Donn, I beleive those records are kept at the Lehigh County Historical Society. I do have some records from Zion's in Upper Milford Twp. which would now be Lehigh The title of the records is Church Record of Upper Milford Reformed Congregation - Now Zions Reformed Church, Zionsville-Lehigh Co., Pa. I was only looking for Schaffer, Meitzler, Schlauch, information so thats all I copied. I do have a book about the early churches of this area. History of the Allentown Conference of the Ministerium of Pa. by Preston Laury. In considering the origin of Zionsville Congregation, 1757, account must be taken of an older, though dying congregation near Dillingerville, which for convenience will be designated the Dillingerville Congregation. Oct. 30, 1746, Muhlenberg writes that in addition to Saucum[Blue Church] there is a small congregation in "Upper Milford" which are served as opportunity affords, every fourth week. In this manner the small congregation were supplied. When this plan had to be abandoned, providentially there came from Nova Scotia in April 1749, to his house in Providence, Ludolph Heinrich Schrenk, whom after some private instruction, Muhlenberg introduced to Saccum and Dillingersville at Catechist in Oct. 1749. As soon as Schrenk began his ministry he opened the church record of " The Evangelical Congregation of Upper Milford" and entered as many names as possible of those baptized by his predecessors. In 1750 Mulhenberg visits the congregation and the church record contains the names of 81 communicants as having communed on May 21, of that year. [Listed is Michael Rieb and wife Catherine -this is the closest I found to Ring Michael Flores and wife Elisabeth] I am summarizing here 1753- Schrenk leaves -Rev. Frederici takes over - he preached every two weeks for 8 years The dissatisfaction with the services of Rev. Frederici and the limited quarters in the log school house, led the Lutheran to errect a log church in Zionsville. Frederici leaves in 1762 - Rev. Joseph Roth takes over - 1763 Rev. Joseph Roth -dies May 1764 Very poor attendance follows this. 1768 a large number from the mother church joined Zionsville congregation. Rev. Christian Espich in 1789 made an effort to revive the church, but after 2 years he gave up. He left in 1791. With the removal of Espich the congregation ceased to function, and the remant joined either Zionsville or some neighboring congregation. Thus ended the old Lutheran Church at Dillingersville. Zionsville - organized 1757 -by residents of Zionsville and disaffect members of the Dillingersville Congregation. With Peter Hittle's donation of an acre of land for church burial puroses, Peter Hittle may be regarded as the father of Zionsville congregation. He had been a member of the mother church, but with others having become dissatisfied with things as they existed under Frederici ministration, Hittle gave the new congregation his best possible support. Names of parents found in the baptismal record from 1757-1769 Michael Flores. I hope this helps. Jean