USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 19
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had been in his possession since 1797. On this farm John Branin died October 4, 1866, and his wife died December 13, 1884. She was Ann, daughter of Samuel Jones, of Hatfield township, Montgomery county, who married Hannah Clayton, who was a daughter of Rich- ard and Margaret (Kenderdine) Clayton.
(VI) George, only son and child of John and Ann (Jones) Branin, was born on his father's farm in Cheltenham township, Mont- gomery county, Pennsylvania, December 30, 1833. After a period of time spent at the town - ship school he completed his studies at Tree- mount Seminary, in Norristown, then under charge of the Rev. Samuel Aaron. On return- ing from the seminary he gave his entire atten- tion to the cultivation of the farm, and on the death of his father he assumed its manage- ment. Mr. Branin is known as a thrifty and substantial farmer, a good citizen, a firm Re- publican, and a consistent member of the Soci- ety of Friends. He married, February 26, 1863, Ann Elizabeth Branin, born Medford, New Jersey, June 19, 1840, died May 17, 1893, daughter of John Branin, who married Abi- gail Ann Jones. This marriage created a some- what unusual family condition, as may be seen from the following extract from a family narrative. George Branin's father and his wife's father bore the same name, John Branin. They were somewhat distantly related and not personally acquainted ; and they both married the same day, month and year, to women of almost identical names, the father of each of whom was Samuel Jones, but neither related nor acquainted. George and Ann Elizabeth Branin had three children, the last born of whom died in extreme infancy. Their other children are John Walter, see post; Ruth, married Israel Hallowell, and has children. George, Alice and Mary Hallowell.
(VII) Dr. John Walter Branin, son of George and Ann Elizabeth ( Branin) Branin, was born at Wyncote, Cheltenham township, Montgom- ery county, Pennsylvania, January 28, 1864. He received his earlier education in public schools, the Friends' Central School, Philadel- phia, and Pierce's Business College, Philadel- phia, graduating from the latter in June, 1885. He was educated for his profession at the Halınemann Medical College of Philadelphia, where he completed the course and was grad- uated April 6, 1888. Since that time he has engaged in active and successful practice in Mt. Holly, New Jersey. Dr. Branin is a mem- ber of the New Jersey State Homeopathic Medical Society and of the American Institute
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of Homeopathy. In politics he is a Repub- lican. He married (first) March 12, 1890, Martha C., daughter of Joseph A. Jones, of Vincentown, New Jersey, and had three chil- dren. She died October 24, 1897, and he mar- ried (second) August 2, 1899, Ida L. Sailer, born Medford, died March 14, 1907, having borne him two children. Children : Ruth J .. Helen M., Elsie W., Dorothy A. and John W.
ANTRIM The Antrum, Antram, and An-
trim families in New Jersey have all of them sprung from the two brothers, John and James, who were among the earliest of the Quaker settlers of West Jersey, and their descendants have been among the sturdiest and strongest supporters of that belief in the colony and state as well as among the front rank of New Jersey's repre- sentative citizens.
(I) James Antram, the brother of John, re- ferred to above, came to this country in 1678, and settling at Mansfield township, Burling- ton county, married at the public meeting of Friends in Shrewsbury, on the fifth day of the week, May 14, 1696, Mary, eldest daughter of John and Elizabeth Hance, born September 29, 1670, in Shrewsbury. James Antram then bought five hundred acres of his brother John in Mansfield, where he died leaving a will dated 1736. Children of James and Mary (Hance) Antram were: 1. John, married Mary Gar- wood. 2. James, referred to below. 3. Eliza- beth, married Joseph Garwood. 4. Mary, mar- ried Thomas, son of Thomas and Rachel (Grosbeck) Biddle.
(II) James (2), son of James (I) and Mary (Hance) Antram, was born in Mansfield township, Burlington county. He was a farmer, and spent his life and died there. He married, July 2, 1725, Mary Mulcher and had one child, Ebenezer, referred to below.
