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The Salzburgers
In 1731, twenty thousand Protestants were expelled by the Archbishop Firmian of the Province of Salzburg (presently Austria) because they refused to embrace certain religious beliefs and they continued to follow the teachings of Martin Luther. Sixteen thousand went to East Prussia, two hundred to Holland, three hundred to the United States of America, Georgia, and three thousand five hundred settled in various locations. The Trustees of the Colony of Georgia in 1732
extended an invitation to Salzburgers to come settle in the new colony in
America. Reverend Samuel Urlsperger, Pastor of St Anna’s Lutheran Church in
Augsburg, Germany, working through the “Society for the Propagation of
Christian Knowledge” in England, made arrangements for the group of
Salzburgers to travel to Georgia. In 1733, the first exiles arrived at St.
Anna’s Lutheran Church. From Augsburg,
Having spent eight weeks crossing the ocean, the American coastline was sighted on March 5th, 1734. The ship was off the shore of Charleston, South Carolina. Pastors Boltzius and Gronau were allowed to go ashore, while the others remained on the vessel. As the Purysburg continued its trip down the coastline to Georgia, March 11-12, 1734, the ship grounded on a sand bar increasing fear of a shipwreck. Finally, on March 12th, 1734, the first Salzburgers landed at Savannah. General James Oglethorpe and the inhabitants of the City welcomed the Salzburgers. A tent was erected and a breakfast of rice soup was served to them.
The town of New Ebenezer was laid out similar
to Savannah. By 1741, the town had grown to a population of twelve hundred.
The Salzburgers were successful in agriculture, raising cattle, lumbering
and silk culturing. These early settlers built the first saw mill in Georgia
on Ebenezer Creek (1735), the first orphanage was built at New Ebenezer
(1737), the first rice and grist mill in Georgia (1740), organized the first
Sunday School (1734), constructed the
From 1767 to 1769, the Jerusalem Lutheran Church was built from bricks made of clay from the area. The walls of the Church are twenty-one (21) inches thick. Some of the original panes of glass can be seen in the windows of the Church. The congregation of this Church was originally formed at St Anna’s Lutheran Church in Augsburg, Germany in 1733. The congregation remains active today. The Jerusalem Lutheran Church is the oldest surviving intact building in Georgia. Transports continued to arrive until 1752. The population of Ebenezer continued to grow until the Revolutionary War. During this period, Ebenezer was burned by the British and the town never recovered. Presently at the Town of Ebenezer, one will find the Jerusalem Lutheran Church, the Cemetery, a Salzburger home built in 1755, and the Old Parsonage built in 1835. The Georgia Salzburger Museum is, also, located at the settlement. The Salzburgers of today are the descendants of these brave men, women, and children who left their homeland (Austria and Germany). They stood up for their religious beliefs, traveled to Georgia, and settled at... Eben Ezer, stone of help, or monument to God’s protection. Georgia Salzburger Society Home |
Information | Books and Gifts
| Genealogy | "The
Salzburgers" | Salzburger Park
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