In a message dated 5/26/2007 9:41:34 AM Eastern Standard Time, [email protected] writes: 24 BIG TIMBER CREEK ---- I can look out my window and see a branch of Big Timber Creek (or more correctly the woods and ravine that runs down into a branch of Big Timber Creek). <g> It actually is primarily in Gloucester County but also extends into Camden County--especially in the Gloucester Township area of Camden County. The FloodGates that I mentioned in my post about the Old Mills of Camden County were along Big Timber Creek in the Chews Landing section of Gloucester Township. Joan ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
There may be an Abraham Larew/Larue on the list if people interred at Pine Hill Burial Ground on the old William Williamson/Jacob Smith farm near Sergeantsville, Hunterdon County, Delaware Twp., NJ A partial listing: I. F., May 14, 1831 This may be a Fisher. Mary Lake, died April 15, 1813 in her 48th year. She was the wife of Cornelius Lake and the daughter of Joseph and Mary Sergeant. Cornelius Lake and his second wife Lydia are buried in the Lower Amwell Old Yard. M. L. This is probably Moses LaRue, who died in 1797 and whose farm lay just to the south of the Williamson farm. Anna LaRue wrote that a number of LaRues were buried in this yard, including Moses LaRue and his wife Urenia, but their stones had no inscriptions. Deats found about 20 plain field stones without markings. A. L. This may be Abraham Larew, son of Daniel Larew and Margaret Williamson or Amos LaRue, son of Moses and Urenia Larew A. Larowc, son (found during 3/95 visit) A. P., 10 1765 Identity not known. Abraham Rounsavell, died August 17, 1853 in his 67th year. Died unmarried, the son of Isaac Rounsavel and Catharine Larew, and great nephew of Moses Larew. C. R. Deats writes this is a footstone uniform with the stone for Abraham Rounsavell, and is probably his wife. But more likely it is Catharine Larew Rounsavel, Abraham’s mother. She died 5 April 1832 age 57. 1 S X R The S is backwards. (found on the 3/95 visit) Possibly Samuel Rittenhouse who lived in the small stone house northwest of the Covered Bridge. W. S., died October 4, 1792 The “S” is reversed. I don’t know who this is, but it seems likely to be another Sergeant, possibly an uncle of Charles Sergeant below. Dot Williamson has found several more stones buried about a foot or so beneath the surface. Richard Williamson Tucson, AZ _http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~williamsondnaproject/INDEX.htm_ (http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~williamsondnaproject/INDEX.htm) ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Archives of the State of New Jersey, First Series; Documents Relating To The Colonial History of the State of New Jersey, Volume XXIII; Calendar of New Jersey Wills, Vol. 1, 1670-1730. Nelson, William; Paterson NJ 1901. p. 283 1702 Sept 21. LARUE, Abraham, of Staten Island, yeoman; will of. Wife Alche, sole heiress. Children menitoned, but not by name. Movable and immovable estate. Witnesses - William TILLYER, Jean CASIER, Louis du BOIS, Samuel GRASSET. Burlington Wills [[sounds like all the people here had French names]]dave _________________________________________________________________ More photos, more messages, more storageget 2GB with Windows Live Hotmail. http://imagine-windowslive.com/hotmail/?locale=en-us&ocid=TXT_TAGHM_migration_HM_mini_2G_0507
_http://www.packetonline.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18379811&BRD=1091&PAG=461&de pt_id=456072&rfi=6_ (http://www.packetonline.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18379811&BRD=1091&PAG=461&dept_id=456072&rfi=6) Historically Speaking 05/24/2007 (javascript: openEmailWindow();) _Email to a friend_ (javascript: openEmailWindow();) (http://www.packetonline.com/site/?brd=1091&pag=795&newsid=18379811&action=submit) _Post a Comment_ (http://www.packetonline.com/site/?brd=1091&pag=795&newsid=18379811&action=submit) (http://www.packetonline.com/site/printerFriendly.cfm?brd=1091&dept_id=456072&newsid=18379811) _Printer-friendly_ (http://www.packetonline.com/site/printerFriendly.cfm?brd=1091&dept_id=456072&new sid=18379811) Allentown: Its rise and progress, part 39 >From the NJ Historical Society's C. R. Hutchinson collection, the following short history of the Presbyterian Church. Although our region was predominately Quaker, Hutchinson claimed that the Presbyterians preceded them in Allentown proper. Advertisement The Presbyterian Church, which was the earliest religious organization at Allentown, was first located on the site of the old graveyard which still exists in the rear and on the southerly side of Main Street. This location was abandoned in 1756, when a brick building was erected on the one acre lot conveyed by William Lawrence in 1745. Rev. Charles McKnight, who, since 1744, had been the pastor both here and at Cranbury, on the erection of the new building resigned his charge at Cranbury and removed thence to Allentown, where he occupied the parsonage farm, which had then been recently acquired. He was a young man, licensed in 1741: married in 1746. David Brainerd, in his journal, under date of June 18, 1745, says: "In the afternoon came to place called Cranbury, and meeting with a serious