USA > New Jersey > Mercer County > Pennington > A history of the old Presbyterian congregation of "The people of Maidenhead and Hopewell" : more especially of the First Presbyterian Church of Hopewell, at Pennington, New Jersey, delivered at the pastor's request, on Sabbath morning, July 2d, 1876 > Part 1
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Ga 974.902 P38h
Gc 974.902 P38h 1235101
GENEALOGY COLLECTION
ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 02236 7285
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016
https://archive.org/details/historyofoldpres00hale_0
ared Emig Surtain Phila.
George Hale.
J
A HISTORY
OF THE
OLD PRESBYTERIAN CONGREGATION OF "THE PEOPLE OF MAIDENHEAD AND HOPEWELL,"
MORE ESPECIALLY OF THE
First
resbpterian
Church of hopewell,
AT
PENNINGTON, NEW JERSEY,
DELIVERED AT THE PASTOR'S REQUEST,
On Sabbath Morning, July 2d, 1876,
BY . THE
REV. GEORGE HALE, D.D., LATELY PASTOR OF THE CHURCH.
PHILADELPHIA: PRESS OF HENRY B. ASHMEAD, Nos. 1102 & 1104 SANSOM STREET. 1876.
1235101
The following correspondence will explain the appearance in print of this Historical Discourse :
PENNINGTON, July 5, 1876.
REV. DR. GEORGE HALE :
DEAR BROTHER :- Please accept our sincere thanks for the interesting and elabo- rate sermon delivered in our church July 2d, 1876, so appropriate to the Centen- nial year of our nation. While we are gratified to know that it shall find a safe place in the archives of the Presbyterian Historical Society, we ask the privilege of having it published, that we may have it in our homes and extend it to the many closely allied to our Church, whose history is half a century older than our national existence. -
DANIEL R. FOSTER, Pastor.
ELDERS.
DEACONS.
JOHN E. BURD,
DANIEL C. TITUS,
TRUSTEES. HENRY B. PERRINE, SAMUEL B. KETCHAM, JOHN G. MUIRHEID,
ENOCH A. TITUS,
JONATHAN S. HART,
JOHN S. VANCLEVE,
J. SMITH HART, AZARIAH HUNT,
GEORGE WOOLSEY,
PETER V. D. SCHENCK,
JONATHAN V. BLACKWELL.
JOHN E. BURD, JONATHAN S. HART, DANIEL C. TITUS, RALPH EGE.
PENNINGTON, July 6, 1876.
To REV. DANIEL R. FOSTER, and the Elders, Deacons and Trustees of Pennington Church.
BELOVED BRETHREN :- I cheerfully comply with the request contained in yours of the 5th inst., and place the discourse in your hands for publication. With sincere regards, yours ever,
GEORGE HALE.
At the meeting of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, held May, 1875, in Cleveland, Ohio, the following resolutions were adopted :
1. "That the first Sabbath in July, 1876, be designated as a day of thanksgiving and praise to God, for the manifold blessings with which He has crowned us as a people.
2. "That the pastor of each church deliver a discourse on that day, if not pre- viously done, on the History of his Church."
RALPH EGE.
HISTORICAL DISCOURSE.
TELL YE YOUR CHILDREN OF IT, AND LET YOUR CHILDREN TELL THEIR CHILDREN, AND THEIR CHILDREN ANOTHER GENERATION .- Joel i. 3.
IT is just two hundred years yesterday since "the old Province Line," the division line between East New Jersey and West New Jersey, was fixed-a compromise of vast importance to the peace and prosperity of New Jersey. " This was concluded by a deed between George Carteret of the one part and the trustees of Edward Billinge on the other. July 1, 1676."
Already, March 20, 1664, Charles II., King of Great Britain, had, by royal charter, made an extensive grant of territory in America to his brother James, the Duke of York. On the 23d of June, in the same year, James conveyed to Sir George Carteret and Lord Berkley the section which was then for the first time named New Jersey, with boundaries corresponding exactly with the present limits of this State. Sir George Carteret sold out his right in the part, which subsequently bore the name of West Jersey, to John Fenwicke, as trustee for Edward Billinge and others. This section having been divided into one hundred parts and distributed among the proprietors, the tract called the thirty thousand
6
acres above the Falls of the Delaware fell to the lot of Thomas Sadler and Edward Billinge, who, on the 20th of October, 1685, sold out their title and interest to Dr. Daniel Cox, of London. This is the original town- ship of Hopewell, the first accurate survey of which extant is to be found in the Book of Surveys, page 103, in the office of the Secretary of State at Trenton, hav- ing the marginal note, "Re-survey of Hopewell tract for Col. Cox, 31,000."
