USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume I > Part 29
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(VIII) Alfred (2), eldest child of Alfred and Priscilla Middleton (Wright) Cramer, was born in Camden, New Jersey, February 13, 1871. He was a pupil in the public schools of Camden, and for one year in the Friends' Central School of Philadelphia ; prepared for college at Peddie Institute, Hightstown, New Jersey ; graduated from Princeton College in the class of 1895, with the degree of A. B .; graduated from the medical department of the University of Pennsylvania, class of 1898, with the degree of M. D .: studied for a short time at the University of Vienna, Austria ; was resident physician at the Lackawanna Hospital, Scranton, Pennsylvania, and at the Cooper Hospital, Camden, New Jersey. Since January 1, 1901, he has been practicing in Camden. In the winter of 1901-02 he was superintendent of the Municipal Hospital, Camden, during a small-pox epidemic. From 1903-08 he was clinical assistant at the Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, and is now oph- thalmologist to the Cooper Hospital, Camden. He is a member of the local medical societies, and of the American Medical Association. In 1907 he became a member of the Pennsylvania Historical Society. Alfred Cramer Jr. mar- ried. June 9, 1906, Anna Browning, daughter of Isaac and Josephine ( Browning ) Donghten, of Camden, New Jersey, and granddaughter of Maurice and Anna (Smith) Browning. Isaac
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Doughten serves as deputy comptroller of the state of New Jersey.
(IX) Alfred (3), son of Alfred Jr. and Anna Browning (Doughten) Cramer, was born at 218 North Fifth street, Camden, New Jersey, December 27, 1907, being in the ninth generation from William Cramer the immi- grant.
HOADLEY The surname Hoadley was originally a place name. There are two parishes of the name in county Sussex, England, and as early as 1280 Margaret de Hothlegh and her father Solomon are mentioned in Sussex. In 1296 William de Hodlegh, in 1318 Maurice de Hodleye, are mentioned in Sussex records.
(I) William Hoadley (or Hoadle, as he wrote it) was born in England, about 1630, and was the immigrant ancestor of this family. He settled in Saybrook, Connecticut, as early as 1663, and in 1666 bought the home lot of Rev. Abraham Pierson, of Branford, Con- necticut, when the latter removed to New Jer- sey, transplanted his Branford church and founded the city of Newark and the First Presbyterian Church of that city. This lot was on the west side of the public green. where the Totoket House now stands. Mr. Hoadley was a merchant, and his shop was next his dwelling house. He signed the Plan- tation Covenant of Branford, January 20, 1667-8, and was admitted a freeman in Octo- ber, 1669. He was a representative from Branford in the general assembly between 1678 and 1685, and one of the patentees of the town on February 16, 1685-6; selectman sev- cral years between 1673 and 1690. At a town meeting held June 26, 1683, he was appointed to keep the ordinary in Branford. The death of his wife, perhaps, caused him to give up the tavern, and his successor was appointed March 28, 1687. He was one of the grand jurors at a court of quarter sessions at New Haven in June, 1688; one of a committee appointed Oc- tober II, 1686 to make application to the gen- eral assembly at Hartford for liberty for the town to embody into a church estate. In 1699 he was on a committee to build the meeting house, and often served on committees to pro- cure a minister for the town. The town gave him permission in December, 1701, to build a pew for himself and family in the meeting house, and for two of his sons and their wives, he building at his own charge, and after his decease and his wife's the pew to revert to the
town, provided the town pay reasonable price for it.
