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Countess Henrietta Benigna Justine von Watteville (von Zinzendorf und Pottendorf)

German: Gräfin Henriëtte von Watteville (Zinzendorf und Pottendorf)
Also Known As: "Benigna", "Baroness von Watteville", "nee Countess von Zinzendorf", "Benigna de Watteville", "Henrietta Benigna Justine Zinzendorf von Watteville"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Herrnhut, Dresden, Saxony, Germany
Death: 1789 (63-64)
Herrnhut, Dresden, Saxony, Germany
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Nikolaus Ludwig, Reichsgraf von Zinzendorf und Pottendorf and Erdmuthe Dorothea von Reuss-Ebersdorf, Gräfin
Wife of Bishop Johannes de Watteville
Mother of Anna Dorothea Elisabeth von Schweinitz; Johann Ludwig von Watteville and Marie Justine von Watteville, Freiin, Gräfin Reuß zu Köstritz
Sister of Christian Renatus Reichgraf Christel von Sinzendorf und Pottendorf
Half sister of Marie Agnes Dohna-Schlodien

Occupation: Missionary; founder of Moravian College in May 1742
Titles: Countess at birth, baroness at death
Managed by: Erica Howton
Last Updated:

About Benigna Zinzendorf

Henrietta Benigna Justine Zinzendorf von Watteville (1725-1789), Moravian Educator


Biography

From 18th Century American Women - blog retrieved Nov 2015

Henrietta Benigna Justine Zinzendorf von Watteville (1725-1789) Moravian educator, a key figure in the beginnings of Moravian Seminary & College for Women, Bethlehem, Pa., was born in Berthelsdorf, Saxony. She was the 1st daughter & 2nd of 12 children, of whom only 4 reached maturity, of Count Nicolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf by his wife, Countess Erdmuthe Dorothea von Reuss. Her father, founder of the Renewed Moravian Church, was of an old family of the Austrian nobility that had migrated to Germany. Her mother was of the nobility of Thuringia. Reared in the 18th-century Moravian Church, Benigna lived & achieved as a devout Pietist.

Her father’s banishment from Saxony, when she was 11, marked the beginning for her of a much-traveled life. With him she came to America for the first time in December 1741, for a stay of 14 months, chiefly in the newly established Moravian communities of Pennsylvania.

On May 4, 1742, at her father’s suggestion, the 16-year-old countess, with 2 assistants, opened a girls’ school in the Ashmead house in Germantown, Pennsylvania. Here 25 pupils were instructed in reading, writing, religion, & the household arts in what was probably the first boarding school for girls in the 13 British American colonies. Seven weeks later the school moved to Bethlehem; & in 1745, to nearby Nazareth, returning permanently in 1749, to Bethlehem, the center of the Moravian Church in America.

On July 27, 1742, Count von Zinzendorf and his fellowship crossed the Blue Mountain into Cherry Valley, and on July 28 they finally emerged from the endless forests at Meniolágoméka -- "The Fat Land Among the Barren" -- present-day Kunkletown. Von Zinzendorf's 16-year-old daughter, Benigna, upon meeting the Indian children at the settlement, decided that the girls should have the opportunity to go to school just like white boys.

The same year she founded Moravian Seminary in Germantown, Pennsylvania. Shortly thereafter it was moved to Bell House in Bethlehem, and Lady Benigna invited all the Indian girls to come. Moravian Seminary was the first boarding school for girls in the New World, and over time it gained a superb reputation -- so much so that 50 years later, while he was President, George Washington personally petitioned for admission of his great-nieces. Eventually the school's charter was expanded, and it became Moravian College and Moravian Academy, both of which remain to this day.

In 1746 Benigna was married to Baron Johann von Waterville (de Watteville), a Moravian clergyman & her father’s secretary, in a ceremony performed by Zinzendorf at the new Moravian settlement in Zeist, Holland. Consecrated a bishop the following year, Watteville, aided by his capable wife, became out outstanding leader of his church.

She had four children of her own: Johann Ludwig (born 1752), Anna Dorothea Elizabeth (1754), Maria Justine (1762), & Johann Christian Frederick (1766). The older son died while a missionary in Tranquebar, India, in 1780, & the younger son died at nineteen as a student at Herrnhut, the church headquarters on his grandfather’s Berthelsdorf estate. The younger daughter, who never married, served as a worker in the church. The older daughter married Hans Christian Alexander von Schweinitz (later changed to de Schweinitz) in Bethlehem, Pa., in 1779. One of their children was the distinguished American botanist Louis David de Schweinitz, & de Schweinitz descendants have for four generations been prominent in American educational & professional life.

Benigna de Watteville died in the place of her birth at the age of sixty-three, a year after her husband. The Bethlehem seminary, incorporated in 1863 as the Moravian Seminary for Young Ladies, became in 1913, Moravian Seminary & College for Women & in 1953, a part of the coeducational Moravian College at Bethlehem.

- This posting based, in part, on information from Notable American Women edited by Edward T James, Janet Wilson James, Paul S Boyer, The Belknap Press of Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 1971


References

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benigna_Zinzendorf cites
    1. Miller, A. Kathrine. “A SHORT HISTORY OF THE LIFE OF BENIGNA, BARONESS VON WATTEVILLE, NEE COUNTESS VON ZINZENDORF.” Transactions of the Moravian Historical Society 27 (1992): 53–61. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41179441
    2. "Moravian College Spotlight: Benigna Zinzendorf". Moravian College. Retrieved June 5, 2020. < link >
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Benigna Zinzendorf's Timeline

1725
1725
Herrnhut, Dresden, Saxony, Germany
1754
April 25, 1754
Herrnhut, SN, Germany
1762
November 18, 1762
Herrnhut, Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR)
1789
1789
Age 64
Herrnhut, Dresden, Saxony, Germany
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