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My Search for the Past

Johann Hans Michel Sigmund – The Ordeal of the Love and Unity – 52 Ancestors #40

Posted on October 11, 2014November 14, 2025 by Cheryl Biermann Hartley

Entry #40

It is not my intention to write the definitive history of Johann Michael Sigmund. My mother-in-law’s cousin, Nancy Schanes has done most of the research on the Sigmund family, and I gratefully acknowledge her work. I met Nancy this past summer and I immediately felt the bond that can develop between two people who are passionate about family history and who love unraveling the mysteries of the past. I learned that we both believe that there are ancestors who want to be found. I won’t go into that here, but Nancy and I spent hours swapping stories of strange coincidences that led our research in the right direction.

Johann Michael Sigmund was the founder of my mother-in-law’s Sigmund line in the Americas. Sigmund was her maiden name.  Michael was born in Wieblingen near Heidelberg in December 1713 to Jakob Sigmund and Anna Margaretha Lay Sigmund.  The Sigmund family was involved in farming grapes for the wine trade.

Johann Michel Sigmund’s story could inspire a television docudrama.  In May 1731 he and other Palentines boarded the Ship Love and Unity in Rotterdam, Netherlands, bound for Philadelphia in the Colony of Pennsylvania. If ever a ship were misnamed, it was the Love and Unity. One hundred of 150 people aboard the Love and Unity perished at sea due to an excessively long voyage and possible criminal acts by the Master of the ship, Jacob Lobb. Food was rationed, and passengers resorted to eating rats. The surviving passengers accused Jacob Lobb of holding them offshore to extort money and possessions from them in return for food and water. Eventually, the passengers mutinied and were finally rescued off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard in New England. Here is one account of their story:

Summary of the Love and Unity - Immigration Commissioners NY
Summary of the Love and Unity - Immigration Commissioners NY pt 2 Immigration, and the Commissioners of Emigration of the State of New York Author Friedrich Kapp Publisher Douglas Taylor, 1870 Original from Ghent University Digitized Mar 28, 2011

Several of the passengers accused Jacob Lobb of murder and extreme cruelty, and he was held for trial in Boston. Further accounts of the appeal can be read here.  Not only did the Palentine accusers lose their case, but they were ordered to pay court costs. A newspaper account from the Boston Gazette of June 5, 1732, covers the outcome of the trial.

News Account of Jacob Lobb’s Trial

In retaliation, Jacob Lobb brought charges against the Palentine passengers in September 1732. Jacob Lobb -- countersuit Sept 1832

Johann Michel Sigmund finally arrived in Philadelphia on the Norris from Boston on 15 May 1732.  It took him almost exactly a year to arrive at his original destination.

18 thoughts on “Johann Hans Michel Sigmund – The Ordeal of the Love and Unity – 52 Ancestors #40”

  1. Sharon Beach says:
    June 26, 2015 at 7:44 am

    Valentine Westheber, one of the 48 survivors of the Love & Unity, was my 5th gr-grandfather. I’ve been communicating with Nancy Schanes of the Sigmund descendants and Gene Swackhamer of the Schwackheimer descendants and would love to communicate with any Jungman descendant. Please write to Sharon Beach at duke7547@gmail.com. Thank you.

    Reply
    1. Cheryl Biermann Hartley says:
      November 30, 2015 at 8:11 am

      Sharon, it is always interesting to hear about descendants of other survivors. Thanks for posting. I will probably expand on this post sometime in 2016. (Sorry for not responding sooner. I thought I had…)

      Reply
  2. denise hoffman says:
    November 27, 2015 at 11:46 pm

    My husband is a direct relative of Kaspar Schurk (Caspar Shirk), and we live in Shirksville, PA where he settled. He lost his wife and at least one child during the voyage.

    Reply
    1. Cheryl Biermann Hartley says:
      November 30, 2015 at 8:13 am

      Denise, thanks for leaving a comment. Feel free to post more about Kaspar Shurk.

      Reply
      1. Isaac Livingston says:
        September 29, 2025 at 10:25 pm

        My name is Isaac Livingston (Liebenstein), I’m a direct paternal descendant of Survivor Johann Liebenstein. He survived to move to Pennsylvania, and then on to southeastern Ohio.

