USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume I > Part 41
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7-8-9. Alfred, Amelia and Adelaide Stevens, all died young.
IO. Anna Isabella Stevens, born August 14, 1828; died June, 1898; married, 1865. Elias B. Harris, M. D. ; children : Maria Fowler Harris ; Isabel Stevens Harris; Sylvia Fowler Harris; and James Stevens Harris.
II. Theodosius Fowler Stevens, born 1830; died about 1844.
12. Richard Fowler Stevens was born in Hoboken, July 18, 1832, and is now living in South Orange, New Jersey. After being sent to a private school for his early education, he entered Columbia University, from which insti- tution he graduated in 1852. He then took up the study of civil engineering, after a year and a half of which he went to Europe, and on his return took up a commercial course. He then went into the Camden & Amboy railroad as its cashier and auditor and finally settled down to his present business of private expert account- ant. Mr. Stevens is a Democrat, and from 1861 to 1865, the period of the civil war, was a brigadier-general of New Jersey militia. He belongs to no secret societies, but is president of the New Jersey Society, Sons of the Revolu- tion ; also president of the Revolutionary Me- morial Society of New Jersey; a member of the Wednesday Night Club, and the Univer- sity Club. He is a member of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Protestant Episcopal Church, of the Board of Missions of the Dio- cese of Newark, also auditor of the diocese, and a vestryman of St. Barnabas Protestant Episcopal Church in Newark. He is also one of the directors of the New Jersey Marl and Trans- portation Company, and of the Tuxpam Valley Plantation Company. September 29, 1857, he married in Trenton, Emily Gouverneur, daugh- ter of Philemon and Margaret Corinne Clothilde (Gobert) Dickinson. Children: I. Richard, unmarried. 2. Theodosius Fowler, died September, 1889. 3. Margueret Corinne Clothilde. 4. Mary Dickinson.
(For ancestry see preceding sketch).
(V) James Alexander, third STEVENS child and second son of James Alexander and Maria (Fowl- er ) Stevens, was born about 1815. He stud- ied engineering, and when eighteen years old became superintendent of the Hoboken Ferry Company, which position he held until his health gave out and compelled him to re- tire at about the age of fifty. In 1845 he mar- ried Julia, daughter of Rev. Frederick Beasley, D. D., born about 1823, died January 18, 1875. Her father was provost of the University of Philadelphia. Children of James Alexander
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and Julia (Beasley) Stevens : I. Frederick William, referred to below. 2. Maria Fowler, born 1848; entered religious life, and is now mother superior of the American branch of the Sisters of St. John the Baptist, founded 1851, at Clewer, England, by Rev. Thomas Thelusson Carter, D. D., with Harriet Mon- sell, widow of Rev. Charles Monsell, and a cousin to the wife of Archibald Campbell Tait, D. D., archbishop of Canterbury, as the first mother superior. Maria Fowler Stevens is known in religion as Mother Mary Angela. 3. Robert Livingston, born 1851, still living. He graduated from Princeton University, 1872, M. A. 1876, and from the General Theological Seminary, New York City, 1878. He has been rector of the following parishes: 1876-86, at Albany, Oregon ; 1886-89, at Columbus, Ne- braska ; 1889, at Concord, Pennsylvania ; 1900 to 1904, of Trinity Church, Vineland, New Jersey ; 1904-1908, of St. Mary's Church, War- wick, Pennsylvania ; and 1908 took charge also of St. Mark's Church, Honeybrook, Cupola post-office, Chester county, Pennsylvania. He married (first) Mary Hope, who bore him one child; (second) Catharine Burton. 4. Eliza- beth, died 1874. 5. Rachel, living unmarried, in Princeton. 6. James Alexander, graduated from Columbia College in 1880, and took a postgraduate course in Germany. He married Sarah Glenn; he died in 1892, leaving one child, James Alfred, who at present (1909) lives in Memphis, Hull county, Texas. 7. Al- fred Francis, born August 29, 1860; is unmar- ried, and a practicing lawyer in Newark.
