USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume I > Part 69
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(VII) Lewis, eldest son of William and Catherine A. (Sutton) Van Blarcom, was born in Sparta township, Sussex county, New Jer- sey, July 19, 1835, died February 19, 1904. His early education was obtained at the com- mon school in his native township and under the private instruction of Edward A. Stiles, a well-known teacher of Wantage. His minor- ity was mostly spent at home, where he be- came inured of farm work and learned the inestimable lesson of self-reliance and perse- verance. After reaching a suitable age he became a teacher, continuing for four terms. In 1858 he began to read law with N. R. Kim- ble, of Hamburg, and after one year entered the law office of John Linn, of Newton. Au- gust 25, 1862, he enlisted as first lieutenant, Company D, Fifteenth Regiment, New Jersey Volunteers, and for meritorious service was promoted in June, 1863, to captain of Com- pany C. This regiment was a part of the first New Jersey Brigade, which formed a part of the Army of the Potomac, First Division, Sixth Army Corps. During his service he was in the following engagements : Fredericks- burg, December, 1862; Second Fredericksburg at Salem Heights, May, 1863 ; Gettysburg, July,
1863; Rappahannock Station, November, 1863; Spottsylvania, May 8, 1864. In this latter en- gagement he was wounded and captured by the enemy and had his leg amputated by their surgeons. After remaining in the hospital for ten days he was carried to Richmond and placed in Libby Prison, where he remained until September 12, 1864, when he was ex- changed and placed in the hospital at Annap- olis. December 19, 1864, he received his dis- charge from service and returned home. After his return to Newton he resumed the study of law and was admitted to the bar as attorney, June, 1865, and in June, 1868, as counsellor. He then began the practice of his profession in Newton, where he met with great and well- deserved success. From 1869 to 1873 he was associated in business with Joseph Coult, from 1873 to 1880 with Lewis Cochran. Governor Randolph appointed him, March 25, 1869, prosecutor of the pleas, and he discharged the duties of that office with acknowledged ability and justice for a term of five years. Politically speaking Captain Van Blarcom was a Repub- lican and a leading and influential man in his party in Sussex county. He was the Repub- lican candidate for county clerk, member of congress, but failed of election owing to his party being largely in the minority. For two years he was one of the chosen board of free- holders. For many years he was the chairman of the Republican county committee.
August 17, 1871, he married Mary, daughter of Dr. Alexander H. Thomson, of Marksboro, Warren county, New Jersey (see Thomson, IV). Children : 1. Kate. 2. Andrew, referred to below. 3. Lewis Jr.
(VIII) Andrew, second child and eldest son of Lewis and Mary ( Thomson) Van Blar- com, was born in Newton, Sussex county, New Jersey, November 12, 1881, and is now living in Newark, New Jersey. He was educated at the Newton Collegiate Institute, after which he read law in the office of Messrs. Count & Howell, Esquires, and was admitted to the New Jersey bar as attorney in February, 1902, and as counsellor in February, 1905. Since that time he has been in the general practice of his profession in Newark, New Jersey, where he is regarded as one of the rising men of the present generation. In politics Mr. Van Blarcom is a Republican. He is a Presbyterian, and a member of the Essex Club of Newark, of the Lawyers' Club of Newark, and of the Wednesday Club. May 9. 1906, Mr. Van Blarcom married in Newark, Sara Streit,
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daughter of Joseph M. Riker. Children: An- drew Jr., born April 19, 1907. Sarah Hunter, born September 24, 1909.
(The Thomson Line).
