USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 15
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( III) John, second son of Samuel and Plain ( Wickerden ) Wilkinson, was born at "Lo- quisset" in the town of Providence, Rhode Island, January 25, 1677-78. He was brought up on his father's farm, and about 1706 re- moved to Hunterdon county, New Jersey, with his wife whose maiden name was Mary Walk- er. The first child, Mary, was born in Hunter- clon county, New Jersey. July 17, 1708, and in August, 1730, she married Joseph Chapman, of Wrightstown. He removed to Bucks coun- ty. Pennsylvania, before 1713, received and had recorded a deed for three hundred and
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seven acres on Neshaminy, in Bucks county, then a primeval forest, tenanted by Indians and wild beasts. The tract still known as the "Wilkinson Tract" was on the laying out of townships partly in Wrightstown and partly in Warwick and Buckingham township. 2. Keziah, married Thomas Ross, and was the mother of Judge John Ross. 3. Plain, married Peter Ball. 4. Susanna, married Andrew Davis. 5. Ruth, married Joseph Chapman. 6. John, see forward. His home in the wilderness was subject to all the dangers of frontier life, and his wife and children had scant society and no educational advantages except such as could be acquired at their own firesides and in the Friends meeting. In 1751, when seventy-four years of age, he made his will and a few days after he died. His will was probated April 23, 1751, which is the only date that indicates the time of his death. He was buried in the fam- ily burial ground set apart on his farm for that purpose when he built his house and fenced the cultivated fields.
(IV) John (2), sixth child and only son of John ( I) and Mary (Walker ) Wilkinson, was born in Wrightstown, Bucks county, Pennsyl- vania, about 1723. He was brought up liter- ally in the wilderness and he grew up to be the chief dependence of his father in the care of the farm. He became a prominent citizen of Wrightstown, serving as a delegate to the pro- vincial assembly of Pennsylvania, 1761-62; as magistrate of the court of common pleas of Bucks county, 1764-70-74-76; as a member of the committee of safety, 1775-76; a member of the provincial conference in 1774; lieutenant colonel of the Third Bucks County Battalion, 1775, and in the American revolution did serv- ice in the field, as well as being a member of the committee to hear and discharge prisoners, appointed June 25, 1776; member of the gen- eral assembly of Pennsylvania in 1776 and a member of the committee to raise money to carry on the war by issuing two hundred thous- and pounds in bills of credit in 1777 and a dele- gate to the state constitutional committee that met in Philadelphia, July 15, 1776. He was called to account by the Society of Friends for his active participation in war and public affairs, contrary to the rules of the society, and he was expelled from the Society of Friends in 1777. He married, May 27, 1740, Mary, daughter of General John Lacey ( 1752- 1814), a revolutionary soldier and brigadier- general of the Pennsylvania militia; grand- daughter of John and Rachel (Hestra) Lacey, great-granddaughter of William Lacey, the
immigrant, who came from the Isle of Wight, England, and took up land near the Wrights- town meetinghouse, in Bucks county, Pennsyl- vania. By this marriage he became the father of nine children who intermarried with the best families of Bucks county and the youngest child, Elisha (1774-1846), settled in the town- ship of Buckingham, was lieutenant-colonel and quartermaster in the war of 1812; sheriff of Bucks county for two terms, a noted sports- man and the keeper of a popular tavern. He married (first) Ann Dungan, and (second) Maria Whitman. His son, Ogden Dungan Wilkinson (1806-1866), removed to Trenton, New Jersey, and was one of the contractors of the Delaware and Raritan canal. Another son, Abraham, lived on the old homestead during his entire life, married Mary Thwing and had five children : Jane, John, Abraham, Samuel T. and Eleazer. Another son was Josiah, see forward. One of his daughters married Gen- eral Samuel Smith (1749-1835), and they had seven sons and one daughter. Colonel John Wilkinson died May 31, 1782, and he probably was buried in the old family burial lot on the homestead, rather than in the meetinghouse grounds as he had been expelled from the meeting on account of his activity in war.