SEPTEMBER, 1707.
Resurveyed then for Coll. Daniel Cox, his tract of land called Hope- well, beginning at the upper corner of the same by the river Delaware, at a white oak corner in the low land, and runs thence East South East fourty chain to a markt maple and hickory for a corner, then east three hundred and one chain to a white oak for a corner, then north by west one hundred and sixty five chain to a white oak corner, then East two hundred sixty four chain to a white oak corner, then again East two hundred and fourty chains to a white oak corner in a line called the Scotch line, or line of partition between East and West Jersey, then along the said line neare South South West four miles and thirty two chains to a white oak corner in the line of Maidenhead Indian purchase, then alonge the said line, south west and south south west to the head of a creek called little Shabbaconck, then south west to a creek called Great Shabbakonk, then down by the same fivety six chaine to a tree markt for a corner on the south west side thereof, the south west eighty two chain to a hickery corner to land surveyed to Thomas Hutchinson, then by the same North West two hundred eighty five chaines to a hick- ery corner by the land surveyed to Pope and Wetherill, then bounded by the same by a line North East seventy three chains and East by South fourty nine chaine, and South Eleaven chaine and East by South fivety six chaine, and North by East one hundred and three chaines and a halfe, and west sixty four chains, and South West by West one hundred and ninety eight chaine to a hickery corner at the Dellawar aforesaid, and so bounded up by the said river to the first mentioned corner con- taining one and thirty thousand acres besides allowances for highwayes. Resurveyed by me, DANIEL LEEDS.
Dr. Daniel Coxe owned twenty-two shares of propri- ety, was Governor of West Jersey from 1687 to 1690,
7
and appointed Edward Hunlock his deputy. In 1691 he conveyed the government of West Jersey and terri- tories to a company of proprietaries called the West Jersey Society, for the sum of nine thousand pounds sterling. (Smith's N. J. pp. 190, 207.)
Possibly it was this conveyance of the right of gov- ernment that furnished the pretext for the sale of the numerous tracts of land in Hopewell and Maidenhead, to parties who were afterwards ejected from their lands because'the title under Thomas Revell was not valid. Of this more hereafter.
It may be interesting to know that there is every reason to believe that the land in this region was fairly purchased of the Indians. We have here a copy of the deed from the Indian Chiefs to Adlord Bowde, Agent of Dr. Daniel Coxe, as follows :
To all people to whom this prsent writing shall come, Hoham, Teplao- pamun, Mehekighue, Capernonickon, Nahusing, Mehkaekan and Sha- wonne, Indian Sachimachers and owners of the following tract of land in the Province of West Jersey, send greeting,
Know ye that the said Indian Sachimachers and owners of the Tract of land hereinafter mentioned for and in consideration of one hundred fathoms of wampum, Tenne stript Dutch Duffulds, Tenne broad stea- welwater matchroles sixty matchroles, Thirty Gunns, Twenty Kettles, Twenty shirts, fforty pair of stockings, Eighty Hatchetts, two half Anchors of powder, one hundred knives, one hundred and twenty barres of lead, sixty pounds of shott, one Anchor of Rumme, Two Bar- rels of Beere, Three pounds of Readlead, Three . hundred pipes, Three hundred needles, and Three Anchors of tobacco, by Adlord Bowde now of Burlington, m'chant and within ye Province of West Jersey aforesª at and before the sealing and delivery hereof for and on the behalfe of Daniell Coxe, Esq" Gov'no' of the said Province to them the said Indian Sachimachers and owners in hand paid whereof and wherewith they doe hereby acknowledge themselves fully contented & satisfy'd. Have granted bargained and sold, alyened, enfeoffed and confirmed, and by these presents do fully clearly and absolutely grant, bargain and sell, aleyn, enfeoffe and confirm unto the said Adlord Bowde, for and to the
8
