas Moll (1852-unk) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Hellertown shop.
Circa 1874. William Henry Moll’s son
Henry Thomas Moll (1860-1913) reaches apprentice age and begins at the Allentown gunshop.
1877. The Hellertown gunshop gradually converts to dry goods, hardware and groceries after William H. Moll dies.
1884. The Moll Allentown gunshop is sold, and until 1889 Henry Thomas Moll was the last practicing Moll gunsmith in Allentown in a small shop on Hamilton Street.
Circa 1905. John Jacob Moll is the last practicing Moll gunsmith in Hellertown, repairing guns on a part-time basis.