Scoville, Joseph Alfred, The old merchants of New York City (v. 1)

(New York :  T.R. Knox,  1885.)

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THE   OLD   .MERCHA.YTS
 

CHAPTER XVIII.

Teh history of the names of some of the old mer-
caants is very curious. The large grocery houses of
Bininger is an example of our statement.

The eldest, or founder of the name that came to this
country, was a native of Zurich, Switzerland, The
father. Christian, his wife and son Abraham, came in a
brig from a port in Europe to Savannah, Georgia. On
board the vessel came the celebrated John Wesley.

The vessel was within two days' sail of her port
when Mr. C. Biningeraild his wife died, and their bo¬
dies were committed to the great deep. Abraham Bin¬
inger, then a lad, was educated in the great Methodist
Whitfield Orphan School in Savannah. A large crowd
of Moravians had settled in this Southern city. They
afterwards emigrated north to Philadelphia, and carried
young Bininger with them. The Rev. Mr. Whitfield
came North also. . He had bought a large tract of land
(about five thousand acres) at Nazaretli, near Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania. This land he sokl to the Moravians,
and they, after a short stay in Philadelphia, removed
to it. The young Abraham Bininger was educated in
the Moravian tenets, and with the intention of becoming
a preacher in that faith.

When of age, he settled at Christian Spring,amile from
  v. 1: Page 144