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Doub

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The Doub family is believed to be a French family that emigrated from the Moselle region of France, in the time of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685), and settled in Germany.

There are several branches of the Doub family, but the two earliest branches are the Maryland Doubs and the North Carolina Doubs.

A Doub family member, John Nicholas Daub (or Taub), came with his wife and family to the New World in 1752,[1][2] spreading widely in mid-Atlantic colonial America.

  • John Nicholas Doub (19 March 1722, Minfeld, Rhineland-Palatinate – 1790, Frederick County, Maryland). He was the ninth and last child of Hans Ludwig Daub (1677 – 2 October 1730, Minfeld) and Maria Juliana Gros.[2] He married (7 February 1741) to Anna Maria König.
  • Anna Maria König (31 July 1718, Minfeld, Rhineland-Palatinate – before 1790, Frederick County, Maryland), wife of John Nicholas Doub, was the daughter of Frantz König and Rahel Bucke.[2]
  • :They came from Germany to Frederick Co. with three children:[2]
    • Johann Jacob Doub (27 February 1744, Minfeld – 1824, Frederick Co).
    • Maria Elizabeth (21 May 1746, Minfeld – 28 September 1765, Frederick Co); married to Valentine Lingenfelter.
    • Catharine Magdalena (born 8 June 1749, Minfeld).
  • :Their forth child, Maria Magdalena (born 22 January 1756) in Frederick Co., Maryland.

Another Doub, Johan Doub, was born 27 March 1742 in Littfred (now Kreutzal), Germany.[3] He married Mary Eve Spainhour, daughter of Jacobus Wernhardt Spainhour and Elizabeth Lohner, and died 20 October 1814 in Vienna, Forsyth Co., North Carolina.[4]

The Maryland Doubs

John Jacob Doub (aka Jacob) (27 February 1744 – 1824) was born in Minfeld, and moved to the new world with his parents, John Nicholas Doub and Anna Maria König. He then moved into Maryland from Pennsylvania, and died in Frederick Co., Maryland.[2] The Maryland branch settled first in Frederick, Maryland, then further into frontier Maryland, starting in the early 18th century. Several early Doubs were active land speculators in Frederick, and their names are mentioned on many colonial-era deeds. Jacob Doub married Louisa Bowlus (Paulus) (2 February 1750 – 30 December 1817), who was born in Frederick Co., Maryland, daughter of Andreas Bowlus and Anna Maria his wife, and who died at Middleton, Frederick Co.[2] Together they had seven sons, and two daughters, Rosanna and Catherine:[5]

  • (John) George (1774–1858), who went west and settled in Lousville, Kentucky. He had a son, John Doup (born 1799) and two daughters, Lydia Elizabeth (1801–1888), who married her first cousin Daniel; Elizabeth (1814–1878).
  • John (1781–1854) who settled at Beaver Creek.
  • (John) Jacob (1771–1738) settled near Myersville, Maryland, on the Eldridge farm, and is buried in the old Jerusalem graveyard. He had six sons: John (died a young man), Daniel (who went west), George (lived near Hyersvill, and had a son Isaih), Jacob (who went west and became a Methodist minister, and had one daughter), Jonathan (settled in Washington Co, in the area of Hagerstown) and David (bachelor who lived and died near Myersville); and daughters: Elizabeth (1804–1857) Mrs John Harp, and Catherine (1807–1859) Mrs Joseph Bowlus.
  • (John) Abraham (1777–1853) settled near Myersville. He married a Miss Catherine Thomas from Washington Co, Maryland, and had eight children: Joel (1806–1893, settled near Chewsville, Wash. Co, Maryland), Enos (1806–1896, married Elizabeth Sheffer), Ezra (1814–1892, married Annie Eyler and settled near Boonesboro, Maryland), Samuel (1812–1837, married a Miss Tom and Settled near Bonnesboro, Maryland), Elizabeth (1806–1844, who died young), Mary (1819–1892, married David Eyler of Thurmont, Maryland), Catherine (married Joel Schlosser, Boonesboro, Maryland) and Lydia (18810-1863, died single).
  • Valentine married a Miss Kemp, and settled near Frederick, Maryland, on the Miller farm, where a number of the family is buried. They had three sons: Joshua, Ezra and Valentine. Joshua had sons (William and Valentine) and a daughter, Mrs William B. McCleery, in Frederick, Maryland. Ezra had one son, Wilton, who went to California. Valentine had one son, Charles.
  • Henerey (Henry) went west, and is the father of the Ohio Doubs.
  • Frederick died young, leaving a wife and a daughter.

Maryland Doub family members were active in the taming of the Western Maryland frontier, and played a prominent role in the agriculture, economy, and politics of Washington County, Maryland from the earliest days of the county. An Ezra Doub ran for the Maryland legislature in 1841 on the Whig ticket, and lost.