only proper use & behoofe of the said Daniel Coxe and his Heirs & As- signs forever, All that and those tract and tracts of land beginning at a white oak markt on fouer sides being on the South South west side of Shabbicunck Creek by the roadside leading to New York three miles from the Delaware River or three miles from Hugh Stannylands, from thence running north by the land of Thomas Budd to a white poplar and a Beeche tree upon the head of Shabbicuncke creek on fouer sides and from thence to a small hickery standing by a black oak markt by the line of Thomas Budd aforesaid, from thence to a gumme tree stand- ing by the side of Stony Brook by a lyne tree, from thence along the line of Thomas Budd aforesaid to a line of markt trees running west north west to one white and one black oake marked on fouer sides a little above Menapenasson, and from thence by a direct line west and by north to the mouth of a creek called Laocoton running into Dellaware River about Atecokin's wigwam, and soe to run down the side of Della- ware river to a line of markt trees lying two miles above the ffalls mill, and from thence running East to the white oake on the south west side of Shabbacunke Creeke aforesaid. And also all and every the mines mineralls woods ffishings hawkings huntings and fowlings. And all & every the Rivers, Rivuletts, Creekes, Isles, Islands, Lakes, Ponds, Marshes, Swamps, Meadows, ffeedings, Pasturings, profitts, commodities & appurtenances whatsoever to the said granted tracts of land or any part thereof belonging or in any wise appertaining. And also all the estate, Right, tytle, Interest possession, pperty, claim and demand what- soever of them the said Indian Sachimachers & owners or any of them in Lawe & Equity & either of them of in or into the said granted p"mises or any pte or psel thereof, and the reversion & reversions, Remaind" and Remaindrs of the same and every pte thereof. To have & to hold to the said Adlord Bowde his Heirs & Assigns forever.
And the said Indian Sachimachers and owners doe for themselves and every of them & for their and every of their Heires & successors, cove- nant promise and agree to and with the said Adlord Bowde his heirs & Assignes by these presents. That it shall & may be lawful to and for the said Daniel Coxe his heirs & Assigns forever hereafter peaceably & quietly to have hold and enjoy the said granted & bargained tracts of land & every pte & pcel thereof to & for the uses aforesaid without any lawfull lett molestation or disturbance of them the said Indian Sachi- machers & owners or any of them or of their Heirs or successors or of from or by any other prson or p"sons whatsoever clayming or which shall or may clayme any estate Right, title, Interest, Inheritance or pperty of in or out of the said granted & bargained premises or any pte or pcell thereof by from or under them or any of them or by or through their or any of their meanes, assent consent tytle, privity pcurement.
In witness whereof the said Indian Sachimachers and owners have
9
ereunto sett their hands & affixed their seals (according to the English Anot.), the Thirtieth day of the month called March in the year one thou- sand six hundred and eighty eight Annoque R. R. Jacobi Sedi Angt & Quarter.
Signed, Sealed & delivered
НОНАМ,
in ye prsence of THOMAS BUDD,
TEPLAOPAMUN,
MEROPPE,
HENRY GREENLAND, THOMAS BOWMAN,
WEWEENOLING,
LUMMUSECON,
WILL™ BIDDLE, JUNE, JOHN WILLS, Interpreter.
PLEEZE,
MEHEEKISSUE,
COPENAKONISKOU,
NEHUOING,
NEHEEKAN,
SHAWSUNA.
The territory originally embraced in Hopewell was diminished on the south by the order of the court, of which there is the following record :
March 2nd, 1719-20. Ordered by the Court that the bounds of Tren- ton be entered upon the record as followeth, ordered accordingly. Begin- ning at the landing on Delaware river in Nottingham, running up sª river to the mouth of Jacob's creek, thence along said creek to a run called Jacob's run, thence up sª run to Thatcher's swamp, along a run that runs into Shabbakunk including Ralph Hart's plantation to the line that divides Hopewell from Maidenhead, Thence along sª line until it comes to the sª line of Mr. Trents and Tho" Lamberts land, thence along sª line between Mr. Trents and Thomas Lamberts to Delaware River and so along sª river to the first mentioned station.