He filed his ear-mark, a capital T and a half- penny, January 28, 1670, and December 19, 1674. He was elected constable December 21. 1677; served on a school committee in 1678; was on a committee to run the line between Branford and Wallingford, March 14, 1678-9; was elected a lister or assessor of the town, September 1I, 1679; from time to time served on committees to lay out lots granted to pro- prietors of the town and inhabitants. He was elected March 25, 1679, on a turnpike com- mittee, and June 17, 1680, was elected on a committee to consider some claims of New Haven to land in Branford. He and Edward Barker were appointed a committee April 26, 1681, to take an account of "what corn there is in town." He was a town auditor, elected December 6, 1681. He owned much land and left a considerable estate, as shown by the in- ventory dated December 27, 1709, four pages in length, as copied in the New Haven probate records. Among the items were : House, barn and homelot; ten acres of land and meadow in the Mill Quarter, meadow land in the same section, meadow in Little Mill Quarter on near side of an island ; various other meadows ; a parcel at Stony Creek; another at the mouth of Pine Creek ; plowing land at Great Island, Little Plain, Indian Neck and Beaver Swamp; upland and swamp at Cole pit plain ; piece of swamp on the back side of the town ; pasture ; parcel called the ho-ground : 159 acres of Fourth Division; right in undivided land; sixteen acres at Stratford ; twenty acres at Hop Yard Plain and twenty acres near the school land, etc. Mr. Hoadley was called captain and doubtless commanded a company of militia at some time.
The name and date of death of the first wife of William Hoadley are unknown. He had eight children, according to the list taken January 17. 1676, but the names of but seven are known and but six survived him. He died in November or December, 1709, aged about seventy-nine years. His will was presented but not allowed by the court, and the settle- ment of his estate was the occasion of a long and unhappy litigation. The will is not to be found and its provisions are now unknown. He married (second) about 1686, Mary (Bul- lard) Farrington, widow of John Farrington, of Dedham, Massachusetts, and daughter of William Bullard of Charlestown, Massachu- setts, and Dedham, who died May 12, 1703.
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in Branford. Mr. Hoadley married (third) in Branford, about 1704, Ruth (Bowers) Fris- bie, widow of John Frisbie, and daughter of Rev. John and Bridget (Thompson) Bowers. She was baptized December 20, 1657, in New Haven, and died April 26, 1736, in Branford. Children of first wife: I. William, married (first) Abigail Frisbie; (second) Elizabeth Frost. 2. Samuel, mentioned below. 3. John, married Mercy Crane. 4. Mary, married, about 1698, Nathaniel Finch, of Branford. 5. Elizabeth, baptized February 15, 1668, died be- fore her father. 6. Hannah, baptized Novem- ber 8, 1670; married Nathaniel Johnson, of Branford. 7. Abraham, married Elizabeth Maltby.
(II) Samuel, son of William Hoadley, was born about 1666, in Branford, Connecticut, and died February 8, 1714, in his native town. He was killed under a haymow. On April 24, 1683, he was chosen one of the haywards. He lived at Hopyard Plain, also called Hoppit and Hoppin Plain, Branford, where he was granted with others a parcel of land a mile square in the western part of the town. The inventory of his estate was filed December 16, 1714, and amounted to
one thousand eighty-seven pounds. He married, March 6, 1689, in Bran- ford, Abigail, daughter of John and Mary (Bullard) Farrington, born April 30, 1668 in Dedham, Massachusetts, died February 26, 1745, in Branford. Children, born in Bran- ford: I. Abigail, January 5, 1690; married December 5, 1711, Joseph Frisbie. 2. William, December 10, 1692; married Mary Harrison. 3. Hannah, December 16, 1694; married, June 30, 1720, Daniel Harrison. 4. Samuel, Febru- ary 20, 1696; mentioned below. 5. Gideon, April 17, 1699, died young. 6. Lydia, Decem- ber 23, 1701; married, June 12, 1723, Josiah Harrison. 7. Benjamin, July 24, 1704, mar- ried Lucy Harrison. 8. Daniel, December 9, 1706; married Elizabeth Howd. 9. Timothy, July 14, 1709; married Mary Harrison.
