Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume II, Part 12

Author: Lee, Francis Bazley, 1869- ed
Publication date: 1910
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Lewis Historical Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 618


USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume II > Part 12


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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(I) Alexander Kirkpatrick, the American progenitor of the family, was one of the scions of the Closeburn family, and was born at Watties Neach, county Dumfries, and died at Mine Brook, Somerset county, New Jersey, June 3, 1758. He was a Presbyterian, but was warmly devoted to the cause of the Stuarts, and took part in the rising under the Earl of Mar for the old pretender. On account of this falling under the disfavor of the English gov- ernment, he emigrated first to Belfast, Ireland, and in the spring of 1736 came over to Amer- ica, landed in Delaware, and went to Philadel- phia, but finally settled in Somerset county, New Jersey, building his home on the southern slope of Round Mountain, about two miles from the present village of Basking Ridge. He was accompanied to this country by his brother, Andrew Kirkpatrick, and the latter's two sons and two daughters, and this branch settled in Sussex county, New Jersey. By his wife Elizabeth, whom he married in Scotland, Alexander Kirkpatrick had five children: I. Andrew, who married Margaret, daughter of Joseph Gaston, who emigrated to New Jersey about 1720. They had one son, Alexander, and seven daughters. He inherited the home- stead at Mine Brook, but sold it soon after his


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father's death to his brother David and re- moved to what was then called the "Redstone country" in Pennsylvania. 2. David, who is referred to below. 3. Alexander, who was a surveyor and also a merchant at Peapack, Warren county ; married Margaret Anderson, of Bound Brook, and had Martha, who mar- ried John Stevenson. 4. Jennet, who married Duncan McEowen and removed to Maryland. 5. Mary, who married John Bigger and re- moved from New Jersey.


(II) David, the second child and son of Alexander and Elizabeth Kirkpatrick, was born at Watties Neach, county Dumfries, Scot- land, February 17, 1724, and died at Mine Brook, New Jersey, March 19, 1814. Com- ing to America with his father, he bought from his brother Andrew the paternal homestead at Mine Brook, and lived there, "greatly esteemed and loved." In his habits he was plain and simple, while he was noted for his strict integ- rity, his sterling common sense, and his great energy and self reliance. In 1765 he was a member of the legislature of New Jersey. He built at Mine Brook the stone mansion, still standing, over the doors of which he carved the initials "D. M. K." David Kirkpatrick married, March 31, 1748, Mary McEowen, born in Argyleshire, August 1, 1728, died at Mine Brook, New Jersey, November 2, 1795. Their seven children were: I. Elizabeth, born September 27, 1749, died 1829; married (first) a Mr. Sloan and became the mother of the Rev. William B. Sloan, pastor of the Presby- terian church at Greenwich, Warren county, New Jersey; she married ( second) William Maxwell. 2. Alexander, born September 3, 1751, died September 24, 1827 ; married Sarah Carle, daughter of Judge John Carle, of Long Hill, Morris county, and had thirteen children, the fourth of whom was the Rev. Jacob Kirk- patrick, D. D., of Ringoes, New Jersey, whose son, the Rev. Jacob Kirkpatrick, D. D., was for many years a clergyman at Trenton, New Jersey. 3. Andrew, who is referred to below. 5. David, born November 1, 1758. 6. Mary, born November 23, 1761, died July 1, 1842; married Hugh Gaston, of Peapack, New Jersey, the son of John or Robert, and the grandson of Joseph Gaston, the emigrant. 7. Anne, born March 10, 1769, married Dickinson Miller, of Somerville, New Jersey.


