Ludwig Derr | |
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Born | 1720 Palatinate, Germany |
Died | 1785 Pennsylvania, U.S. | (aged 64–65)
Ludwig Derr was an 18th-century Palatinate German emigrant to colonial America. In 1785, he settled Lewisburg, Pennsylvania (as Derrstown),[1] and designed its street layout.[2][3]
A settler of the area since as early as 1763–1769, Derr purchased several tracts of land from the William Penn family and other neighboring landowners, the largest of which was known as "The Prescott". Having been on the land for such a long time, Derr had befriended the local Native Americans of the area. His relationship with these indigenous peoples was so well founded that, even as many of the other local settlers' homesteads were routinely sacked by Native Americans, Derr's lands remained free from attacks. Subsequently, in 1784, he worked with Samuel Weiser to lay out his combined land tracts, and create Derrstown. Lewisburg was so named because the German name Ludwig becomes Lewis when translated into English.[4] Its name was later changed to Lewisburgh when Snyder County was created from Union County in 1855 (according to a local Keystone Marker sign), but was known on original plans and deeds as Lewisburg before that time.