Hello listers, I will have a rare one-day opportunity for an excursion to NJ during the week of August 13! Where should I apply my time???? Help sought! BACKGROUND My problem is a supposed Huguenot, James (Jacques) Verrier (Verier, Verree etc) who came to America supposedly around 1690 and begins being seen in Burlington County deeds etc. in 1693. There is in the Colonial marriage series a note of his marriage in Burlington to Valbert Williams in 1701. A mason, he is seen in Bucks and Burlington deeds through 1708 (he lived at least for a time on the island between them) and then, nothing. No record of births of his children, no will, no burial, for him or his wife. Did he leave? His supposed son James (who changed the name to Verree) b. around 1703, married Rachel, lived and died in Burlington, and has a will dated 1748 in the Burlington Calendar of New Jersey Wills. He was mentioned as a coffinmaker in one deed but so far I've found no other mentions. I have the bible record of the children and some grandchildren of James and Rachel of Burlington. One son at least, Robert Verree, was a Quaker and is found in Montgomery and Philadelphia county Monthly Meeting records starting around 1760s. GENERAL QUESTION What archives/libraries etc. are likely to have information - not available to me at home - on this early family (I can get the published sources like the calendar of wills) SPECIFIC QUESTIONS Where can original sources for the NJ State Archives series of Colonial Marriages be found - where did the 1701 marriage of J. Verier take place? What are the earliest Quaker records extant for Burlington - or the places from which people came to Burlington - and where can they be found? Where are the other early Protestant records that I might search, as it may be that only the third generation was Quaker? Where is the best place to hunt for early Huguenot families in NJ? I have not found an immigration record for J. Verrier. Now that I've written this all down, I'm embarrassed that it is so lengthy, but I will trust that you have sympathy for obsessed genealogists with little time and will be willing to share your research experiences in NJ with me. Jane Peppler in North Carolina