New Wells, Missouri

New Wells is an unincorporated community in northern Cape Girardeau County, Missouri, United States. It is located twenty miles north of Cape Girardeau and is part of the Cape GirardeauJackson, MO-IL Metropolitan Statistical Area.

Name

The source of the original name Johannisberg remains something of a mystery. There are many German places by that name, but none of them is listed as the original home of any of the Saxon colony that came to Perry County. It is not likely to have been the well known Johannisberg on the Rhine, which is a Catholic stronghold, nor is it likely to have been Johannisberg in East Prussia, which also could not have had any connection with the Saxons. There is a Johannisberg in the historically German-speaking part of Bohemia, near Reichenberg, about seventy miles southeast of Dresden across the Erzgebirge, and some connection is just possible between it and Martin Stephan's earlier Bohemian days. But the most probable conjecture is that the name was coined from the name of Stephan's church in Dresden, the "Johannis-Gemeinde," or else that it is a lost parish name from somewhere near Dresden, which is particularly rich in Johannis-names.[1][2] Austrian settlers referred to the community as Neu Wels, after the city in Austria, which was later Americanized to New Wells.

History

Johannisberg was one of the seven colonies established in 1839 in the Saxon Migration to Perry County, Missouri. Johannisberg is said to have been an offshoot of the Dresden settlement. In May 1840, the members of the New York group of Saxon migrants who had arrived in December 1839, and who had been members of C.F.W. Walther's congregation at Dresden, branched off and founded a village seven miles away in Cape Girardeau County. It is thought the split was caused by a quarrel over the sale of lots at Wittenberg to the general public. Members of the New York group violently opposed this move, which was proposed because of the failure of Wittenberg to grow as fast as had been hoped. They severed financial connections with the community, and withdrew into a separate settlement, although they continued other connections with the Saxons. C.F.W. Walther continued to serve both Dresden and Johannisberg until the end of 1841, but after his departure for St. Louis both were made branches of Altenburg. An account in the WESTERN DISTRICT LUTHERAN tells how in the late 1840s services were held on a hill near the town. In 1852, fresh settlers arrived from Austria, and these for a while continued to attend church at Altenburg in Perry County. At this time the place began to be known to the people of Altenburg by the name of Österreich, German for Austria. But because Apple Creek often rose and prevented attendance at the church in Altenburg, a separate church was organized in 1853 for Johannisberg. The Reverend L.F. Dippold, pastor at Johannisberg, wrote that the Austrian settlers never called the place Österreich, but rather called it Neu Wels (German: New Wels), after their home city of Wels, located fifteen miles southwest of Linz in Upper Austria, and later the name was Americanized to New Wells.[1][3][4][5]

Dan Smith, author of the upcoming book 'The Many Bad Habits of Highly Messed Up Societies' lives on the outskirts of New Wells.

References

  1. 1 2 State Historical Society of Missouri: Perry County Place Names http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/ramsay/ramsay_perry.html
  2. "10th Anniversary Edition: New Wells was the home of Cotner & Schuppan store". Southeast Missourian. August 25, 2015.
  3. The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod http://cyclopedia.lcms.org/display.asp?t1=l&word=LUTHERANCHURCH-MISSOURISYNOD.THE
  4. Robyn K. Burnett (1996). "German Settlement in Missouri: New Land, Old Ways". ISBN 9780826210944.
  5. State Historical Society of Missouri: Cape Girardeau County Place Names http://shs.umsystem.edu/manuscripts/ramsay/ramsay_cape_girardeau.html

Coordinates: 37°33′22″N 89°37′28″W / 37.55611°N 89.62444°W / 37.55611; -89.62444

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