USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume I > Part 7
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call Newark responded immediately; but Stephen Crane who had succeeded Robert Ogden as. chairman of the Elizabethtown committee wrote to Lord Stirling, March 14, to the effect that the committee had no right to send a detachment out of the province, urged the desperate state of the colony and said, "The Arming the two battalions in the Continental Service hath drained us of our best Arms, and in Case a Descent should be made at New York, we should be liable to continual excursions of the enemy." On the following day, William Burnet, chairman of the Essex county committee, wrote to Lord Stirling that he also had received a copy of Stephen Crane's letter "from which we are afraid no men will come from Elizabeth
Town * * * however we shall Endeavour to prevail with them to furnish their quota, and hope we shall succeed"; and the day sub- sequent to this he wrote again that "the con- fusion is owing to your writing to the Town- ship and not to the County Committee." Two days later Lord Stirling acknowledged the services of Burnet and of the people of New- ark and arranged with the Elizabethtown com- mittee to undertake preparations necessary nearer home, wisely judging that their refusal had been due not to disloyalty or cowardice, but to the mistaken idea of self-preservation so prevalent during the early years of the war. Shortly after this Stephen Crane lost his wife Phebe, born 1714, died August 28, 1776, and he himself. followed her less than three years later, dying June 23, 1780, after thirty years of public life, maintaining always a good reputation for integrity, sagacity and courage.
The children of the Hon. Stephen Crane were :
I. Daniel, born January 3, 1735.
2. Stephen, Jr., October 14, 1737 ; according to one account killed by the British during the revolution, and according to another dying February II, 1796. He married (first) Phebe Morse, who bore him eleven children: Eliza- beth, Susan, Daniel, Phebe, Nancy, Margaret, Hannah, Mary, Jenet Sinclair, Esther and Jonathan ; married (second) Jane Haines or Harris, who bore him three more children: Mary, Sarah, married Nehemiah, son of Jacob and Phebe (Woodruff) Crane, grandson of Caleb and Mary, daughter of Edward Searls, great-grandson of Nathaniel and Damaris. Crane, and great-great-grandson of Stephen Crane (I), and Solomon.
.. 3. Elizabeth, March 10, 1740; married Sam-
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uel 'Bonnel, and bore him two children: Jane and Lewis.
4. David, November 27, 1742, died August 20, 1822. He was at one time alderman of Eliz- abethtown ; married (first ) November 21, 1762, Anne Sayre, and (second ) in 1806, Agnes Neaty Cooper, and had two children by his first wife, David and Sarah, who died young, and with their father, mother and stepmother are buried in Union cemetery, Connecticut Farms.
5. General William, born in 1747, died July 30, 1814, from the results of a wound received at the storming of Quebec, December 31, 1775. In this campaign he was a lieutenant of artil- lery under General Montgomery, and after the close of the war he became a major-general of the militia, serving as such in the war of 1812. being for a time posted at Sandy Hook for the defence of New York City. In 1807 he was ap- pointed deputy-mayor of Elizabethtown, and from the same year until his death he was a trustee of the First Presbyterian Church of the city. He was twice married, his second wife being Abigail, daughter of Benjamin Miller, who bore him six children: Captain William Montgomery Crane, United States navy ; Colonel Ichabod B. Crane, United States army, married Charlotte A. Rainger. of Barre, Massa- chusetts, and had Charles Henry Crane, sur- geon-general United States army; the Hon. Joseph H. Crane, United States congressman and Judge of the supreme court of Ohio; Maria Crane, who lived with her brother. Joseph H. Crane, and died unmarried ; Joanna Crane, married John Magie and left one child Julia ; Phebe Crane, died unmarried aged twenty-five years.
6. Phebe, June 2, 1750; married Captain Jacob Crane, who served in the French and Indian wars and was a non-commissioned officer under the British government in the war with Canada, and died July 25, 1811, leaving four children, Stephen, Jacob, Phebe and Matthias. Captain Jacob was the son of the Hon. Matthias Crane, mayor of Eliz- abethtown; grandson of John and Esther (Williams) Crane; and great-grandson of Stephen Crane (I).
