Here you go (Moravians):
Main text: John Moll’s arrival in Allentown was only months after the colonial assembly approved generous funding for raising and arming provincial militia companies after the October, 1763 massacre of 23 people, most of them defenseless women and children, in neighboring Whitehall and Allen Townships, arms being described in desperately short supply.
"NORTHAMPTON TOWN, the 10th, this instant, October, 1763.
To the Honorable JAMES HAMILTON (1710-1783), Esq., Lieutenant Governor and Commander in Chief of the Province of Pennsylvania,
… we found the inhabitants that had neither Guns, Powder nor Lead, to defend themselves, and that Colonel Burd (James Burd 1726-1793) …would assist them with guns and ammunition, and he requested of me to write to your Honor, because the inhabitants of the town had not chose their officers at the time he set off, so we, the inhabitants of the said town hath unanimous chose George Wolf, the bearer hereof, to be Captain, and Abraham Rinker (1741-1820, later brother-in-law to John Moll I) to be Lieutenant; we whose names are underwritten, promise to obey to this mentioned Captain and Lieutenant, and so we hope his Honor will be so good and send us 50 guns, 100 pound of powder, and 400 pound lead, 150 stands for the guns… JOSEPH ROTH, Minister (Mickley 30)”
Perhaps someone in Allentown knew John Moll and asked him to come. Fifty guns provided by the province would only accommodate the militia company, and probably every family who didn’t own a gun wanted one or more. There were no other gunmakers in the immediate area then except the Moravians at Christian Springs, but despite the 1757 expansion of their enterprise mentioned previously, a record dated 1759 (Figure 20 below) lists only one part-time gunmaker there. The Moravians had to import weapons from New York to supply their own needs in 1755, and by 1759 their weapons output likely remained insufficient to service others, as the population of their local communities was 886 and growing. Meanwhile, the general Indian uprising of Pontiac’s Rebellion with all its terror raged throughout the frontier region in 1763 and 1764, with the well-publicized July, 1764 massacre of a schoolmaster and 11 children in Franklin County adding urgency to the community effort to arm themselves. Moll’s primary interest was paid work; the demand for weapons in the Allentown area was immediate and well-funded, and Moll probably sought outside labor to assist. Nineteen-year-old Peter Newhard, talented and ambitious but destined to remain subordinate to an older brother and father in a farming operation long on land but short on cash, could easily have been one of those assistants, bartering training for labor (Busch 184-224; Klees 100; Moravian Historical Society; Silver 66). (Note 18)
Christian Springs’ 1759 “Distribution of Trades”
Andreas Albrecht is listed as the sole Buechsen Schaefter (gunmaker) at #11 between four nail makers
and three wood turners. As Albrecht also taught music at their school two miles away at Nazareth
during this period, the Moravians were producing more sets of chairs than they were rifles.
End Notes:Note 18: Sources conflict. Dennis Kastens states the 1764 tax rolls list a married person (or widower) named Moll rather than single gunmaker John Moll I, who was first listed in 1772. Brent Wade Moll states the 1764 Moll was described as a gunsmith. Some students don’t believe much gunmaking was occurring in the Lehigh Valley outside the Moravian enclaves in the early 1760’s, which favors Kasten’s version. I’ve used Moll’s version because it coincides with a John Moll’s Sep 1763 sale of his Berks County land and gunsmith shop a few months before appearing in Allentown in 1764. This was land either he or his father perhaps acquired circa 1750, the date a John Moll appears on neighboring land warrants (Berks County courthouse in the Recorder of Deeds Office for Rockland Twp). The Indian uprisings throughout the summer of 1763 culminating in attacks in Northampton County in October mentioned in the first paragraph also support the Moll version, because the result was an urgent request for arms and ammunition, which were described as being in short supply, and 24,000 English pounds were soon appropriated by the Colonial Assembly for raising and equipping an 800-man defense force. Local gunmakers and merchants selling guns were clearly busy and well-funded by 1764, albeit with workaday muskets, fowlers or trade-gun types rather than the works of art most likely to survive. Further, Joseph Mickley also mentions Abraham Rinker (1741-1820) as the lieutenant of the local volunteer defense company in October 1763. Rinker was the older brother of Lydia Rinker (1749-unk) who married John Moll I in 1772. The newly-arrived stranger Moll couldn’t have married into the Rinker family without a close, longstanding relationship that probably began with Moll servicing Rinker’s defense company with weaponry in 1764. Strings of coincidences usually aren’t.
References:Busch, Clarence M. Report of the Commission to Locate the Site of the Frontier Forts of Pennsylvania, Vol 1. State Printer of Pennsylvania, 1896. Print.
Klees, Frederic. The Pennsylvania Dutch. New York: The MacMillan Company, 1950. Print.
Mickley, Joseph J. Brief account of murders by the Indians, and the cause thereof, in Northampton County, Penn'a., October 8th, 1763 [database on-line]. Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005. Original data:,. Brief account of murders by the Indians, and the cause thereof, in Northampton County, Penn'a., October 8th, 1763. unknown: unknown, 1875. Web.
Moll, Brent Wade, The Moll Family in Pennsylvania,
http://www.angelfire.com/pa5/mollpa/. Web.
Moravian Historical Society, 214 East Center Street Nazareth, Pennsylvania 18064,
http://www.moravianhistoricalsociety.org/index.html. Web.
Silver, Peter Rhoads. Our Savage Neighbors. New York: WW Norton and Company, 2008. Print.
Sipe, C Hale. The Indian Wars of Pennsylvania. 2 vols. 1929: Bowie, Md; Heritage Books, 2000. Web