(III) Samuel (2), son of Samuel (I) Hoadley, was born in Branford, February 20, 1696, and died there February 22, 1756. He lived in Branford, on what is now known as Pave street. He was a very corpulent man. He married, in October, 1720, Lydia Frisbie, born June 1, 1698, died February 6, 1759, daughter of Caleb and Hannah Frisbie, of Branford. Children: 1. Abigail, born August 24, 1722; married, December 22, 1750, Paul Dudley. 2. Gideon, born November 24, 1724; married Martha 3. Samuel, born June 24, 1727; married (first) Sybil Jones ;
(second) Ruth Leete; (third) Hannah (Howe) Palmer. 4. Ebenezer, born Novem- ber 9, 1729; married Martha Hoadley. 5. Jacob, born March 8, 1731, mentioned below. 6. Lydia, born January 1, 1734; married, June 25, 1753, Thomas Gould. 7. Jerusha, born February 20, 1736 ; married, October 16, 1760, Stephen Rogers. 8. James, born February 25, 1738; married Lydia (Buell) Hoadley.
(IV) Jacob, son of Samuel (2) Hoadley, was born in Branford, March 8th, 1731, and died in West Turin (Collinsville), New York, in November, 1816. He is buried in the old Collinsville cemetery. About 1771 he re- moved from Branford to Westfield, Massachu- setts, and finally settled in Turin, in the part of New York state known then as the Black River country. He was a farmer. He mar- ried, July 1, 1752, in Branford, Jemima Buell, born in Killingworth, Connecticut, October 26, 1735, died in Westfield, January 25, 1791, daughter of Captain Samuel and Lydia (Wil- cox) Buell, and sister of Lydia Buell, who married James Hoadley. Children, all except the last two born in Branford : 1. Jared, March 18, 1753-4; married Ann Kellogg. 2. Phile- mon, June II, 1755; mentioned below. 3. Lucy, May 21, 1757 ; married - Baker, of Westfield. 4. Jacob, August 19, 1759, died young. 5. Jemima, January 30, 1762 ; married Gunn, of Westfield. 6. Lydia, No- vember 20, 1764; married, 1783, Aaron Dem- ing, of Bennington, Vermont. 7. Hannah, July I, 1767; married, May 31, 1787, Hanes Deming. 8. Mary, February 1, 1770; married Nathan Wood, of Morristown, New York. 9. Abigail, September 12, 1772; married Edmund Millard, of Turin. 10. Jacob, October 7, 1779; married Elizabeth Crandall.
(V) Philemon, son of Jacob Hoadley, was born in Branford, June II, 1755, and died January 18, 1811, at West Turin, New York. He removed from Branford to Westfield, Massachusetts, and his eldest child was bap- tized there September 14, 1777. She may have been born there, although recorded in Branford. The next six children were born in Westfield, the seventh is said to have been born in Montgomery, and the youngest in Southampton, Massachusetts. He finally re- moved to Turin, New York, and lived near his father, dying before him. He and his wife are buried in Collinsville, New York. He was a soldier in the revolution, in Captain Nathan Rowley's company, Hampshire county regi- ment, under Lieutenant Colonel Timothy Rob- inson, and was at Ticonderoga in February,
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1777, credited with a service of two months and twenty-three days. He married, May I, 1776, in Branford, Mary Rogers, born there February 22, 1753, died in West Turin Decem- ber II, 1843, daughter of Jonathan and Mary (Foote) Rogers. Children: I. Sophia, born September 18, 1776; married John Moore, of Martinsburgh, New York. 2. Irene, born May 12, 1779; married, 1797, Nathaniel Moore, of Leyden. 3. Lyman, born October 28, 1781 ; mentioned below. 4. Mary, born September 5, 1784; married, 1824, Nathaniel Moore, husband of her deceased sister Irene. 5. Roxanna, born February 5, 1787 ; married Josiah P. Raymond, of Turin. 6. Chester, born November 7, 1790; married Abigail Hooker. 7. Lester, born March 4, 1794 ; mar- ried Sarah Chipman. 8. Philemon, born March 31, 1797; married (first) Rosetta Goodrich; (second) Betsey ( Bradley ) Plant. (VI) Lyman, son of Philemon Hoadley, was born in Westfield, Massachusetts, October 28, 1781, and died in Collins- ville, New York, February 4, 1861. He re- moved when young to Turin, with his father, and lived there the rest of his life. He was baptized June 12, 1814, and joined the Close Communion Baptist church in Turin. When this church united with the Free Will Baptist, he followed with it and continued a faithful
