USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume I > Part 33
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churchman and a communicant of Trinity Church, Newark, Mr. Gifford labored long and earnestly. For twenty-four years he was sen- ior warden of the parish, and in addition to his labors in this office he took an active part in the rising Tractarian discussions of his day by writing and publishing a strong controversial pamphlet entitled the "Unison of the Liturgy." During the greater part of his life he was a man of robust health, and it is said that he en- joyed nothing better than a walk from Tren- ton to Newark, a distance of fifty miles, which he often accomplished in going to and from the sessions of the supreme court. He died May 12, 1859. By his wife, Louisa C. Cammann, of New York, Mr. Gifford had six children : I. Charles Louis Cammann, treated below. 2. Ellen M., now living at 50 Park place, Newark. 3. John Archer, treated below. 4. Louisa Cammann. 5. George Ernst Cammann, treated below. 6. Philip A.
(III) Charles Louis Cammann, eldest son of Archer and Louisa C. (Cammann) Gifford, was born in Newark, November, 1825, died in that city, March 29, 1877. In 1845 he gradu- ated as a member of the third class of the Law School of Yale University, and returning home studied law in the office of his father until he was admitted to the bar as attorney in January, 1847. For the next four years, while still con- tinuing his legal studies, Mr. Gifford acted as deputy collector for the port of Newark under his father's successor, James Hewson, and in January, 1850, was admitted to the bar as counsellor. In 1857 he was elected a member of the house of assembly, and for the three following years, 1858 to 1860, was returned as state senator, during the last mentioned year serving as president of that body. For years Mr. Gifford had been identified with the Dem- ocratic party, and with the exception of the following instance he continued to be so throughout his life. In 1861 he was the anti- Democratic candidate for the mayoralty against Moses Bigelow, but was defeated. June 29, 1872, Mr. Gifford was sworn in as the presiding judge of the court of common pleas for Essex county to fill the unexpired term of Judge Frederick H. Teese, who had removed to another county and resigned. In this po- sition he was succeeded about two years later by Judge Caleb S. Titsworth, owing to Judge Gifford's failing health. In the following year, 1875, Judge Gifford and his wife went to Europe in the hope that the voyage and the rest would give him back his former vigor ; for a short time the trip seemed to have a salu-
tary effect ; he gradually, however, grew worse, and after many months of suffering, died in his own house, 55 Fulton street, at two o'clock in the morning. All his life he had been a com- municant of Trinity Church, Newark, and on the Sunday after his death he was buried from there by the Rev. John H. Eccleston, D. D. By his wife, Helen Matoaka, daughter of Will- iam and Rebecca Murray, of Virginia, Judge Gifford had six children: I. William Murray, born 1852. 2. Charles, died in infancy. 3. Oswald Cammann, 1856, died 1892; married Frances Kingsland and left three children : Ed- mund, Virginia and Helen Murray. 4. Susan V., unmarried. 5. Frank W., unmarried. 6. Archer, born July 8, 1859; married, April 24, 1889, Evelyn A., daughter of Henry W. and Mary G. (Abeel) Duryee; has two children : Gertrude M. and Helen J., and is now engaged in the woolen commission business.
(III) John Archer, second son of Archer and Louisa C. (Cammann) Gifford, was born in Newark, October 21, 1831, and is now liv- ing with his family at 60 Park place, in that city. After receiving his early education under the tuition of Burr Baldwin, a noted educator in his day, he graduated from the Newark Academy, and at once started on a business career. From 1848 to 1854 he worked in the employ of Sheldon Smith, man- ufacturer and dealer in carriage hardware. In 1863 this firm was dissolved and Mr. Gif- ford and Cornelius Van Horn founded the firm of C. Van Horn & Company, carriage hardware. In 1871 the corporate name of the business was changed to Gifford, Beach & Company, with Mr. Gifford for the senior partner, and ten years later, when Mr. Beach retired, Mr. Gifford continued the business alone until 1903, when he also retired from ac- tive business, and left the business to his son, Harry H. Gifford, who now conducts the same under the firm name of John A. Gifford & Son.