(III) Ebenezer, only child of James (2) and Mary ( Mulcher) Antram, was born and died on the farm inherited from his father in Mansfield. In 1756 he married Elizabeth -, who bore him four children: I. Sam- uel, married, October II, 1780, Elizabeth Hawk and had one daughter, Elizabeth, born September 16, 1782. 2. Benajah, born 1758, died February 4, 1821 ; married Bernice
.
3. Sarah, October 7, 1764, died July 23, 1821 ; married, April 25, 1791, David Branson. 4. Stacy, referred to below.
(IV) Stacy Antrim, youngest child of Eben- ezer and Elizabeth Antram, was born in Mans- field township, Burlington county, 1766, and
spent his life on his farm near Juliustown. In this branch of the family the change in the spelling of the surname occurred. He married Mary Knight and had seven children : I. Charles, born January 1, 1790. 2. Elizabeth, November 3, 1792; married a Mr. White, but had no children. 3. Earl, December 25, 1794. 4. Daniel, February 2, 1796; married Hannah Pierson. 5. Benajah, referred to below. 6. Mary, February 6, 1803 ; married James Kemp- ton. 7. Henry, July 23, 1805; married Mary Russell.
(V) Benajah, fifth child and fourth son of Stacy and Mary (Knight) Antrim, was born October 14, 1800, died in 1895. For a good many years he was a merchant in Pemberton, New Jersey, conducting his business in the store now occupied by William H. Bishop. He was an assemblyman in New Jersey legislature in 1852. He was one of the directors of the Farmers' Bank, of Mount Holly, for many years and until his death, and for over sixty years trustee of the church and superintendent of the Sunday school in Pemberton. He mar- ried Eliza Bodine. Their children were: I. John Henry, referred to below. 2. Charles, born January, 1831, died July 28, 1874; mar- ried Sarah Ann Davis and had Howard D., Clarence D., Virginia and William L. 3. Emma, married Alfred Shinn, of Pemberton, and had Fannie, Benajah, Laura, Eliza, Josephine and Henrietta. 4. Watson, born 1836, died in 1902 : married and had one child, George. 5. George, died in infancy.
(VI) John Henry, eldest child of Benajah and Eliza ( Bodine) Antrim, was born in Pem- berton, Burlington county, 1828, died in 1904. He was educated in private schools, and be- came an accountant and merchant. He was a Republican and was clerk of the board of free- holders for over twenty-five years and at the time of his death. He was the commissioner of deeds. For a great many years he was the secretary of the Sunday school. He lived and died at Pemberton. He married Henrietta E., daughter of Samuel W. and Ann (Trippe) Budd, whose children were: Mary, Samuel, Thomas, William, Charles H., Ann, Martha and Henrietta E. Budd. Samuel W. was son of Levi and Mary ( Woolston) Budd, and grandson of William Budd and Susanna, daughter of Samuel Cole and Mary, daughter of Thomas and Mary Kendall, the emigrants. Samuel was son of Samuel and Elizabeth Cole, the emigrants. William was son of William Budd and Elizabeth, daughter of Richard and Abigail Stockton, the emigrants, and grandson
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of William and Ann (Clapgut) Budd, the emigrants. Henrietta E. ( Budd) Antrim was born in 1827, died in 1865. (See Budd, VII). Children of John Henry and Henrietta E. (Budd) Antrim were: I. Harry Budd, an. umbrella manufacturer in Philadelphia ; mar- ried Elizabeth King and had Carlton, William, Walter and Paul. 2. Walter, referred to below. 3. Minnie Budd, married Joseph B. Turpin, a Methodist clergyman, and had Mary Budd, Henrietta Budd, Helen Budd and Joseph B. 4. Annie Budd, lives in Pemberton.