Colonel Mark Thomson, the first member of the family of whom we have definite informa- tion, settled first in Changewater, and then in Marksboro, Sussex (now Warren) county, New Jersey, the latter of which places was named in his honor. He was one of the lead- ing men of his day, was commissioned lieu- tenant-colonel of Colonel Stewart's battalion of minute-men, February 15, 1776; colonel of the First Regiment of Sussex County Militia, July 10, 1776; and colonel of the Battalion of Detached Militia, July 18, 1776. He was also after the revolution appointed lieutenant-colo- nel and aide-de-camp on staff of Governor Richard Howell, June 10, 1793. In 1775 he was a member of the provincial congress of New Jersey, and was appointed sheriff of Sussex county in October, 1779, October, 1791, and October, 1794. From 1786 to 1788 he was a member of the New Jersey council of state, and in 1779 a member of the New Jersey assembly. From 1795 to 1799 he was a repre- sentative from New Jersey to the fourth and fifth United States congresses. He died De- cember 14, 1803. In 1768 he married Ann Breckenridge. Children : I. Robert C., re- ferred to below. 2. Jacob Stern, attorney and counsellor at law, admitted to the New Jersey bar in 1796; member of the New Jersey coun- cil of state, 1806; member from Sussex county to the New Jersey legislature, 1823-24; and was the first member of the same body from Warren county in 1825, the year in which that county was set apart. 3. Ann Brecken- ridge, married Dr. Samuel Fowler. 4. Mar- tha, married Edward Sharp. 5. Maria C., married James V. Anderson.
(II) Robert C., son of Colonel Mark and Ann (Breckenridge) Thomson, was a mem- ber of the New Jersey assembly from Sussex county from 1816 to 1819. He married Maria, daughter of Elias and Mary (Joline ) Woodruff (see Woodruff X). Children: I. Alexander Hamilton, referred to below. 2. George, mar- ried his cousin, Susan, daughter of Aaron Dickinson and Grace (Lowrey) Woodruff. 3. Mark, married Ruth Smith. 4. Theodore. 5. Robert. 6. Edward.
(III) Alexander Hamilton, son of Robert C. and Maria ( Woodruff ) Thomson, was born in the old homestead at Marksboro, which is still standing. He graduated from Princeton
College in 1824, and then took his degree from the Medical School of the University of Penn- sylvania. He then began the practice of his profession at Marksboro, where he lived for the greater part of his life, combining with his medical services the management of a farm and a milling business. He married, August 19, 1830, Rachel Everitt, born June 7, 1809. Children: I. Susan Dowers. 2. Elizabeth Catharine. 3. Mary, referred to below. 4. Jane Woodruff.
(IV) Mary, daughter of Dr. Alexander Hamilton and Rachel (Everitt) Thomson, of Marksboro, Warren county, New Jersey, mar- ried, August 17, 1871, Lewis, son of William and Catharine A. (Sutton) Van Blarcom (see Van Blarcom, VII).
(The Woodruff Line).
Thomas Woodrove, the first member of the family of whom we have definite information, appears of record in the town of Fordwich, county Kent, England, in 1508. He died in 1552. In 1538 he was one of the magistrates who arranged for the conveyancing to some favored individuals of a portion of the pos- sessions of the monastery of St. Augustine, which had been despoiled and desecrated by King Henry VIII. The family name has been variously spelled in different generations.
(II) William Woodroffe, son of Thomas, died in 1587. He was a jurat or magistrate of Fordwich in 1579, and also key keeper of the town chest, one of the most honorable offices in the borough.
(III) Robert, son of William Woodroffe. died in 1611. He and his brother William, whose family became extinct in 1673, were freemen of Fordwich in 1580, and Robert was church warden and jurat in 1584. He married at St. Mary, Northgate, in 1573, Alice Russel.
(IV) John, son of Robert and Alice (Rus- sel) Woodroffe, was born at Fordwich, in 1 574, died in 1611. On reaching manhood he took up his residence in Northgate, where his uncle, William Russel, was church warden. He mar- ried, in 1601, Elizabeth Cartwright, who after his death married John Gosmer, Esquire.