Mr. Gifford is a Democrat, and although drafted for the war in 1861, he sent a substi- tute in his place. His only club is the Essex. He is a communicant of Trinity Church, New- ark, and for a long while has been that parish's senior warden and treasurer. He is also a member of the finance committee of the dio- cese of Newark, and one of the trustees of the Episcopal fund of the diocese. Among the financial interests, outside of his own business, with which Mr. Gifford has been or is still identified are the Security Savings Bank, of which he is the vice-president, and the Manu-
Lewis Ehistorical Puh. Co.
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facturers' National Bank, in the latter of which he is senior director.
February 1I, 1858, Mr. Gifford married Mary Jane Alling, ninth in descent from old James Allen, the blacksmith of Kempton, county Bedford, England, from whose sons, Roger and John, have sprung the descendants of the Allings and Allens of New Haven. Roger Alling came to America about 1638, and four years later married Mary, daughter of Thomas Nash, the emigrant of the Rev. John Davenport's colony. His eldest son, Samuel, born November 4, 1645, died August 28, 1709, was twice married, first to Elizabeth, daughter of John Winston, October 24. 1667, and second to Sarah, daughter of John Ched- sey, October 26, 1683. His eldest son, Sam- uel, born in New Haven, October 16, 1668, married Sarah, daughter of Thomas Curry, and removed to Newark, about 1701. Here he soon became one of the town's principal men, holding various offices of trust and re- sponsibility between the years 1709 and 1732 when he died, and for the last five years of his life being an elder in the church. His second son, Samuel, generally known as Deacon Sam- uel Alling, born 1698, died February 6, 1793; married Abigail, daughter of the Rev. John Prudden, one of the most famous of Newark's early dominies and schoolmasters. John, son of Deacon Samuel Alling, 1723 to 1753, mar- ried Martha, daughter of David and Mary Crane, and the aunt of Hannah, daughter of Joseph and Patience Crane, who was the wife of John Gifford (I). The eldest son of John and Martha (Crane) Alling was John, who married Abigail, granddaughter of Robert Young, one of the Scotchmen welcomed to Newark with Clizbie and Nesbit. He was a lieutenant in a minute company during the rev- olution and was the John Alling who figured so conspicuously as a sharpshooter when the British pillaged that town. John Alling, his eldest son, born December 27, 1772, died June 14, 1852; married, January 18, 1798, Sarah Hamilton, and their second son, Charles Al- ling, born April 14, 1803, died March 15, 1852, was the father of Mary Jane ( Alling) Gifford, by his wife Clarissa R., daughter of Jephtha and Catharine (Bishop) Baldwin, and great- great-granddaughter of Benjamin, son of Jo- seph Baldwin, of Milford, by his wife Han- nah, daughter of Jonathan Sergeant, through their son and grandson Benjamin (III) and Benjamin (IV).
John Archer and Mary Jane (Alling) Gif- ford have had six children, three of whom,
Clarissa Baldwin, John Archer, Jr., and Char- lotte L., died in infancy. Charles Alling Gifford, born July 17, 1860, received his elementary educational training in the schools of Newark, which he supplemented by a course in the Stevens Institute, graduating from that institution. He entered the office of McKim, Mead & White, architects of New York City, and after spending some time under the tuition of this noted firm Mr. Gifford en- gaged upon an independent career and has met with a marked degree of success in his pro- fession; married, December 10, 1890, Helen M., daughter of Colonel Charles M. Conyng- ham and Helen Hunter Turner, whose grand- father, Jabez Turner, married Rebecca Wol- cott, daughter of William Wolcott and Phebe Alling, the daughter of Daniel, youngest son of Samuel by his first marriage, and great- granddaughter of Roger Alling, of New Haven, the emigrant. The children of Charles Alling and Helen M. (Conyngham) Gifford are: Alice Conyngham, Charles Conyngham, John Archer, Herbert Cammann, who died young, and Donald Stanton. Agnes Gifford, the only surviving daughter of John Archer and Mary Jane ( Alling) Gifford, is unmarried and lives with her parents. Harry Harrison Gifford, the youngest child, is treated below.
