John Stadler

Male 1792 - 1860  (67 years)


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  • Name John Stadler 
    Born 6 Aug 1792  Granville County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    _UID F6D3E9A092DD45C98EBC6E9F441D3713D1E0 
    Died 6 Mar 1860  Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I2438  Bennett, Harrison, and Herron Families
    Last Modified 2 Feb 2014 

    Father Robert Stadler,   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Mother Mary Ann Shanks,   d. Yes, date unknown 
    Married 2 Nov 1754  Fauquier County, Virginia Find all individuals with events at this location 
    • bond
    Children
    1. John Stadler,   b. 6 Aug 1792, Granville County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 6 Mar 1860, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location
     
    Family ID F1288  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Nancy Arnold,   b. 12 Dec 1791, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 19 Oct 1865, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 73 years) 
    Married 12 Dec 1812  Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Nancy A. Stadler,   b. 25 Apr 1819, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 22 Dec 1843, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 24 years)
     2. Mary Stadler,   b. 22 Oct 1813, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     3. John T. Stadler,   b. 9 Apr 1815, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
    Married: Arrena Gooch
     4. Robert D. Stadler,   b. 6 Oct 1816, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     5. William B. Stadler,   b. 13 Apr 1818, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     6. Rhese E. Stadler,   b. 6 Mar 1825, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     7. Barzillia Stadler,   b. 18 Nov 1826, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     8. Martha F. Stadler,   b. 26 Dec 1831, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 4 May 1903  (Age 71 years)
     9. Melissa Susan Stadler,   b. 13 Dec 1833, Caswell County, North Carolina Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 11 Nov 1879  (Age 45 years)
     10. James L. Stadler
     11. Stephen C. Stadler
    Last Modified 14 Oct 2020 
    Family ID F778  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 

    • John Stadler was a well-respected minister in Caswell, Co. NC. The following biography of Johgn Stadler is taken from the minutes of the Gilliam Association in Alamance Co., North Carolina on Aug. 18-20, 1860.