member until his death. He was generous to a fault, and his loss was deeply felt by the whole community. He owned a fine farm near Collinsville, town of Turin, which he sold in 1856 and removed to the village, where he died. He was buried in the family lot in the old burying-ground in Collinsville. Mr. Hoad- ley served as a soldier in the war of 1812 from July 30 to August 22, 1814, in Captain Heze- kiah Scoville's company, New York state militia, and marched from West Turin to Sackett's Harbor. He received from the United States government, in 1855, a warrant for one hundred and sixty acres of land in what is now the state of Minnesota, as a re- ward for his military service. He married (first) about 1803, in Turin, Lydia Scoville, born 1787, in Turin, died there January 9, 1827, daughter of Hezekiah and Lydia (Bald- win) Scoville. He married (second) July 13, 1843, in Rome, New York, Charlotte Eliza Cowles, born in Durham, New York, April 28, 1812, died in Newark, New Jersey, September 29, 1893, daughter of Orrin and Sophronia (Hitchcock) Cowles. Children of first wife, born in Turin : I. Sophia, June 26, 1805 ; mar- ried (first) George Sheldon, of Russia, New
York; (second) March 15, 1848, Medad B. Hoyt, of Collinsville. 2. Statira, November 4, 1807 ; married Riley Stillman, of Houns- field, New York. 3. Lyman, 1808, died young. 4. Adelia Frances, January 7, 1810, died April 19, 1858; unmarried. 5. Louisa, March 19, 1812; married, June 29, 1843, Albert Fowler, of Hammond, New York. 6. Mary Ann, Sep- tember 7, 1815; married, February 2, 1836, John J. Smith, of Sheboygan Falls, Wiscon- sin. 7. Julia, March 20, 1817 ; married Albert Dean, of Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin. 8. Lyman George, October 20, 1822, died Sep- tember 22, 1842. Children of second wife, born in Collinsville, New York: 9. Philemon Lyman, December 6, 1845; mentioned below. IO. James Hart, February 28, 1847; married Sarah E. (Scott) Snyder. Is now Rev. James H. Hoadley, D. D., a Presbyterian pastor in New York City. Children: i. Harwood, Ph. D., born February 26, 1877; ii. Ruth, born December 26, 1883.
(VII) Philemon Lyman, son of Lyman Hoadley, was born at Collinsville, Lewis county, New York, December 6, 1845. He was educated in the public schools in his native town, and at Whitestown Seminary and Rome Academy, residing in Rome, New York, from 1862 to 1865. His first initiation into business life was made in Camden, Oneida county, New York, in 1865, where, in addition to filling the position of clerk and teller in a bank, he also acted as local agent for several insurance com- panies. That he was successful as an insur- ance agent is indicated by the fact that before the end of three years (in 1869) the Hanover Fire Insurance Company of New York, recog- nizing the material of which the young agent was made, appointed him special agent for the state of New Jersey and the eastern half of New York. Mr. Hoadley remained with the Hanover until the latter part of 1874, when he was induced to accept an official position with the American Fire Insurance Campany of Newark. The place and the man to fill it had met, and there he has ever since remained. One promotion succeeded another until he was made a director in April, 1899; vice-president in December, 1900, and president in June, 1907, the office which he holds at present.
Mr. Hoadley is distinctively an underwriter of ideas which make for business success. He is coolly calculating, placidly undemonstrative but withal a man of kindly disposition and cordial manner. In politics he is a Republican but has avoided political honors, devoting his undivided service to the American Fire Insur-
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ance Company, which company's pronounced success is a monument to his fidelity, energy and ability. He occupies a prominent position in the financial world, being a director of the National Newark Banking Company, of the New Jersey Fire Alarm Company, and of the Provident Loan Association of Newark, of which latter association he was the organizer and first president. He is a life member of the New Jersey Historical Society, a member of the Sons of the American Revolution, of the Essex Club and the Forest Hill Field Club, but not of any secret orders. He is also a member and one of the trustees of the First Presbyterian Church of Newark.
