USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume II > Part 27
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daughter of Enoch Core, the emigrant, and Sarah, daughter of John and Sarah Roberts, the emigrants ; granddaughter of Thomas and Susannah Wilkins, the emigrants. Isaac Haines was also the grandson of Jonathan and Hannah (Sharp) Haines whose ancestry is given below. After her first husband's death, Rebecca Lippincott married (second) Isaac, son of John and Mary Wilson. 2. Elizabeth married (first) William Austin and (second) Josiah Costill. 3. Dorothy, married Joseph Matlack. 4. Sarah, married John Hoile, of Jefferson county, Ohio, son of John and Sarah Hoile, who lived in the north of England. 5. Benjamin H., treated below. After his first wife's death, Moses Lippincott married (sec- ond) Sarah, daughter of David Stratton, who bore him three children. 6. John S., married Hannah Alberston. 7. Eli Stratton, married Elizabeth Vandyke. 8. Mary, who died un- married.
(VI) Benjamin H., youngest child and only son of Moses and Mary ( Hewlings) Lippin- cott, was born in Salem county, New Jersey, and settled in Burlington county, same state, where he was one of the most prominent per- sons in his day. He was a surveyor, a con- veyancer, and also served as one of the judges of the court of common pleas. Like his an- cestors, he belonged to the Society of Friends. He married (first) Elizabeth Wilkins, who was the mother of three children: I. George W. 2. William, mentioned below. 3. Sarah. who became the wife of Charles Jessup, of Moorestown. Mr. Lippincott married (sec- ond) Martha Collins, who was the mother of Benjamin B. and Elizabeth Lippincott. The latter is now the widow of George L. Dilling- ham, residing in Moorestown.
(VII) William, second son of Benjamin H. and Elizabeth ( Wilkins) Lippincott, was born in 1812 at Mt. Laurel, near Moorestown, and died in the latter place in 1879. He had a farm of one hundred and twenty acres and was an industrious, respected and worthy citizen. He was a member of the Society of Friends and was at the head of the meeting at the time of his death. He married Eliza- beth, daughter of Hugh and Mary (Lippin- cott) Roberts. The last named, a daughter of Samuel and Priscilla ( Briant ) Lippincott, and granddaughter of Isaac and Hannah Lippin- cott. The last named was a daughter of John Engle and his wife Mary, daughter of Samuel Osborn. John Engle, above named, was a son of Robert and Jane (Horne) Engle, the immigrants. Samuel Lippincott above named
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was a grandson of Thomas Lippincott, the latter a son of Freedom and Mary (Curtis) Lippincott. Freedom was a son of Richard and Abigail Lippincott. Thomas Lippincott's wife, Mary, was a daughter of John and Esther (Borton) Haines, whose ancestry is given above. Hugh Roberts was the son of Samuel and Elizabeth (Shute) Roberts ; grand- son of Joshua Roberts and Rebecca, daughter of Joseph, son of Thomas and Mary ( Bernard) Stokes, the immigrants, by his wife Judith, . daughter of Freedom and Mary (Curtis) Lip- pincott. Joshua Roberts was the son of John Roberts and Mary, daughter of George Elkin- ton, who emigrated as a servant or redemp- tioner of Dr. Daniel Wills; and the grandson of John and Sarah Roberts, the immigrants who came to West Jersey in the ship "Kent." William and Elizabeth (Roberts) Lippincott had children : 1. Richard R., enlisted at the be- ginning of the civil war as a private in Com- pany I, Sixty-first Pennsylvania Volunteers, and served three years, participating in all the battles of the Army of the Potomac, including the Wilderness, both engagements at Fredricks- burg, Fair Oaks, Antietam and Gettysburg. He passed through the ranks of promotion to first lieutenant of Company I, was subsequently adjutant and major of the regiment. He mar- ried Ella Hansell, of Rancocas, and had chil- dren : Ella, Ella M. and James H. The daugh- ter is the wife of Richard Williams, of Plain- field, New Jersey, and the son is a farmer at Moorestown. 2. Sarah A., resides with her younger brother at Hartford. 3. Martha B., died at Philadelphia while the wife of Thomp- son Shrouds. 4. William Penn, treated below.
