Background
Johann Christoph Sauer was born in 1695 in Ladenburg (near Heidelberg), the son of a Reformed pastor.
Johann Christoph Sauer was born in 1695 in Ladenburg (near Heidelberg), the son of a Reformed pastor.
The family lived in the village of Schwarzenau, which now belongs to the town of Berleburg though had ties to Laasphe as well. They emigrated to Pennsylvania in 1724, settling in Germantown. Sauer worked as a tailor before moving in 1726 to Lancaster where he had a 50-acre (200,000 m2) farm.
He and his son of the same name returned to Germantown where he worked in a variety of trades and belonged to the Dunkard community.
He was successful enough to purchase 6 acres (24,000 m2) where he built a house. Around 1735, Sauer took up the idea of becoming a printer and publisher.
Benjamin Franklin dominated this trade at the time, and was a supplier of printed materials to the large German community around Pennsylvania. Significantly, Franklin used only Roman typefaces.
Sauer obtained Fraktur type from a foundry in Frankfurt/Main in 1738 and began to publish almanacs, calendars, books and newspapers in 1739 using a type face that his German readers could more easily read.
The press itself is believed to have come from Berleburg in Wittgenstein, with which he had remained in contact. lieutenant had been used by Pietist printers there. In 1743, Sauer published the first German-language Bible to be printed in North America (the first in any European language).
The 1,272 pages were of course hand-set and printed one sheet at a time.
lieutenant bore the title "Biblia, Das ist: Die Heilige Schrift Alten und Neuen Testaments, Nach der Deutschen Übersetzung Doctorate. Martin Luther". (Bible: The Holy Scripture of the Old and New Testaments following the translation of Doctor Martin Luther).
1200 copies were printed. Another 40 years would pass before an English-language Bible would appear in North America.
Controversially, Sauer"s Bible emphasized passages most in sympathy with Pietist beliefs.
lieutenant was well received by the German churches of Pennsylvania, who were in turn influential in what became the Universalist church in the Middle Atlantic and New England states. George de Benneville (1703–1793) was an important influence on the early Universalists and, like Sauer, had sojourned among the Wittgenstein Pietists before coming to America.