He married, August 5, 1869, Mary Aurelia Olmstead, of Camden, New York, born Octo- ber 14, 1846, in Camden, daughter of Anson Gates and Almira (Plumley) Olmstead. Chil- dren: I. Frederick, born March 13, 1870, in Princeton, New Jersey ; married, June 22, 1898, Sarah Y. Areson, of Montclair, New Jersey. 2. George O., born in Newark, New Jersey, July 27, 1872 ; married, April 9, 1902, Gertrude Schleicher, of Indianapolis, Indiana. 3. Alliene, born in Newark, New Jersey, October 25, 1878. 4. Helen Maronette, born in Newark, New Jersey, March 17, 1883.
(VIII) Frederick, eldest son of Philemon Lyman Hoadley, was born in Princeton, New Jersey, March 13, 1870. His early education was obtained in the public schools of Newark, and in 1888 he graduated from the high school of that city, and began the study of architecture with Charles P. Baldwin, of Newark. After completing this course of study Mr. Hoadley became for a short while a draughtsman in the office of Cady, Berg & See, architects, in New York City. This position, however, was soon resigned to accept a better and more lucrative one with Rossiter & Wright, a well known firm of New York architects, with whom he continued a number of years, acquiring a varied and valuable experience. In 1898, owing to the depression in general business, which espe- cially affected building operations, Mr. Hoad- ley accepted a position with the American Fire Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, of which his father (now its president) was agency secretary. In this new field Frederick Hoadley's ability soon won appreciative recog- nition and two years after entering on his new work, he was in 1900 appointed a special agent of the company, and for a number of years was a member of the Underwriters Association of the Middle Department, and an active mem-
ber of several of the Association's important New Jersey committees.
January Ist, 1909, he was elected assistant secretary of the American Insurance Com- pany, which office he now holds. Notwith- standing the engrossing character of his work, Mr. Hoadley has not (either by his family and friends or by his employers) been allowed to wrap up his architectural talent in a napkin, but at different times has been called upon to . exercise it for their benefit. In 1904 he de- signed the American Insurance Company's Western Department Office Building at Rock- ford, Illinois, and subsequently designed the residences of his brother-in-law, Dr. William H. Areson, at Upper Montclair, New Jersey ; of James H. Worden, at Montclair, and of his father, Philemon L. Hoadley, in Mt. Prospect avenue, Newark.
In politics Mr. Hoadley is a Republican, but he has never sought or held office. Although himself a Presbyterian, he has always, since his marriage, attended the services of the Epis- copal church, in which his children have been baptized and in which his wife is a communi- cant. June 22nd, 1898, Mr. Hoadley married, at Montclair, New Jersey, Sarah Young Are- son, born in New York City, May 5, 1871, daughter of William Henry and Annie (Scoales) Areson. Children: I. Philemon, born January 17, 1902. 2. Frederick Areson, March 10, 1904.
(VIII) George Olmstead, second son of Philemon Lyman Hoadley, was born in New- ark, New Jersey, July 27, 1872, and obtained his education in the public schools of that city. After filling the position of clerk in a New York office for a brief period, and a similar position for a short time with the Clark Thread Company of Newark, he engaged in the fire insurance business; then tried the hardware business at Somerville, New Jersey, where he was proprietor of a retail store for a few years, but was unsuccessful, and resumed the fire insurance business, representing the American Insurance Company of Newark with marked success for about six years, as State Agent for Indiana. In July, 1905, the company trans- ferred him to the Pacific coast, with head- quarters at San Francisco, where he passed through the thrilling experiences connected with the great earthquake and conflagration which practically destroyed that city in April, 1906. Mr. Hoadley is now associate manager of the American Insurance Company's Pacific Department and resides in San Francisco.
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While a resident of Newark he took great interest in military affairs, and was elected captain of Company H, First Regiment, N. G. N. J. He married, April 9, 1902, in Indian- apolis, Indiana, Gertrude, daughter of Adolf and Elizabeth (Brown) Schleicher, born Sep- tember 7th, 1881. Child : George, born in San Francisco, September 24, 1909.