(VIII) William Penn, younger son of Will- iam and Elizabeth ( Roberts) Lippincott, was born March 22, 1850, at Mt. Laurel, New Jer- sey, and was educated in a rate school, such as prevailed in his time. When sixteen years of age he left home and went to Philadelphia to learn the art of bricklaying. After four years of apprenticeship he continued five years in the occupation, as a journeyman and later as a builder. In 1876 he returned to New Jersey and purchased a country store at Hartford, where he has ever since made his home. He conducted this store for thirty years and still owns the building, having leased it in 1906 on the occasion of his election to the office of sur- rogate of Burlington county for a term of five years, which he is now efficiently serving. For four terms he served as collector of his township and was three terms a representa- tive in the legislature. Like most of his con-
freres he is a Republican in political principles. and is by birthright a member of the Society of Friends. He is a charter member of Moorestown Lodge, No. 158, A. F. and A. M., and was the second master of the lodge which he also served for a period of sixteen years as secretary. He is also a member of the Benev- olent and Protective Order of Elks, affiliating with Mt. Holly Lodge, No. 848. As a careful, shrewd business man, Mr. Lippincott has been successful, and he brings to the fulfillment of his public duties the same faithful care of de- tails and intelligent interest in his work which has characterized his private career. He mar- ried, November 6, 1873, Abbie E. Hollings- head, who was born in Moorestown, a daugh- ter of Enoch and Rachel (Atkinson) Hollings- head, the last named being a member of the Society of Friends. Mr. and Mrs. Lippincott are the parents of two children: Franklin Richard and Elizabeth. Roberts. The son is a resident of Hartford, New Jersey, and the daughter of Medford, same state, being the wife of Jacob Kay Haines.
(For first generation see preceding sketch).
(II) Freedom, fifth child
LIPPINCOTT and fourth son of Richard and Abigail Lippincott, was born in Stonehouse, near Plymouth, Dev- onshire, England, September 1, 165-, died in Burlington county, West Jersey, in 1697, the inventory on his estate being dated June 13 of that year. He was a tanner and lived near Rancocas creek, where the king's highway crossed the stream and very near where the town of Bridgeborough now stands. Having sold the land in Salem county given him by his father, he located two hundred and eighty- eight acres here in 1687, and settled thereon. To the trade of a tanner he probably added that of a smith, and could shoe a horse or "upset" the axes of his neighbors with some skill, but his proficiency cost him his life, for in the summer of 1697, while shoeing a horse, he was killed by lightning. His widow and five children survived him, the oldest being but thirteen years of age. ' His descendants of his name are most numerous in the western town- ships of Camden and Burlington counties.
October 4, 1680, Freedom Lippincott mar- ried Mary Curtis, and their five children were : I. Samuel, born December 24, 1684, died in 1760; married Hope, daughter of John and Hope (Delefaste) Wills. 2. Thomas, referred to below. 3. Judith, August 22, 1689, died August 22, 1745; married Joseph, son of
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Thomas and Mary (Bernard) Stokes. 4. Mary, November 21, 1691, married Edward Peake. 5. Freedom Jr., February 6, 1693, died about 1764; married Elizabeth, daughter of John and Hope ( Delefaste) Wills, referred to above.
, (III) Thomas, second child and son of Freedom and Mary (Curtis) Lippincott, was born in Shrewsbury, Monmouth county, De- cember 28, 1686, died in Chester township, Burlington county, November 5, 1759. In 1708 he purchased a tract of one thousand and thirty-four acres, extending from Penisaukin river to Swedes' run, joining the No-se-ne- men-si-on tract reserved for the Indians, from which the modern name of Cinnaminson is derived. On the northern border of this tract the village of Westfield now stands. The name was originally given to the meeting house which was erected in 1800, in Thomas Lippin- cott's western field. Thomas Lippincott was an active and useful man in the affairs of Chester township, in which his lands were then included. His first house, built about 17II, stood where the old Samuel L. Allen residence was about thirty years ago, and in it and a second house built upon the same site his descendants lived for one hundred and thirty years. The first meeting of Friends in this district was held in his house and there subsequent meetings continued to be held until 1800. The descendants of his son Nathaniel are now to be found in Burlington county, New Jersey, in Philadelphia, and in the state of Illinois, General Charles Ellet Lippincott, former auditor of the last mentioned state, being among them.
