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Drawn portrait of Conrad Luther

Conrad Luther

Once paid to quell the Patriot’s rebellion, German soldier Bernhard Marianus "Conrad" Luther found a new life among them.

An Ocean Away

Bernhard Marianus "Conrad" Luther was born in Erfurt, in the Germanic territory of Thuringia in 1754, the son of Johann Melchior Michael Luther, a university professor descended from the religious reformer Martin Luther.

Not much is known of Conrad's early life in Erfurt. As the Revolution took hold in the North American colonies an ocean away however, Conrad must have found an opportunity to seize as Great Britian called upon German armies to support their actions against the Patriots.

Thuringia's western neighbors in Hesse-Kassel answered that call and by 1776, Conrad had crossed the ocean with the nearly 34,000 German soldiers hired by the British to quell the Patriots in America.

An illustrated map showing an image of Conrad by New York City and a loyalist flag

Conrad likely began his service in New York, though historians are not certain to which regiment Conrad was attached. By year's end, Conrad had either deserted his German regiment or defected to the Patriot cause. Sources offer differing possibilities for how Conrad's allegiance shifted.

Conrad may have run and deserted as Washington's army surprised 1,500 Hessian soldiers on their march to Trenton, New Jersey after crossing the Delaware River on December 25, 1776.

Another possibility is that Conrad was among the number of prisoners Washington's army captured during the attack.

Image: The Capture of the Hessians at Trenton, December 26, 1776 Trumbull Collection, Yale University

An illustrated map showing an image of Conrad by Trenton, NJ

The captured Germans were eventually marched to Lancaster, Pennsylvania with the other prisoners of war.

An illustrated map showing Conrad going to Lancaster, PA.

There, the captured Germans worked on farms or found other opportunities in the local area, many electing to stay in the new United States at war’s end.

An illustrated map showing Conrad with the accompanying Loyalist marker changing to Patriot.

Another version of Conrad’s tale suggests that he opted to join the Continental Army.

A New Life and Love

The most colorful version of the events leading up to Conrad's new life in Lancaster stipulates that while on the run as a deserter, he was aided and given safe haven by a young woman who "carefully concealed him until his pursuers went by, and thus enabled him to make his escape." Without her quick thinking, Conrad would have been shot. The young heroine of this story, Elizabeth Smith, became his wife.

Conrad and Elizabeth settled into a life together in Lancaster. Conrad remained loyal to the new United States, signing an oath of allegiance on November 10, 1782—renouncing any allegiance to George III, Great Britain, or any of its supporting armies.

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