CARTER Not every family whose name stands highest on the roll of honor in this country can trace its lineage back to the English or other home from which it sprang ; and fewer still can carry that line back step by step for many generations. It is therefore a special source of gratification that the Carters of America can not only go back generation after generation for nine degrees in the mother country, but also can trace the interrelationship of all the families in the new world.
(I) The first Carter of whom there seems to be official record is Johannes le Carter, of Wodemanse Manor, in Beverly, a town of the East Riding, county York, England, where he owned land which brought him in a rental of two shillings, six pence. He is mentioned first in a placita coram rege roll, in the Trinity term of the King's court of county Kent, in the 25th year of Edward I. (1297). He died leaving issue : Johannis, referred to below ; William, married Elizabeth; Ingram, and his wife Alicia ; Richard, died unmarried; Henri- cus and his wife Margaretta.
(II) Johannes le Carter, son of Johannes of Beverly, moved to Cussworth parish with his wife Agnes, and in 1349 he is mentioned in the will of William de Shriburn, rector of Bol- ton Percy. He left children: Nicholas; Ra- delphus, and his wife Alicia ; William, referred to below ; Sabina ; Avicia and Thomas. Thomas removed to St. Alban's, county Hertford, be- fore 1392, and had two sons, Edmond-who was custos capellae SS. Angelorum, that is, vicar of the Chapel of the Holy Angels, in the town of York, and whose son William was the ancestor of the London Carters; and Rich- ard, from whom is descended Rev. Thomas Carter, who emigrated to New England in the "Planter" and became the first pastor of the church at Woburn, Massachusetts; and also Colonel John Carter, of Upper Norfolk coun- ty, Virginia, who was the father of Robert or "King" Carter, of the James river.
(III) William Carter, son of Johannes of Cussworth, married Mathilda Marshall; chil-
dren: John, referred to below; William, Thomas and Richard.
(IV) John, son of William Carter, became a freeman of York in 1476, and by his wife Margaret had children: I. Nicholas, who was knighted and received as his arms: Argent, a chevron between three cartwheels, vert; crest : on a mount vert a greyhound sejant argent sustaining a shield of the last charged with a cartwheel vert. 2. John, referred to below. 3. James. 4. Brian. 5. Thomas.
(V) John, son of John Carter, of York, was a merchant in that town, and on the jury list in 1500. Children: Richard, and William, referred to below.
(VI) William, son of John Carter of York, merchant, was an inn-holder, in 1548 a free- man, and married May, daughter of Christian Bedell ; children: Martin; Christian, referred to below ; Nicholas.
(VII) Christian, son of William Carter, of York, was living at Horingham in 1605 with his wife Isabella ; children : I. Francis, mar- ried Frances Webster, of Hunsingon. 2. George. whose wife was Mary Watkinson of Heming- borow. 3. Michael, married the widow Janet Lacke, of Halifax. 4. John, whose wife was Mary Buck, of Sowerby. 5. Thomas, referred to below. 6. William. 7. Matthias.
(VIII) Thomas, son of Christian Carter, of Horingham, married, in 1594, Ellen Wade, of Alne ; children : 1. Roger, referred to below. 2. Nicolas, married Dorothy Strangeways. 3. Susan, wife of Samuel Firth. 4. Mary, wife of William Robinson. 5. John, whose wife was Jane Piers. 6. Jesset, wife of Robert Holmes. 7. Almond, married Anna William- son.
(IX) Roger, son of Thomas Carter, was born in Helperby, county York, May 8, 1595, and married, in St. Michael's le Belfry, York, November 25, 1627, Emma, daughter of Will- iam Rayles and Abigail Haxupp. Children : I. Nicholas, referred to below. 2. John, mar- ried Phebe Foster, December 12, 1647. 3. Roger, who when he married Marie Haxupp, June 8, 1652, stated that he was the "son of Roger Carter of Helperby and Ellen Carter, and brother of Nicholas Carter, now in New England. 4. Benjamin, married Obedrina Northruop.
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