(VI) Frederick William, eldest child and son of James Alexander and Julia ( Beasley) Stevens, was born June 9, 1846, at Hoboken, and is now living at Morristown. He entered Columbia College University, graduating in 1864, and later received his degrees of M. A. and LL. D. from the same university. He read law with Judge Edward T. Green, afterwards United States district judge, and was admitted to the bar in November, 1868. as attorney, and in November, 1871, as counsellor. He prac- ticed law in Newark. In 1873, when the dis- trict courts of Newark were established, he was made judge of the second district, a posi- tion which he resigned two years later. In 1896 he was appointed vice-chancellor by Chan- cellor McGill, and this position he has held ever since. Toward the end of his practice his work was principally in the argument of cases before the higher courts. He held for about two years the office of counsel to the Essex County Board of Freeholders. In politics he
is a Democrat. He is a member of the Essex and the Lawyers' clubs, and a communicant of The Church of the Redeemer, Morristown. In June, 1880, he married (first) Mary Worth. daughter of Joseph Olden, of Princeton, born about 1856, died October 31, 1897, leaving two children: Katharine Stevens, born August 15, 1883, and Neil Campbell Stevens, born Octo- ber 22, 1887. He married (second), Septem- ber 9, 1904, Edith de Gueldry, daughter of Kinsley and Mary Twining, of Morristown, who has borne to him two children: Barbara Twining, January II, 1906; and Alice de Guel- dry, May 21, 1908.
(For ancestry see John Stevens 1).
(IV) Edwin Augustus Ste-
STEVENS vens, eighth child and seventh son of Colonel John and Rachel (Cox) Stevens, was born at Castle Point, Ho- boken, New Jersey, July 28, 1795, and died at Paris, France, August 8, 1868. As a young man he assisted his brother, Robert Livingston Stevens, in his engineering work, but in 1820, by a family agreement, he was made the trustee of his father's estate in Hoboken, which he managed most successfully. It was during this period of his life that he invented and patented the Stevens plow, which came into such ex- tended use and favor. In 1825, with his brothers, Robert Livingston Stevens and John Cox Stevens, he bought up the Union line of steamboats which plied along the coast between New York and New Brunswick, New Jersey, and ran in connection with the line of stages running from the latter city to Philadelphia. Of this enterprise Edwin Augustus was also made the manager, and under his able opera- tion it continued until the Camden & Amboy railroad superseded the line of stages. In'1830, with his brother, Robert Livingston, he ob- tained from the legislature of the state of New Jersey a charter for that railroad, and so vigor- ously did he prosecute the work of construc- tion that the road opened for traffic on October 9, 1832, with his brother, Robert Livingston, as president, and he himself as treasurer and manager. As a testimony to the exceptional executive ability of Edwin Augustus Stevens, it should be mentioned that during the thirty-five years during which the road was under his con- trol it never at any time passed a dividend. Dur- ing this period also, Mr. Stevens was very con- spicuous in aiding and advancing the develop- ment of railroads and railroad interests of the United States. On his own road he invented and introduced many appliances of all sorts,
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and the germs of many improvements after- wards perfected on other roads can be traced back, as, for example, the vestibule car, to Mr. Stevens's inventions for the Camden & Amboy railroad. In 1842, Robert Livingston Stevens applied forced draft to his steamboat, the "North America," and its use immediately became gen- eral. In the same year Edwin Augustus Ste- vens patented his airtight fireroom for the use of the forced draft and applied it to many vessels. Nowadays this double invention of the Stevens brothers is in use in all the great navies of the world. Towards the close of the last war with England, Robert Livingston Ste- vens began experimenting with the object of making a bomb that could be fired from a cannon instead of a mortar, and so could be made of practical use to naval warfare. The result of these experiments was the first per- cussion shell. In 1814 Edwin Augustus, under . his father's direction, had experimented in the effects of shot against inclined iron plating ; and in 1841, when the boundary dispute be- tween the United States and England had di- rected the attention of the public to the condi- tion of the naval defences of the country, he made another series of experiments which he and his brothers laid before the government. As a result of this, President Tyler appointed a commission of army and navy officers to superintend, at Sandy Hook, the experiments of