minister (Mr. McKnight), lodged with him." He [McKnight] remained at Allentown until 1766, and appears to have prospered in a wordly sense, being taxed in 1758 for 200 acres of land, and in 1767, when the Allentown Mills were sold by sheriff as the property of James English, Junr. [father of revolutionary war heroine Jinnie Jackson], deceased, it was at the suit of Stoffil Longstreet for L1,000, and Charles McKight for L674. In 1767, he was settled as pastor of the churches at Shrewsbury and Middletown Point (Matawan), where, in the revolutionary war he made himself so obnoxious to the British that his church was burned, and himself seized and confined in one of the prison ships in New York Harbor, which, although soon released, caused his death shortly afterwards. He died in New York, Jan. 1, 1778, and was buried in Trinity Churchyard, where his grave may still be seen. >From 1766 to 1774 the church had no settled pastor, although the Rev. William Schenck, a graduate of Princeton, sometimes preached here and for the last two years of that time appears to have been (with occasional interruptions) a sort of stated supply, until, in 1774, he was regularly called to the pastorate. He was born in Monmouth County, near Marlboro, in 1740, and was a pupil of Rev. William Tennet, at Freehold. He remained here till 1778, when he removed to South Hampton, Pa. An account of him by one of his descendants says he was driven out of the state by the British in 1777. After other changes he removed in 1817 from Newark N.J. to Franklin, Ohio, where he died, at the home of his son, Gen. William C. Schenck, in 1823, aged 83 years. Hon. Robert C. Schenck, who entered Congress in 1843 and was United States Minister to Great Britain in the administration of President Grant, was his grandson. August 4, 1779, Rev. George Faitout was installed as pastor at Allentown, and also at Nottingham, to which charge he was to give a third of his time. He remained about two years. Little is known of him, but the minutes of Presbytery granting his request for dismissal, indicate that his pastorate, for some cause, had not been a success. He married Euphemia Titus, by a license dated November 4, 1779, and is then described as "of Monmouth County." In 1783, he appears to have been located at Pittsgrove, Salem County, where he preached the funeral sermon of Catherine, widow of the Rev. William Tennet, who died there, September 1, of that year. The next incumbent was the Rev. Joseph Clark, to whom a call was extended in the spring of 1784. He was born in Elizabethtown, N.J., October 21, 1751, and while a carpenters apprentice, studying at night, by the light of a pine knot, in two years fitted himself to enter the junior class at Princeton. When the war broke out he became a soldier, a private in Captain Samuel Stout's company of Hunterdon militia. When the war was over the returned to Princeton, graduated in 1781, and was licensed to preach in 1783. He remained at Allentown until 1796, when he removed to New Brunswick as pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in that city. He died there in 1813. Hew carried away with him the records of the church at Allentown, and they were all burned when soon afterward his dwelling was destroyed by fire. For four years the pulpit was again vacant, and then, in 1800, the Rev. John Cornell became the pastor. He was born at Northampton, Pa. in 1774, and married Maria, daughter of Gen. Frederick Frelinghuysen of Somerset County N.J. who is mentioned as a woman of unusual ability and excellence, and as having been the founder of the first Sunday School in this locality. Mr. Cornell is said to have been a man of much personal dignity, a fine classical scholar, and an excellent preacher, but his pastorate of twenty years does not appear to have been to the advantage of the church, doubtless owing to the increasingly intemperate habits of the pastor, which resulted in the dissolution of the pastoral relation, and he removed to take charge of a classical school, first to Somerville and later to Millstone, Somerset County, at which latter place he died in 1835. A farm on the Yardville Road [opposite Merrick Rd.], about two miles west from Allentown, containing 216 acres, which he bought of Randal Robbins and wife, March 25, 1812, for $8,000, remained in his family as late as 1847, and is still know as "the Cornell Farm." The northerly part of it is now in the possession of Benjamin F. Stelle, and the southerly part, on which the original buildings were located, was until recently owned by Sarah B., wife of Washington P. Taylor. It is the same which was the homestead farm of Samuel Allen till his death in 1777. December 6, 1820, Rev. Henry Perkins was installed as pastor, and so continued until 1864, when the infirmities of age necessitated his retirement. His successors have been: Rev. Kneeland P. Ketcham, 1864-1871; Rev. Lawarence M. Colfelt, 1872-1874; Rev. George Swain, 1874-1912; and Rev. H.B. Strock, who is the present [1914] incumbent. The Presbyterian Church is given exceptional prominence in these pages because it was the only religious organization in Allentown during colonial times, and for many years after the revolutionary war. In the beginning it must have been very weak, for