(V) Josiah, son of Colonel John (2) and Mary (Lacey) Wilkinson, was born in Wrights- town, Bucks county, Pennsylvania. He was one of nine children and was born probably between the years 1745 and 1750. He mar- ried Mary Burrows (or Burroughts) and re- moved with other members of the family to New Jersey, where their son, Eleazer Burnett, was born.
(VI) Eleazer Burnett, son of Josiah and Mary (Burrows) Wilkinson, was born in New Jersey, June 2, 1813 ; died October, 1879. He was a traveling Methodist preacher during his early manhood, and later in life engaged in the grocery business in Newark New Jersey. He married Catherine Ackerson, who was born in 1851. Children, born in Chatham, Morris county, New Jersey : I. Elias Ackerson, see for- ward. 2. Frances Asbury, whose sketch fol- lows. 3. Kate L. 4. Mary L., married James W. Lent, and in 1909 was living in Bernards- ville, Somerset county, New Jersey.
(VII) Elias Ackerson, son of Eleazer Bur- nett and Catherine ( Ackerson) Wilkinson, was born in Chatham, Morris county, New Jersey, May II, 1842. He was a pupil in the public schools of his native township and on leaving school became a clerk in the country store of. Frances Asbury Wilkinson, and he also carried
W T. Bather, N.Y
Lewis Historical Pub Co.
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on a country store in Chatham, on his own account, and subsequently engaged in the dairy business, and in 1867 with the Wilkinson, Gaddis & Company. He was a Republican in party politics, and was a director in the Essex County National Bank. He married in New- ark, New Jersey, May 2, 1866, Alice Blanche, daughter of David and Phoebe R. (Soverel) Earl. She was born in Orange, New Jersey, January 31, 1841 ; died in Newark, New Jer- sey, February 28, 1887. Children, born in Newark, New Jersey: I. Blanche Earl, mar- ried in Newark, New Jersey, November 4, 1891, Harry, son of Wickliffe Baldwin and Jane A. (Taylor) Durand and had five chil- dren. 2. Alice Bell, married Job Morris, son of Wesley C. and Mary ( Meeker) Miller, and had three children born between 1899 and 1904. 3. Ethel Ackerson, married George Mccutchen Lamont, M. D., of 192 Clinton avenue, New- ark, New Jersey, and had four children. + Elias Alva, see forward.
(VIII) Elias Alva, only son and fourth child of Elias Ackerson and Alice Blanche (Earl) Wilkinson, was born in Newark, New Jersey, February 18, 1878. He was a pupil in the public schools of Newark and in the New- ark Academy, was prepared for college at St. George's Hall and was graduated at Princeton University, A. B., 1899. He engaged in busi- ness in the Wilkinson, Gaddis & Company, of Newark, and in 1904 was made president of the corporation. He was elected to member- ship in the Essex Club and the Essex County Club. He was made a director in the Iron Bond Trust Company, of Newark. He mar- ried, October 19, 1899, Helen Louise, daughter of Theodore and Clementine ( Bruen ) Runyon, whose children were: Mary, Julia, Helen Louise, Chauncey and Frederick Runyon. The children of Elias Alva and Helen Louise (Run- yon) Wilkinson were: I. Theodore Runyon, born April 12, 1901. 2. Helen Louise, April 6, 1904. The address of Elias Alva Wilkin- son, president of the Wilkinson, Gaddis & Company is 866 Broad street, Newark, New Jersey.
(For preceding generations see Lawrence Wilkin- son 1).