December 19, 1711, Thomas Lippincott mar- ried (first) Mary, daughter of John, son of Richard and Margaret Haines, the emigrants, and his first wife, Esther, daughter of John and Ann Borton, the emigrants. She was born April 20, 1693, and died after bearing her husband six children: 1. Nathaniel, born July 2, 1713, married Mary Engle. 2. Isaac, referred to below. 3. Thomas, married, 1745, Rachel Eldridge. 4. Abigail, married Thomas Wallis or Thomas Wills. 5. Esther, married John Roberts. 6. Mary, who died unmarried. Thomas Lippincott married (second) Mercy, widow of Thomas Middleton, who bore him three more children : 7. Patience, married Ebe- nezer Andrews. 8. Phebe. 9. Mercy, mar- ried Ephraim Stiles. Thomas Lippincott mar- ried (third) Rachel Smith, a widow. There is no record of children.
(IV) Isaac, second child and son of Thomas
and Mary (Haines) Lippincott, was born in Chester township, Burlington county, died in Westfield, in the same county. All of his de- scendants settled on part of their grandfather's tract in Cinnaminson and Chester townships, Burlington county, and in Philadelphia. Among them should be mentioned Joshua, a cloth merchant of that city, and Samuel R., a director of the National State Bank of Cam- den, New Jersey. In 1739 Isaac Lippincott married Hannah, daughter of John Engle and Mary, daughter of Samuel and Jane Ogborn, the emigrants, and granddaughter of Robert and Jane (Horne) Engle, the emigrants. Their seven children were: 1. Samuel, married Priscilla Bryant. 2. Isaac, married Elizabeth Antrim. 3. Thomas, referred to below. 4. Mary, married Abraham Eldridge. 5. Han- nah, married (first) Jacob Lippincott, and (second) John Cahill. 6. Bathsheba, who died unmarried. 7. Esther, who died unmarried.
(V) Thomas (2), third child and son of Isaac and Hannah ( Engle) Lippincott, was born in Westfield, and died there. August 15, 1767, he procured a license to marry Elizabeth, daughter of Nathan or Nathaniel and Mary (Hervey) Haines, granddaughter of William, son of Richard and Margaret Haines, the emi- grants, and Sarah, daughter of John Paine, the emigrant, and Elizabeth Field. They had three children : 1. William, referred to below. 2. Thomas, married Abigail Borton. 3. Mary, married Thomas Rakestraw.
(VI) William, son of Thomas (2) and Elizabeth (Haines) Lippincott, was born in Chester, now Cinnaminson township, Burling- ton county, in 1770 or 1771, died there April 7, 1813. He lived on a part of the original one thousand and thirty-four acre tract pur- chased by his great-grandfather on Swedes' run, where all of his children were born. Sep- tember II, 1793, he married Ann, born near Mt. Holly, February 16, 1770, died in West- field, December 12, 1822, the ninth child and fifth daughter of William Rogers, of North- ampton township, Burlington county, and Martha "Esturgans," that being the name on the marriage bond possibly since the name has never been found elsewhere, Martha Esther Gans or Gano. William Rogers was a revo- lutionary soldier, and April 4, 1781, was dis- owned by the Mt. Holly Meeting for his mili- tary acts. He was the son of William Rogers, of New Hanover, and Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Branson, of New Jersey and Vir- ginia, and Elizabeth, daughter of John Day, of Philadelphia, the emigrant, and Elizabeth, sis-
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ter to Peter Hervey. William was the son of Lieutenant William and Abigail Rogers, of Burlington. The children of William and Ann ( Rogers) Lippincott were: I. Amasa, born July 3, 1794, died February 26, 1862; married (first) Esther Collins, and (second) Hannah Bishop. 2. William, January 8, 1798, died May 7, 1879; married Catherine Rud- derow. 3. Israel, May 17, 1800, died May 9, 1879; married (first) Maria Wallace, and (second) Atlantic Warrington. 4. Martha, March 3, 1802, died May, 1884; married Tim- othy Paxson, of Pennsylvania. 5. Thomas, referred to below. 6. Ann, November 30, 1805, died January 10, 1879, unmarried. 7. Benjamin, February 6, 1808, died March 24, 1832, at Tampico, Mexico. 8. Clayton, Janu- ary 19, 1810, died December 26, 1891 ; married Rachel Collins. 9. Elizabeth, April 6, 1812, died August 3, 1834; married Nathan Hunt Conrow.
