William Rittenhouse

For the politician, see William Rittenhouse (Wisconsin).

William Rittenhouse (1644 – 18 February 1708) is the first person recorded as having made paper in North America.

Early life

External video
William Rittenhouse, Paper Industry International Hall of Fame, 1996, 2:23

He was born in a small village in the Ruhr region of Germany with the name Wilhelm Rettinghaus or Rittinghaus.[1] During his stay in the Netherlands he changed his name to "Willm Rittenhuysen". This name was also found on a petition for naturalization of residents of Germantown, Pennsylvania dated 7 May 1691.

As a young man, Rittenhouse was a papermaking apprentice in Germany; he learned the Dutch ways of papermaking while living with his brother in the Netherlands before emigrating to the Pennsylvania Colony in 1688. Two years later he founded the first paper mill to be established in the colonies. This Rittenhouse Mill became the family business for the next century.

Rittenhouse was naturalized as a citizen of Pennsylvania (and therefore England) in 1691.[1]

Ministry

Around 1690 the Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Mennonite congregation elected William Rittenhouse as its first preacher. He died in Pennsylvania in 1708. His legacy continued to his descendant David Rittenhouse, who had the Rittenhouse name immortalized in Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[2]

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 Erben, Patrick. "William Rittenhouse." In Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies, 1720 to the Present, vol. 1, edited by Marianne S. Wokeck. German Historical Institute. Last modified July 24, 2014.
  2. "Rittenhouse Square". visitphilly.com. Visit Philadelphia™. Retrieved 27 April 2014.

External links


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