(VII) Francis Asbury Wil- WILKINSON kinson, second son of Elea- zar Burnett and Catharine ( Ackerson) Wilkinson, was born in Chatham, Morris county, New Jersey, March 12, 1844; died in Newark, January 25, 1901. Except for three years spent as a soldier during the civil
war, and for one or two years just after the war spent in Cincinnati, Ohio, his whole life was spent in Newark, of which he was one of the most representative citizens. For his early education he was sent to the Newark schools, which he attended until the outbreak of the civil war, when at the age of eighteen in 1861 . he enlisted in Company F, First Regiment, In- dependent Essex Brigade, which later became a part of the Union Volunteer Army. His en- listment was for three years. His company was commanded by Captain John E. Beam, and was known as Beam's battery, although Beam was killed at Malvern Hill and was suc- ceeded by Colonel Judson Clark. With this battery Francis Asbury served from Septem- ber 3, 1861, to September, 1864, and was en- gaged at the defence of Washington in 1861, at the siege of Yorktown, in April and May, 1862, at Twin Pines, Seven Pines, Peach Orchard, Fair Oaks, Malvern Hill, Fredericks- burg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Locust Grove, Mine Run, Wapping Heights, Williams- burg, the Wilderness, Spottsylvania, Spottsyl- vania Court House, Cold Harbor, North and South Anna River, Petersburg, and in all the engagements to Deer Bottom, Virginia.
After he was mustered out of service, he spent a year or two at work in Cincinnati, Ohio, and then returned to Newark in order to take his place as a member of the firm of Wil- kinson & Voorhees, the forerunner of the pres- ent firm of Wilkinson, Gaddis & Company, which had been founded in 1864 by Elias Ack- erson Wilkinson and Jacob Runer, and in 1866 replaced by the firm of Wilkinson & Voorhees, which continued until 1873, when it in turn was replaced by the present firm of Wilkinson, Gaddis & Company. The new firm began on Commerce street, where the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company building now stands. In April, 1886, the firm became a corporation with a capital of $500,000 and Francis Asbury Wilkinson was elected treasurer of the corpora- tion. At the time of its incorporation the firm was negotiating for the site of its present main building on the corner of Broad and Fair streets and in September, 1887, the handsome six-story building the corporation now occu- pies was completed and opened. The remark- able growth of the corporation has been almost altogether accomplished since the two Wilkin- sons and E. B. Gaddis came together. From a comparatively modest, though well established and prosperous business in the early seventies, it has grown to very great proportions, being now the third largest wholesale grocery house
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in the country. In addition to its buildings at Broad and Fair streets, the corporation has a grain elevator in Chicago, offices in New York City, branch warehouses in Paterson and As- bury Park, New Jersey, and it is said that its business now amounts to very nearly if not quite ten millions a year. Its trade is in whole- sale groceries of all kinds, in flour and grain and creamery products. It controls a number of dairies, secures a large share of the govern- ment contracts in its line and does a large busi- ness of this sort almost every week. Its rating is of the highest.
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In addition to fulfilling the duties of treas- urer of this great corporation, Francis Asbury Wilkinson was a director of the Essex County National Bank and of the Security Savings Institution. He was also president of the Or- ville Milling Company, of Orville, Ohio; sec- retary of the North Bangor Slate Company, and a director in the Brooklyn Slate and Man- tel Company. Besides this he was a member of the Newark Board of Trade, of the Essex Club, Essex County Country Club, and of the Society of the Army of the Potomac. All his life he had been greatly interested in St. Luke's Methodist Episcopal Church, of Newark, with which he had been connected from his youth- ful days as a Sunday school scholar. For the last thirty years of his life he was one of the officials of the society and at the time of his death president of its board of trustees. He was always regular in his attendance at the services, and most liberal in giving to further the objects of the church for and in which also he was a most earnest worker in many direc- tions. Not the least of these was the payment of the church debt, the coincidence of the ac- complishment of which with his death has been often pointed out and commented on by his friends. A few days before his death he at- tended the jubilee services at St. Luke's in celebration of the payment of this debt and then succumbed to an attack of pleuro-pneu- monia which caused his death.
Francis Asbury Wilkinson married Lucetta E. Munroe, who with their five children sur- vive him. Children: 1. Jennie Brown, mar- ried, April 24, 1889, John Lewis Hay, born March 22, 1867, in Newark, New Jersey ; graduate of Newark Academy, then engaged with his father in Hay Foundry, and at the present time (1910) is treasurer of the Hay Foundry Company ; a Republican in politics ; for seven years member of the Essex Troop; a member of the Episcopal church. Children: i. John Lewis, Jr., born January 19, 1891 ; ii.