7. Joseph, referred to below.
8. Jonathan, May 15, 1754, died June, 1780, being killed by Hessian soldiers.
9. Catharine, October 8, 1756.
(IV) Joseph, seventh child and fifth son of the Hon. Stephen (2) and Phebe Crane, was born May 20, 1752, at Elizabethtown. He was at one time sheriff of Essex county and also a judge. May 28, 1777, he was a
second lieutenant in Captain Dodd's company of the second regiment of the Essex county troops; and after the war was the captain of a company of militia grenadiers, which to- gether with Captain Meeker's light horse, Cap- tain Williamson's infantry and Captain Will- iam's artillery took part in Elizabethtown's famous Fourth of July celebration in 1787.
Captain Joseph Crane married (first) Sus- anna Ross, born in 1749, died October 22, 1781. Children: 1. Ann, born January 20, 1773. 2. Susanna, December 12 or 23, 1774, died January 22, 1851 ; married, May 1, 1790, Henry Weaver, born April 15, 1761, served on a privateer during the revolution, was cap- tured, confined in old Mill prison, England, and released January, 1784. About 1787 he mar- ried (first) Hannah Meeker, who, however, soon left him and returned to her own family : and he then eloped with Susanna Crane, and removed to Columbia county, Ohio, near Fort Washington (now Cincinnati), afterwards re- moving again to a tract of land near Middle- town, Butler county, and finally settling about 1801 on Elk creek in Madison township, where he died August 17, 1829, leaving a widow and eight out of fourteen children surviving him. 3. William, referred to below. . 4. Nancy, mar- ried Abraham Van Sickle and went with him to Trenton, Butler county, Ohio, where they had five children: Susan, Henry, Maria, Catharine and Joseph Van Sickle.
Captain Joseph Crane married (second) Margaret, daughter of Dirck and Sarah ( Mid- dagh) Van Vechten or Veghten (the name is spelt both ways). Her father, born July 15. 1699, died November 29, 1781 ; married three times, (first) Judith Brockholst; (second) Deborah, daughter of Dominie Antonides ; and (third) in 1759, Sarah Middagh, who died November 17, 1785, aged forty-six. His farm was the camping ground of the revolutionary armies and his house the center of a bounteous hospitality to officers and men. General Greene gave him a handsome mahogany table as a token of appreciation of the kindness shown him there. Her grandfather, Michael Dirckse Van Veghten, born November 28. 1663, died in 1782; married (first) Marytje Perker, and (second) Janitje Dumon, and with his brother Abraham removed from the Cats- kills to New Jersey before 1699, where his son Dirck was baptized September 16, on the Rari- tan. His family Bible is in the Bible House in New York City, and his will, dated April 17. 1777, was probated February 4, 1782 (Trenton, Liber M, folio 122). He was one
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of the company of eight persons who May 3, 1712, bought the Royce plantation of one thou- sand four hundred and seventy acres; and. February, 1711, he was one of the assistant judges of Somerset county. In 1721 he gave the land upon which the first church of Rari- tan was originally built, shortly after the call- ing and coming of the Rev. Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen. This church was destroyed at the time of the revolution and the second building was erected at what is now the town of Somerville. The land given by Michael Van Veghten was near the bank of the Rari- tan river, about a quarter of a mile east of the present bridge near Finderne station. Michael was the son of Dirck Teunise Van Veghten, born 1634, at Veghten, Holland, emigrated to New Netherland with his father, married Jannetje Michaelse Vreelandt, and settled in the Catskills before 1681, residing where the old Van Vechten house, the third built upon the site, now stands. His father was Teunis Dirckse Van Veghten, who came to New Am- sterdam with his family in the ship "Arms of Norway" in 1638, and settled at Greenbush, opposite Albany, where he had a farm as early as 1648.