By Act of Provincial Assembly, Jan. 21, 1709-10, Burlington county included Maidenhead, Hopewell and Amwell. Hunterdon county was set-off by Act of March 15, 1713-14, making the Assunpink the southern boundary, including what are now Trenton, Ewing, Lawrence and Hopewell in Mercer, with Morris, Sussex, Warren and Hunterdon counties.
10
We learn from public records that the following tracts of land were taken under the title of the West Jersey Society, Thomas Revell, Agent :
John Lee 250 of the 30,000 acres,
Feb. 20, 1693-4.
John Smith 500 of Do.
June 15, 1696. May 24, 1696.
Edward Hunt 1222 Do.
66 97} in Maidenhead,
within the branches of the Shabbakunk.
Col. Wm Hallet of the 30,000 acres 1000 acres July last 1697.
Joseph Sacket 300 acres Do. near Samuel Hunts.
Roger Parke 400 " Do. April 1697 at
Wissamenson, north side of Stony Brook.
Anne Parke 100 acres adjoining.
Andrew Smith for his son Thoss. Smith 100 acres above Roger Parkes.
Ap. 1697.
Andrew Smith 200 " more for his son Tho8. Smith Ap. 1697.
John Parke 300 acres near Thos. Twiggse
Feb. 27, 1696.
John Rue 200 “
Feb. 17, 1699.
Johannes Lawrenson 1050 acres July 12, 1697.
Edward Burrowes 200 acres
Nov. 7, 1699.
Andrew Smith 200 acres
May 20, 1688.
in which Deed the tract is called Hopewell.
That these, except the last named, and others with them, were bought under a title that did not prove valid, appears from the following. document and the events which succeeded its being signed :
Whereas the subscribers whose names are hereunto affixed having purchased several considerable Tracts of land of one Thomas Revell an Agent of ye honourable Societie of West Jersey (and other the residen- tors therein) being part of the tract known by ye name of ye Thirty Thousand above ye falls of Delaware Lying in ye Township of Hopewell, county of Hunterdon and Western Division of New Jersey and of him received such conveyance as by virtue of the Commission of Agency in the behalf of ye Honourable Society are Deemed and esteemed in law Effectual till a more fezable title can be made appear and whereas there is now claim laid to our severall Tracts aforesaid by Colonel Cox under a pretence of being Chief Proprietor thereof whose right to us has not been made appear, Therefore not thinking ourselves not ye least obliga- ted to surrender up our respective lands to the use of said Cox till more legall proprietorship can be made apparently by him appear we think
11
it requesit on such a claim to stand a Tryal as ye law Tantely shall Direct. In order to which proceeding ye sd Cox by his attory has Ejected several of us from our p"mises obliging us to an Issue and we . subscribers thinking it a hardship to carry on this Suit by one prticular person wherein so many is concerned we draw this instrument obliging each of us the subscribers our heirs Executors and administrators to ye each other in ye penal sum of fifTen pounds currt money of this province to be paid by the defauter if he stand not to and abide by evry of ye clauses abovesaid and well and truly perform this Covenant, That is to say Each of the Subscribers oblige themselves to each other in the pen- alty exprest equivalent to the land ye possess [he possesses] to emburse so much money towards ye carrying of this suit as the whole complement shall be found sufficient to defray the contingent charge of Trying this Title. In Testimony whereof we have hereunto set the hand this twenty Second of Aprill annogre Dominy 1731,
ISAAC HERRIN,
DAVID LAROE,
NATHANIEL MOORE,
JNO. FFIELD,
JOSEPH STOUT,
JOHN FIDLER,
THOMAS WINDER,
BARTHOLOM. ANDERSON,
THOMAS HOUGHTON,
THOMAS REED,
JOHN PARKE,
JNO. BLEW,
THO. CURTIS,
GEORGE WOOLSEY,
JOHN HIXON,
JONATHAN STOUT,
JNO. PARKE JUNR,
his
WILLIAM CORNELL,
JNO. mark HENDRICKSON,
RICHARD SMITH,
HENRY OXLEY,
RALPH HUNT,
WILLIAM CRICKFELD,
RALPH SMITH,
JOHN TITUS,
ELNATHAN BALDWIN,
ROGER PARKE JUNR,
DANIEL GANO,
BENJ. DRAKE,
JOSE. PARKE,
ROBERT BLACKWELL,
FRANCIS GANO,
JONATHAN FURMAN,
JOHN HOUGHTON,
JOHN HUNT,
JOHN MERRILL,
JOHN EVERITT,
ROGER PARKE,
THOS.