the meager population was made up mostly of Quakers, who had no sympathy or support to give to "steeple houses" or hireling priests or ministers." Nevertheless, it seems to have prospered from its birth, and thirty years afterward was able to provide its pastor with a farm of more than 200 acres for his maintenance. Of those who were responsible for its origin and support in its infancy, only a few names are known, but among them were Robert and James English, John Chambers, Tobias Polhemus, Guisbert Hendrickson, Robert Imlay, Henry Harper, James Jackson, Lefford Lefferson, and probably William Lawrence, since he conveyed to the trustees in 1744, for the nominal sum of five shillings, the lot of one acre on which the church now stands. Historically Speaking is a regular column presented by John Fabiano, M.A., designated historian for Allentown Borough. ©PACKETONLINE News Classifieds Entertainment Business - Princeton and ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
David, Could I please info for the following? > LARUE, Abraham Will 21 Sep 1702/not stated Staten Island NJA 23:283 Thanks, S. Hoffman
In a message dated 5/23/2007 2:34:40 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [email protected] writes: Mayann, Any possible marriage of my Rev. William H. McCormick m-Josephine (La)Force abt 1855. I would guess he was married in a church being a Methodist Episcopal minister. His father Hiram was married 1828 in lst. Methodist Church of Morris Co. Any help would be appreciated. Justine McCormick ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]>; <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, May 20, 2007 10:32 AM Subject: [NJ] Northampton Twp., Burlington Co., 1848-1865 Justine: there are 5 McCormick names, but none are William...are these of any interEst to you?? HOWARD JOHN JULIA MARGARET and THOMAS. [email protected] "Land of the free BECAUSE of the brave" ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Mayann, Any possible marriage of my Rev. William H. McCormick m-Josephine (La)Force abt 1855. I would guess he was married in a church being a Methodist Episcopal minister. His father Hiram was married 1828 in lst. Methodist Church of Morris Co. Any help would be appreciated. Justine McCormick ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]>; <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, May 20, 2007 10:32 AM Subject: [NJ] Northampton Twp., Burlington Co., 1848-1865 > Several years ago I bought some information for Burlington Co., NJ, > Northampton Twp. ONLY (probably Mt. Holly today)....There is an index > covering > marriages, births, and deaths. Sometimes the info may be incomplete..but > will be > happy to do lookups if anyone is interested in that area and time period. > > Mayann Ross, Ft. Myers, FL > > [email protected] > "Land of the free BECAUSE of the brave" > > > > ************************************** See what's free at > http://www.aol.com. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in > the subject and the body of the message > > > -- > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.5.467 / Virus Database: 269.7.6/814 - Release Date: 5/21/2007 > 2:01 PM > >
Thanks Nancy-Jo Nunez A Genealogy Enthusiast ...Member of Rhode Island Genealogy Society, Connecticut Genealogy Society, New England Genealogical & Historical Society, Killingly Historical Society, Rhode Island Historical Society, Santa Clara California Genealogical Society, Northern California Genealogical Society. Searching...searching...searching... "History is a great teacher. Read it, understand it, ponder upon the first and last chapters as well as the middle. It makes the present so much more understandable and less perplexing." ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Howdy - did not take me as long as I thought. The Master List for the recently completed extracts of people who were not of NJ, has been completed, and is available as an attachment through my offlist email address [email protected] Anyone wishing a copy of it needs to use the 'subject' line title of this message to receive it. Requests will be processed in the order they are received. It will be sent as an 'attachment' and requesters must understand that this Master List is done in Landscape format with 1 inch borders. There is only one entry per line, so kindly be aware of that limitation. On a personal note - as regards the data extracted from volume 1 of the Calendar of Wills series - from my observation alone, many of the entries of this volume demonstrate that a greater number of folks came from areas 'across the sea' and were not originally born in New Jersey. However, unless it was so stated in any entry, where someone lived, or was formerly of, then it would be irresponsible on my part to simply include everyone based on pure supposition. Only with a careful transcribing of the full volume, which I hope to accomplish by the close of 2008, may viewers comprehend and appreciate where the original settlers may have come from. Thankfully, some of them sought to justify to future generations, their places of origin, and/or their migrations to and from New Jersey. David Tourison Sheridan, Wyoming ---------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program.
