woman‎Maria Appolonia “Abigail” Hartman‏‎, daughter of Johannes Hartman and Anna Margaretha Moses‏.
Born ‎04 Sep 1742 at ,, , Germany
Birthplace: Ilbesheim, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany? Had this previously but don't know where it came from.
, died ‎06 Nov 1789 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 47 years, buried at St Peters Church Cemetery, Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States

15 AUG 1750 Arrived at Philadelphia aboard the ship called the "Royal Union" from Rotterdam via Portsmouth.
@S32@

Maria Abigail Hartman was baptized at age 15 in 1756 at the Trappe Church in Montgomery County. She married at age 16. She was the mother of 21 children and 17 were in her funeral procession. She died from typhoid fever. Her parents are buried in Pikeland Cemetery@S18@

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Different records at Ancestry.com list 21 children for Zachariah and Maria.

See notes for husband, Zachariah. Records indicate she died of Typhoid fever... possibly contracted from volunteering in one of the hospitals built by her husband.@S23@

The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 65
page 182 (DAR ID Number: 64519):

Abigail Hartman Rice (1742-89 DAR: A094808) died from typhus fever contracted in the hospital at “Yellow Springs” while on errands of mercy carrying food and delicacies to the invalid soldiers. She was born in Germany; died in Chester County.

From Tombstone Pic:
ABIGAIL HARTMAN RICE WIFE OF ZACHARIAH RICE 1742 – 1789 SERVED AS A NURSE AT YELLOW SPRINGS HOSPITAL DURING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. PLACED BY ABIGAIL HARTMAN RICE CHAPTER, D.A.R. [Original marker is said to have been stolen, but read, “Some have children Some have none. Here lies the mother of twenty-one.” An account states that, “seventeen of her twenty-one children followed her body in procession to the grave… such a sight was never before seen in Pikeland and may never be again.”]

Married ‎1758 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, age 15 or 16 years (married 30 or 31 years) to:

manZachariah Rice‏, age by marriage 26 or 27 years
Born ‎1731 at Passau, Regierungsbezirk Niederbayern, Bavaria, Germany, died ‎19 Aug 1811 at Turbett Township, Juniata County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 79 or 80 years, buried at Church Hill Cemetery, Port Royal, Juniata County, Pennsylvania, United States. Occupation: Carpenter, Millwright

More stuff at http://www.ricefamilybooks.com/ ???

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Different records at Ancestry.com list 21 children for Zachariah and Maria.

The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 65
page 182 (DAR ID Number: 64519):

Zachariah Rice (1731-1811 DAR: A095181), a patriot, who did much work for the government during the Revolutionary War, and assisted in building the hospital at “Yellow Springs,” Chester County. He was born in Germany; died in Pennsylvania.

Zachariah Rice (Reis) was born in Bavaria, Germany in 1731. By 1751, at the age of twenty, Zachariah was already a skilled carpenter and millwright. That year, he decided to leave his native Germany and seek a better life in the "New World". He boarded the ship Edinburgh, which docked in Philadelphia on September 16, 1751. Shortly after his arrival, Zachariah settled in Pikeland Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, near the present town of Chester Springs. It was there that he designed and constructed a mill to separate clover seed, the first of its kind in the New World. It was the prototype for many others that would be built during the next eighty years. In 1757, Zachariah married Marie Appolonia "Abigail" Hartman. Abigail was born in Wurtemburg, Germany on September 4, 1742, the daughter of Johannes and Margaret Hartman. She was fifteen years old when she married Zachariah, who was eleven years her senior. Abigail's father, Johannes Hartman, gave the newlyweds a two-hundred acre parcel of farm land on which they would later build their home, in 1767. During their marriage of 33 years, Zachariah and Abigail had twenty one children, seventeen of whom survived to adulthood.