the Stevens brothers on the application of iron to war vessels as a protection against shot. After many trials against iron targets, this commission reported that iron four and one- half inches thick resisted effectually the force of a sixty-eight pound shot fired at it from a distance of thirty yards with battering charges. April 14, 1842, therefore, Congress passed an act authorizing the secretary of the navy to make a contract with the Stevens brothers for the construction of an iron-clad vessel. The dry-dock for this vessel was begun immediately and was finished within a year, and the vessel itself was planned and its construction begun, when, in the latter part of the year 1843, a change in the contract was made, because Com- modore Robert Field Stockton, had constructed a wrought iron cannon having a bore of ten inches, which threw a round shot that could pierce a four and one-half inch target. This was the beginning of more experiments and improvements, and as each increase of gun- power at home or abroad demanded increased thickness of armer for defence, there was a consequent increasing of the tonnage of the vessel being made by the Stevenses, and there
followed necessarily a season of interminable interruptions and delays and of changes in the specifications and the contract ; and for many years the vessel lay a familiar figure in its basin at Hoboken, and was never finished. This vessel was the first iron-clad ever pro- jected, and preceded by more than ten years the small constructions of the kind which were used by the French at Kilburn in 1854. Robert Livingston Stevens, who had signed the con- tract with the United States government for this vessel, bequeathed it at his death in 1854 to Edwin Augustus, and the latter at the be- ginning of the civil war, presented the govern- ment with a plan for completing it, and at the same time gave to the War Department a small vessel called the "Naugatuck," by means of which he demonstrated the feasibility of his plans. This small vessel the government ac- cepted, and it later formed one of the fleet which attacked the "Merrimac." It was a twin-screw vessel, capable of being immersed three feet below her load line, so as to be nearly invisble, while it could be raised again in eight minutes by the simple expedient of pumping out again the water taken in for pur- poses of immersion ; and it could also be turned on its centre end for end, in one and one- quarter minutes. It was thus the forerunner of the modern submarine. The government, however, refused to appropriate the money needed to carry on the plans proposed by Mr. Edwin Augustus Stevens, and at his death he left the vessel to the state of New Jersey, to- gether with a gift of $1,000,000 to be used for its completion. When the state had spent this money in a vain endeavor to do this, it sold the vessel and it was broken up. Edwin Augustus Stevens was the founder of the Stevens Insti- tute of Technology in Hoboken, to which he bequeathed a large plot of land. For the building of the institute he left an additional $150,000, and for the endowment of it $500,- 000 more. His widow, who survived him nearly fifty years, and his children as well, have added largely to these gifts.
Edwin Augustus Stevens married, in 1836, Mary, daughter of Rev. Thomas Picton, of Princeton, New Jersey. Children : Mary Picton, referred to below; Elizabeth Binney, died in infancy. August 22, 1854, Mr. Stevens married (second ) Martha Bayard, eldest child of Rev. Albert Baldwin Dod, D. D., and his wife Caroline Smith Bayard ( see Bayard fam- ily). Children : 1. John, born July, 1856, now dead ; married, June 25, 1883, Mary Marshall McGuire, and had two children : Mary Picton,
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born May 24, 1885, married Ogden Haggerty Hammond ; and John (2), died at ten years of age. 2. Edwin Augustus, Jr., referred to below. 3. Caroline Bayard, born November 21, 1859; married, June 3, 1879, Archibald Alexander ; one child : Archibald Stevens, mar- ried Helen Tracy, daughter of Charles Tracy Barney, of New York City. 4. Julia Augusta, born May 18, 1863; died December 25, 1870. 5. Robert Livingston Stevens, born August 26, 1864, now dead; married, June, 1895, Mary Stuart Whitney; children: Martha Bayard, born March, 1896, died September 21, 1902; Robert Livingston, Jr., born November, 1899, died March, 1900; Mary Stuart ; Esther Bowes and Robert L. 6. Charles Albert, born Decem- ber 14, 1865; died March 27, 1901 ; married, November 15, 1889, Mary Madeleine, daugh- ter of Hon. John R. Brady. 7. Richard, born May, 1868; now living at the Cliffs, Castle Point, Hoboken ; married Elizabeth Callender, (laughter of Francis Bowes (V) and Eliza- beth Callender (Harris) Stevens, his first cou- sin's daughter; and has children: Elizabeth Callender, born 1895; Caroline Bayard, born 1897 ; Dorothy and Richard.