(VII) Walter, second child and son of John Henry and Henrietta E. (Budd) Antrim, was born in Pemberton, Burlington county, New Jersey, August, 1856, and is now living in Camden, Camden county, New Jersey. He was educated in Miss Nicholson's private school in Pemberton and in the state schools at Trenton, from which latter institution he grad- uated in 1877. In the following year he went to work for the Pennsylvania Railroad Com- pany with which he has been employed ever since. He started in as a telegraph operator at Sea Girt, where he was stationed for two years, when he was transferred to Camden as train dispatcher, and this position he filled for the following three years. In 1885 he was made division operator with his office in Cam- den, and in 1895 was promoted to the post of assistant train master, and six years later be- came train master, which position he still holds. In 1882 Walter Antrim married Helen E., daughter of William and Jane R. (Budd) Budd. Her grandfather on her father's side was Joseph Budd, of Gloucester county, and on her mother's side the Rev. Samuel Budd, of Burlington county. Walter and Helen E. (Budd) Antrim have no children.
(The Budd Line).
The Budd family of New Jersey and Penn- sylvania are the descendants of the Rev. Thomas Budd, a Church of England clergy- man, who became a Quaker, and whose four younger sons emigrated to this country about 1678. There is another family of Budds also connected with New Jersey, but most prom- inently with the colonies of New York and New Haven, whose ancestors were John and Joseph Budd, his brothers, who emigrated about 1632, the descendants of the former being the famous family of Long Island and Westchester county, New York. One branch of the Long Island family coming over into New Jersey settled in Morris county, and inter- mingling with a branch of the West Jersey
family became with them the ancestors of the North Jersey Budds.
(I) The Rev. Thomas Budd, founder of the West Jersey branch of the family, was the grandson of John Budd, Earl of Berkshire, whose eldest son had been slain in the battle of Barnet. Having taken priest's orders in the Church of England, he became the rector of Martock, county Somerset, England, but becoming a disciple of George Fox, he gave up his benefice and became a minister among Friends. In 1661, being required to take the oath of obedience, he was indicted and arrested for refusal, and being imprisoned in the jail at Ilchester, he died there June 22, 1670. His five sons were, according to one of his descend- ants, William Bradford, the famous attorney general under President Washington: I. Sam- uel, eldest son, who remained in England. 2. James, died 1692; was member of the West Jersey colonial assembly, and according to At- torney General Bradford, "poisoned at Brid- lington" (the present Burlington), and accord- ing to another account, drowned in the Dela- ware at Burlington. He was unmarried. 3. John, died before 1738; emigrated to Burling- ton, removed to Philadelphia, where he was for many years a prominent merchant; mar- ried and left issue. 4. Thomas, died 1697: perhaps the most prominent of all the brothers, emigrated to Burlington, held many important provincial offices, removed in 1690 to Philadel- phia, where he died ; was author of the famous pamphlet printed by him in 1685 and entitled "Good Order Established in Pennsylvania and New Jersey in America." Married and had issue. 5. William, referred to below.
(II) William, son of the Rev. Thomas Budd, of the parish of Martock, Somersetshire, Eng- land, was born about 1649, died March 25, 1722. His gravestone containing also the epitaph of his wife, who died September 30, 1722, aged sixty-seven, is still standing in the churchyard of St. Mary's Burlington. He was one of the largest locators of land in West Jersey, and he and his brother Thomas were the original proprietors of the site of the pres- ent towns of Pemberton, Juliustown and Arney's Mount. His name is less conspicuous in the civil records of the province than that of his brother Thomas, and while he undoubt- edly became a Quaker, since his children were married in the monthly meeting, he afterwards returned to the church of his ancestors, prob- ably owing to the efforts of George Keith. His home was near the present town of Pemberton, and the property, known to-day as the Arney
Milli Antrim.
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STATE OF NEW JERSEY.