The following material, showing entries of testators or administrations from areas other than New Jersey, was extracted from NJ Archives Vol 23 Calendar of Wills #1 1670-1730. This is the final volume of the 13 in the Calendar of Wills series. At some time in the future, a combined list of entries found in all 13 volumes will be available - just not now. There are some corrections which need to be done. To view it properly setup page in Landscape with 1 inch borders. Anyone wishing transcription of any entry needs to contact me at my offlist address [email protected] Requests will be processed in the order they are received but MUST contain the full line of data on any one individual so I can find the original entry. NAME EVENT DATE/PROVED RESIDENCE LATE OF SOURCE ARMITT, Thomas Will 28 Jun 1726/not stated Philadelphia PA NJA 23:16 BEACHAM, John Administration 25 Feb 1695-6 Philadelphia PA NJA 23:31 BEBOU, John Will 23 Oct 1710/not stated Stattin Island NY NJA 23:32 BERKSTEAD, John Administration 28 Mar 1694 Salem Co NJ Kent Co PA NJA 23:35 BIBOUT, John Inventory 27 Oct 1716 Middlesex Co NJ Staten Island NY NJA 23:36 BLACKFIELD, Peter Mar. Contract 3 May 1697 Salem Town NJ New England NJA 23:41 BLACKMAN, Bryant Administration 28 Oct 1687 Barbados NJA 23:41,42 BROOKS, John Will 20 Nov 1707/18 Oct 1709 England NJA 23:62 BUDD, Thomas Will 9 Feb 1697-8/13 May 1699 Philadelphia PA NJA 23:70,71 BUTLER, Charles Nuncupative Undated/died 6 Mar 1694-5 Philadelphia PA NJA 23:78 CALLEY, Joseph Will 10 Sep 1691/16 Feb 1691-2 Boston MA (died in Salem Co NJ) NJA 23:79 CARPENTER, Hope (male) Will 8 Jan 1713/not stated Jamaica Queens Co NY NJA 23:83 CHURCH, Christopher Will 10 Nov 1710/26 Feb 1729-30 Philadelphia PA NJA 23:92 CLUBB, Isabella Will 7 Jun 1723/1 & 14 Aug 1723 Philadelphia PA Burlington NJ NJA 23:98 COERTEN, Guert Will 5 Feb 1671/not stated Bergen NJ Voorthuysen Guelderland NJA 23:101 CROKER, Alexander Administration 20 Jun 1691 Pennsilvania NJA 23:119,120 DECOO, Isaac Will 23 Jan 1686-7/10 Jan 1687-8 New Chelsey Co PA probably ENG NJA 23:132 DECOO, Susannah (dau of Issac) Admin. 10 Nov 1697 New Castle Co PA NJA 23:132 DeWILDE, Henry Will 14 Jul 1701/13 Aug 1702 Doctor's Creek WJ Lambeth Surrey ENG NJA 23:137,138 DREDG, William Will 14 Mar 1686-7/31 Jul 1689 Salem Tenth NJ Warefeild Berks ENG NJA 23:142,143 DRUMEY, John Administration 20 Mar 1724-5 New York NJA 23:143 EGLISTON, Joseph Administration 16 Jan 1722-3 Jamaica (Island) Philadelphia PA NJA 23:149 EIER, William Will 4 Jul 1712/not stated Porsmouth Southton NJA 23:149 ELDRIDGE, Capt. Ezekiel Will 6 Jun 1710/2 Feb 1711-2 Cape May NJ Philadelphia PA NJA 23:149 EMET, William