his T mark EVANS,
ANDREW PARKE,
THOS. SMITH,
NEHEMIAH BONHAM,
EPHRAIM TITUS, his
BENJ. MERELL,
JOHN I REED,
mark
JACOB KNOWLES,
ANDREW MERSHON.
These cases of ejectment were all removed by a rule
JOSEPH PRICE,
JAMES MELVIN,
JOSEPH HOUGHTON,
12
of the Supreme Court from the county of Hunterdon to the county of Burlington, because of the alleged preju- "dice in favor of the defendants in Hunterdon. A jury of twelve Quakers (with the Hon. Robert Lettice Hooper, Chief Justice) tried the case, and gave their verdict for the plaintiff. Murray was the attorney for Colonel Coxe, and Kinsey the attorney for the several defendants. One of the latter, George Woolsey, carried the case (as a test case) to the Court of Errors; but it was of no avail.
The records of the Supreme Court, with the several judgments engrossed on parchment rolls, are among the archives of the Supreme Court of New Jersey, and fur- nish a true history of this formidable trial, which was the great event of that period to the early settlers of this township, and kept the minds of the people in a state of agitation and distressing embarrassment. But the majority of them remained on the farms which they had originally settled, and in part improved; and some of these lands are to-day in possession of the lineal de- scendants.
Previous to these ejectment suits, and shortly after the settling of the boundary between Trenton and Hope- well, and when Hunterdon county embraced the five townships of Hanover, Amwell, Maidenhead, Trenton and Hopewell, in 1722, we have a roll of one hundred and thirty-eight men subject to taxation, sixteen of whom were single men. There were, besides, eleven slaves, seven hundred and eighty-five cattle and horses, and four hundred and eighty-seven sheep. There were two mills, that owned by Philip Ringo, now Moore's mill, and the other owned by Cornelius Anderson, in the south-western corner of Hopewell.
13
The number of acres of land then in possession was sixteen thousand nine hundred and ninety-five. The tax-list is as follows :
NAMES.
Single Men.
Mills.
Cattle and Horses.
Sheep.
Servants or Slaves.
Land.
Hue Standland
9
2
50
Thomas Smith
16
15
200
Richard Arnal
3
50
Nicolas Hagerte
3
130
Joshaway Ward
3
Eldad Davis
4
100
John Feald
13
12
200
Robert Darck
2
2
Abraham Laru
8
6
50
James Laru
6
4
50
Peter Laru
10
10
50
Thomas Woacer
3
John Allbado
6
200
Samuel Bould win
6
500
Frances Hege
7
600
Ely Allbado
8
200
Cornelus Allbado
5
150
Frances Fonnoy
10
150
Robert Shaw
7
140
Timothy Titus
6
1
200
Thomas Roberds
4
40
William Reede
1
Joseph Huff
1
James Evanse
6
200
Robert Maclelean
7
100
John Johnson
4
100
Roger Woolverton
1
Andrew Millburne
1
Jonathan Sticklin Senor
1
Henery Heldren
1
John Bennett
1
John Murched
16
25
1
200
John Coe
4
40
Ezekel Oleno
1
Nathaniel Moore
16
25
300
Charles Huff
4
100
Jonathan Stickler Jr
1
Joseph Hart
1
John Smith
12
1
166
William Merrel Juner
20
7
130
Hezekiah Bonham Jr
5
150
Philip Ringo
1
4
50
Benjamin Ďrack
17
260
Joshua Andrus June
6
Frederick Debough
7
Aran funhuck
10
200
Tunus Huff
4
50
L
2
·
·
14
NAMES.
Single Men.
Mills.
Cattle and Horses.
Sheep.
Servants or Slaves.