By his second marriage with Margaret Van Vechten, whose niece, Elizabeth Mercereau Van Vechten, was the second wife of General John Frelinghuysen (IV), son of General Frederick (III), Captain Joseph Crane had six more children: I. Richard Van Vechten, born December 29, 1785; married; settled in Ohio; had one child, a daughter, married John Trotter, of Macoupin county, Illinois, and has three children : Clark, Oscar and George Trot- ter. 2. David, April 18, 1788, died about 1850, in Cass county, Michigan ; married Elizabeth Huff, settled1 as a farmer in Butler county, Ohio, His wife died in Piasa, Macoupin county, Illi- nois, October 9, 1880 ; they had eight children : Leonard W., Nancy, Elizabeth, Joanna, Isaac, David, John and Catharine. 3. Catharine, No- vember 7, 1791, died September 6, 1805. 4. Sally, lived and died unmarried. 5. John, April 17, 1796, died March 15, 1864; married Sarah Conover, and had ten children : William, Joel, Margaret, Tryphena, George Washing- ton, Mariah, Mary, John Conover, Jane Con- over and Joseph. 6. Michael Van Vechten, June 17, 1800, died about 1848, unmarried.
(V) William, eldest son and third child of Captain Joseph and Susanna (Ross) Crane, was born October 23, 1778, died at Elizabeth, June 4, 1830. He was a farmer, a surveyor, and a justice of the peace ; he resided at Con-
necticut Farms (now Union), Essex county. In 1802 he married Sarah Townley, of Eliza- beth, born October 26, 1776, died August 18. 1832. Children : 1. Anne, born November 20. 1803, died August 6, 1805. 2. David Ross, January 8, 1806, died January 12, 1848, at Elizabeth ; married, March, 1828, Phebe Ann, daughter of Lewis Hallam, of New York City, born May 17, 1811, and had nine chil- dren: William Lewis, Sarah Anna, Sarah Townley, Robert Burrell, David Ross Jr., Eliza Langdon, David Ross Jr., Jonathan M. M., Susannah Ross. 3. Agnes Cooper, Au- gust 6, 1809, died January 15, 1857, at Morris- town ; married, November 17, 1836, the Rev. Curtis Talley, a Methodist minister, and left one child, Helen Williams Talley. 4. Richard Townley, referred to below. 5. Joseph Will- iam, December 14, 1815, died January 1, 1865, in Wilmington, Ohio; married (first) Octo- ber 18, 1837, Harriet J., daughter of Ezekiel Wilcox ; she died leaving one daughter, Har- riet Jemima Crane, born July 15, 1838; mar- ried (second) September 25, 1839, Emma S., daughter of Lewis P. Brookfield, of Spring Valley, who bore him two children: Lewis William, born September 25, 1840, and Charles Augustus, July 26, 1842. 6. Jonathan Town- ley, June 18, 1819, at Connecticut Farms ; graduated at Princeton University, 1843, be- came a Methodist minister, and in 1856 re- ceived his D. D. degree from Dickinson College. His pastorate was long and success- ful, and he was the author of a number of moral and religious books. He died at Port Jervis, New York, February 16, 1880. Janu- ary 18. 1848, he married in New York City. Mary Helen, daughter of the Rev. George Peck, of Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, born April 10, 1827, who bore him fourteen chil- dren: Mary Helen, George Peck, Jonathan Townley, William Howe, see forward, Agnes Elizabeth, Edmund Bryan, Wilber Fiske, Elizabeth Townley, Luther Peck, Myra Blanche, Blanche, Jesse T., Jesse T., Stephen, see forward.
William Howe, fourth child of Jonathan Townley Crane, was born at Pennington, New Jersey, February 6, 1854. His education be- gan in the Newark, New Jersey, high school, where he prepared for college. He entered Wesleyan University in 1873 and passed his freshman year, but his health was not rugged enough to allow the completion of his college course. To recuperate he took a position as teacher of the district school at Lyons Farms. New Jersey, where he served from January,
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1875, to July, 1876. He then taught mathe- matics for two years in the Mississippi State Normal School at Holly Springs. After a special course in the New York University he entered the Albany Law School and graduated in 1880. Began the practice of law the same year at Port Jervis, New York. He was for nine years a member of the Port Jervis board of education and part of the time served as president of the board. In 1892 he was elected judge of the county court of Orange county, New York, holding this office for three years. In 1901 he removed his law office to New York City. He married, in 1880, Cornelia Zearfoss, of Musconetcong, New Jersey, who bore him four daughters : Mary, Helen, Agnes Cornelia, Edna Josephine and Florence.