(V) Mary Picton, eldest child of Edwin Augustus and Mary (Picton) Stevens, born May 19, 1840; died September 21, 1903 ; mar- ried (first), July 26, 1860, Muscoe Russell Hunter Garnett (VI). (See Garnett). Mar- ried (second), June 1, 1869, Edward Parke Custis Lewis.
(V) Edwin Augustus, Jr., second child and son of Edwin Augustus and Martha Bayard (Dod) Stevens, was born in Philadelphia, March 14, 1858, and is now living at Castle Point, Hoboken, New Jersey. For his early education he went to St. Paul's School, Con- cord, New Hampshire, after receiving which he entered Princeton University, from which he graduated in 1879. He then read law with Robert Gilchrist, of Jersey City ; but inheriting in a marked degree the mechanical genius of his father, uncles and grandfather, he turned his attention to mechanical and marine engi- neering. He has always been occupied with the business interests of the family, and for years has been the president of the Hoboken Land and Improvement Company ; and until the family sold it, was also president of the Hoboken Ferry Company, which had a con- tinued existence as one of the family prop- erties from 1784 until 1896.
Mr. Stevens was the first to substitute the screw propeller for the cumbersome paddle- wheel in ferry-boats on the Hudson, and the
"Bergen" was built under his supervision from plans and specifications which he himself had made. He has always devoted his energies to the development of Hoboken and the improve- ment of its public facilities. At different times he has been park commissioner of Hudson county, tax commissioner for the city of Hobo- ken, and commissioner for the adjustment of arrears in taxation for the same town. He has also held or is still holding the positions of president of the New Jersey Ice Company, treasurer of the Hackensack Water Company, director of the First National Bank of Hoboken and of the Hudson Trust and Savings Institu- tion, while for many years he has been a trustee of the Stevens Institute. A number of years ago, when the boundary line between New York and New Jersey was finally determined, he was a member of the commission which revised and completed the work done by the commis- sion of 1774, of which his great-grandfather had been a member ; and in 1893 he served as alternate commissioner to the Columbian Ex- position in Chicago. For a long time also he has been active in both state and federal poli- tics, serving as president of the Democratic society of New Jersey, of which he was one of the organizers, and as a member of the Demo- cratic state committee. In 1888 and again in 1892, and also in 1904, he was Democratic candidate for one of the presidential electors. His military services, while confined to his state, have been many and various, and to them he owes his well known title of colonel. For three years he served on the military staff of Governors Ludlow and Abbett, from 1880 to 1883, and from 1883 to 1892 as colonel of the Second Regiment, New Jersey Militia, be- sides being for a time adjutant of the Ninth New Jersey Militia. Like all the members of his family, Colonel Stevens is an ardent and consistent churchman of the Anglican Catholic type, and has always been active not only in the parochial and diocesan but also in the na- tional affairs of the Protestant Episcopal church. He and his brother Richard are trus- tees of the Church of the Holy Innocents, Ho- boken, which their mother built and established as a memorial to their sister Julia, who died in childhood. For years he has served the diocese of Newark as a member of its standing com- mittee, as secretary of its board of trustees of the Episcopal fund, and as treasurer of the diocese. In 1907 he was one of the lay deputies from the diocese of Newark to the general convention of the church held in Richmond, Virginia. He is a trustee of the Washington
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Headquarters Association of New Jersey, a member of the Builders and Underwriters Association, of the Lawyers' and the Univer- sity clubs of New York, of the German and Columbia clubs of Hoboken, of the Atlantic Boat Club, and of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. He belongs to no secret societies.