(III) The Hon. Andrew, third child and second son of David and Mary (McEowen) Kirkpatrick, chief justice of New Jersey, was born at Mine Brook, February 17, 1756; died in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1831. In


1775 he graduated from the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University, and later received from that institution and also from Queens, now Rutgers College, the degree of M. A. He was for many years one of the trustees of his alma mater. His father, who was an ardent Presbyterian, wished him to be- come a minister, and for several months after his graduation he studied divinity with the Rev. Dr. Kennedy ; but his preference lay in the direction of the law, and he, owing to his father's anger at his stopping his theological studies, accepted a tutor's position in a Vir- ginia family, and somewhat later a similar one with a family at Esopus, New York. He then went to New Brunswick, where he tutored men for college, and entered the law office of the Hon. William Paterson, at one time gov- ernor of New Jersey, and later justice of the United States supreme court, and one of the most eminent lawyers of New Jersey of his day. In 1785 Mr. Kirkpatrick was admitted to the New Jersey bar, and for a short time he practiced in Morristown, but his office and library having been destroyed by fire, he re- moved again to New Brunwick, where he be- came noted for his great native ability, untir- ing industry and stern integrity. In 1797 he was elected to the New Jersey assembly from Middlesex county, and sat for the first part of the term, but resigned in January, 1798, in order to assume the office of associate justice of the supreme court of New Jersey, which office he held for the ensuing six years, when he became chief justice, succeeding Chief-Jus- tice Kinsey. To this post he was twice re- elected, and in this capacity he served continu- ously for twenty-one years. His decisions were marked by extensive learning, great acumen, and power of logical analysis, and his strictly logical mind and great personal dignity coupled with his other qualities made him one of the great historical characters of the New Jersey bench. Among other things he created the office of reporter of the decisions of the su- preme court. He was eminently public spirit- ed, and was the founder of the theological seminary at Princeton, and for many years the first president of its board of directors. He was in politics an Anti-Federalist or Re- publican, the party now known as the Demo- cratic, and at one time was its candidate for governor of New Jersey. Among his many excellent qualities he was especially esteemed and admired for his keen sense of justice, his considerateness and loyalty. November 1, 1792, Judge Andrew Kirkpatrick married


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Jane, born July 12, 1772, died February 16, 1851, seventh child and eldest daughter of Colonel John Bubenheim Bayard, by his first wife, Margaret, daughter of Andrew Hodge. She was widely known for her accomplish- ments, her benevolence, and beautiful christian character, and was the author of "The Light of Other Days," edited by her daughter, Mrs. Jane E. Cogswell. The children of Andrew and Jane (Bayard) Kirkpatrick were: I. Mary Ann Margaret, died March 17, 1882; married the Rev. Samuel B. Howe, pastor of the First Reformed Church at New Bruns- wick. 2. John Bayard, who is referred to be- low. 3. Littleton, born October 19, 1797 ; died August 15, 1859; graduated at Princeton, 1815 ; a leader of the New Jersey bar, promi- nent in public life ; attorney-general of New Jersey, and a member of congress from New Jersey. 4. Jane Eudora, died March, 1864; married the Rev. Jonathan Cogswell, D. D., professor of ecclesiastical history at the East Windsor Theological Seminary. 5. Elizabeth. 6. Sarah. 7. Charles Martel.


(IV) John Bayard, the second child and eldest son of the Hon. Andrew and Jane (Bayard) Kirkpatrick, was born in New Brunswick, August 15, 1795; died there Feb- ruary 24, 1864. He was one of the most con- spicuous of the merchants of the town, and was engaged largely in foreign trade. For some time he was the third assistant auditor of the United States treasury department at Washington, District of Columbia, but in 1851 he returned to New Brunswick. In 1842 he married Margaret Weaver, who died in June, 1889, and their children were: I. Andrew, who is referred to below. 2. John Bayard, born February 14, 1847; now living in New Brunswick, graduated from Rutgers College in 1866, and is active in business and in the financial interests of his town; he is commis- sioner of public works, city treasurer and a trustee of Rutgers College. June 28, 1871, he married Mary E. H., daughter of John Phil- lips, of New York City.