Francis Wilkinson, October 23, 1893 ; iii. Joan, August 29, 1898; iv. Virginia, March 22, 1901. John Lewis Hay is son of Ebenezer C. and Annabelle (Lewis) Hay, who were the parents of five children, three daughters of whom died in childhood, and the remaining children were John Lewis, aforementioned, and James Bruce, married Bertha W. Schaffer and they have one child, Gertrude. 2. Elizabeth Munroe, mar- ried Halsey Meeker Larter, of Newark; chil- dren: i. Charlotte, born May 28, 1897; ii. Halsey Munroe, August 3, 1899; iii. Elizabeth, September 12, 1902. 3. Burnet Foster, re- ferred to below. 4. Mary Lucretia, married Edward J. Heilborn; child, Edward J., Jr. 5. Vinton Parker, referred to below.
(VIII) Burnet Foster, eldest son of Francis Asbury and Lucetta E. (Munroe) Wilkinson, was born October 3. 1879, in Newark, New Jersey. For his early education he was sent to the Newark Academy and the Penn Mili- tary College. He then entered Princeton Uni- versity, class of 1900, and afterward engaged in the wholesale grocery business of Wilkin- son, Gaddis & Company, of which his father was the treasurer from 1887 up to the time of his death in 1901. Burnet Foster Wilkinson at this latter date succeeded his father as the treasurer of Wilkinson, Gaddis & Company, and in addition is a director in the Essex Coun- ty National Bank, treasurer of the North Bangor Slate Company, of North Bangor, Pennsylvania, and takes besides a very active part in the operation of many other interests. He is also a member of the Essex County Country Club, of Baltusrol Golf Club, and of St. Luke's Methodist Episcopal Church, of Newark. March 20, 1901, Burnet Foster Wil- kinson married Lillian Augusta Merrick, of Johnstown, New York.
(VIII) Vinton Parker, youngest child of Francis Asbury and Lucetta E. (Munroe) Wilkinson, was born in Newark, New Jersey, June 15, 1883. He was educated at the New- ark Academy and at the Lawrenceville school where he was graduated in 1900, after which he entered Princeton University, class of 1904. After leaving college he became interested in the wholesale grocery business of Wilkinson, Gaddis & Company, and in 1909 was made one of the directors of the corporation. He is a member of the Essex Troop, Essex County Country Club, and of the Union Club, of New- ark, and he is the treasurer of the Motor- Tractor Company of America, incorporated. March 27, 1906, Vinton Parker Wilkinson married Jane, daughter of Theodore Eaton
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and Edith Evelyn Otis. Children : I. Bar- bara Otis, born March 6, 1907. 2. Jane, born September 28, 1908.
John Campbell, son of John CAMPBELL and Bridget Campbell, of Mon- mouth county, New Jersey, is the first member of the family of whom we have definite information. Steen held him to be a descendant of Lord Neil, but of this there is not sufficient evidence. That he was a man of prominence is evident from the fact that he was one of "the twelve loving subjects" to whom the charter of St. Peter's Church was granted, 1736, and one of the first vestrymen ; and he was also a judge or justice of the court of common pleas, Monmouth county.
(I) John Campbell (named above) was born November 6, 1719, and died March 31, 1804. It is possible that he was the son of John and Mary Campbell, of Hunterdon county. He married (first), January 22, 1746, Rachel Walker, who died May 10, 1761; (second), November 30, 1761, Hendrika, born April 12, 1726, died December 7, 1805, daughter of Will- iam and Elizabeth Covenhoven. Children, five by first wife, baptized in Christ Church, Shrewsbury; four by second wife, baptized in old Tennant's Church: I. George, born Janu- ary 7, 1747; died September 22, 1798; un- married. 2. John, born February 5, 1750; died March 28, 1783. 3. Duncan, born 1753, baptized June 10, 1753 ; died January 12, 1813. 4. Eleanor, born December 10, 1755 ; died June, 1774. 5. Elizabeth, born January, 1758; bap- tized February 1, 1758; died September, 1760. 6. Rachel, born December 20, 1762. 7. Will- iam, referred to below. 8. Elizabeth, born December 10, 1767; died September 18, 1769. 9. Benjamin C., born November 8, 1769; died January II, 1810.