Administration 3 Mar 1728-9 New York NJA 23:154 FEILD, Susanna Administration 1 Jul 1702 Chesterfield NJ Long Island NJA 23:160 FENWICK, John Will 7 Aug 1683/16 Apr 1684 Fenwick's Colony NJ Benfield Berks ENG NJA 23:162 FISHER, Dennis Will 14 Feb 1690-1/30 Oct 1700 Salem Co NJ Portsmouth ENG NJA 23:164 FORREST, Mary Will 22 Nov 1689/not stated Woodbridge NJ Dublin IRE NJA 23:169 FORREST, Walter Will 18 Mar 1691-2/15 Apr 1692(PA) Bubury (Byberry) PA Salem Co NJ NJA 23:170 FRENCH, Thomas Will (copy) 3 May 1699/3 May 1699 Burlington Co NJ England NJA 23:174 GARRETT, William Inventory 17 Jan 1687-8 Suffolk Co ENG NJA 23:180,181 GATCHEL, Catherine Will 14 May 1727/22 May 1727 Philadelphia PA NJA 23:182 GEDE, William Will 31 Oct 1685/not stated Bruntiseland Scotland NJA 23:182,183 GILL, Benjamin Will 15 Jul 1695/14 Feb 1695-6 Salem Co NJ New Castle PA NJA 23:185 HADDON, John Will 16 Jul 1723/20 May 1724 Southwark Surrey ENG NJA 23:199 HAIGUE (HAIGH), William Administration 5 May 1694 Philadelphia PA NJA 23:199 HANCOCK, John Administration 18 Jan 1685-6 (died at sea) Edinburgh Scotland NJA 23:206 HANCOCK, William Will 29 Sep 1679/not stated Middlesex ENG NJA 23:207 HIGGINS, William Nuncupative 11 May 1688/1 Jun 1688 Philadelphia PA (died 11 May 1688) NJA 23:227,228 HOOTON, Thomas Will 4 Aug 1694/not stated Philadelphia PA NJA 23:237 HOUGH, Peter Will (copy) 30 Sep 1679/not stated New Castle PA Middlesex Co ENG NJA 23:241 HUNTER, Richard Will 1 7ber 1697/3 Dec 1679 West Jersey Dublin IRE NJA 23:249,250 INNES, Gilbert Will 2 Oct 1685/not stated Amboy, East Jersey Aberdeen Scotland NJA 23:254,255 INNES, Margaret Administration 25 Jan 1726-7 Aberdeen North Britain NJA 23:255 INNESS, ENNIS, Alexander Will 27 Jul 1713/3 Aug 1713 Monmouth Co NJ Aberdeen Scotland NJA 23:253,254 JENNINGS, Henry Will 27 Jun 1705/23 Apr 1706 Philadelphia PA Burlington Co NJ NJA 23:258 JENNINGS, Margaret Will 14 Aug 1708/14 Mar 1710-11 Philadelphia PA Burlington Co NJ NJA 23:258 JOHNSON, John Will 5 Oct 1705/19 Nov 1705 Salem Town NJ London ENG NJA 23:262 JONES, Dorcas Will 2 Aug 1717/10 Jul 1719 New York City NY NJA 23:267 JOYNER, John Will 28 May 1695/24 Apr 1696 Mansfield Burl Co NJ ENG NJA 23:269 KENTON, William Will 8 Dec 1693/23 Apr 1694 Salem NJ Maryland NJA 23:272 KING, Robert Inventory 25 Oct 1719 Middlesex Co NJ Ireland NJA 23:274 KINSEY, John Will 1689/22 Feb 1698-9 Shackamaxon PA NJA 23:276 KISSAM, Daniel Jr Will 23 Dec 1728/24 Mar 1728-9 Queens Co NY NJA 23:276 LANE, LAN, Thomas Administration 28 Oct 1717 London ENG NJA 23:282 LARUE, Abraham Will 21 Sep 1702/not stated Staten Island NJA 23:283 LINES, William Will (copy) 16 Nov 1726/30 Nov 1726 Cecil