Whitemarsh township St. Thomas Episcopal Church The grounds embrace all of six acres, in neat condition. As may be excepted from its antiquity, many have been buried here, probably above two thousand.. The oldest stone bearing the date is that erected to the memory of James Allison, who died at age 45, who died in 1727. Among the numberous names to be found; Burke, Burge, Wells, Farmar, Allison, Woolen, Brandt, White, Shay, Houpt, Ingleman, Cleaver, Bisbing, Robinson, Nash, Acuff, Donatt, Taylor, Nague, Loeser, Brandfield, Hayes, Hinkle, Lukens, Smith, Jackson, Hickling, Young, Warley, Comly, Corson, Aimen, Stackhouse, Hersh, Summerfield, Graffy, Hart, Gibbs, Janney, Dodson, Kifer, Platt, Foote, and Vancourt. Cold Point Baptist, line adjoining Plymouth and Whitepain, graves there; Freas, Rodebaugh, Lysinger, Fight, Phipps, Hellings, Williams, White, Sands, Bisbing, Hallet, Rex, Coulson, Moore, Kirk, Radcliff, Getman, Wood, Jones, Robinson, Yetter, Fisher, Nagle, Schlater, Butler, Roberts, Heller, Gilbert, Childs, Dewees, Wimmer Assessment of Whitemarsh, 1781 (some) Adam Miller, George Knitle, George Geiger, John Hauser, Martha Shoemaker, widow, Jacob Shoemaker, David Shoemaker, Jacob Jones Shoemaker, Thomas Livezey, John Jones, Michael Mitchell,George Fries Jr., a shoemaker, Casper Freas. Assessment of Upper Salford, 1776 John Bergy, Philip Gable Jr.,Christian Haldeman, Charles Derr Union Church (Lutheran and Reformed) Whitemarsh township Aimen, Stout, Kuhler, Dewees, Keyser, Armstrong, Wentz, Ball, Heydrick, Day, Bitting, Sober, Wolf, Dager, Yetters, quandrill, Dotta, Frainger, Everhart,Harmer, Cook, Carr, Engard,, Hocker, Scheetz, Gilbert, McClellan, Clemens, Nace, Jones, Lear, Hallman, Benner, Ott, Heany, Redifer, Fries, Lear, Frantz, Hersh, Fultz, Bryan, Heller, Cox, Carn, McNeille,Sechler, Farr, Davis, Neiman Kline, Coar, Peterman, Haauss, Brooke, Daub, Shugard, Irwin, Bush, Yeakle, Burnet, Closson, Hemp, Kerper, Bowers, Hogg, Cooper, Shaw, Freerick, Roberts, Steer, Jacoby . St, Peter's Barren Hill Dettre, Dager, Morris, Prutzman, Barnet, Crawford, Bell, Rapine, Johnson, Jago, Keys, Mattis, Righter, Bond, Pflieger, Young, Staley, Lylle, Bolton,Pifer, Shinkle, Butter, Haines, Share, Sharp, Jacoby, Faust, Denninson, Shaw, Edelman, Scheetz, Snyder, Woods, Ritter, Markley, Fisher, Hellings, Potts, Zern, Fight, Bauer, Wood, Thompson, Brant, Schlatter, Herman, Hart, Calender, Kutz, Hallman, Graver, VanWinkle, Markley, Ellis, Streeper Kenzie, Davis, Heilman, Kirker, Spealhoffer, Throp, Graver, Hagy, Deshong, Harner, Culp, Wampole. Freas, Joseph, subject, of German extraction, his father, George Freas, married Barbara Wolf. Joseph was born 6 May 1794, he married 15 Jan 1818 to Ann Keely, d/o Henry and Elizabeth Keely. Freas, Jesse, The great-grandfather of Jesse, was was from Saxony. His son Simon, of Whitemarsh township. He married to Margaret Rapin, born in 1773 and died in 1863, a descendant of Paul da Rapin de Thoyras. The children of Simon and Margaret Freas, were William, David, Anna, Charles, Nicholas, Sarah, Elizabeth, Philip, Henry, Elizabeth2, David2. William of this number was born Dec. 27, 1796 in Whitemarsh, he was a blacksmith. He married Catharine Freas. Children; Jesse W. and a daughter, Barbara Ann, who married Philip Cressman of Phila. Jesse W., was born 23 Oct 1818, in Whitemarsh, he married Dec. 24, 1846 to Catharine Streeper, d/o Leonard and Sarah Streeper. Children; William S., born in 1848, Frederick R., 1851, Eva in 1853, died in 1854, Luther, in 1855, Henry M., 1859, L. Streeper, in 1862, Oliver S., Abold, in 1864, Lilly, in 1868, Ida M., in 1872. Members of the Lutheran Church at Barren Hill. Boehm's Reformed Church-Whitemarsh The most ancient names found on the tombstones, Knorr, Etris, Martin, Greenwalt, DeHaven, Doll, Eberhard, Singer, Sheive, Greger, Yost, Rumber, Schlater, Shearer, Klair, Spitznogle, Engard and Remig. More recent, Hoover, Earnest, Jones, Detwiler, Dager, Rile, Sechler, Frantz, Wentz, Sholl, Levering, Hentz, Bodey, Wertsner, and Selser. Best Wishes, Geri