(II) William, son of John and Hendrika (Covenhoven) Campbell, was born January 20, 1765, and died, according to the record on his tombstone, in 1847. He married, in 1787, Margaret, born November 1, 1771, died May 15, 1838, daughter of Thomas Cook. Chil- dren : I. John, born June 1, 1788; died July 27, 1823. 2. George, born May 17, 1791. 3. Rachel, born August 29, 1793; died October 23, 1793. 4. Thomas, born January 14, 1795; (lied November 8, 1829. 5. Nancy, born No- vember 4, 1798. 6. William, referred to below. 7. Maria, born January 12, 1805. 8. Caroline, born April 19, 1808. 9. Rue, born . April 24, 1813; died February 25, 1882.
(III) William (2), son of William (1) and
Margaret (Cook) Campbell, was born August 3, 1800, and died February 1, 1870. He was a farmer, and a man of standing and reputa- tion in the community. He was an Episco- palian, but fell out with some of the church officers (St. Peter's, Freehold) and his family thereafter became members of either the Pres- byterian or Dutch church, Freehold, according as they married. He was a cripple the last many years of his life, and therefore did not attend church. He married, May 21, 1822, Hannah, daughter of Peter and Ann ( Thomp- son) Bowne (see Bowne). Children: Mar- garet Ann, Jane Thompson, Henry, Peter Bowne ( referred to below), Amelia Augusta, John Throckmorton, William, Maria, Caro- line.
(IV) Peter Bowne, son of William and Hannah ( Bowne ) Campbell, was born in Free- hold, New Jersey, January 20, 1830, and is now living at Shrewsbury, New Jersey. For his early education he was sent to the public schools. Like his forefathers he devoted him- self to agriculture, ever striving to make his farm a model in the neighborhood. He is passionately fond of horses, and in his younger days owned many of the best and is probably excelled by few in his judgement of them. He married, June 15, 1853, Mary Elizabeth, daugh- ter of James and Susan (Wall) Schureman (see Schureman). Children : 1. James Wall Schureman, born April 23, 1854; now living in Freehold, New Jersey ; married, November 27, 1878, Mary, daughter of Dennis and Ellen ( Bell) Valentine ; children : Henry Valentine, Edwin Schureman, Ellen, and two others. 2. Hannah Matilda, born March 12, 1856; died March 26, 1861. 3. William Denise, born Oc- tober 17, 1858; died 1891; married Harriet Cooper ; child, William Roy, of Washington, D. C. 4. Henry, referred to below. 5. George, twin with Henry, born June 13, 1865; died June 16, 1865; with sister Hannah Matilda, buried in Christ Church graveyard, Shrews- bury. Peter Bowne Campbell and Mary Eliz- abeth Schureman, his wife, are both descended from William Bowne, through his son James. James (2nd) married Margaret Newbold, whose Bible, published in London, 1661, in good state of preservation, is now owned by J. W. S. Campbell.
(V) Henry, son of Peter Bowne and Mary Elizabeth (Schureman) Campbell, was born in Shrewsbury, New Jersey, June 13, 1865, and is now living in Red Bank, New Jersey. For his early education he was sent to the public schools and to Prof. Schleiter's German Acad-
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emy, from which he graduated in 1880. He then became a messenger in the First National Bank, of Red Bank, and by industry and abil- ity so proved his worth and worked himself up that an April 18, 1898, he was appointed cashier of that institution, and was at that time the youngest man in the state to hold such an important position. He is a Democrat in politics, and a member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, the Knights of Malta, the Loyal Legion, and the Aztec Club. He is the treasurer and ranks eldest in point of serv- ice of the vestrymen of Christ Protestant Epis- copal Church in Shrewsbury, and for the past twenty-three years (since 1886) has been di- rector and treasurer of the Red Bank Building and Loan Company. He married in Shrews- bury, January 14, 1893, Maud Barclay, daugh- ter of William R. and Caroline ( Barclay) Stevens.
