Rev R Koestlin
Kentucky: A
History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 7th ed., 1887,
Campbell Co.
Rev. R. Koestlin was born at Metzingen, in Wurttemberg, Germany, May 22,
1845, and is a son of Dr. William and Louisa (Heerbrand) Koestlin. He
absolved the College of Humaniora at Stuttgard and the university of his
kingdom, and served afterward, from 1866 to 1868, as lieutenant in the Second
Sharpshooter Battalion of Wurttemberg.
Our subject immigrated
to the United States in 1868 (February 20), and landed at New York, from which
place he went to Baltimore, where he was engaged first on a
newspaper, but subsequently entered the ministry in the German Protestant
Church. He labored in Princeton, Ind., one year, and nine months at
Lawrenceburg, Ind. He then removed to North Amherst, Ohio, where he
remained three years, going from there to Middletown, same State, where he
organized a new congregation and built a church.
He was then called to St. John's German Protestant Church, at Newport, Ky., and remained there five years. In December 1882, he moved to Alexandria, where he still resides as minister of the St. Paul's German Protestant Church, and correspondent of native and foreign newspapers. He has been very active in his labors as a minister in his allotted field.
In September 1868, he
married Anna Newman, and two children have been born to them: William, who is
seventeen years old, and Freddie, eleven years of age.
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