John Doub was born (27 February 1781) in Frederick Co, Maryland. He married (1804) Catharine Routzahn (1786 – 15 September 1856, Beaver Creek).[2] They settled at Beaver Creek, Wahs. Co, Maryland, two and a half miles south of Middletown. John and Catherine Doub had nine children, seven sons and two daughters:[5]

  • Samuel (1806–1872) married (1832) Lydia Stouffer. He lived near Keedysville where he died. They had but one son, Frisby, who died as a bachelor.
  • Elizabeth (1809–1873) married (1833) Samuel C. Stouffer.
  • Jonathan (1811–1863) settled near Beaver Creek, and married (1838) Catherine Rinehart. They had two sons, Jelty and Daniel, and one daughter who married Lawson Harp.
  • John (1815–1880) died as a bachelor.
  • Catherine (1819–1892) married (1841) Andrew Funk.
  • Jacob (1821–1827) died in childhood.
  • Mary (1824–1888) was not married.
  • Philip Routzhan (1825–1891) lived and died at the home place. He married (1854) Cornelia Witmer. Their children are Lewis P., Daniel J. (lawer in Wagerstown), Albert (lawer in Cumberland, father of George Cochran Doub), Franck and Mrs Summers. Lewis P. And Frank owned the Mill property at Beaver Creek.
  • Caroline (1830–1871 married (1852) Henry Eakle.

John Doub died (25 August 1854) in Beaver Creek, Washington Co., Maryland. The Doub's Mill, the Doub's Mill Historic District (Beaver Creek Maryland) and the Doub Farm in Keedysville are named after him.

Another Doub family farm in Boonsboro, Maryland was reportedly used as a field headquarters during the Battle of Antietam; the family had fled the battlefield and taken refuge in the western Maryland hills.

Notable Doub family members

  • Rev. Peter Doub (1796–1869),[6] early North Carolina Methodist preacher and advocate of women's education, Peter Doub was one of three founders of Greensboro Female College. He was the son of Johan Doub, native of Germany, and Mrs. Mary Eve Spainhour Doub, of Swiss parentage.
  • Ezra Doub (1814 – c. 1892),[7] Frederick, then Boonsboro, landowner and Whig candidate for Maryland House of Representatives, 1841. Justice of peace for the Frederick County, 1845[8]
  • Samuel Doub (February 1806 – August 2, 1872),[9] builder of the Doub Farm in 1851. Married to Lydia Stouffer (c. 1831), his son Frisby was born January 1 1844.[10]
  • Albert Alvin Doub Sr. (born 1865),[11] 1915 Republican candidate for Attorney General of Maryland (defeated by Albert Ritchie), later Circuit Court Judge, Alleghany County Maryland (born 1921)[12] · .[13]
  • Emma Katie Doub (1876–1955),[14] Maryland educator, donnated the Doub's Woods to Washington County and owned the land where the "Emma K Doub School for Integrated Arts & Technology" has been build[15] and is named after her.
  • George Cochran Doub (1902–1981),[16] son of Albert A. Doub[17] and Anne Cochran, United States Attorney for the District of Maryland (1953–1956), US District Court; then Assistant Attorney General of the United States (1956–60).[18]
  • Janet Doub Erickson (born Janet Ann Doub, 1924), artist and author.
  • William Offutt Doub (1931–2015),[19] pioneer in environmental and energy law, former Atomic Energy Commissioner[20][21] (1971–74). Son of Albert Alvin Doub jr. (died 1977), attorney ; grandson of judge Albert Alvin Doub Sr.
  • Joseph Peyton Doub (son of William O. Doub), Environmental Scientist, Wetland Scientist, US Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Authored "The Endangered Species Act: History, Implementation, Successes, and Controversies", CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, October 2012.

See also

References

  1. ^ New World Immigrants: A Consolidation of Ship Passenger Lists
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Doub Family Bible; Wash. Co. Marriage rec; Wash. Co. Cemetery rec.; Wms. Hist. of Wash. Co. MD; Parish record, Evan. Luth. Ch. Minfeld; Frederick Co. MD wills Liber GM2; Early Middletown Luth. Ch. records; Adm. Acct. Frederick Co., MD, liber B2; Middleton Zion Luth. Ch. records; Jacob's Will dated 16 June 1770 – Compiled by Dorothy Eads.
  3. ^ http://www.fmoran.com/doub.html
  4. ^ Family of Ashley Meredith Smith : Information about Johan Doub.
  5. ^ a b A sketch of the Doub Family, as gathered from Different Sources. Josiah Doub, Middleton, 1904.
  6. ^ Rev. Peter Doub, DD
  7. ^ Ezra Doub
  8. ^ Journal of the Proceedings of the Senate of the State of Maryland
  9. ^ History of Western Maryland, vol. 1, p. 1048.
  10. ^ A history of Washington County, Maryland.
  11. ^ Albert A DOUB, Sr. Esq.
  12. ^ Archives of Maryland
  13. ^ Albert Alvin Doub obituary part 1-1977
  14. ^ Emma Katie Doub
  15. ^ Seven schools in Washington County Public Schools system named after individuals or families
  16. ^ George Doub dies ; ex-justice Aide, 79, The New York Times, November 2, 1981.
  17. ^ George Cochran DOUB, Sr. Esq.
  18. ^ http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/guides/military-history.pdf
  19. ^ [1]
  20. ^ http://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/AEC%20History.pdf
  21. ^ http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives/acquisitions/114131