(The Bowne Line).
(I) William Bowne, founder of this branch of the family of his name in America, and probably a brother or cousin of the famous Quaker minister, John Bowne, of Flushing, whose descendants have played such an import- ant part in the history of West Jersey, came from Yorkshire, England, and settled at Salem. Massachusetts, in 1631. He afterwards re- moved to Gravesend, Long Island, where he bought a plantation, November 12, 1646. Early in 1665 he came to Monmouth county, New Jersey, and settled at what is now known as Holmdel, the name, according to family tradi- tion, having been bestowed upon it in compli- ment to the wife of his son John. He married (first) Ann -, in England; (second), July 2, 1669, Mary H. Felt. Sons of record by first wife: I. John, died January 3, 1684: married Lydia, daughter of Rev. Obadiah Holmes. 2. James, baptized Salem, Massachu- setts, August 25, 1636; died 1692; married, 1665, Mary Stout. 3. Andrew, baptized Att- gust 12, 1638; died 1708; married Elizabeth ; settled in Monmouth county before 1692, and commissioned governor of East Jer- sey. 4. Philip (or Peter).
(II) Peter, a descendant of William Bowne, married and had children: Joseph, referred to below; Jonathan, David, Lydia; Daughter, name unknown.
(III) Joseph, son of Peter Bowne, was born May 17, 1735 ; died October 8, 1812. He mar- ried, January 18, 1763, Hannah Anderson, born January 25, 1740. Children : I. Hannah, born March 31, 1763. 2. Obadiah, August 19,
1765. 3. John, September 2, 1767; died 1857; married Nancy Corle. 4. Anna, born March 23, 1770. 5. Peter, referred to below. 6. James, born September 20, 1775; died April 22, 1853; married (first) Lydia Mount; (sec- ond) Mary Craig. 7. David, born October I, 1777. 8. Catharine, June 12, 1779. 9. Lydia, February 28, 1781 ; died April 14, 1829.
(IV) Peter, son of Joseph and Hannalı (Anderson) Bowne, was born June 27, 1772, and died October 3, 1835. He married (first) Ann Thompson; (second), May 26, 1816, Amelia Holmes, daughter of John and Ann Craig, who died June 3, 1855, aged seventy- seven years, five months, seventeen days. Chil- dren, one by second wife, and probably others by first wife: Hannah, referred to below ; Anna Maria, married Enoch Cowart, Sr.
(V) Hannah, daughter of Peter and Ann (Thompson) Bowne, was born April 3, 1805. and died March 13, 1886. She was married in old Tennant Church, by Rev. John Wood- hull, May 21, 1822, to William, son of William and Margaret (Cook) Campbell.
(The Schureman Line).
James Schureman, of New Brunswick, was born February 12, 1756, and died January 22, 1824. He graduated from Rutgers College in 1775, served in the revolutionary army, and was a delegate from New Jersey to the Conti- nental congress, 1786-87. He was elected to the first United States congress as a Federalist, and also to the fifth congress. He was then elected United States senator from New Jer- sey, vice John Rutherfurd, resigned, and served from December 3, 1799, until he resign- ed, February 6, 1801. He was then elected mayor of New Brunswick, and later a repre- sentative from New Jersey to the thirteenth congress. In 1812 he was president of the Council of New Jersey, a position correspond- ing to the present office of president of the state senate.
James (2), son of James Schureman (I). was born March 10, 1790, and died May 12, 1877. He was a soldier in the war of 1812. He married Susan, sister of Garret D. Wall, of Trenton, who was born January 21, 1785, and died April 13, 1880. Children: James WVall; Mary Elizabeth, referred to below.
(III) Mary Elizabeth, daughter of James and Susan (Wall) Schureman, was born No- vember 13, 1823, and married, June 15, 1853, Peter Bowne, son of William and Hannah (Bowne) Campbell.
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