Stephen, youngest son of Jonathan Town- ley Crane, was born in Newark, November I, 1870, died at Badenweiler, Germany, June 5, 1900. He was educated at Lafayette College and Syracuse University, was a reporter and newspaper writer, and was correspondent for the New York Journal in the Greco-Turkish war, 1897, and in Cuba, and then removed to England. Since his first essay in fiction, in 1891, "Maggie, a Girl of the Streets," he has published many stories of various lengths, and since his death his widow has collected and published many of his posthumous writings. His greatest story, however, was the "Red Badge of Courage," published in 1896, a very realistic though wholly imaginary description of the horrors of a battle of the civil war.
(VI) Richard Townley, fourth child and second son of William and Sarah (Townley) Crane, was born at Connecticut Farms, Sep- tember 14, 1812, died at Camden, New Jersey, December 18, 1886. He was a sash, door and blind manufacturer, and a farmer. He learned the sash and blind making trade from the firm of Baker & Ward of Newark, and afterwards removed to Brooklyn, where he set up in business and remained for nine years. In 1847 he returned to Newark and carried on his business at 589 West Broad street (now Clinton avenue) for nearly twenty years, when he removed to a farm near Millstone, New Jersey. where he spent the remainder of his life. Mr. Crane was a musical amateur and connected with several musical societies. For eleven years he was chorister of the First Con- gregational Church of Clinton street, New- ark. He was a man "of exceptionally regular and temperate habits, irreproachable in all his business relations, and of a sensitive retiring
nature. He was best appreciated and loved by his most intimate friends; and possessing a keen sense of humor, he was a most genial companion." September 24, 1885, he and his wife celebrated their golden wedding at the home of their youngest son at Lyons Farms, New Jersey, where a large gathering of rela- tives and friends greeted the venerable couple.
September 24, 1835, Richard Townley Crane married in Newark, Jane Thompson Dolbear, born at Connecticut Farms, Febru- ary 26, 1818. Children : I. Theodore Talley, born in Newark, October 12, 1837; became a local preacher of the Methodist Episcopal church. He made music his life work and profession, and was proficient on both organ and piano. He composed considerably for both instruments and published a text book for students in music which showed a practical advance on any previously put out. He was one of the leading organists in Newark, New Jersey, until 1866. He also served in this capacity in the cities of New Brunswick, Tren- ton, Philadelphia and Camden, respectively, as his residence changed in later years. August 31, 1861, he married (first) in Flemington, New Jersey, Ruth E. Thatcher, of Everitts- town, where she was born November 22, 1840. She died at Clarksboro, New Jersey, August 24, 1891, leaving two children : Helen Elizabeth, born June 27, 1863; and Charles Thatcher, February 23, 1866, married, Sep- tember 2, 1896, Marie Cheeseman and has one child Theodore. He married (second) Henrietta Dod Miller, June 24, 1896, daughter of Sylvester B. Miller, of Newark, New Jer- sey, and is now living at Pasadena, Califor- nia. 2. Frederic Willard Curtis, referred to below.
