Given the socio-cultural context in which she was born and raised, her work is unique, not only because of the content of her writing per se but also because she produced and published her texts as a woman and in her native German dialect (Pennsilfaanisch Deitsch) in the United States.
Her will, only 30 words long, left her $855 estate to the Moravian Home for Aged Women in Lititz.
[1] Louise A. Weitzel obtained her education at Sunnyside Kollitsch and at the Linden Hall Seminary for girls.
[3] Louise A. Weitzel was an active member of the Herrnhuter Brüdergemeine/Moravian Church fellowship, a Christian reformist movement that preceded the German Protestant Martin Luther in Europe by more than a century, with the work initiated by John Huss and revived by Count Nicholas von Zinzendorf.
Uff Gut's un Scheen's in daere Welt Gewwe sie gar kee Acht.