The Rulons in America
Ruel Rulon, my maternal 7th great grandfather, was a Huguenot (Protestant) who left France sometime between 1684 and 1704 during the persecution of the Huguenots [1]. The above paragraph about his escape is based on family lore written about in The Rulon Family and Their Descendants by John C. Rulon [2]. (This book is free on Google Books.) The story goes that Ruel’s brothers (who were Catholic) hid him in a hogshead and put him on board a ship bound for America so that he could escape the persecution. Once he was a safe distance from France, he got out of the hogshead. I wonder how he explained his sudden appearance on the ship if this story is true!
It is thought that Ruel landed in New York [3]. He settled in Monmouth, New Jersey, at least by 1704 [4]. He is apparently mentioned in some documents from that year, and his son David, my maternal 6th great grandfather, was born around that time [5]. Several family trees (including mine) on ancestry.com list Ruel’s wife as Margaret Paulding. I haven’t confirmed this.
How I Connect to the Rulon Line
1. David Rulon (1704-1778), son of Ruel Rulon and Margaret Paulding, married Exercise Allen (1705-?), daughter of Henry and Hannah Allen.
2. Henry Rulon (1732-18100), son of David Rulon and Exercise Allen, married Theodosa Robbins.
3. John Rulon (1758-1833), son of Henry Rulon and Theodosa Robbins, married Sarah Burt.
4. Sarah Sallie Rulon (1785-1851), daughter of John Rulon and Sarah Burt, married Johan Adam Rodelsperger/Redles (1781-1869).
5. John Adam Redles (1817-?), son of Sarah Sallie Rulon and Johan Adam Rodelsperger/Redles, married Jane Eliza Meyers (1818-1885).
6. George Albert Redles (1843-1912), son of John Adam Redles and Jane Eliza Meyers, married Isabella Liming (1844-?)
7. William Liming Redles (1873-1932), son of George Albert Redles and Isabella Liming, married Martha Leona Roberts (1895-1955).
8. Leona Roberts Redles (1925), daughter of William Liming Redles and Martha Leona Roberts, married Albert Sidney Pendleton, Jr. (1925-2006).
For a history of the French Huguenots see The National Huguenot Society.
We’ll probably never know if the above account of Ruel Rulon’s escape from France is truth or fiction, but it sure makes a good story.
Any family legends in your family? I’d love to hear about them!
Catherine
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[1] John C. Rulon. The Rulon Family and Their Descendants. (Lineaweaver & Wallace, Philadelphia, 1870).
[2] See footnote 1 above.
[3] Albert F. Koehler. The Huguenots or Early French in New Jersey. (Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, reprinted 2007).
[4] See footnote 1 above.
[5] See footnotes 1 and 3 above.