(V) John Woodruff (2), only son of John (I) and Elizabeth (Cartwright) Woodroffe, was baptized at St. Mary, Northgate, in 1604, died in May, 1670, in Southampton, Long Island. In 1636 he was church warden at Fordwich, and a year or two later he accompanied his mother and step-father to America, being in Lynn, Massachusetts, and Southampton, Long Island, in 1639 and 1640. In 1657 his step-father deed-
1
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ed him his own homestead. He married Ann, conjectured to have been the daughter either of his step-father, John Gosmer, or of a Mr. Hyde. Children: I. John, referred to below. 2. Ann, married Robert Woolley. 3. Elizabeth, married Robert Dayton. 4. John, married Han- nah
(VI) John (3), eldest son of John (2) and Ann Woodruff, was baptized in the parish of Sturry, county Kent, England, in 1637, died at Elizabethtown, New Jersey, in April or May, 1691. He accompanied his parents and grand- parents to Southampton, and April 30, 1657, is included in the list of arms-bearing men. May I, 1663, he was elected constable, and be- tween August 29 and September 7, 1665, he sold his Southampton lands, preparatory to removing to Elizabethtown, in which latter place he soon became one of the leading citi- zens, holding the offices of ensign, high sheriff, magistrate and one of the most prominent op- ponents of the lords proprietors. His only brother was, like himself, named John, a fact proven by their father's will, but as the latter remained in Southampton, where he inherited the bulk of his father's estate, the two lines have had distinct histories. John Woodruff, of Elizabethtown, married (first) Sarah -; and (second) Mary, daughter of John Ogden. Children: 1. Sarah, died young. 2. John, re- ferred to below. 3. Jonathan. 4. Elizabeth. 5. Benjamin. 6. Sarah. 7. Joseph. 8. David. 9. Daniel, married Ann Price. 10. Hannah.
(VII) John (4), son of John (3) and Mary (Ogden) Woodruff, was born in Elizabeth- town, New Jersey, and was a joiner. He mar- ried Sarah, daughter of Timothy and Eliza- beth ( Munson) Cooper. Children: I. Timo- thy, born about 1683, died 1766 ; married Mary Baker. 2. Elias. 3. Thomas, born about 1689, died 1752; married Hannah Ward. 4. Jona- than. 5. John, married Mercy Carle. 6. David, referred to below.
(VIII) David, son of John (4) and Sarah (Cooper) Woodruff, was born in Elizabeth- town, about 1689 or 1690, died there in 1749. He married Eunice, daughter of Nathaniel and Sarah (Harrison) Ward, of Newark, who died in Elizabethtown in 1749. Children: I. David, born about 1720, died 1795; married (first) Sarah Davis, (second) Sarah Zeleff, and (third) the Widow Meeker. 2. Abner, born about 1723, died 1792; married Rachel Meeker. 3. Nathaniel. 4. Eunice, married Thomas Mann. 5. Elias, referred to below. 6. Jabez. 7. Jonathan. 8. Uzal, born about
1745, died 1774; married Elizabeth Ogden. 9. Jediah. 10 to 12. Three sons, names unknown.
(IX) Elias, son of David and Eunice (Ward) Woodruff, was born in Elizabeth- town, about 1739, died there in 1802. He mar- ried, in 1761, Mary Joline, a descendant of Andre Joline, a French Huguenot, who was a member of the French Church in New York, in 1688, and whose son Andrew removed to Elizabethtown, where he became alderman, February 8, 1739; was one of the committee appointed to settle the division line between Newark and Elizabeth and from 1734 to 1738 was collector of Elizabethtown. Chil- dren : I. Aaron Dickinson, Esquire, born 1761, died 1817; married Grace Lowrey. 2. George W., died 1846; married Jean H. 3. Phebe. 4. Mary or Maria, referred to be- low. 5. Elizabeth, married the Rev. Thomas Howe. 6. Susan. 7. Harriet.
(X) Maria, daughter of Elias and Mary (Joline) Woodruff, married Robert C., son of Colonel Mark and Ann ( Breckenridge) Thomson (see Thomson, II).