(VII) Frederic Willard Curtis, second and youngest child of Richard Townley and Jane Thompson (Dolbear) Crane, was born in Brooklyn, November 1, 1842. His father came to Newark when Frederic W. C. was four years old and he was sent for his early education to the public and high schools of that city. Until the civil war broke out, he was with his father learning the sash, door and blind manufacturing trade, but in 1864 went to New York City and took a position as clerk in an importing house. He remained in New York for thirty-five years in various po- sitions of trust, and in 1902 retired from ac- tive business. Mr. Crane is a Republican, but never sought political office. In 1863 he was one of those who answered the emergency
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call for seventy-five thousand volunteers, and was orderly sergeant of Company C, Newark Battalion. His home since 1870 (except two and one-half years in Cincinnati, 1883-85) has been at Lyons Farms, New Jersey, and he and his family are members of the First Presby- terian church of that place, on Elizabeth ave- nue, where he has been a trustee for thirty- three years, an elder for twenty -four years, and organist for twenty-six years. Besides music, Mr. Crane's taste led him to take up the game of chess. He was an enthusiastic amateur, and served two different terms as president of the New Jersey State Chess Association. In 1874 he began making a pocket chess board, a sort of pastime. These became known widely, and found sale through this and foreign countries for more than thirty-five years, it being known as Crane's Pocket Chess Board. He was also a lifelong student of astronomy; and several times gave lectures on the science, especially to arouse the interest of young people in the heavenly bodies and their movements.
June 28, 1866, he married (first) Harriet, daughter of Stephen and Harriet Helen ( Kniffin) Riker, born April 30, 1846, died November 10, 1868, who bore him one child, Emma, died in infancy. October 18, 1870, he married (second) at Lyons Farms, Phebe Townley, daughter of Jacob Smith and Rhoda C. (Brown) Dod, born October 10, 1841. Her mother was the daughter of Colonel William Brown, of Lyons Farms, and her father, a currier of Newark, was the son of Abner Dod, of Newark, who was a mathematical in- strument maker and lived for the early part of his life in Mendham, New Jersey. April 24, 1802, he married Hannah, daughter of Joseph Gould, of Caldwell, and second cousin to his brother Stephen's wife, who bore him five children, Susan Henrietta, Horace Lucius, Charles, Jacob Smith and Sarah Catharine. After the death of his first wife, Abner Dod married (second) Phebe (Bates) Squire, widow of Ezra Squire, M. D., of Caldwell, and after her death, Abigail (Wade) Squier, widow of Samuel Squier, of Livingston, but he had no issue by his second and third mar- riages. He was the son of Lebbeus Dod, of Mendham, and Mary, daughter of Caleb Bald- win, and the grandson of Stephen Dod, of Mendham, son of Daniel (III), of Guilford, and Deborah Brown. By his second marriage with Phebe Townley Dod, Frederic Willard Curtis Crane had six children: I. Laura Dod, born December 4, 1871, died December 24, 1873, 2. Jessie Florence, May 3, 1873, died August
23, 1876. 3. Raymond Townley, May 31, 1875 ; married Ada Delphine Van Name, and has two children, Robert Townley, born April 12, 1903; and Phyllis Wyckoff, January 10, 1907. 4. Arthur Dod, September 7, 1877; married Nellie Hathaway, of Cincinnati, and has two children: Frances Hathaway, born April 19, 1905; and Christine Dod, May 26, 1908. 5. and 6. Clarence Brown and Willard Ward, twins, April 9, 1879; Willard Ward died August II, 1879, and Clarence . Brown married Minnie A. Fuhrmann.
(For first generation see preceding sketch).
CRANE (II) John Crane, son of Stephen Crane, of Elizabethtown, was born probably in Elizabethtown, died in that place in February, 1723. He was a carpenter by trade and lived in Eliz- abethtown. In 1713 he was chosen one of the overseers of the highways; August 2, 1720, he was appointed as one of seven com- mitteemen for some work to be done for the town. In his will, dated February 7, and proved February 16, 1723, he mentions his wife Esther, his sons John, Joseph, Mathias, Benjamin, Samuel, all except John being un- der twenty-one, and his daughters, Abigail, Es- ther, Sarah, Rebekah and Deborah. . His saw mill and his grist mill on the Rahway river, inherited from his father, Stephen Crane, he gives to his sons, John and Joseph, in whose families the property remained for many years. In addition of this he disposes of one hundred acres of meadow in Elizabethtown, bought April 13, 1716, of Benjamin Wade, of four acres of meadow in the same place bought of Jeremiah Osborne, of his house and fourteen acre lot in Elizabethtown, and of much personal estate. His executors are his wife, the Rev. Jonathan Dickinson, and his brother, Jeremiah Crane.