Lands.
Andru Routten hors
5
110
Danel Deno
1
50
Samuel Runyoun
2
50
Jemse Hide
9
200
Danel Geano
7
100
Steven Geano
6
50
Joseph Combs
1
24
20
2
300
Benjamin Merel
5
2
150
Jabes Jarvis
4
100
Joseph Davis
12
8
350
Edward Butler
1
100
Johannes Hendrikx
13
10
149
Samuel Fitch
16
200
John Everit
5
100
John Framton
14
6
100
Samuel Furman Jr
3
50
Jonathan Furman
5
4
50
Thomas Runyon
15
16
150
Viencien Runyon
2
Roger Parke Jr
16
16
200
Roger Parke Sener
15
20
300
John Reede
16
4
240
John Sharp
1
William Whited
1
3
60
Samuel Furman Sener
10
6
100
John Capender
5
90
Joshua Ely
10
200
Richard Smith
10
100
Joses Lombard
2
Joseph Stout
28
18
230
Hezekiah Bonel
1
10
Isaak Asstoll
10
140
David Stout
10
1
250
Thomas Evans
5
8
100
Thomas Curtes
15
14
150
William Brient sener
6
6
100
Robard Blackwel
8
250
Enoch Armitage
11
4
250
Ralph Hunt
9
6
300
Thomas Huf
6
Henere Hendrix
6
100
Jeremiah Hendrix
1
1
Addom Bratten
3
50
William Larason
11
9
160
John Titus
22
10
200
Efrom Titus
4
100
·
.
3
Auanies Olen
3
Barth Corvine
.
·
·
.
Thomas Combs
4
9
John Park
Joseph Longlee
L
William Merel Sener
Nehemiah Bonham
Peter Hendrix
·
15
NAMES.
Single Men.
Mills.
Cattle and Horses.
Sheep.
Servants or Slaves.
Lands.
Ralph Hunt stone brock
7
100
John Hunt yoreng
2
100
Elisha Bord
5
40
Elnathan Boulder
18
20
100
Thomas Reede
8
200
John Hart
10
6
200
Samuel Hunt
9
10
200
John Hunt
13
11
200
Edward Hart
4
50
Isaac Herren
9
7
260
Thomas Merel
9
100
Peter Ringo
1
50
William Cornel
20
30
1
200
Andru Foster
1
100
Jemse Terrel
4
3
Calap Carman
4
90
Andru Smith
25
15
1
500
John Hickson
14
100
William Larance
12
5
200
Henery Oxly
15
7
200
William Huff
5
1
500
William Briant Stone bruk
13
28
300
Cornelus Andrus sun
17
3
134
Samuel Everit
9
4
100
Joseph Reeder
7
200
William Miller
2
120
Joseph Reed sener
5
13
80
Thomas Finne
1
4
60
Jemes Melven
9
1
500
David Price
3
William Lin
5
200
Joseph Nasbet
1
Nicolas Roberds
3
Jorge Wolse
11
200
Thomas Burrus
13
18
297
NOTE .- In 1726 Hunterdon county had
Males above 16,
892
Females "
743
Males under " ·
·
.
· 851
Females
750
Total
3236
·
.
.
·
.
·
·
.
.
This is perhaps the best place to insert " A Duplicate for the Township of Hopewell, June 26, 1753."
At a meeting of the assessors of the county of Hunterdon at the house of Philip Ringo in Amwell on the 12th day of June 1753 pursuant to an
·
.
·
·
C
1
Joseph Reede Jr
·
16
order from the Justices and freeholders of sd county to divide the Quota for raising the sum of One Hundred and Thirty Pounds for repairing the Gaol and Court House and killing wolves and panthers &c. The Quota of each Township is as follows viz
Kingwood .
12
13 0
Bethlehem .
·
Reading
18 4
5
Lebanon
21
6
8
Amwell
34
5
2
Hopewell
16
12 5
Maidenhead
6
16 8
Trenton
4
15
9
Jos. DEACON,
GEO. READING,
CORNELIUS LARE,
CHARLES HOFF,
WM. BAY,
WM. BATES,
JOHN VANCLEVE,
AZARIAH HUNT,
Assessors.