Co MD NJA 23:292,293 MASTERS, Francis Will 19 Aug 1719/27 Feb 1723-4 New York NJA 23:310 MATHEWS, Edward Will 19 Nov 1679/not stated Middlesex Co ENG NJA 23:310 MAURITZ, Jacob Will 3 Aug 1707/17 Jan 1726-7 New York City NY Elizabeth Town NJ NJA 23:312 MAURITZ, Margaret Will 11 Mar 1727-8/21 May 1728 Essex Co NJ New York City NY NJA 23:312 MORRIS, Lewis (Colonel) Will 12 Feb 1690-1 (see NJA 30:563) NJA 23:329 MULFORD, Benjamin Will 28 Nov 1700/28 Dec 1700 Salem Co NJ New England NJA 23:333 NORTHE, Joseph Will 18 Feb 1693-4/26 Feb 1693-4 Baltimore Co MD New West Jersey NJA 23:341,342 NOUELL, Monteeth Administration 9 Nov 1716 New York City NY NJA 23:342 PALMER, Thomas Administration 12 Feb 1691-2 New York West Jersey NJA 23:351 PETTEY, Edward Will 3 May 1704/7 Jun 1704 Shampton Suffolk NY NJA 23:362 PITMAN, Henry Administration 4 May 1675 Barbados NJA 23:367 PORTER, Abell Jr Administration 4 Mar 1685-6 Boston MA (died on voyage from Scotland to EJ) NJA 23:370 POST, William Administration 5 Oct 1724 Long Island & Somerset Co NJ NJA 23:371,372 QUARY, Robert Will 23 Dec 1706/11 May 1713 Philadelphia PA NJA 23:376 REGNIER, Jacob Will 8 Nov 1714/10 May 1715 New York City NY Lincoln's Inn ENG NJA 23:380 RELNEY, James Inventory 21 Apr 1686 (died on voyage from Scotland) NJA 23:380,381 RODNEY, RODENIE, John Will (copy) 15 Sep 1694/12 Dec 1694 Philadelphia PA & West Jersey NJA 23:392 ROYTON, John Administration 21 Oct 1717 Bristol PA NJA 23:396 RUDYARD, Thomas Will 7 Dec 1685/19 Jun 1693 NY & PA (sailing for Barbados & Jamaica) NJA 23:397 SCOTT, George Will 31 Oct 1685/26 Feb 1685-6 Pilochy (on ship bound for East Jersey) NJA 23:408 SCUDMORE, William Administration 25 Jan 1726-7 Bristol ENG NJA 23:410 SHEPPARD, Joanna Administration 2 May 1724 Boston New England NJA 23:416 SHILLEY, SHELLY, Hillegout Will 28 May 1716/27 Sep 1718 New York City NY NJA 23:417 SMITH, John, Jr Will (copy) 9 Dec 1685? New Castle Co NJA 23:428 SONGHURST, John Will (copy) 26 Sep 1687/not stated Pensilvania England NJA 23:434 STACY, Henry Will 28 Mar 1684/24 Apr 1684 Middlesex ENG NJA 23:436,437 STITES, STITS, William Will 5 May 1727/14 Sep 1727 Elizabeth Town NJ Hempstead LI NY NJA 23:442 STORER, John Will 28 Oct 1687/6 Dec 1687 Burlington Co NJ Cape May Co NJ NJA 32:445 TATHAM, John Will 10 Feb 1713-4/23 Feb 1713-4 New York City NY NJA 32:453 TEST, John Will 21 Jul 1706/209 Jan 1709-10 New Castle on Dellaware NJA 23:457 TRIBBEKO, Fredrick Will 23 Nov 1715/19 Dec 1715 Philadelphia PA Saxe Gotha Germany NJA 23:472 WARNER, Edward Administration 6 Apr 1688 Pennsilvania probably ENG NJA 23:491 ---------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program.