(VII) Thomas (3), son of William and Ann Lippincott, was born in Cinnaminson (formerly Chester township), Burlington County, New Jersey, February 8, 1804. He spent his boyhood on the parental farm. His father's death, in 1813, left the management of affairs with the mother and the older children, until her death in 1822. Thomas was ap- prenticed at the age of fifteen years to learn blacksmithing with Abram Lippincott, of Westfield, where he remained until he reached his majority. In 1825 he settled in Fellow- ship, Mt. Laurel township, as a blacksmith, and is said to have constructed, under a farm- er's wagon, the first pair of elliptic springs that carried a load of farm produce to Phila- delphia. In 1856 he gave up his trade and turned his attention to raising fruits and ber- ries with fair success. He planted an orchard of the best varieties of fruits when past fifty years old, and lived to reap the profit of it in his old age. He was a strong character, hon- est in his dealings, firm in his convictions of the truth, and plain of speech. He was a great reader with a very retentive memory, and few men were better informed in the history of the country. After his decease, which oc- curred February 16, 1895, the Philadelphia Record noted the death of "the venerable Thomas Lippincott, aged ninety-one years, and one of the most scholarly farmers of the county of Burlington." He married, in 1831, Hannah, daughter of William and Rachel ( Borden) Rudderow, of Chester, who was born May 9, 1812. She was a devoted wife and mother, a member of the Society of
Friends, and died August 8, 1863, leaving children : Lydia R., Lusanna, Emma, William R., and Eliza, who married Nathan S. Roberts, of Camden, New Jersey, and their children are Wilmer L., Alvin T. and Elizabeth.
(VIII) William Rudderow, only son of Thomas (3) and Hannah (Rudderow) Lip- pincott, was born in Fellowship, Burlington county, December 15, 1843. He received most of his education in very early life from Samuel Smith, a famous mathematician who taught a boarding school at Fellowship more than fifty years ago. William inherited his father's strong constitution and retentive memory, but his mother's early training did much toward shaping his course through life. He began to teach school at seventeen years of age, and after attaining his majority took an interest in public affairs. He held office for a number of years in his township, and, like his father, was fairly successful in farm- ing and fruit growing. He became connected with the New Jersey state board of agricul- ture, was instrumental in shipping the agri- cultural and horticultural products of the state to several Expositions, and in 1897 was made treasurer of the board. He took great interest in the movement for improving the common roads in New Jersey, and was appointed en- gineer in charge of the construction of a num- ber of the macadam roads in the vicinity of Moorestown. He became connected with the Burlington County Safe Deposit and Trust Company soon after its organization, and in 1902 was made its treasurer. In 1903 he was elected vice-president of the Moorestown Na- tional Bank, and after the death of the presi- dent in 1906 was elected to the presidency. Mr. Lippincott married Tacie, eldest daughter of the late Hon. Chalkley Albertson, of Camden county, and, like many other men, owes much of his success to the good counsel and help of his wife. Their home, "Gillingham Place," near Mt. Laurel, is one of the landmarks of the neighborhood.
AUSTIN The name Austin is an old Eng- lish contraction of the Latin Augustinus, the cognomen of the family of Augustus, and meaning origin- ally, "venerable," "worthy of honor"; and the family that bears the name in New Jersey have a record which fully bears out their right to the title, from the time that the founder of the family arrived among the earliest of the set- tlers down to the present day.