October 28, 1879, Edwin Augustus Stevens, Jr., married in Berryville, Virginia, Emily Contee, daughter of George Washington Lewis, and his wife Emily, daughter of Hon. Reverdy Johnson. Her father was son of Lorenzo Lewis, son of Lawrence and Eleanor Parke (Custis) Lewis, and grandson of Colonel Field- ing Lewis by his second wife Betty, daughter of Colonel John Washington. Lorenzo Lewis' wife was Esther, daughter of Colonel John Cox, of Bloomsbury, New Jersey, a younger sister of Rachel Cox, the grandmother of Colo- nel Edwin Augustus Stevens himself.
Children of Edwin Augustus and Emily Contee (Lewis) Stevens : 1. John, born Janu- ary 28, 1881. 2. Edwin Augustus (3d), Au- gust 15. 1882. 3. Washington Lewis, Septem- ber 26, 1883 ; married, October 28, 1905, Nannie Nye, eldest child of Philip Nye and Margaret (Atlee) Jackson (see Jackson family). 4. Bayard, born July 20, 1885. 5. Martha Bayard, December 9. 1886; died April 12, 1888. 6. Basil, born December 28, 1888. 7. Lawrence Lewis, November 29, 1889. 8. Emily Lewis, June 12, 1896.
GARNETT As a family, the Garnetts, thought to be originally from Lancashire, England, belong to Virginia and the south, but by their alliances with the Stevenses of Hoboken, one line of the family has been for many years identified with New Jersey and requires mention .*
(I) John Garnett, the founder of the fam- ily in this country, emigrated to Gloucester and Essex counties, Virginia, where he died in 1713, his will being proved in Essex county court March II of that year, leaving three sons: James, referred to below; John and Anthony ; his wife was Ann
(II) James, son of John and Ann Garnett, was born in Essex county, Virginia, January 17, 1692, and died there May 27, 1765. He was one of the large landed proprietors of the province ; he was one of the justices of Essex county, 1720-40; and one of the members of
the Virginia house of burgesses, 1742-47. He was married four times: First to Sarah Green, second to Elizabeth Muscoe, third to Mary (Rowzee) Jones, and fourth to Margaret Scott. By his first marriage James Garnett had children: 1. John, born September 27, 1717; died February 15, 1746; married Eliza- beth Evans. 2. James, born October 15, 1719; died February 23, 1745. 3. Milly, born August 23, 1721. 4. Thomas, January 19, 1723; died March II, 1738. 5. William, born July II, 1727; died February 21, 1759; married Anne Rowzee. 6. Reuben, born June 15, 1729; died October 7, 1749. 7. Robert, born May 20, 1732.
The second wife of James Garnett, Elizabeth Muscoe, was daughter of Salvator . Muscoe, and granddaughter of Salvator Muscoe, a stone carver of Monmouth street, in St. Giles-in-the- Fields, London. Her father, born December 28, 1674, was a lawyer of Essex county, Vir- ginia ; justice of the peace, 1720-40, and from 1734 to 1736, also in 1738 and 1740, a member of the Virginia house of burgesses. By his wife Mary he had children: Elizabeth, who became the second wife of James Garnett ; Mary, Frances, Tabitha, Sarah and Jane. The only child of James and Elizabeth ( Muscoe) Garnett, was Muscoe, referred to below. Eliz- abeth ( Muscoe ) Garnett died August 23, 1736.
By his third wife Mary, daughter of Cap- tain Edward Rowzee, and widow of Captain Thomas Jones, whom James Garnett married. July 19, 1740; he had five more children : Catharine; Augustine; Elizabeth, born June 20, 1744; James, April 25, 1747, died October, 1780, married Judith Neale; and Betty, born June 6, 1750, married John Taliaferro, of Hayes.
By his fourth marriage James Garnett had no children.