(V) The Hon. Andrew (2), eldest son of John Bayard and Margaret (Weaver) Kirk- patrick, was born in Washington, District of Columbia, October 8, 1844; died in Newark, New Jersey, May 3, 1904. Returning with his parents to New Brunswick, he was educated in New Jersey, at Rutgers grammar school, Princeton College, where he remained for three years and left to graduate at Union Col- lege, Schenectady, New York, from which he graduated in 1863, receiving his honorary de-


gree of M. A. from Princeton University in 1870, and in 1903 the degree of LL. D. from Union College. He then entered the office of the Hon. Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen, of Newark, and was admitted to the New Jersey bar as attorney in 1866, and as coun- sellor in 1869. For several years he practiced as one of the members of the firm of Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen, and then he went into partnership with the Hon. Frederick H. Teese. He was eminently successful, and was a recognized leader. In April, 1885, he was appointed judge of the Essex county court of common pleas by Governor Abbett, and con- tinuously reappointed until 1896, when he re- signed to become judge of the United States district court for New Jersey, which position was then offered to him by President Grover Cleveland. This position he held until his death. "His career on the bench showed a wide knowledge of the law, together with a large fund of common sense, and his methods were celebrated for this latter trait. He ac- quitted himself with honor, and the brevity of his charges to juries was frequently comment- ed on *


* His legal knowledge was brought to bear on the cases, to the disen- tanglement of many knotty problems. His record as a federal judge was brilliant, and to his courtesy and humanity there were hun- dreds to testify. Quick-witted, intolerant of shams of any kind, and broad-minded, Judge Kirkpatrick conducted cases to the admiration of lawyers and jurists of many minds * *


He possessed wide reading and because of the soundness of his judgment his opinions car- ried weight in the legal world. They were re- garded as peculiarly clear in statement and had the quality of being easily comprehended by the lay mind. He was a keen student of human nature, a man of force and insight of char- acter." Among the important commercial and corporation cases determined by him were the United States Steel Company, the United States Shipbuilding Company, and the "As- phalt Trust." He was essentially the lawyer and the judge with administrative powers of a high order, and on one memorable occasion he exercised these powers for the great advantage of one of the most extensive businesses in the country. In 1893 the Domestic Manufactur- ing company failed, and Judge Kirkpatrick was appointed receiver with authority to con- tinue the business of making and selling Do- mestic sewing machines. Notwithstanding the unexampled financial depression which mark- ed the year of the World's Fair he discharged


Maymarchaluck


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his trust with such skill that works with hun- dreds of employees continued in operation, and at the expiration of his official term as receiver he delivered the property to the stockholders entirely freed from its embarrasments and with assets sufficient to pay all of its creditors in full. He was one of the organizers and for some time was president of the Federal Trust Company, a director in the Howard Savings Institution, treasurer of the T. P. Howell Company, a director in the Fidelity Title and Deposit Company, a director in the Newark Gas Company, a member of the Newark city hall commission, and a member of the New- ark sinking fund commission. He was the type of all that is highest and best in Ameri- can civilization, of the purest integrity, and the loftiest ideals, devoted to the obligations of his family and bound to his friends by at- tachments most amiable and attractive in his private character. He was the treasurer and one of the original governors of the Essex Club, and one of the organizers of the Sons of the American Revolution. In 1869 he mar- ried (first) Alice, daughter of Joel W. and Margaret (Harrison) Condit, the sister of Estelle Condit, who married Thomas Tal- madge Kinney. Their three children were: I. Andrew, of New York City, born October 12, 1870; educated at St. Paul's school, Con- cord, New Hampshire ; spent one year at Cor- nell, and five years in the Pennsylvania rail- road shops at Altoona ; became assistant road foreman of engines of the Pennsylvania rail- road, and is now in the automobile business ; he married Mae Bittner and has one child, Andrew, Jr. 2. John Bayard, who is referred to below. 3. Alice Condit, born December II, 1874; graduated from St. Agnes school, Al- bany, New York. In 1883 Judge Andrew Kirkpatrick married (second) Louise C., daughter of Theodore P. and Elizabeth Wood- ruff (King) Howell, of New York City, and their three children are: 4. Littleton, who is referred to below. 5. Isabelle, born January 18, 1886; married Albert H. Marckwald, of Short Hills, New Jersey. 6. Elizabeth, born August 2, 1895.