      A Biographical Sketch of Elder John Stadler 

"Who was born in Granville County, North Carolina, on the 6th day of August, 1792, of poor but highly respectable parents. His father having been drowned, he became an orphan while yet an infant, and upon his mother depended the onerous duty of rearing a large family of children, how nobly she performed that sacred duty, the deceased is a living example. But her physical ability was unequaled to the laborious task that had devolved upon her, and necessity compelled her to hire out his brother and himself to obtain the means of support for the younger members of the family, thereby preventing the deceased from enjoying those opportunities of acquiring an education, which are offered to the poorest of our people. 
      He attended school for one month only, but an all- wise God had provided a better instructor for him than the mere works of men. 
      The subject of this memoir was married on the 12th day of December, 1812, in his 21st year, to Miss Nancy Arnold, who, also was of poor but respectable parents, with whom he lived to the day of his death and by whom he had thirteen children, all of whom they raised to be men and women. Though poor and laboring hard to support his family, yet the Lord had a greater work for him to perform. 
God was pleased to awaken him to a sense of his lost and ruined state, and he made a profession of a saving interest in Christ, on the 5th day of November, 1820, and joined the church together with his wife at Bush Arbor, in Caswell County, at their May meeting 1821, and continued to be an orderly member and leading one till death. 
He commenced his glorious career as a minister of the Gospel at the fountain on the morning of his baptism, and was ordained on the 11th of November 1822. 
He soon became known far and near, proclaiming the riches of divine grace as often as his situation would admit of. 
      The Lord seemed to look with a favoring eye and to bless all labors both in the ministry and in his worldly affairs. 
He soon became a great and useful preacher, many becoming alarmed under his preaching, many were confirmed in his hopes, and the sheep were fed. Traveling far and near, he preached the unsearchable riches of Christ the Redeemer. During his ministry the Missionary God was introduced, creating divisions and dissensions among the Baptist. He remained firm and no one raised his banner against the false God sooner, or opposed it with more unyielding firmness than he, admonishing with true eloquence and convincing arguments, his brethren to beware of the new God, and to flee from it as from the evil one. 
      Though without the benefits derived from an education, yet his appeals in behalf of the Savior's undying love were so heart stirring, his eloquence so moving-his arguments so firm and unanswerable-his reasoning so convincing that none could gain-say or confound his doctrine. Having the scriptures at command he used the sword of Spirit with power and effect. 
      He was called to the pastoral care of four churches, Lick Fork, Bush Arbor, Gilliam's and Deep Creek, and in that capacity he served the churches faithfully and satisfactorily to his death. 
      The greater portion of the older brethren, who called him to this charge have long preceded him to that bourne whence no traveler returns, and the present members are the fruits of his ministry. He was chosen Moderator of the Country Line Primitive Baptist Association, in the year 1832, which honorable position he filled with so much credit to himself, and satisfaction to the Association that he was annually re-elected until death. If ill feelings and dissensions raised their heads in any of the churches within the Association, he it was, who poured the Holy Oil on the agitated waters and restored good will and brotherly love among the brethren. 
      He was like-wise ever ready to assist the sister Associations in reconciling their difference, and his efforts were ever crowned with success. 
      Conscious of his declining years and shortness of his days, and knowing that the "Harvest was great and the laborers few", he preached more, if possible, in his old age than in his youth, and his efforts were more successful. He increased his travels preaching the Holy Gospel and warning his bearers to flee the wrath to come, and strengthening the brethren and entreating them to remain firm in their faith. He seemed to be the favorite and was generally selected to preach their funerals, and always complied with this request by paying the last tribute to the dead. 
      His labors were incessant, and burden-some; but when entreated by his friends to spare his health by desisting from his labors, his invariable reply was, "I prefer wearing myself away to rusting away," and that he wanted to die preaching; it seemed that a kind Providence granted both of his wishes. He preached at Lick Fork on Sunday preceding his death from 14th Chapter of the Gospel by John, 6th verse, "Jesus saith until him, I am the way, the truth and the life; no man cometh unto the father but by me," with as much power and zeal as I ever heard him, and all who heard him felt that the Lord was with him. 
      Immediately after church he felt the cold hands of disease seize upon him, the following night he spent with an old sister in the Gospel, when he grew worse notwithstanding all their efforts to relieve him, they wished to call in a physician but he objected, saying he would return home to die with his nearest and dearest friends on earth. 
      The next morning he hastened home to die with his dear wife and children whom he continued to exhort, with all the friends who visited him, to prepare for the life to come. 
      He departed this life on Thursday, the 6th day of March 1860, and I think that he might adopt the language of the Apostle: "For I am now ready to be offered, the time of my departure is at hand, I have fought a good fight - I have finished my course - I have kept the faith - henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness"." 
      <http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~kithandkin2000/stadler.htm >captured 17 April 2008.


      Another tribute to John Stadler copied from the Minutes of the Kehukee Baptist Association meeting held Oct. 6-8, 1860 at the Cross Roads Church in Edgecombe Co., NC is reproduced below:
      lder John Stadler
"The Messengers composing the Kehukee Association, convened with the Church at Cross Roads, Edgecombe County, October, 1860, feel called on to notice the death of our estimable friend and worthy brother in Christ, Elder John Stadler, of Caswell County, North Carolina, who departed this life at his own residence, on the 8th March, 1860, in the 68th year of his age. Elder Stadler had been chosen Messenger from the Country Line to the Kehukee Association for twenty-one consecutive years, commencing with the year 1838, and ending in 1859. He failed only once, viz. in 1844; so that he attended the Kehukee Sessions precisely 20 years. 
      He was so uniformly with us, that he appeared very much like one of our own members. His advise in matters of discipline, was always highly regarded and duly appreciated, and his preaching eminently useful and acceptable. 
We miss him very much now - he is gone home to the great Association above. We deeply sympathize with his own Association in her loss. But what is their loss, is his gain. The number of the redeemed is no less by his being removed to another apartment. 
      His great interest in the welfare of the Churches, the wide field of his ministry, and the strict purity of his moral deportment, constituted him one of the remarkable men of his age; and his memory we think will long be cherished with affection by the household of faith and all his surviving acquaintances." 
      <http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~kithandkin2000/stadler.htm >captured 17 April 2008.

      John Stadler made a will dated 15 Sept. 1854. In his will, he names his wife Nancy, daughter Mary While Massey, sons, John T., Robert D., William B., Rese E., Barzillai B., James L, and Stephen C., and daugher Martha F. McKinney, daugher Maylai Susan, deceased daughter Nancy A. Allred, and grandchildren Elizabeth L. and John B. Allred . The will states that Elizabeth L. and John B. Allred are to get the share of their mother Nancy A. Allred. Caswell Co. Will Book S, p. 228.