Lippincott farm, about two miles north of Pemberton and one mile southwest of the Mount Holly Friends' meetinghouse, is now the property of Murrell Dobbins, of Philadel- phia. He married Ann Clapgut. Children : I. William, referred to below. 2. John, 1682, died 1730 ; married Hannah Wilson. 3. Thomas, born 1686, died 1742; married Deborah Lang- staff. 4. Susan, 1691, married Samuel Woolston. 5. Ann, born 1694, married James Bingham. 6. James, 1695, died before 1729; married Sarah Tindal.
(III) William (2), son of William (I) and Ann (Clapgut) Budd, was born in Burlington county, West Jersey, 1680, died in 1727. He inherited from his father, not only the original farm on Arney's Mount, but also his love of domestic and home life. From him also have sprung most of the Budds in Burlington coun- ty, and it is claimed that over one-half of all the persons buried in the old and densely filled Methodist burying-ground at Pemberton are his descendants. He married, December 2, 1703, Elizabeth, daughter of Richard and Abigail Stockton, at that time living in Springfield township, Burlington county, who was born in Flushing, Long Island, in 1680. Children: I. Mary, born 1704; married Joseph Shinn. 2. Susan, 1706, married Jacob Gaskill. 3. Thomas, 1708, died October 15, 1775 ; married Jemima Leeds. 4. William, referred to below. 5. David, 1712, died June 5, 1760; married Cath- arine Allen. 6. Rebecca, 1714; married Joseph Lamb. 7. Abigail, 1716; married John Fisher. 8. Sarah, 1718; married John Gosling. 9. Ann, married Kendall Cole. 10. Elizabeth, died May 26, 1752, unmarried.
(IV) William (3), son of William (2) and Elizabeth (Stockton) Budd, was born in the old homestead on Arney's Mount, 1709, died August 28, 1770. January 2, 1710, he was baptized in St. Mary's Church, Burlington, and after reaching manhood, settled in New Hanover township, Burlington county. In April, 1738, he married Susanna, daughter of Samuel and Mary (Kendall) Cole, whose brother, Kendall Cole, married his sister, Ann Budd. Children : 1. Samuel, born about 1740, died May 27, 1796; married, April, 1766, Han- nah Gill. 2. Eli, married, April, 1774, Ann Carman. 3. Levi, referred to below. 4. George, married Elizabeth Cooper. 5. Jonathan, mar- ried (first) October, 1777, Anna Sexton ; (sec- ond) Mary Woolston. 6. Mary, married Thomas Platt. 7. Elizabeth, married, Septem- ber, 1772, Vincent Shinn. 8. Rachel, died un-
married. 9. Rebecca, married, November, 1785, James Sterling.
(V) Levi, son of William (3) and Susanna (Cole) Budd, was born in New Hanover town- ship, Burlington county, New Jersey, 1751, died in 1828. He married, September, 1774, Mary Woolston, born 1757, died 1821. Chil- dren : I. William, married a Miss Croshaw. 2. Samuel Woolston, referred to below. 3. Rev. Thomas L., died aged twenty-seven years. 4. James, married Sarah Van Wyck. 5. Mar- garet, married Rev. Daniel Fidler. 6. Ann, married Isaac Hilliard. 7. Rebecca, married William Page. 8. Martha, married William Croshaw.
(VI) Samuel Woolston, son of Levi and Mary (Woolston) Budd, was born in 1781 on his father's farm near- Buddtown, now gen- erally known as the Samuel B. Shinn farm, and died at Pemberton, 1854. When quite young, much to the regret of his father, he manifested a restless disposition and lack of interest in agricultural pursuits, and found his amusement in fishing and trapping in the nearby woods. At the earliest opportunity he left the home on the farm and becoming an apprentice to an apothecary, he later on enter- ed into the wholesale drug business as one of the members of the firm of Wetherill & Budd, whose offices and warehouse on Front street, Philadelphia, were long known as one of the most important of their kind in the Quaker city. Having amassed quite a large fortune for the days in which he lived, on September 12, 1821, he purchased the Thomas R. Lacy prop- erty at New Mills, now Pemberton, New Jer- sey, from Anthony S. Earl, and upon retiring from business he spent his time improving and beautifying his new home. He enlarged and improved the dwelling house, built new out- buildings, and laid out large and beautiful grounds around them, spending on this work more than $25,000, and constructing a resi- dence which at that time was considered to be the finest in Burlington county. His children, all having married or died before their father's death, the property was sold by Mr. Budd's executors and passed into other hands, and it has now lost a great deal of its former neat- ness and beauty. Mr. Budd married (first) Ann Mccullough, and (second) Ann Trippe. Children, all by second marriage: I. Samuel, died young. 2. Mary, died unmarried. 3. Samuel, professor at Mercersburg College. Pennsylvania; married Jane Williams. 4. Thomas, went to Kentucky, married (first)
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STATE OF NEW JERSEY.
