Everything about George Rapp totally explained
Johann Georg Rapp (
November 1,
1757 in
Iptingen,
Germany –
August 7,
1847 in
Economy, Pennsylvania) was the founder of the religious sect called Harmonists, Harmonites, Rappites, or the
Harmony Society.
Born in
Iptingen, Duchy of
Württemberg,
Germany, Rapp became inspired by the philosophies of
Jakob Böhme,
Philipp Jakob Spener, and
Emanuel Swedenborg, among others. In the 1780s, George Rapp began preaching and soon started to gather a group of his own followers. His group officially split with the
Lutheran Church in 1785 and was promptly banned from meeting. The persecution that Rapp and his followers experienced caused them to leave Germany and come to the
United States in 1803. Rapp was a
pietist, and a number of his beliefs were shared by the
Anabaptist movement.
Rapp's religious beliefs and philosophy were the cement that held his community together both in Germany and in America – a
Christian community and
commune, which in America organized as the
Harmony Society. The Harmony Society built three American towns, became rich, famous, and survived for 100 years – roughly from 1805 until 1905.
George Rapp and the Harmony Society
Rapp and his followers, the
Harmonites, believed
Christ would return in their lifetime. The purpose of the community was to be worthy of Christ and prepare for his return. Rapp produced a book with his ideas and philosophy,
Thoughts on the Destiny of Man published in German in 1824 and in English a year later.
Rapp was the son of Hans Adam Rapp (1720-71) and Rosine Berger. He had one brother, Adam, and three sisters, Marie Dorothea, Elise Dorothea, and Maria Barbara. George Rapp married Christine Benzinger in 1783 and the couple had two children, Johannes (1783-1812) and Rosine (1786-1849). Johannes, trained as a surveyor, died young in an industrial accident. His is the only name listed on a stone in the Harmonist cemetery in
Harmony, Pennsylvania - the Harmonists didn't mark their graves. The stone was donated by Non-Harmonists, and the Society accepted it reluctantly. The location of Johannes' grave within the cemetery is unknown. Johannes' daughter, Gertrude (1808-89), would become a minor American celebrity and organized the Society's silk production at
Economy, Pennsylvania.
Rapp adopted Frederick Reichert (1775-1834), who organized the move of Rapp's followers from Württemberg to America in 1804. In America, Frederick was the business leader and public spokesman for the
Harmony Society.
Rapp was tall, blue eyed, broad shouldered, with long hair and a patriarch's beard. He had a powerful voice, which matched his commanding presence. Rapp trained as a journeyman weaver and learned the art of wine growing. Grapevines and wine are prominent in all three Harmonite towns.
By 1798, Rapp and his group of followers had already begun to distance themselves from mainstream society. In the Lomersheimer Declaration, written in 1798, Rapp's followers refused to serve in the military or attend
Lutheran schools. In 1803, when the government began to persecute Rapp's followers, he decided to move the entire group to the United States. The initial move scattered the followers and reduced Rapp's original group of 12,000 to many fewer persons. In 1804, Rapp was able to secure a large tract of land in
Pennsylvania and started his first
commune. This first commune, 'Harmonie', (
Harmony),
Butler County, Pennsylvania, soon grew to a population of about 800, and was highly profitable. At Harmony, the
Harmony Society was created and its members contracted to hold all property in common, to submit to spiritual and material leadership by Rapp and associates, and adopted the
celibate lifestyle.
In 1814, the first town was sold to
Mennonites for 10 times the amount originally paid for the land, and the entire commune moved out west to
Indiana where their new town was also known as Harmony. Ten years after the move to Indiana the commune moved again, this time it returned to
Pennsylvania and named their town 'Ökonomie',
Economy. The Indiana settlement was sold to
Robert Owen, at which point it was renamed
New Harmony, Indiana.
George Rapp lived out his remaining days in the town of
Economy, Pennsylvania, until August 7, 1847, when he died at the age of 89. George Rapp's life wasn't without controversy and problems. Rapp and the Harmony Society were involved in protracted legal cases: many relating to the monetary claims by former Society member who didn't feel properly compensated for their time and labor, other cases concerned the ownership and sale of property Society members left in Württemberg, and legal complications from fines and payments made to avoid militia service. Rapp was called a tyrant and Society members his slaves. During elections, the Society was seen as a monolithic voting block which caused political ill feelings and generated animosity against Rapp. Rapp was accused of killing his son Johannes – who died in accident. Rapp's greatest error was in 1831 when he accepted
Bernhard Müller, who called himself Maximilian Count de Leon, the "Lion of Judah" as the man who would unite all true Christians. In the year that followed Rapp changed his mind, but one third of the Society members separated and joined with
Müller in establishing a separate community, the
New Philadelphian Congregation. After Rapp's death in 1847, a number of members left the group because of disappointment and disillusionment over the fact that his prophecies regarding the return of Jesus Christ in his lifetime were not fulfilled.
The Harmonite
commune ultimately failed because the policy of
celibacy prevented new members from within, and the majority of the outside world had no desire to give up so much to live in a commune. The society was formally dissolved in 1906.
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