The Keim and allied families in America and Europe . terials and care in thepreparation of the subject matter, withmuch promise of entertaining matterfor the Hon. Samuel W. Pennypacker, judgeof the Court of Common Plea-, Phila-delphia, says, January 29, 1899: I amobliged to you for sending me So. 1 ofthe Keim Family. It is very interest-ing and does you great credit. I shallwant the later numbers/ The husband of a reader not withinthe range of the Allied Families saysthat his wife cosily reading The Keimand Allied Families by the fireside,with the mercury skirmishing in the di-rection
The Keim and allied families in America and Europe . terials and care in thepreparation of the subject matter, withmuch promise of entertaining matterfor the Hon. Samuel W. Pennypacker, judgeof the Court of Common Plea-, Phila-delphia, says, January 29, 1899: I amobliged to you for sending me So. 1 ofthe Keim Family. It is very interest-ing and does you great credit. I shallwant the later numbers/ The husband of a reader not withinthe range of the Allied Families saysthat his wife cosily reading The Keimand Allied Families by the fireside,with the mercury skirmishing in the di-rection of minus zero, after an unus-ually protracted silence said: This isthe first publication on genealogy Ihave ever_known to be , number two will be mere soand each one after will be still more advance by increasing ratio in valueof solid facts, opening of new folds ofgenealogical research and widening flu-ency of romance. There has already so much of valuedtestimony accumulated that it must besubmitted on the instalment GKORGE DI-IJKNK of Joint Keini, Second of the Name ; Son of Nicholas Keini . Son ofJohann-es Keim, The n at Reading, /a., 177S, Died there rSs2. The Keim and Allied Families IN AMERICA AND EUROPE A Monthly Serial of History, Biography, Genealogy and Folklore,illustrating- the causes, circumstances and consequences of theGerman, French and Swiss Emigration to America fromthe \ 7th Century to the present time. Vol. 1, READING, PA. FEBRUARY, 1899. HARR1SBURG, PA. No 3. PENNSYLVANIA THE BIRTH OF AN AMERICAN COMMONWEALTH X physique, instincts and charac-li teristics William Penn was morea Dutchman than an English-man. He may have inherited some ofthe distinguished abilities of his father,but the qualities for which he wasworld-wide in his Jame as a founder,law-giver and promoter were drawnfrom the maternal side. The mother of William Penn, Mar-garet Jasper, was the daughter of JohnJasper, a successful merchan
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