(VI) John Bayard, the second child and son of the Hon. Andrew (2) and Alice (Con- dit) Kirkpatrick, was born in Newark, New Jersey, May 1, 1872, and is now living in that city. Preparing for college in St. Paul's school, Concord, New Hampshire ; he graduated from Harvard University in 1894, and from the same institution's law school in 1897. He then read law with Coult & Howell and was


admitted to the New Jersey bar at attorney in February, 1898, and as counsellor in Febru- ary, 1891. For the next three years he worked in partnership with Joseph D. Gallegher and then set up in practice for himself in Newark. Mr. Kirkpatrick is a Democrat, but has held no office nor does he belong to any secret soci- eties. He is a member of three of the Har- vard clubs, namely those of New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia, and also a member of the Lawyers' Club, the Union Club, the Essex Club, the Engineers' Club, of New York. He is a communicant of Grace Prot- estant Episcopal Church, of Newark, and is one of the trustees of St. Matthews Church. He is a director in the Neptune Meter Com- pany, in the New Jersey Patent Holding Com- pany and the New Jersey Title and Abstract Company. He is unmarried.


(VI) Littleton, the only son of the Hon. Andrew (2) and Louise C. (Howell) Kirk- patrick, was born in Newark, New Jersey, September 2, 1884, and is now living at 243 Mount Prospect avenue in that city. For his early education he went to the Newark Academy, and then prepared for college in St. Paul's school, Concord, New Hampshire, after leaving which he graduated from Princeton University in 1906. He then became superin- tendent of the blast furnace of the New Jersey Zinc Company at Palmerton, Pennsylvania, and a year later went to Cuba as assistant treasurer for the Stewart Sugar Company. After a year of this he returned to Newark and is now in the real estate and insurance business, under the firm name of Kirkpatrick & Young. Mr. Kirkpatrick is a Democrat, but he has held no office and he belongs to no secret societies. He is a member of the Prince- ton Club, of New York; of the University Cottage Club, of Princeton, and of the Union Club, of Newark. June 9, 1908, Littleton Kirkpatrick married, in Newark, Amanda Lewis, the fourth child and third daughter of Edward Nichols and Cordelia (Matthews) Crane, born December 3, 1884. They have one daughter.


COBB This name, so closely identified with the early iron industries founded in Essex county, New Jersey, at the beginning of the eighteenth cen- tury, first appears in Massachusetts in connec- tion with the same industry founded at Taun- ton, Plymouth Colony, in 1639. Already the Winthrop Company at Braintree had estab- lished a bloomery and forge, having imported


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skilled workmen from Wales to operate the works. The absence of a circulating medium except wampum, and measures of Indian corn, found a new medium in the manufactured iron and even in the pig as it came from the bloom- ery. Plows and hoes were a prime necessity in the cultivation of Indian corn, the chief food of the Colonists, and the iron industry as- sumed an importance second to no other in the colony. At Two Mile river, near Taunton, the supply of iron ore appeared to be inexhaust- able and the proprietors of that town at once set about to develop the mines. The pro- prietors of the First Company organized in 1653-54 included twenty-three residents and proprietors of the town, and the thirteenth one on the list of subscribers was John Cobb, or Cob, as then written. Additional capital was furnished from Plymouth, Boston, Salem and Braintree, in Massachusetts, and by Provi- dence and Newport, in Rhode Island. The product of the bloomeries and forges there established was transported by wagon to Bos- ton and Salem and by small sloops to Provi- dence, Newport and even to New York. This trade put Taunton in close touch with the western world as it then existed, and for the time the iron mines of Taunton were the gold mines of more favored Spanish-America. The mines at Taunton were in charge of Henry and James Leonard and Ralph Russell. Cap- tain Thomas Cobb married a daughter of James Leonard and in this way the Cobbs be- came more firmly allied to the iron industry, and when the iron mines of Morris county, New Jersey, presented new fields of quickly acquired wealth, we find the Cobbs at Rocka- way, East New Jersey. The progenitor of these thrifty and enterprising colonists was Henry Cobb (q. v.).