The American Revolution
Zachariah Rice enlisted in the Continental Army as an engineer and carpenter, under the command of General George Washington. He helped build the Yellow Springs Hospital near his home in Chester County, which would soon be used as a field hospital for the casualties of the war. His wife, Abigail, became a recurrent visitor to the hospital, spending much of her time ministering to the sick and wounded soldiers. As a result of her devotion to help the suffering, she contracted typhus, which would later cause her untimely death.
On September 11, 1777, Washington encountered General William Howe's army at the Battle of Brandywine. As the battle ensued and the casualties mounted, Washington soon realized that he was hopelessly outnumbered and poorly supplied to resume the fight. He wisely decided to withdraw, saving his men to "fight another day". During his retreat, Washington and his staff officers stopped at the Rice farm and asked Abigail if they could have some water. She sent one of her daughters to retrieve a pitcher of water from their well, to which she added some sugar, spices, and rum, making a drink that was popularly known as "flip". Abigail handed the drink to him and said, "Here, my Lord." Washington quickly replied, "We have no titles here, we are all brothers." As General Washington drank this beverage, Abigail's five-year-old daughter, Susannah, approached him. Washington smiled, picked her up, and sat her on his knee while he finished his drink.

For Abigail's contributions during the war, there is a chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in her name in Washington, DC. There is also a plaque in her honor in the Bell Tower at Valley Forge. After the war, the Rices continued to farm their land and raise their family. Then, in 1789, Zachariah was struck with two overwhelming blows. The first was the death of his beloved wife, Abigail. She had succumbed to the typhus that she contracted during the war. She was buried at St. Peter's Church in Chester County. Shortly thereafter, Zachariah lost his land, along with 114 other families in Pikeland Township.

The Pikeland Land Foreclosure of 1789
The Pikeland property was originally patented by William Penn in 1681, and, following a succession of owners, was eventually acquired by Samuel Hoare, a London merchant. Hoare purchased the tract in 1750, which he financed through a London mortgage company. He later conveyed a portion of it, about 17,000 acres, to Andrew Allen, a prominent Philadelphia merchant and a member of the Continental Congress. Allen's mortgage was carried by Mr. Hoare. Allen then divided his portion of the property into two and three-hundred acre parcels, which he, in turn, sold to the German immigrants. Because of his respected standing in the community, the immigrants did not question his integrity. Mr. Allen, however, kept the money he made from these transactions and defaulted on his payments to Hoare. The deeds that he gave to his buyers were worthless because they were never registered with the county land office. By this time, the Revolutionary War had begun. Andrew Allen then fled to Trenton, New Jersey, which had recently been captured by the British, and asked General Howe for protection. Because we were now at war with Britain, Hoare could take no legal action to recover his losses until the hostilities ended. After the war, civil courts were established, and Sheriff Ezekial Howard was given writs, dated August 26, 1789, to start foreclosure proceedings on the Hoare-Allen mortgage, and to begin the sale of the land.

As a result of the foreclosure, Zachariah Rice, now nearly sixty years old, along with his seventeen children, five of whom were married, packed their belongings into wagons and began a journey west, to what is now Perry and Juniata Counties in central Pennsylvania. It was rumored that farmland was cheap there, and after losing almost everything, they had little choice.
Soon after his arrival in Juniata County in 1790, Zachariah purchased some land from Laurence and Mary King for 1100 Pounds. He made his final payment on September 21, 1801, and thus received a clear title for his property, which was known as "Spring Mill", just outside of Port Royal, Pennsylvania. After establishing a new home for himself and his twelve dependant children, his next priority was a place of worship. Zachariah was a German Lutheran by faith, but there were no Lutheran churches in the area at that time. In order to provide a house of worship for his growing family and the other German settlers arriving from Chester County, Zachariah set aside one and a half acres of the highest section of his land, now called Church Hill, on which he built the first Lutheran Church in Juniata County. Rice's Church, a log building, was constructed sometime between 1794 and 1797. On January 1, 1803, the church and its land was sold to the trustees of the German Lutheran Congregation for sixteen dollars. A cemetery was also established on the property that year, with the first burial being that of a six-month-old child, Johann Daniel Kebner (or Kepner), in 1803. Zachariah Rice died on August 19, 1811, and was laid to rest in the Church Hill Cemetery, next to the church he built for his family and neighbors. The inscription on his tombstone, which still stands, is written in German. Translated to English, it reads: "When You will awaken the dead on that day, also give Your hand after we have arisen. Lord, speak Your answer kindly to me. Lift this transfigured body up to Thy throne." The surviving children of