(VII) William Henry Irick HILLIARD Hilliard, D. D. S., son of Franklin (q. v.) and Lydia Hewling (Irick) Hilliard, was born in Vin- centown, New Jersey, in 1841. While a lad his father removed from that place to Salem, Ohio, where the son received his early educa- tion. In 1861, at the outbreak of the civil war, being then nineteen years of age, he responded to President Lincoln's call for troops, and en- listed in Company H, Nineteenth Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry. He was offered the captaincy of his company, but declined on ac- count of his youth, being the youngest mem- ber. Against his protest he was elected first lieutenant, and served in that capacity until the end of the first three months term. He was one of the gallant fellows who, at the expira- tion of his three months' service, re-enlisted, taking his place in the ranks, and in due time was commissioned first lieutenant. He served in the Army of the Potomac, and participated in the battles of the Shenandoah Valley and with the Army of the Potomac. In the last year of the war he served under General Phil Sheridan. At the battle of Aldie he was wounded, taken prisoner, and was recaptured the next morning, and lay in the hospital three months on account of his wounds. He was with General Sheridan in his closing operations closing with the surrender of General Lee at
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Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wall
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Appomattox Court House, Virginia, and soon thereafter, peace having been restored, was honorably mustered out of service.
Returning home, he turned his attention to the study of dentistry, under the instruction of Dr. Stockton, at Mount Holly, and then com- pleted a course at the Penn Dental School, Pennsylvania, from which he graduated in 1871. Later the same year he located in Bord- entown, where he has since remained, and has won for himself a more than enviable reputa- tion in his profession, and which is far from being merely local. He is an honored mem- ber of various dental associations. In relig- ion he is a Baptist. He is affiliated with Mount Moriah Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons. Dr. Hilliard married, in 1875, Virginia, daugh- ter of John and Elizabeth ( Woolston ) Wools- ton, of Mount Holly. Children, all born in Bordentown : I. Augusta, married Henry Brakeley, of Bordentown; child-Henry Jr. 2. Mary, unmarried; living with her parents. 3. Helen, married John Conard, of Beverly, New Jersey ; children-John Jr. and William. 4. Virginia D., married Edgar F. Satlerthwait.
The name Wall is a corruption of WALL De Val, and it was introduced into Ireland by the Normans in 1169. The bearers of this name settled in the south of Ireland and held estates in Water ford and Cork. The family seat was at Coolnamuck, Waterford. They were sold under the encum- bered estate act, 1852, and are now held by the Ormond Buttlers. The name is still car- ried in the original form by the Italian and French descendants of the family. In some cases it is written Del Val, notably in that of Merry Del Val, secretary to Pope Pius X, who is a direct descendant of the Water ford branch. The name was introduced into Spain by Rich- ard Wall, born in Waterford, Ireland, 1693, died at Granada in 1778. He entered the Spanish navy while still a youth, and rose to the rank of major-general. He served as pri- vate agent of Spain at Aix-La-Chapelle, was minister to the Court of St. James, and later minister of foreign affairs to Ferdinand VI. and Charles III. It is to his antiquarian zeal that the world is indebted for the preservation of the Alhambra. His father was a colonel in the army of James II., and had two brothers, one of whom was father of Garrett Wall, of whom further.
(I) Garrett Wall, progenitor of the Wall family here under consideration, born 1710,
died 1768. He married Cleary, died 1779. Among his children was a son James, see forward.
(II) James, son of Garrett and (Cleary) Wall, was born in 1764; died 1806. He was an officer in the United Irishmen, and very active in the stirring days of 1798. He was somewhat of a political figure in his time, and his services were much in demand as an orator. He married, 1794, Mary Brouders, born 1769, died 1809. Children: I. Patrick, born 1796; see forward. 2. Garrett, born 1799; died 1842. 3. Ellen, born 1801 ; died 1851. 4. William, born 1805; died 1869.
(III) Patrick, eldest son of James and Mary (Brouders) Wall, was born in 1796; died 1879. He was a contractor for army clothing in London, England, during the Crimean war. He returned to Ireland, where his death oc- curred, and was buried in the family plot at Glanworth. He married, 1825, Hanora, born 1797, died 1881, daughter of Michael and Mary (Birmingham) Keleher, who were married in 1796; the former, born 1768, died 1841, and the latter, born 1770, died 1800. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Wall: 1. Mary, born 1826; died at New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1904; mar- ried in London, England, 1853, Jeremiah Cole- man. 2. Ellen, born 1828; died 1834. 3. Mar- garet, born 1831 ; last heard from in 1854, when she was living in Brooklyn, New York, where she married John Sattier. 4. James, born 1833; living in London, England; married, 1864, Ellen Courtney. 5. Michael, born December 2, 1836; see forward. 6. John, born 1838; went to Italy as secretary to one of the British representatives at Rome during the Papal war ; a letter received from him stated that he was wounded, and after that all efforts to locate him failed. 7. Patrick, born 1840; living in London, England; married, 1866, Hanora, sister of Susanna Greene, wife of his brother Michael.