(III) Muscoe, only son of James and Eliz- abeth (Muscoe) Garnett, was born in Essex county, Virginia, August 17, 1736, and died there in January, 1803. He was baptized by Rev. Robert Rose, rector of St. Anne's parish, and July 9, 1767, married Grace Fenton, daugh- ter of John Mercer, of Marlborough, Stafford county, Virginia, by his second wife, Anne Roy. Her great-great-grandparents were Noel and Ann (Smith) Mercer, of Chester, Eng- land, her great-grandparents, Robert and Eli- nor (Reynolds) Mercer, and her grandparents, John and Grace ( Fenton ) Mercer, of Dublin, Ireland. Children of Muscoe and Grace Fen- ton ( Mercer) Garnett: I. Elizabeth, born No- vember 25, 1768; died August 25, 1769. 2.
*This Garnett genealogy was originally prepared by James Mercer Garnett and copyright has been applied for.
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James Mercer, referred to below. 3. Anne, born January 5, 1773; died July 17, 1783. 4. Elizabeth (2d), born September 6, 1775; died September 25, 1776. 5. Maria, born July 22, 1777; died August 14, 1811; married, as his first wife, James Hunter, and had children : Maria (referred to below), Muscoe Garnett, Martha Fenton, James, Jane Swann, William, Robert Mercer Taliaferro, and William Gar- nett. William and William Garnett Hunter died young, and all the others, except Maria and Robert Mercer Taliaferro, died unmar- ried. Maria (Garnett) Hunter having died, James Hunter married (second), in 1821, Ap- phia B. Rowzee, who bore him one child, Sally Harriet Apphia Hunter, who died unmarried. 6. Grace Fenton, born October 20, 1779, died October 4, 1846, married Muscoe Garnett Hunter, brother of James. 7. John Mercer, born March 24, 1783, died April 3, 1856, unmarried. 8-9. Muscoe, Jr., and William, born July 12, 1786; Muscoe died in 1869, married Maria Battaile, and William died March 16, 1866, married Anna Maria Brooke, daughter of Richard and Maria (Mercer) Brooke. 10. Robert Selden, born April 26, 1789; died Au- gust 15, 1840; married Olympia Charlotte De Gouges.
(IV) James Mercer, second child and eld- est son of Muscoe and Grace Fenton ( Mercer) Garnett, was born in Essex county, Virginia, June 8, 1770, and died there April 23, 1843. He became one of the visitors of William and Mary College, 1824, and served several terms as a member of the Virginia legislature. From 1805 to 1809 he was a representative from Virginia to the ninth and tenth congresses, and in 1829-30 was one of the delegates to the Vir- ginia state constitutional convention. For twenty years he was the president of the Fred- ericksburg agricultural society. September 21, 1793, James Mercer Garnett married Mary Eleanor Dick Mercer, daughter of Judge James Mercer and his wife Eleanor, daughter of Major Charles Dick, of Fredericksburg, Vir- ginia, and sister to the celebrated Major Alex- ander Dick, of the revolution. Judge James Mercer was son of John Mercer, of Marl- borough, Stafford county, Virginia, and his first wife Catharine, only daughter of Colonel George Mason by his second wife, Elizabeth Waugh. This family of Mercers must not be confused with that of General Hugh Mercer, M. D., from which they are entirely distinct, although Doctor (later General) Hugh Mercer was the family physician of the family of John Mercer, of Marlborough. Children of James
Mercer and Mary Eleanor Dick ( Mercer) Gar- nett : I. James Mercer, Jr., referred to below. 2. Ann, born August 15, 1797 ; died unmarried, October 3, 1835. 3. Albert Roy, born Febru- ary 28, 1800; died unmarried, February 23, 1852. 4. Mary Eleanor, born June 30, 1802; died March, 1822; married Robert Payne War- ing. 5. Grace Fenton, April 15, 1805; died unmarried, August, 1826. 6. Maria, June 12, 1808; died September 1, 1841 ; married, as his first wife, Rev. John Peyton McGuire. 7. Charles Fenton Mercer, born October 7, 1810; died unmarried, March 6, 1886. 8. Theodore Stanford, born November 18, 1812; died May 28, 1885; married Florentina Isidora Moreno. 9. Eliza Lucinda, born May 6, 1815; died un- married, July 5, 1847.
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