        Reply
        1. Cheryl Biermann Hartley says:
          September 30, 2025 at 9:04 pm

          Wonderful to hear from you, Isaac! Interesting how the name changed from Liebenstein to Livingston – I wouldn’t have guessed that.

          Reply
    2. Mary Tirrell Bevan says:
      January 16, 2019 at 11:27 pm

      I am a direct relative of Kaspar Schirk (Caspar Shirk) and would like to communicate with other families related to Casper…. I am also looking for a copy of the book to buy Voyage of the Love and Unity by Nancy Schanes

      Reply
      1. Douglas Whitlock says:
        June 23, 2019 at 3:35 pm

        I am a desc of Casper Shirk through his son Andrew and grandson David. Would be happy to correspond and share what I have. Have been researching all my lines for many years but havent spent too much time on the Shirk line (it was fairly easy to trace). My 4th great grandmother Malinda Shirk Whitlock (1812-1878) was daughter of the aforementioned David Shirk.

        Reply
        1. Michelle Niinisto says:
          July 17, 2022 at 8:55 pm

          I’m a little late to the party, but I am also a descendant of Casper Shirk, through his son Casper, J. I will be Travelling to Mass. next week and I may try to do some more research while I’m there.

          Reply
  3. Paul Smith says:
    November 29, 2015 at 11:27 am

    The Palatines’ Appeal. Published in the Pennsylvania Gazette 15 February 1732.

    http://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-01-02-0072

    Reply
    1. Cheryl Biermann Hartley says:
      November 30, 2015 at 8:07 am

      Thanks, Paul. I do have this link embedded in the body of the story. I guess it isn’t obvious, though, so thanks for sharing!

      Reply
  4. William McCarver says:
    September 12, 2018 at 11:08 pm

    Is there a passenger list?

    Reply
    1. Cheryl Biermann Hartley says:
      October 14, 2018 at 4:55 pm

      Hi. I tried to find an original copy of the passenger list for the Love and Unity and I didn’t immediately find one. There is one for the Norris and it can be found here.

      I tried to phone Love and Unity researcher Nancy Schanes. Sadly, I learned that she passed away last fall.

      Reply
  5. Kevin Bess says:
    April 27, 2019 at 4:56 pm

    I am also related to Casper Shirk. I did not know that there was a book titled Voyage of the Love and Unity. Has anyone been able to find this book and how to obtain it. I wanted to read it and to see if it had a picture on what the ship would look like.

    Kevin

    Reply
    1. Cheryl Biermann Hartley says:
      May 2, 2019 at 1:33 pm

      Kevin,
      The book was written by Nancy Schanes. I saw it once when I visited her. It was not a long book and I don’t recall there being a picture of the ship. I doubt there was a painting or drawing of the Love and Unity. At best, I think you could research what types of sailing ships were likely to have been used in 1732. The book, “The Voyage of the Love and Unity,” was self-published by Nancy Schanes and is now out of print and Nancy has passed away. It is available in a few libraries.
      Cheryl

      Reply
  6. Stephen Livingston says:
    January 31, 2026 at 6:08 pm

    I’m a descendant of Johann Georg Liebenstein, one of the survivors. I have a PDF copy of Nancy Schanes book on the Love and Unity if anyone wants a copy let me know. I’m wondering if there is any interest in having a get together for us descendants of the survivors at Martha’s Vineyard in 2031, for the 300th anniversary?

    Reply
    1. Cheryl Biermann Hartley says:
      February 2, 2026 at 5:58 pm

      Stephen,
      First, I would love a PDF of Nancy Shanes’ book. She let me photograph the pages of her copy when I was visiting her, but I was using a cell phone camera, and it didn’t turn out. She no longer had any extra copies of the book. How can we be in touch – maybe Ancestry messaging?

      A get-together at Martha’s Vineyard is an interesting idea. (It could be pricey, though!) I guess the first step would be compiling a list of descendants. That alone might be a big project. Maybe we will get more feedback here.
      Cheryl

      Reply
    2. Patrick wallace says:
      February 13, 2026 at 12:28 pm

      Stephen…i would love the digital link…the pdf…i can’t find the book anywhere..

      My email is

      P.wallace.qpm@comcast.net

      My ancester is Johann Hans Michael sigmund

      Thank you!!!

      Patrick wallace

      Reply

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