(IV) Harry Harrison, son of John Archer and Mary Jane (Alling) Gifford, was born in Newark, August 20, 1867, and is now living in Summit, New Jersey, carrying on the car- riage hardware business in Park Place, New York City, which his father turned over to his management in 1903. After graduating from the Newark Academy Mr. Gifford entered the preparatory school of Stevens Institute, Ho- boken, and later Stevens Institute, in the class of 1889. He relinquished his studies and entered his father's employ and gradually worked himself up until on his father's retire- ment he became general manager, and in 1907 full partner in the firm. Mr. Gifford is a staunch Democrat and has several times been offered different offices which he has refused to accept. He has had no military service and belongs to no clubs, and his single society is the college fraternity of Chi Phi. He has no bank connections and is a communicant of Calvary Church, Summit, New Jersey.
November 8. 1892, Mr. Gifford married Elizabeth Baldwin, born February 23. 1868, daughter of Henry Clay and Anna ( Bolles) Howell, who has borne him four children : Anna Howell, November 16, 1893; Elizabeth Baldwin, December 7, 1895; Mary Alling,
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April 11, 1898; Harry Harrison, Jr., August 24, 1902.
(III) George Ernst Cammann, fifth child of Archer and Louisa C. (Cammann) Gifford, was for many years manager of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, of New York, al- though his residence was in Newark, and he was the Democratic appointee as tax receiver and clerk of the water board. He married Jane Elizabeth, daughter of Eliphalet C. and Jane (Kingsland) Smith. Mrs. Gifford's father was state surveyor, city engineer, and the installer of Newark's water plant. They have two children: George Ernst and Archer Plume Gifford, both of whom have married and have issue.
BENJAMIN The name of Benjamin be- longs to the patronymic class of surnames, which, while a general characteristic of all national- ities, was almost the only system of nomencla- ture in vogue among the Welsh, who when the period arrived for the adoption of surnames merely assumed as such the Christian name of the father. As may be inferred from this, the name of Benjamin is distinctively Welsh, though it should be added it is in some cases English as well. Whether the family at pres- ent under consideration should trace its lineage back to a German count of Jewish lineage, as some members of the American and English branches do, is problematical; it seems more likely that the pedigree connecting the Benja- mins of Lower Hereford with the De Laceys who came over with William the Conqueror, is the correct one; and that the De Laceys, Bery- tons, Berringtons and Benjamins, descendants of Walter de Lacey, of 1074, who lived in Hereford county and on the Welsh border, are the ancestors of the founders of the New England and Long Island families of Benja- min.
These two families are in reality one; for their emigrant ancestors were brothers who came from Lower Hereford to Boston, where one became the founder of the Benjamins of Massachusetts, and his brother Richard, re- moving to Southold, Long Island, in 1663, with his wife Ann and his daughter Ann, born September 1, 1643, applied in May, 1664, with Jeffrey Jones and others, to the general court of Connecticut to be admitted as Con- necticut freemen, and later had the oath of fidelity administered to them by Captain John Young, of Southold. Since that time Rich- ard Benjamin's descendants have made their
name and mark in the politics of Queens and Kings counties.
(I) John Benjamin, brother of Richard Ben- jamin referred to above, was born in lower Hereford, in 1598, and died in Watertown, Massachusetts, June 14, 1645. He was a man of much consequence not only intellectually and spiritually, but also socially, as Governor Win- throp's designation of him as gentleman fully bears out the family tradition that he bore arms and belonged to the landed gentry of his native land. These arms, were: Or, on a saltire quarterly-pierced sable five annulets counter charged. Crest : on a chapeau, a plume of fire all proper. Motto: "Poussez en avant" ("Press forward"). As the annulets show, John Benjamin was a younger son, the number telling us that he was the fifth; in consequence, having little to hope for from the paternal inheritance, he set out for the new world, true to his own personal motto, that "a race by vigor, not by vaunts, is won," " in
order to make a home and fortune for him- self. Setting sail in the same ship which brought over Governor Winthrop, the "Lion," Captain Mason, master, he arrived after a voyage of twelve weeks, eight from Lands End, in Boston harbor, on the evening of Sun- day, September 16, 1632, being one of the "one-hundred and twenty passengers whereof fifty were children, all in good health," of which the Governor makes mention. With John Benjamin came his wife, four children, and his brother Richard.