I've had a superior relationship with [email protected] -- Ann Boldt. She's quick, price is right and no charge if nothing is found. Highly recommend Ann -- from Terri in WA
Have you checked RAOGK? Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness) for individuals living in Burlington or Mercer Counties? Jim ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, May 21, 2007 7:31 AM Subject: [NJ] Does anyone locally have access to the New Jersey StateArchives? > Hello > I am looking for someone locally on this list that may be able to visit > the > New Jersey State Archives for me and to lookup birtths, marriages and > deaths. > Does anyone know of a local researcher? Thanks for replying. > > Nancy-Jo Nunez > A Genealogy Enthusiast > ....Member of Rhode Island Genealogy Society, Connecticut Genealogy > Society, > New England Genealogical & Historical Society, Killingly Historical > Society, > Rhode Island Historical Society, Santa Clara California Genealogical > Society, > Northern California Genealogical Society. > Searching...searching...searching... > > "History is a great teacher. Read it, understand it, ponder upon the > first > and last chapters as well as the middle. It makes the present so much > more > understandable and less perplexing." > > > > > ************************************** See what's free at > http://www.aol.com. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in > the subject and the body of the message >
Shawn, Mine came in fine all 3 times. Thank you for sending. Gold From: "Shawn Dempsey" <[email protected]> To: "NJ-L" <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, May 21, 2007 6:19 PM Subject: [NJ] ESSEX County History Looks like my formatting was lost again. Here it is again and hopefully more readable.(3rd and last time the charm????)Essex County was formed in 1683 from The Province of East Jersey.In 1837, part of Passaic County was formed from part of Essex CountyIn 1857, Union County split from Essex County. For a brief history of Essex County visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/history.htmCurrently it is surrounded by Bergen, Hudson, Union, Passaic and Morris counties. To see a current map (hand-drawn, not to scale) visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/map.htm. Some of the towns of EssexCounty include:BellevilleBloomfieldCaldwellCedar GroveEast OrangeEssex FellsFairfieldGlen RidgeIrvingtonLivingstonMaplewoodMillburn/Short HillsMontclairNewarkNorth CaldwellNutleyOrangeRoselandSouth OrangeVeronaWest CaldwellWest OrangeThe County seat is Newark. One of the best run town websites I have come across is for Newark, NJ and it is run by Glenn G. Geisheimer. See http://www.oldnewark.com/m! ainindex.phpShawn DempseyEssex County County CoordinatorNJGenWeb Projecthttp://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex
Looks like my formatting was lost again. Here it is again and hopefully more readable.(3rd and last time the charm????)Essex County was formed in 1683 from The Province of East Jersey.In 1837, part of Passaic County was formed from part of Essex CountyIn 1857, Union County split from Essex County. For a brief history of Essex County visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/history.htmCurrently it is surrounded by Bergen, Hudson, Union, Passaic and Morris counties. To see a current map (hand-drawn, not to scale) visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/map.htm. Some of the towns of EssexCounty include:BellevilleBloomfieldCaldwellCedar GroveEast OrangeEssex FellsFairfieldGlen RidgeIrvingtonLivingstonMaplewoodMillburn/Short HillsMontclairNewarkNorth CaldwellNutleyOrangeRoselandSouth OrangeVeronaWest CaldwellWest OrangeThe County seat is Newark. One of the best run town websites I have come across is for Newark, NJ and it is run by Glenn G. Geisheimer. See http://www.oldnewark.com/mainindex.phpShawn DempseyEssex County County CoordinatorNJGenWeb Projecthttp://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex
Looks like my formatting was lost. Here it is again and hopefully more readable.Essex County was formed in 1683 from The Province of East JerseyIn 1837, part of Passaic County was formed from part of Essex CountyIn 1857, Union County split from Essex County. For a brief history of Essex County visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/history.htmCurrently it is surrounded by Bergen, Hudson, Union, Passaic and Morris counties. To see a current map (hand-drawn, not to scale) visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/map.htm. Some of the towns of EssexCounty include:BellevilleBloomfieldCaldwellCedar GroveEast OrangeEssex FellsFairfieldGlen RidgeIrvingtonLivingstonMaplewoodMillburn/Short HillsMontclairNewarkNorth CaldwellNutleyOrangeRoselandSouth OrangeVeronaWest CaldwellWest OrangeThe County seat is Newark. One of the best run town websites I have come across is for Newark, NJ and it is run by Glenn G. Geisheimer. See http://www.oldnewark.com/mainindex.phpShawn DempseyEssex County CoordinatorNJGenWeb Projecthttp://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex
Essex County was formed in 1683 from The Province of East JerseyIn 1837, part of Passaic County was formed from part of Essex CountyIn 1857, Union County split from Essex County. For a brief history of Essex County visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/history.htmCurrently it is surrounded by Bergen, Hudson, Union, Passaic and Morris counties. To see a current map (hand-drawn, not to scale) visit http://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex/map.htm. Some of the towns of EssexCounty include:BellevilleBloomfieldCaldwellCedar GroveEast OrangeEssex FellsFairfieldGlen RidgeIrvingtonLivingstonMaplewoodMillburn/Short HillsMontclairNewarkNorth CaldwellNutleyOrangeRoselandSouth OrangeVeronaWest CaldwellWest OrangeThe County seat is Newark. One of the best run town websites I have come across is for Newark, NJ and it is run by Glenn G. Geisheimer. See http://www.oldnewark.com/mainindex.phpShawn DempseyEssex County CoordinatorNJGenWeb Projecthttp://www.rootsweb.com/~njessex
Looking for more info on Emerson Brooks from Montclair. He was founder of the Boy Rangers of American in the early 1900's. Born 11/1860 in New York City. Married Alice May Kunkel. Parents were Horace Brooks and Mary Octavia Emerson. Choose the right car based on your needs. Check out Yahoo! Autos new Car Finder tool.http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=48518/*http://autos.yahoo.com/carfinder/;_ylc=X3oDMTE3NWsyMDd2BF9TAzk3MTA3MDc2BHNlYwNtYWlsdGFncwRzbGsDY2FyLWZpbmRlcg-- hot CTA = Yahoo! Autos new Car Finder tool
I am looking for a David COOK b. abt 1770 d. before 1822. He was married to Rebecca BALDWIN d/o Stephen BALDWIN and Abigail RICHARDS. On 5/21/07, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote: > > Howdy Folks - time for a new county, with its new bits of data and > details, and I hope, lots of discussion. The only info I have is that > it was formed in 1683, that its county seat is Newark, that it is one > of the original counties, that part of Passaic was formed from it in > 1837 and that Union county was set away in 1857. Kindly place any > surnames in CAPS if you are presenting data about specific individuals > from Essex Co., who maybe served in wars, were statesmen, or even > common citizens, who are part of your family trees and of whom, maybe, > you'd like to find connecting list members who might help in your > searching. > > We'll deal with this county for a week, and maybe longer if needed, > and then move on to another. I will be somewhat out of contact for > parts of the week as I've signed up to assist with a research project > of planting different varieties of grapes here in northern Wyoming, to > see how they'll handle the colder temps; the duties include digging > and planting, and a wee bit more, which means I won't be at my > computer or at home. Not a great way to spend my vacation days, but > rewarding in other ways for sure. > > Sooooo, have some fun while I'm gone, and leave me lots of nice > messages about ESSEX County - its history, people, places and such - > anything to make be want to go there for a visit! > > Happy Trails... > > David Tourison > NJ List Moderator > [email protected] > > ---------------------------------------------------------------- > This message was sent using IMP, the Internet Messaging Program. > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in > the subject and the body of the message > -- Ann Brown " Cookie"
Geoffrey Cooper ([email protected]) is fast, and his fees are very reasonable. Mark Lomax Pasadena, CA On 5/21/07, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello > I am looking for someone locally on this list that may be able to visit the > New Jersey State Archives for me and to lookup birtths, marriages and deaths. > Does anyone know of a local researcher? Thanks for replying. > > Nancy-Jo Nunez > A Genealogy Enthusiast > ...Member of Rhode Island Genealogy Society, Connecticut Genealogy Society, > New England Genealogical & Historical Society, Killingly Historical Society, > Rhode Island Historical Society, Santa Clara California Genealogical Society, > Northern California Genealogical Society. > Searching...searching...searching... > > "History is a great teacher. Read it, understand it, ponder upon the first > and last chapters as well as the middle. It makes the present so much more > understandable and less perplexing." > > > > > ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Hello I am looking for someone locally on this list that may be able to visit the New Jersey State Archives for me and to lookup birtths, marriages and deaths. Does anyone know of a local researcher? Thanks for replying. Nancy-Jo Nunez A Genealogy Enthusiast ...Member of Rhode Island Genealogy Society, Connecticut Genealogy Society, New England Genealogical & Historical Society, Killingly Historical Society, Rhode Island Historical Society, Santa Clara California Genealogical Society, Northern California Genealogical Society. Searching...searching...searching... "History is a great teacher. Read it, understand it, ponder upon the first and last chapters as well as the middle. It makes the present so much more understandable and less perplexing." ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.