Zachariah and Abigail Rice were:
John Rice (1758 - 1837) - Married Elizabeth Hench, 1784
Elizabeth Rice (1760-1823) - Married Jacob Hipple
Margaret Rice (1762-1821) - Married John Hench, 1780
Anna Maria Rice (1764-1834) - Married Benjamin Sheneman
Peter Rice (1764-1839) - Married Maria Foose
Jacob Rice (1767-1838) - Married Catherine Foose
Mary Engel Rice (1768-1822) - Married Daniel Kabel
George Rice (1769-1841) - Married Catherine Gerich
Conrad Rice (1770-1856) - Married Elizabeth Foose
Sallie Rice (1771-1855) - Married John Weimer
Susannah Rice (1772-1856) - Married Johann Jacob Hench

Grave of Zachariah Rice
Polly Rice (1773-????) - Married Benjamin Wollack
Zachariah Rice (1774-1848) - Married Anna Maria Knerr
Henry Rice (1778-1853) - Married Margaret Thomas
Catherine Rice (1780-1854) - Married John Henry Strauch
Betsey Rice (1784-????) - Married Alexander Martin
Benjamin Rice (1785-1861) - Married Nancy Diller
Note: John, Peter, George, Sallie, and Susannah Rice are also buried in the
Church Hill Cemetery in Juniata County. Margaret and Jacob Rice are interred at
the Loysville Cemetery; Conrad Rice in the Buffalo Cemetery; and Zachariah Rice
II is buried in Landisburg, all in Perry County, PA.
@S23@
Children:
1.
manJohannes Rice‏
Born ‎1758 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎02 Jan 1837 at Port Royal, Juniata County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 78 or 79 years

2.
woman‎Betsey Rice‏‎
Born ‎1759 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States‎

3.
womanElizabeth Rice‏
Born ‎08 Nov 1760 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎24 Oct 1823‎, age 62 years

4.
womanMargaretta Margaret Rice‏
Born ‎1762 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎26 May 1821 at Loysville, Perry County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 58 or 59 years

5.
woman‎Susannah Rice‏‎
Born ‎09 Mar 1763 at , Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎1838 at Otsego, Muskingum County, Ohio, United States‎, age 74 or 75 years

6.
man‎Peter Rice‏‎
Born ‎22 Apr 1764 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎Feb 1839 at , Juniata County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 74 years

7.
woman‎Mary Rice‏‎
Born ‎23 Dec 1766 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎1822 at Charlestown,, West Virginia, United States‎, age 55 or 56 years

8.
man‎Jacob Rice‏‎
Born ‎15 Jan 1767 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎01 Apr 1838 at Loysville, Perry County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 71 years

9.
manGeorge Rice‏
Born ‎1769 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎05 Jan 1841 at Turbett Township, Juniata County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 71 or 72 years, buried at Old Church Hill Cemetery, Port Royal, Juniata County, Pennsylvania, United States

10.
man‎Conrad Rice‏‎
Born ‎23 Dec 1770 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎03 Oct 1856 at Buffalo Valley, Perry County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 85 years

11.
woman‎Polly Rice‏‎
Born ‎25 Jul 1772 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎12 Feb 1860 at Peru,, , IN‎, age 87 years

12.
man‎Zachariah Rice‏‎
Born ‎1774 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎19 Jan 1846 at Landisburg, Perry County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 71 or 72 years

13.
woman‎Elizabeth Rice‏‎
Born ‎1775 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎1790 at ,, Kentucky, United States‎, age 14 or 15 years

14.
man‎Henry Rice‏‎
Born ‎1778 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎21 Sep 1853 at Landisburg, Perry County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 74 or 75 years

15.
woman‎Catherine Rice‏‎
Born ‎25 Oct 1780 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎25 Sep 1854 at Mahoning, Armstrong County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 73 years

16.
man‎Benjamin Rice‏‎
Born ‎21 Dec 1785 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎02 Nov 1861 at , Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 75 years

17.
woman‎Madeline Rice‏‎
Born ‎1787 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎1805 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 17 or 18 years

18.
woman‎Abigail Rice‏‎
Born ‎1789 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎12 Jan 1856 at Chester Springs, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States‎, age 66 or 67 years

19.
man‎Samuel Rice‏‎
Born ‎1789 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States, died ‎1789 at Pikeland, Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States‎