(I) Henry Cobb, one of the "Men of Kent," was born in county Kent, near London, Eng- land, in 1596. He had been brought up in the established church, and when the non-con- formist party took a stand against the religious intolerance that became more and more un- bearable, young Cobb attended the meetings held by Lathrop and his followers in London and became a disciple of Congregationalism. He was not, however, of the twenty-four mem- bers who, with their preacher Lathrop, con- fined in the "foul and loothsome prisons" of London, but it was his privilege a few years after to welcome Lathrop to New England and help to organize for him a school at Scit- uate, Plymouth Colony. It is probable that Henry Cobb was a passenger of the ship


"Anne" that reached the New England coast in 1629. He was at Plymouth that year and remained in the oldest established town in America up to 1633, when the church at Plymouth gave him a letter of dismissal to Scituate, which was common land of the colony, and where a considerable body of set- tlers had located and stood in need of a church and preacher. A town government was organized by Cobb and his associates and incorporated by the general court of Plymouth, July 1, 1633. The next year Mr. Lathrop arrived from London and was installed min- ister over the church organization and Henry Cobb was made senior deacon. This position marks the estimation in which he was held by the fellow Pilgrims. The town and church grew and prospered, and in 1638 he was dismissed to go to Barnstable and established a town and church goverment there which was affected March 5, 1738. He was made ruling elder of this church and was thereafter known as Elder Cobb. Besides holding the highest office in the town and church, he was deputy to the general court at Plymouth, 1645-47-52-59-60- 61. He married (first) in Plymouth, in April, 1631, Patience, daughter of Deacon James and Catherine Hurst, of that town, and by her he had eight children and of these the first three were born in Plymouth, the next two in Scit- uate and the others in Barnstable which be- came his permanent home and where he died in 1679, aged eighty-three years. The children were born in the following order: I. John (q. v.). 2. Edward (q. v.). 3. James, Janu- ary 14, 1634; married Sarah, daughter of James Lewis, December 26, 1663, and died 1695. 4. Mary, March 24, 1637; married Jon- athan Dunham, of Barnstable, October 15, 1657. 5. Hannah, October 5, 1639; married Edward Lewis, May 9, 1681, and died January 17, 1736. 6. Patience, March 19, 1641 ; mar- ried (first) Robert Parker, August, 1667; (second) Deacon William Crocker, 1686. 7. Greshom, January 10, 1645; married Hannah David, June 4, 1675 ; he was beheaded by the Indians. 8. Eleazer, March 30, 1648. The mother of these children, Patience (Hurst) Cobb, died May 4, 1648, and Elder Cobb mar- ried (second) Sarah, daughter of Samuel and Sarah Hinckley, who were also the parents of Governor Thomas Hinckley. By this marriage Elder Cobb had eight children, all born in Braintree as follows: 9. Mehitable, Septem- ber 1, 1652; died March 8, 1653. 10. Samuel, October 12, 1654; married Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Taylor, December 20, 1680; died


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December 27, 1727. II. Sarah, January 15, 1658; died the same year. 12. Jonathan, April IO. 1660; married, March 1, 1683, Hope, daughter of John Chipman and widow of John Hukins, a "Mayflower" descendant. 13. Sarah (2), March 10, 1663; married Deacon Samuel Chipman, December 27, 1689. 14. Henry, September 5, 1665 ; married Lois, daughter of Joseph Hallett, April 10, 1690; removed to Stonington, Connecticut colony. 15. Mehit- able, February 15, 1667 ; died young. 16. Ex- perience, September, 1671 ; died young.