(IV) Michael, son of Patrick and Hanora (Keleher) Wall, was born December 2, 1836. He was educated in London, England, became a military tailor, which was not to his liking, so he abandoned that trade and became a trav- eling auctioneer. He settled at New Bruns- wick, New Jersey, June 12, 1870, where he took a position with the tailoring firm of M. D. Vincent & Company, and continued in the same line until his retirement from active business pursuits in 1897. He married, May 11, 1866, Susanna, born February 2, 1839, eldest daugh- ter of George and Mary (Hennessy) Greene,
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who were married in 1838, the former born 1811, died July 7, 1886, the latter born 1819, died 1883. George Greene was postmaster and revenue collector at Glanworth fifty-one years. Susanna (Greene) Wall received her education at the Black Rock Convent and the Dublin University of Teachers, after which she became principal of the Glanworth public schools. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Wall: I. John P., see forward. 2. Hanna, born 1869; died aged four months. 3. Susanna, born 1873; died aged five months. 4. Annie, born 1876; died aged eleven months. 5. Michael, born 1881 ; died aged six months. 6. Mary T., resi- dent of Brooklyn, New York. 7. Nora M., resident of New Brunswick, New Jersey. 8. James M., resident of New Brunswick, New Jersey ; married, January 7, 1903, Emma, daughter of William and Fannie ( Breese) Wright ; children :- James Clifford and George Greene Wall. 9. Margaret C., graduate of St. Agnes Academy, and State Normal School at Trenton, 1900, now a teacher in public schools of New Brunswick, New Jersey.
(V) John P., son of Michael and Susanna (Greene) Wall, was born January 22, 1868. His education was acquired in the New Bruns- wick schools. He is a merchant. Mr. Wall is noted for his literary ability, and among the articles of note which he has written are the following: "When the British held New Bruns- wick," "New Brunswick during the War of 1812," "How New Brunswick became the County Seat," "Before the Railroad came to Town," "When County Sheriffs were Hang- men," "New Brunswick's Navy in the Revolu- tion," "New Brunswick at the Critical Period of the Revolution," "The Floods of the Rari- tan," "When the Irish came to America," "The Settlement and Progress of the Catholic Church at New Brunswick, New Jersey," "A History of Clerical Garments," "The Boys of '98," and sev- eral others of more or less importance. Mr. Wall is reputed to have one of the finest private libraries of Americana in New Jersey, and is considered an authority on local history. It was under his direction that the early records of the common council were copied for the New Brunswick Historical Society. He estab- lished the "Wall Targum Prize" at Rutgers College. He was chairman of the committee on arrangements to welcome home the soldiers from the Spanish-American war. Mr. Wall married, January 15, 1903, Elizabeth Hope, second daughter of Samuel and Margaret (Harding) Macom, who were married August 12, 1866; the former was born September 29,
1841, died December 9, 1889; the latter was born August 1, 1844. Mr. and Mrs. Wall have one child-Evelyn Macom.
HOWELL
The Howells are said by anti- quarians to be of Welsh origin, although the surname is found
more frequently in England than perhaps any other portion of the British possessions. It is said, too, that the Welsh Howells trace their ancestry to one Hywel Dda ("Howell the Good"), of Wales, A. D., 800, who is men- tioned as "an early and beloved law-maker."