November 6, same year (1632) he was made a freeman of the colony, and for a short time he seems to have taken up his abode in Cambridge, where he became one of the pro- prietors, and May 20, 1633, was chosen by the general court constable of New Town, as Cambridge was then named. The next year, November 7, 1634, the court records tell us that he was "exempted from training on ac- count of his age and infirmity, but was re- quired to have at all times arms for himself and his servants." On emigrating to New England, John Benjamin brought over with him a large and fine library, which unfortu- nately, on April 7, 1637, with his house and other goods to the amount of fioo, was de- stroyed by fire. He then removed from Cam- bridge, and finally settled himself and his family in Watertown, where he spent the re- mainder of his life, as one of the foremost and prominent of the older generation of colonists. Visiting him about this time, Governor Win- throp writes to a friend: "Mr. Benjamin's
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.
mansion was unsurpassed in elegance and com- fort by any in the vicinity. It was the mansion of intelligence and hospitality, visited by the clergy of all denominations and by the literati at home and abroad." Two days be- fore his death, John Benjamin wrote his will in which he says, "I being in pfect memory as touching my outward estate do bequeath to my sonne John a double portion and to my beloved wife 2 Cowes fourty bushels of Corne out of all my lands, to be allowed her towards the bringing vp of my small Children yearly, such as growes vppon the ground, one part of fower of all my household sufffe, all the rest of my lands goods and chattels shall be equally divided between seven other of my children. Provided that out of all my former estate my wife during her life shall enjoye the dwelling house & 3 Acres of the broken vp ground next the house & two Acres of the Meddowes near hand belonging to the house. That this will be truly pformed I do appoint my brother John Eddie of Watertown & Thomas Marret of Cambridge that they doe theire best In- devor to see this pformed." The inventory of his estate was made by Simon Stone, John Eddy and Thomas Marret, and amounted to £297 3 shillings 2 pence, and among the more important items may be mentioned his house and meadow next the mill bought of John Bernard, £50; his homestall house and sixty acres, f75; ten acres of meadow near Oyster Bank, fio; another ten acres in Rocky meadow, f13; eight acres in the Great Div- idends, f12; and sixteen acres in Watertown, bought of Captain Robert Sedgwick of Charlestown, April 20, 1645, fio.
About 1819, John Benjamin married Abi- gail, daughter of Rev. William Eddy and his wife Mary, daughter of John and Ellen (Munn) Fosten. Her father, born about 1560 or 1565, graduated and received his Mas- ter of Arts degree from Trinity College, Cam- bridge, in 1586, and the following year, imme- diately after his marriage, November 20, 1587, became the non-conformist vicar of St. Dun- stan's parish, Cranbrook, county Kent, where he remained until his death in 1616. Two of. his sons, John and Samuel Eddy emigrated to New England in the "Handmaid" in 1630, and settled at Plymouth, where Samuel re- mained while John removed after a short so- journ to Watertown.
Children of John and Abigail (Eddy) Ben- jamin :
1. John Benjamin, born about 1620, died December 22, 1706, at Watertown; married
Lydia Allen, died 1709 ; children : John, Lydia, Abigail, Mary, Daniel, Ann, Sarah and Abel.
2. Abigail Benjamin, born about 1624; mar- ried (first) 1640 or 1641, Joshua Stubbs, of Watertown and Charlestown; children: Sam- uel, Mary, married John Traine, and Eliza- beth, married Jonathan Stimson. Their father dying about 1654, his widow married (second) John Woodward. November 8, 1654, Joshua Stubbs and his wife Abigail, with consent of their mother, Abigail Benjamin, sold several parcels of land in Watertown, and Mrs. Ben- jamin took up her home with her daughter in Charlestown, where she died May 20, 1687, aged eighty-seven years.