(II) John, eldest son of Henry and Patience (Hurst) Cobb, was born in Plymouth, Plymouth colony, January 7, 1632. He was brought up in Barnstable, where he was mar- ried, August 28, 1658, to Martha, daughter of William Nelson, of Plymouth, and by her he had six children as follows, all born in Barn- stable : I. John, August 24, 1662 ; died Octo- ber 8, 1727 ; he married Rachel Soule, grand- daughter of George Soule, the "Mayflower" passenger, 1620. 2. Samuel, 1663; settled in Tolland, Connecticut colony, where he became very prominent in town and colonial affairs. 3. Elizabeth, 1664. 4. Israel, 1666. 5. Pa- tience, August 10, 1668; married John Barett, of Middleburgh. 6. Ebenezer, August 9, 1671 ; married (first) Mercy Holmes, March 22, 1694; (second) Mary Thomas; he died in Kingston, Plymouth colony, January 29, 1752. 7. Elisha, April 3, 1679 ; married Lydia Ryder, February 4, 1703. 8. James, July 20, 1682; married Patience Holmes, July 21, 1705. The mother of these children, except the last two, Martha (Nelson) Cobb, died and her husband married as his second wife, in Taunton, June 13, 1676, Jane Woodward, of Taunton, and by her had Elisha and James. He had re- moved to Taunton in 1659, and been allotted thirty acres of land in the division of the town lots, and he took the oath of allegiance in 1659, as did Edward Cobb. On June 6, 1668, John Cobb, of Taunton, with thirty-five other of the settlers of Plymouth colony purchased from Thomas Pence, Josiah Winslow, Thomas Southworth and Constant Southworth the territory lying in the north of Taunton and known as Taunton North Purchase and where John and William Cobb became permanent settlers, the place being incorporated as the town of Norton, May 17, 1710. John Cobb, of Taunton, paid taxes into the treasury of Plymouth colony according to the records in 1668 at the October court, July 8, 1669; Janu- ary, 1670, was on the jury at Plymouth for Taunton, and was one of seven of the twelve


men on the jury able to write his name, the other five making their marks. He was super- visor of highways and entrusted with the lay- ing out of boundaries as well as roads in 1666. He returned to Barnstable but his sons, who did not remove to Connecticut, remained in Taunton.


(II) Edward, second son of Henry and Patience (Hurst) Cobb, was born in Plymouth, 1633, and took the oath of fidelity, 1659. He married Mary, daughter of William and Ann (Hynd) Hoskins, November 28, 1660. He removed to Taunton in 1657, where he died in 1675, and his widow married (second) Samuel Philips. The children of Edward and Mary (Hoskins) Cobb were: Edward and John.


(III) Edward (2), eldest son of Edward (I) and Mary (Hoskins) Cobb, was born in Taunton, Plymouth colony, about 1662. He married but we find no record as to name of wife or date of marriage. He had children as follows : I. Ebenezer (q. v.). 2. Mary, who married Seth Dean, and had sons, Ichabod Paul and Silas Dean; she married (second) John Rosher and (third) Nicholas Stephens. Edward (2) gave his son, Ebenezer, fifteen acres of land in Taunton taken from the north- erly portion of his homestead farm. The deed for this land is dated February 22, 1733.


(IV) Ebenezer, eldest child of Edward (2) Cobb, was born in Taunton, Massachusetts, May 6, 1696; died in 1769. He married, Feb- ruary 6, 1717, Mehitable, daughter of Increase and Mehitable (Williams) Robinson, and granddaughter of Increase Robinson, baptized in Dorchester, Massachusetts Bay colony, May 14, 1642, son of William and Margaret Robin- son (1635). She was born January 12, 1695, died 1761. The children of Ebenezer and Mehitable (Robinson) Cobb were born in Taunton, Massachusetts, as follows : I. Jemima, June 21, 1718. 2. Sarah, December 6, 1719. 3. Ebenezer, December 13, 1721. 4. John (q. v.). 5. Abiel, November 15, 1725; married Sarah Van Winkle, January 4, 1750; died 1805. 6. Mehitable, January 9, 1728; married (first) a Woodruff ; (second) a Bald- win, and (third) Thomas Gould, of Caldwell, New Jersey. 7. Edward, July 15, 1731 ; mar- ried Elizabeth Bowers, born 1746, died 1788; he died 1813. 8. Mary, October 12, 1733 ; died 1805. 9. Ann, June 27, 1738; married John Gould; died 1780.




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