By his marriage with Esther, daughter of Samuel and Esther (Wheeler) Williams, of Elizabethtown, he had ten children: I. John, born about 1700; married ; died September II, 1763. 2. Matthias, referred to in the sketch of the Benjamin family. 3. Benjamin, re- ferred to below. 4. Samuel, born about 1712. 5. Abigail, born January 25, 1713; married Jacob DeHart; died before 1777. 6. Joseph. 7. Esther, married probably John Davis. 8. Sarah. 9. Rebecca. . IO: Deborah.
(III) Benjamin, third child and son of John and Esther (Williams) Crane, was born in Elizabethtown, New Jersey, about 1710. He lived near Elizabethtown. He married Esther
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Woodruff, born 1711, died February 22, 1809. who bore him two children of record: I. Ben- jamin, referred to below. 2. Eleazar, who served with the New Jersey troops in the rev- olution, was taken prisoner in the battle of Long Island, August 27, 1776, and died shortly after from the effects of the treatment he re- ceived. He married Susan, daughter of David and granddaughter of George Day, of New- ark, who bore him three children, and after his death married (second) Matthias Allen, to whom she bore two daughters.
(IV) Benjamin (2), eldest child and son of Benjamin (I) and Esther (Woodruff) Crane, was born near Elizabethtown about 1732. He lived in Westfield, New Jersey. He married Phebe, daughter of Joseph Halsey, who lived between Elizabethtown and Rah- way. They had seven children: I. Benjamin, referred to below. 2. Abigail, born November 22, 1762, died young. 3. Norris, born Febru- ary 9, 1764, died February 21, 1846; married Jane Dunham. 4. John, born April 18, 1765. 5. Phebe, born December 19, 1766; married John Johnson but had no children. 6. Sarah, born April 12, 1771, died August 8, 1826; mar- ried John Ogden, of Green Village, Morris county, New Jersey. 7. Abigail, born Sep- tember 14, 1774, died young.
(V) Benjamin (3), eldest child and son of Benjamin (2) and Phebe (Halsey) Crane, was born in Westfield, New Jersey, November 29, 1761, and lived in Cranville, now Cranford. He was an auctioneer, a farmer and a revo- lutionary soldier, being a private and musician in the Essex county troops of the New Jersey militia. By his wife Sarah Thompson or as some accounts state, Sarah Tufts, he had eleven children : 1. John, married Mary Clark. 2. Abigail, married David Heyt. 3. Esther, died aged eighteen or twenty. 4. Hezekiah Thompson, married Amanda Osborne. 5. Phebe, married (first) Francis Randolph, and (second). George R. King. 6. Charlotte King, married H. Baker. 7. Norris, went to Ohio and married there. 8. Jacob Thompson, went to Ohio and died there unmarried. 9. Benja- min, married Electa Baker. 10. David John- son, referred to below. II Moses Thompson, married Eliza Scudder.
(VI) David Johnson, tenth child and sixth son of Benjamin (3) and Sarah (Thompson) or (Tufts) Crane, was born in Cranville, New Jersey. He went to New York where he spent five years trucking and teaming, and then returned to Cranford ( formerly Cran- ville.) and went to farming. He was a
Democrat in politics. By his marriage with Hannah Eliza, daughter of Isaac and Rebecca (Higgins) Roll, whose other children were James, Elmer, Mary, Jane and John Roll, he had eight children: I. James, married Sarah Clark, and had Samuel, Leonora, Aaron D., James and Joseph Crane. 2. Jacob Thompson, died aged two and a half or three years old. 3. David Newton, referred to below. 4. George King, married a Winans and had Min- nie, Jessie, and Ethel Crane. 5. Isaac Roll, married Frederica Springer, who with her hus- band is now dead. 6. John. 7. Hezekiah, married (first) Annabel Brokaw, and (sec- ond) Althea Woodruff. 8. Benjamin Frank- lin, died aged three weeks old.
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