Jacob Ehrenhardt Jr. built the 1803 House. He was the son of Jacob Ehrenhardt Sr. who was one of the founders of Emmaus. Jacob Jr. was the youngest of 10 children of Jacob and Barbara Ehrenhardt. In 1782, Jacob Jr. who was 22, enlisted in the Northampton county Militia with 11 other men to fight in the Revolution, and was promptly removed from the Emmaus congregation which he had formally joined only about a month before. In 1785 Jacob, Jr. married Susanna Saeger. Then In 1803, at the age 43, Jacob Jr. built this fine Federal Style house. At that time his girls were Barbara age 18, Anna Marie age 15, Anna Eleonora age 9 and Susanna age 6. Jacob, Jr. was known as a Revolutionary War soldier, a shoemaker and a builder. Jacob Jr. saw Emmaus grow from 92 residents in 1804 to approximately 130 at the time of his death in 1825. Because he went against the teaching of the Moravian faith, he was buried in God’s Acre, unrecorded and forgotten as a war hero. It wasn’t until the early 1930's that the Liberty Bell Chapter of Daughters of the American Revolution found his name and the names of 11 men who serviced from Emmaus. They now are marked with the American flags in addition to a modest gravestone in the church cemetery. History of the 1803 House. For all published articles Go to Resources