The Howell family of the branch treated in this place is supposed to have been of kin with the family of Edward Howell, who is mention- ed by Burke as "the owner of the manor of Westbury, in March county, Buckingham, which he sold prior to his departure for Amer- ica." He was a son of William Howell, of Wedon, Bucks, England, who died 1557, and who undoubtedly was a descendant of remote Welsh ancestors. Edward Howell came from England in 1638, and settled first in Lynn, Massachusetts, where he had a grant of five hundred acres of land. This he soon sold, and with others formed the first colony that left Lynn and settled on Long Island, where they founded the town of Southampton. From there the Howells scattered and settled in other parts of the eastern colonies, and a fair num- ber of them came over into the Jerseys.
(I) Hugh Howell, with whom our present narrative begins, was born in Wales in 1659, and died in New Jersey, September 14, 1745. He is believed to have been related to the fam- ily of Edward Howell, mentioned in the pre-, ceding paragraph, although the relationship seems difficult to establish at this time. He undoubtedly came over much later than Ed- ward, but whether he ever lived on Long Island at any time is unknown, for he appears in New Jersey at a period much later than that during which the New England colonists were driven from their settlement at Southampton by the Dutch claimants of that territory ; and we only known that Hugh Howell lived for a time in New Jersey, died there, and was buried at Baptisttown in 1745. Chambers in his "Early Germans of New Jersey," takes no account of Hugh Howell, and begins his narrative of the family life there with the second son of Hugh.
(II) Sampson, son of Hugh Howell, is said to have been born in 1718, and died February 3, 1803. In the history of the township of Hope, Warren county, New Jersey, it is writ- ten that "The Howells located on the east side
outall.
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of the township, near where now ( 1880) stands the Union Methodist Episcopal church." Samp- son Howell was the pioneer of that name, and many of the Howell descendants still live in that locality. On his death Sampson Howell was buried in Union cemetery, a few miles from Hope, and his descendants are scattered throughout Warren and Sussex counties. He was a devout member of the Church of Eng- land, and according to his gravestone he preached at times. The baptismal name of his wife was Jane, but her family name is not known. They had three sons: I. Levi, born 1746, died 1825 ; married, and had sons, George and Samuel, and a daughter, Mrs. Harris. 2. Sampson, see forward. 3. Jonah, born 1757, died 1849; married, and had sons, Asa and Caleb, and a daughter, Mrs. Osmun.
(III) Sampson (2), son of Sampson (I) and Jane Howell, was born May I, 1750, died December 20, 1810. He lived in Hardwick, Warren county, and married Elizabeth Rich- ards, born March 3, 1759, died April 18, 1818; children : I. Isaac, born 1777, died 1835 ; mar- ried, and had Philip S., David K. and Eliza- beth. 2. James, born November 27, 1778; married, and had John L., Nichols, Robert and Mary A. 3. Levinah, born 1780, died 1854; married George Van Horn, and had William, Isaac, Green, Shaver and George Van Horn. 4. Levi, married, and had Aaron, Susan, Nel- son and Garret. 5. Garret, born September 28, 1783, died January 12, 1837 ; married, and had Euphemia, Letitia and Gideon L. 6. Na- than, born November 1I, 1784. 7. John, born June 26, 1788; married, and lived in Blairs- town, New Jersey. 8. Aaron, see forward. 9. Achsah, born November 29, 1792; married David Kinney, of Livonia, New York. IO. Letitia, born May 8, 1795; married James Buckley, of Alton, Illinois. II. Uzal Ogden, born December 16, 1797, died April 17, 1834; married, and had Alexander C., of Hacketts- town, New Jersey ; children: Christian L., of Corning, New York ; Uzal H., of Vienna, New Jersey ; Isaac B., of Hackettstown, and Samp- son O., of Vienna.
(IV) Aaron, son of Sampson (2) and Eliz- abeth (Richards) Howell, was born in Hope. New Jersey, October 3, 1790, died March 5, 1857. He removed to Egg Harbor, New Jer- sey, in 1815, and afterward lived there. He married Mary Dildine, born January 13, 1786, daughter of Samuel and Rhoda Ogden Dil- dine ; children : 1. Caroline, married Godfrey Nolan. 2. Laban, see post. 3. Thaddeus. 4.
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