(I) Francis Austin, founder of the fam-
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ily, came over to West Jersey from England some time before December 24, 1688, when he bought fifty acres on Birch creek from John Antram. This is as yet the first Austin record that has come to light. May 3, 1689, Francis bought another fifty acres adjoining his first lot from Percival Towle, and November I, 1694, he sold the entire one hundred acres to Thomas Scattergood Jr. In all of these deeds he is styled as a resident of Burlington and a carpenter. Four years previous to the sale of this land, Francis Austin had bought an- other one hundred and fifty acres of Symon Charles, April 2, 1690, and this he in turn sold January 2, 1695, to George Porter ; as about a month previously, December 10, 1694, he had purchased from Henry and Mary Grubb and Thomas and Abigail Raper a large farm of three hundred and fifty acres in Evesham township, on which he finally made his home and spent the remainder of his life. About a year later he made his final acquisition of land by buying from Thomas Wilkins, whose land adjoined his own, a small tract of three acres which logically went with his own property. Where Francis Austin came from in England has not yet been discovered, but he emigrated to this country as a young man accompanied by his sister, Elizabeth, who, in 1692, married Thomas, son of Richard and Margaret Haines, the emigrants. His will, which is undated, was proven July 30, 1723, the inventory of his personal estate, amounting to £280, having been made by John Sharp and Thomas Wil- kins, the preceding day.
In 1696 Francis Austin was married in the Chester monthly meeting to Mary, daughter of John and Ann Borton, the emigrants, who bore him ten children, the last one being post- humous. Children: 1. Amos, referred to be- low. 2. William, married (first) in 1741, Mary Robeson, and (second) in 1749, Hannah Thomas. 3. Jonathan, married, 1747, Rebecca Mason. 4. Mary, married, as her first husband, William Sharp. 5. Elizabeth, married, 1719, Henry Warrington. 6. Sarah, married, 1725, Nathan Haines. 7. Ann, married, 1727, Josiah Albertson. 8. Hannah, married, 1735, Will- iam Sharp. 9. Martha, married, 1744, John Hughston. 10. Francis, married, 1748, Deb- orah Allen.
(II) Amos, eldest son of Francis and Mary (Borton) Austin, was born in Evesham town- ship, Burlington county, and died there in 1770, his will, written January 15, 1763, being proven by affirmation December 15, of that year. In 1736, the license being obtained Sep-
tember 27, he married Esther, daughter of Caleb Haines and Sarah, daughter of Henry and Elizabeth ( Hudson) Burr. Caleb was the son of John, son of Richard and Margaret Haines, the emigrants, by his wife, Esther, daughter of John and Ann Borton, the emi- grants, and sister to Mary, wife of Francis Austin (I). Children of Amos and Esther (Haines) Austin: I. Caleb, married, 1758, Lydia Mason. 2. Vesti, married, 1754, John Rogers. 3. Mary, married, 1761, John Somers. 4. Seth, referred to below. 5. Patience, mar- ried, 1771, John Mott. 6. Esther, married either John Wright or Isaac Barber. 7. Amos, Jr.
(III) Seth, fourth child and second son of Amos and Esther ( Haines) Austin, was born in Evesham township, and died in 1822, in Wellingborough township, Burlington county. His father, in his will, left him "Five shillings, he haveing received his full part before the date hereof." In his own will, written April 2, 1815, when he was "weak of body," he disposes merely of his moveable property, which was inventoried after his death at $1,079.561/2, and his home plantation, which he leaves to his youngest son, Caleb, on condition that he pays certain legacies to his brothers and sisters men- tioned before. He mentions his wife, but only to leave her $400, a clock, and provision for her maintenance. Seth Austin was married three times and as yet it is impossible to deter- mine which of his children were borne him by each union. The first four were undoubtedly by the first wife, Hannah, and possibly the fifth and sixth. The seventh was undoubtedly by his second wife, Lydia Naylor, whom he married in 1770, and she may have been the mother of his three youngest children also, or one or all of these may have been the chil- dren of his third wife, Sarah, who survived him. Children of Seth Austin : I. Letitia, who is said to have married an Austin. 2. Cain, referred to below. 3. Seth. 4. Hannah, married, 1795, Thomas Buzby. 5. Vashti, mar- ried a Gardiner. 6. Esther, married a Hammel. 7. Lydia, married a Naylor. 8. Abigail, mar- ried a Pippit. 9. Amos. 10. Caleb.
