Bonnie I don't know the name of man you are asking about at Welsh Run. I will forward the information that my cousin sent to me. John L. Raymer [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) ______________________________________________________ I inherited a project this summer I hope I can handle. (Note: My cousin is a master brick layer and stone cutter. I know he will do justice to the project. JR) Found my gg grandfather's grave near Welsh Run,PA. His wife, also his father (an American Revolutionary Soldier) and consort plus brothers and sisters and individuals that married into the family. It is located on the former Stech Farm in Montgomery Twp. has been neglected for some 20 years, but many of the stones are still readable. A distant cousin and I decided to restore it, give the soldier a marker, cut down many trees,exterminate the woodchucks, clear the ground , plant grass seed set gravestones and rebuild the dry native stone wall that has fallen down around the perimeter. Plan on leaving, with travel trailer, the middle of Sept., and may stay at Cowan's Gap State Park. Taking brother Bob along. I drove out by car this summer, first time to Pa., stayed in Greencastle. Like that town. One day while searching another cemetery in Welsh Run a gentleman approached us, he was working on a church next door, he ask who we were looking for, when we gave the name Stech his mouth dropped and eyes opened wide. He made us follow him to his farm 1/2 mile down the road. It turned out he had restored an 1897 Steck Buggy and his family had married into the Steck's. Spent the rest of the afternoon there, taking pictures,going thru scrapbooks, and learning new names. The Steck's employed Blacksmith's and Wheelwrights in Welsh Run and turned out 40-50 wagons and buggies a year, which sold in MD,VA and PA