3. Mary Benjamin, born about 1626, died unmarried, April 10, 1646, leaving a will dated January 4, 1646, in which she mentions Pas- tor Knolls, her aunt Wines (probably her father's sister) her sister Abigail Stubbs and her cousin Anne Wyes. November 4, 1646, the validity of this will was set aside on the ground that the testator was under age, and the general court appointed Mary's mother Abi- gail Benjamin as administratrix of the es- tate.
4. Samuel Benjamin, born about 1628; moved to Hoccanum, in Hartford, Connecticut ; by wife Mary had children: Samuel, John, Mary and Abigail. -
5. Joseph Benjamin is referred to below.
6. Joshua Benjamin, born about 1642, died May 6, 1684, leaving a widow Thankful and no issue.
7. Caleb Benjamin, died May 8, 1684, in Wethersfield, Connecticut, where he had been living since 1669, leaving a widow Mary (Hale) and children: Caleb, Mary, Abigail, Sarah, John, Samuel, and Martha.
8. Abel Benjamin, married, November 6, 1671, Amithy Myrick, and wrote his will July 3, 1710, in which he mentions wife, son, grand- son John, his daughter Abigail, born August 26, 1680, and his brother Joshua Benjamin.
(II) Joseph, fifth child and third son of John and Abigail (Eddy) Benjamin, was born at Cambridge, Massachusetts, September 16, 1633, and died in Preston, or New London, Connecticut, in 1704. Some time prior to his first marriage he settled in Barnstable, Massa- chusetts, where he remained a number of years, probably until the death of his first wife. He then seems to have removed to Yarmouth, where he bought and settled on a farm, near the meadows to the north of the old Miller farm. December 7, 1668, William Clark, of Yarmouth, died, and in his nuncu-
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pative will, proved February 28, 1668, he gives property, amounting to £8 3 shillings, to his brother, Joseph Benjamin. In 1680 Joseph exchanged his Yarmouth farm for that of Joseph Gorham, in Barnstable, and removed thither, but shortly afterwards settled in Pres- ton, Connecticut, where he spent the remainder of his life. October 30, 1686, he sold the land in Cambridge "bounded on the land of Abel Benjamin my brother, which was devised to nie by the will of my honored father Mr. Ben- jamin, sometime of Watertown, deceased."
June 10, 1661, Joseph Benjamin married (first) Jemima, daughter of Thomas and Joice Lambert, of Barnstable, who died some time prior to the date of William Clark's will, De- cember 7. 1668; children: Abigail; Joseph, died young; and Jemima. Joseph Benjamin married (second) Sarah, sister to William Clark, by whom he had eight more children : Hannah, born February, 1668, dead before 1704; Mary, born April, 1670, married, No- vember 16, 1697, John Clark, the school- master ; Joseph, born 1673, married August 25, 1698, Elizabeth Cook, and had nine chil- dren : Obed, Elizabeth, Joseph, Sarah, Grace, Jedediah, Daniel, John and Abiel. Mercy, seventh child of Joseph Benjamin, and fourth by his second marriage, was born March 12, 1674. Elizabeth, born January 14, 1680, died before 1704. John is referred to below. Sarah and Kezia were the remaining two children.
(III) John, sixth child and second son of Joseph and Sarah (Clark) Benjamin, was born in Barnstable, Massachusetts, in 1682, and died in Preston, Connecticut, August 2, 1716. He married Phoebe Barrabee, of Preston and had one son John, referred to below, and four daughters.
(IV) John, only son of John and Phoebe ( Barrabee) Benjamin, married (first) Mar- garet Denison, of Stonington, Connecticut, (second) Louisa Palmer, of the same place. The dates of his birth and death are unknown. He had several children by each of his wives.