8.
d.
s. d
Andrew Smith Esq
5
0
Cornelius Polhemus 2 4
Andrew Smith Jun™
3
7
Cornelius Anderson
3
4
Andrew Mershon
2
1 Charles Hoff
3
2
Andrew Foster
1
10
Charles Sexton
2
4
Abraham Laroe
1
10
Cornelius Ringo Eq™
1 7
Andrew Muirhead
2
6
Cornelius Wiliamson
9
Adam Ague
1
5 Daniel Cox
8
2
Andrew Titus
1
6 Daniel Hart
3
5
Abraham Anderson
1
10 Daniel Genoe
4
2
Azariah Hunt
1
9 David Stout
5
3
Andrew Vannoy
1
0
David Stout Sen
7
10
Andrew Morgan
3
3
Daniel Biles
6
Benj' Cornwall
2
9 Edward Burrows
2
1
Benj'" Pelton
4
2 Edward Hunt R S
2
6
John Soverns
1
0 Edward Hunt
2
7
Benj' Anderson
2
0 Edmund Palmer
1 10
Benj'" Ketchum
0
5
Elnathan Baldwin
11
Benj'" Temple
4
8 Eliakim Anderson
1
Benj'n Stout Sen™
5
10 Edmund Herin
1 8
Benj'" Stout Jun™
1
5 Ephraim Titus
2 2
Benj" Merril
1
5 Elnathan Moore
11
Benj" Drake
2 11 Edward Cooper
4
Barnet Christopher
2
0 Ephraim Merril
4
£.
S.
d.
15
5
11
Abraham Moor
1
7 David Price
1
17
s. d.
s.
d.
Everitt Oxley
3 Josiah Furman 1
1
Ephraim Runyon
9 Jonathan Furman 0
7
Francis Blackwell
2
Joseph Hart
3
Francis Vannoy
3
3 Joseph Golden Sen James Adams
4
5
George Woolsey
3
Gerrit Johnson
4
7 Joseph Stout
4 4
Henry Woolsey
6 Joshua Bunn
1 10
Henry Ringo
9 James Larason
2
1
Henry Oxley
2
7 James Hunt
1
9
Henry Vankirk
3
10 Jacob Ketcham
1
Hugh Howell
1
9 James Matthews
1
4
Henry Pinkerton
11 Joseph Stout Col
6
5
John Bord
6 James Larue
2
5
John Peter Kempall
7 Josiah Hart
1
10
John Davis
1
5 James Fitch
1
John Porter
1
4 Jonathan Gray
1 5
John Ronze Sen™
1
9
Joseph Gray
1
6
John Fider Sen
2
7 Jeremiah Smith
2
8
John Phillips Esq"
4
9 Joseph Moore Sen
4 10
John Bainbridge
3
6 Joseph Severns
3
10
John Cornwall
1
5 Joseph Burrows
2
7
John Carpenter
1
6 Joseph Disborough
1
John Hart Jna son
2
9 Jacob Blackwell
3
9
John Moor Gs son
1
8 Isaac Herin Esq™
3
3
John Welling
5
3 Joseph Titus .
1
4
John Ketcham
1
1 Joseph Vankirk Isaac Anderson
1
2
John Skidmore
1
4 Joseph Baldwin
1
11
Joseph Brown
5 Jacob Stout
1 4
John Titus Jr
2
2 Josiah Golden Jr
4
John Lambert
2
3 Moses Baldwin
1
4
John Moor Nathans son
3
Matthew Hixon
2
2
John Titus Sen
3
4 Mathias Baker
1
11
John Roberts
1 Mary Burt
1
11
John Houghton
1 10 Nathaniel Moore
6
4
John Ballard
5 Nathan Moore
1
9
John Anderson
4 Noah Hunt
2
6
Joseph Moore Jr
1 11 Nathan Hunt
1
4
Joseph Bonham
1
1 Philip Titus
2
2
Josiah Howell
1
2 Peter Parn
1
Joseph Price
2
5 Peter Covenhoven
2
8
Jonathan Smith
3
5 Philip Palmer
1 6
Joseph Parke
3 Philip Roberts
7
1
8
John Hart Edwards son
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