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Image courtesy Pinterest |
Close family friends of mine are descended from the Hertlein family, whose ancestors were longtime farmers in Erie County, Ohio, with deep German roots. One of the sisters heard of a Hertlein Campsite on the Appalachian Trail. She wondered how that campsite came to be named Hertlein.
It turns out that a brewer in Reading, Pennsylvania, named John Michael Hertlein, appreciated nature and hiking. After John Michael Hertlein died in 1927, his wife, Anna K. Hertlein, donated several acres of land near Schubert's Gap in Berks County to the state of Pennsylvania, now a part of the Appalachian Trail. In about 1930 a cabin called the Hertlein cabin was built. Eventually the cabin was demolished due to repeated vandalism. The area is now known as the Hertlein Campsite.
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Image courtesy Find a Grave |
This picture of Mr. and Mrs. John Michael Hertlein, along with their grandson, appeared on a Passport application in 1921, accessed at Ancestry.com, before they embarked on a trip to Europe.
Thank you Mr. and Mrs. John Michael Hertlein for your generosity to nature lovers who hike the Appalachian Trail.
To read more about the Appalachian Trail, visit the travel section of your local library. Articles about the Hertlein donation of land are found in the Reading Times of October 27, 1930, and July 25, 1934.