The gravestone of Johannes Walk (b & d 1769) will be returned to his home church of Friedberg Moravian Church near Winston-Salem, North Carolina during the homecoming worship service on October 19, 2014. The public is invited.
Johannes Walk lived only for a few months, but we remember him – he is related to nearly half of our members. Johannes was the infant son of Martin Walk Jr. and Elisabeth Fiscus Walk. Baby Walk’s grandmother was Catherine Clore, daughter of Germanna colonist Michael Clore of Gemmingen, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany who arrived in Virginia in 1717/18.
The stone was stolen many years ago from Friedberg’s cemetery, and was turned over to the Germanna Foundation by the County of Culpeper after it was discovered in December 2013.
The church’s address is: 2178 Friedberg Church Rd., Clemmons, NC 27127
245-year-old tombstone returned to Friedberg Moravian
(The Dispatch) The homecoming celebration Sunday at Friedberg Moravian Church in northern Davidson County will be more than just an annual celebration. It will be a true-to-life homecoming for the tombstone of a 6-month-old infant who was buried at the church in 1769. The infant’s tombstone was recently discovered in Virginia.
Jimmy Snyder, historian for Friedberg Moravian Church in northwestern Davidson County, said someone with the Germanna Foundation contacted the church after a cleaning crew in Culpeper, Va., found the tombstone of Johanes Walk, born March 4 and deceased Nov. 13, 1769, propped up against a tree in an abandoned field last December.
“It is really hard to say how or when it went missing and how it ended up in Virginia,” Snyder said. “We are happy to have it back and glad it is being returned to us. It’s so appropriate that the stone is connected to homecoming on Sunday. He is one of the people who was a beginning member of our church.”
Members of the local homeowners association in Culpeper notified the director of the Museum of Culpeper History after finding the tombstone, who turned to the Germanna Foundation for help. The Germanna Foundation, whose mission is to preserve the early German-American heritage in colonial Virginia, researched the marker and discovered Johanes was the infant son of Martin Walk Jr. and Elisabeth Fiscus Walk, whose colonist ancestors arrived in Virginia from Germany in 1717.
Steve Hein, chief operating officer for the Germanna Foundation in Virginia, said the tombstone mystery is unusual for the organization, but thanks to its extensive genealogy records, tracing Johanes’ family history was fairly straight-forward.
“The Walks are one of our known Germanna families,” Hein said. “We have a couple of members who are genealogists, plus we have a 105,000-name database. … It really didn’t take that long to find the information to piece together the family history, and it was through this history we traced the tombstone back to North Carolina.”
In March, the mystery of the tombstone became a little clearer when former Culpeper resident James Lee Lloyd shed some light on how the tombstone came to be left in the field. According to Lloyd, he had purchased the stone 30 years ago from an antiques store in Fredericksburg, Va. He said he had abandoned the stone when he decided to move to Arizona and didn’t want to take it with him.
Snyder was contacted by officials with the Germanna Foundation as well as the historical museum in Old Salem about the tombstone. He said the church had previously replaced Johanes’ tombstone in the 1950s, so it was pretty clear it belonged to the church.
Members of the Germanna Foundation will present the tombstone Sunday, and the 7-year-old five times great-grandnephew of Johanes Walk will attend the service.
Johanes has a very prominent historical connection to the church, Snyder said. Records shows that he was one of two babies who were baptized the day the church building was consecrated in 1769. His was one of three graves the congregation stood around during its very first Easter Service in 1770. The original tombstone will be placed in the church’s museum of historical artifacts.
“We know Johanes Walk was one of the first three people buried at the cemetery,” Snyder said. “The original headstone of the Peter Frye, the first person buried in the graveyard, is in our historical room, and we will put Johanes there, too. We keep learning all kinds of stuff except how (the stone) came to be in Virginia”