(IV) Cain, second child and eldest son of Seth and Hannah Austin, was born in Well- ingborough township, Burlington county, De- cember 2, 1766. He married Tabitha, daugh- ter of Hezekiah and Gertrude (Hammel) Gar- wood ; children: I. Samuel, born November 26, 1789 ; served in the war of 1812, and about 1820 went to Ohio. 2. Hannah, Mav I, 1792; married William Fenimore Smith, of Burling-
-
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ton. 3. Hezekiah, February 5, 1794; served in the war of 1812. 4. Rebecca, April 9, 1797 ; married Pearson Johnson. 5. Gertrude, Au- gust 2, 1799. 6. Joseph, November 25, 1801. 7. Seth, May 17, 1804. 8. David, September 24, 1806. 9. Charles, referred to below. 10. Esther, July 26, 1814; married Josiah Vennel.
(V) Charles, ninth child and sixth son of Cain and Tabitha (Garwood) Austin, was born at Bridgeborough, Burlington county, June 4, 1810. He married Ann, born at Rising Sun village, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, February 9, 1813, and still living (1909), daughter of Peter and Susanna (Neglee) Dull. They had ten children, only two of whom are now living : I. Samuel C. 2. William. 3. Evelyn. 4. Ed- win. 5. Miriam. 6. Ann Elizabeth. 7. Charles, now a sergeant of police in Philadelphia, who married Rosanna Catherine Segrest, and has one child, Miriam, married Morris Simmons, of Philadelphia. 8. George H. 9. Lemuel. IO. Eliza, referred to below.
(VI) Eliza, youngest child and sixth daugh- ter of Charles and Ann (Dull) Austin, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and is now living in that city at 1024 Brown street, having her office at 501 Witherspoon building. For her early education she was sent to the public schools of Philadelphia, and then she entered the Pierce Business College. Later she became connected as clerk and secretary with several religious newspapers, and in De- cember, 1898, became the secretary and treas- urer of the religious magazine entitled Over Sca and Land, published by the Women's Home and Foreign Missionary Society of the Pres- byterian Church, at Philadelphia. This posi- tion she is now holding.
(For preceding generations see preceding sketch).
(V) Seth Austin, seventh child AUSTIN and fourth son of Cain and Tabitha (Garwood) Austin, was born May 17, 1804. He married Martha (Mathis) Mathis, daughter of Barzillai and Elizabeth (Edwards) Mathis, and the widow of Samuel, son of Hezekiah Mathis, to whom she had borne two children: I. Elmira, mar- ried a Mr. Senderling, and had two daughters. 2. Robert. Her grandparents were James Ed- wards, of Barnegat, and Micajah, son of John Mathis (or Matthews), the emigrant, and his wife, Alice, daughter of Edward Andrews, the founder of Tuckerton, and widow of John Higbee. Her grandmother was Mercy, daugh- ter of Joshua and Jane Shreve, of Upper Springfield, Burlington county. Children of
Seth and Martha (Mathis) (Mathis) Austin were: I. Sarah, married George W. William- son, of Philadelphia, and had children : George W., William, Mary, Charles, Anna, Clara and John. 2. Charles Seth, referred to below. 3. Mary, married Thomas Field, of Philadelphia, and had Martha, Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, Charles, Emma, Henry, Alfred, Edwin, Wal- ter and Austin.
(VI) Charles Seth, the only son of Seth and Martha (Mathis) (Mathis) Austin, lived in Philadelphia, and was for twenty-five years the teller of the People's Bank in that city. He married Margaret Roe, daughter of
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