(V) David, second son of Benjamin and either Margaret Denison or Louisa Palmer, married (first) Esther Wilson, who died within five months of her wedding day, with- out issue, and (second), February 19, 1769. Lucy Park, who bore her husband six chil- dren : Park ; Elijah ; Moses, born July 5, 1774 ; Stephen, September 15, 1776; Lucy, March 15, 1779; and Esther, March 15, 1781.
(VI) Park, eldest son of David Benjamin, born October 5, 1769, in Preston, became with
his brother Elijah an importing merchant in the trade with the West Indies. He made frequent trips to and fro between New Lon- don and British Guiana, and was head of the West India branch of the business. In 1824 he was lost at sea, with his son, Christopher, in the foundering of the brig "Falcon." He married, during one of his stops at Barbadoes, Mary Judith Gall, a cousin of Governor Boerckels, of that island, and also, so it is said, a cousin of the celebrated Lord North, of revo- lutionary fame. On his death his widow and surviving son Park, born August 14, 1809, at Demerara, British Guiana, where his father owned a plantation, came to Connecticut and took up their abode in the home of her brother -. in-law, Elijah, where Park Jr., who was lame, and of a dreamy, idealistic disposition was brought with his cousins, making a particular friend of his cousin David, referred to below. This Park was the poet and editor so well known to and beloved by the literary world of a generation ago, and whose "Old Sexton" still holds its honored place in American an- thologies.
(VI) Elijah, second child and son of David and Lucy (Park) Benjamin, was born in Preston, Connecticut, November 12, 1771. He was an importing merchant in New Lon- don, and was twice married, his two wives being cousins of each other. Children by first wife: Sebra, Nathan and Roswell; by second wife: Rufus, David (referred to below), and Lucy Ann Maria, married Nel- son Geer Packer.
(VII) David, son of Elijah Benjamin by his second marriage, was born June 18, 1809, and died at his home at Lincoln Park, New Jersey, August 20, 1887. The closeness of age as well as similarity of disposition made David and his cousin, "Lame Park," the poet. close friends and companions, and the inti- macy was continued throughout the latter's whole life. At first David tried his fortunes in Scotland, Windham county, Connecticut, but not succeeding as well as he expected he went to Pennsylvania, where he spent five years, and then concluding that the old place was the best, he returned there, and married. In September, 1845, he purchased the farm at Lincoln Park, where he made his home and spent the remainder of his life. March 23, 1834, David Benjamin married Cornelia, daughter of Eleazar Smith and Mehitable Robinson, who was a direct descendant of Pastor John, Robinson, of the Pilgrim church in Leyden, who followed his flock over to the
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new world soon after the arrival of the "May- flower." David and Cornelia (Smith) Ben - jamin had children: 1-2. Edward and Al- fred, referred to below. 3. Martha Mehit- able, born September 29, 1845; married, September 2, 1868, Abraham Ryerson; chil- dren: Alice, born September II, 1870, mar- ried, October, 1896, Ira Mitchell; Cora, born June 13, 1873; Clara, born November 15, 1874, married June, 1898, Warren Parker ; Alfred Bird, born October 25, 1879; Nellie, January 20, 1884; Christine, March 22, 1886, married October, 1905, William Winkleman ; and Helen, born October 6, 1887. 4. Thomas Williams Benjamin, born February 28, 1848, at Lincoln Park ; inherited the homestead farm there; married, November 25, 1872, Leah Jacobus; children : Herbert, born March 23, 1880, married, 1902, Katharine Doremus ; David, born July 29, 1884; Sydney Newton, August 13, 1890. 5. Cornelia Elizabeth Ben- jamin, born May 16, 1851 ; married, May 30. 1876, Tilghamm B. Koons, of Plainfield, New Jersey ; children : Olive, born July 21, 1878; Chauncey Benjamin, March 20, 1881; Lucius T., January 13, 1885, married February, 1907, Olive Bogardus ; and Cornelia A., born March 31, 1889. 6. Newton Benjamin, born August 3, 1854, at Lincoln Park, New Jersey ; lives at Elmira, New York; married, December 20, 1883, Sarah W. Williams.
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