Elizabeth Moffit; then removed to Chambers- burg, Pennsylvania ; married (second) Sabina S. Schroeder. 5. William, married Phoebe Ann Sheppard. 6. Ann, married Henry Cole. 7. John Piatt, died young. 8. Martha Ann Piatt, died young. 9. Caroline Matilda, died young. 10. Charles H., M. D., professor in Girard College, Philadelphia; married Caro- line Jones. II. Martha, married Harris Cox. 12. Henrietta E., referred to below. 13. John Wetherill, died young.
(VII) Henrietta E., daughter of Samuel Woolston and Ann (Trippe) Budd, was born in Pemberton, New Jersey, 1827, died in 1865. She married John Henry, eldest child of Bena- jah and Eliza (Bodine) Antrim. (See An- trim, VI).
AARONSON The Aaronson or Aronson family are said to be de- scended from Dirck or Di- rick Areson, who emigrated from Holland and died in Flushing, Long Island, October, 1678, from the result of injuries sustained while shoeing a horse. In his will he leaves to his wife Mary all of his lands and goods during her widowhood, and if she remarries her estate is to be divided among his seven children, and "the estate which is in Holland," if recovered, is to be divided among his seven children. His executors were Captain Thomas Willett and Elias Doughty, and the witnesses of the will were James Clement and William Ward. Chil- dren: I. Dirck, probably his eldest child, in- herited his Flushing property and died there, September or October, 1710, leaving children- Benjamin, who became an innholder in New York, and died 1766, leaving widow Ann to administer his estate; Samuel; Deborah, and Hannah. 2. Sarah, married Caleb Shreve, founder of the family of that name in New Jersey. 3. John, referred to below.
(II) John Aronson, who, if the date of his birth, 1678, is correct, must have been the youngest child of Dirck and Mary Areson, re- mained in Flushing until he was about twenty- five years old, and August II, 1703, bought of Abraham Brown, for forty-five pounds silver, one hundred acres of land in Mansfield town- ship, Burlington county, New Jersey, bounded on the south by lands of Mordecai Andrews, and on the north by those of John Heaton and Daniel Bacon. In this deed, recorded in the office of the secretary of state at Trenton, liber B. B. B., p. 342, he is styled as "of Queens County on the Island of Nassau, State of New York." He died in Mansfield township, in 1742,
leaving a wife Mary, and children: Thomas; Joseph, referred to below; Benjamin ; Aaron ; Elizabeth ; Sarah.
(III) Joseph, son of John and Mary Aron- son, died in Mansfield township, Burlington county, New Jersey, about 1755. He married, in November or December, 1749, Ann Marriott, of Burlington, the date of the license being November 20, 1749. Children: Benjamin ; Sarah; Mary; Hannah; John, referred to be- low.
(IV) John (2), son of Joseph and Ann (Marriott) Aronson, was born about 1754, and died December II, 1785. He married Re- becca Haines. Children: Joseph; Samuel ; John; George; Rebecca ; Thomas, referred to below.
(V) Thomas, son of John (2) and Rebecca (Haines) Aronson, was born in Mansfield township, November 20, 1764, and died there, March 22, 1830. He married, in July or Au- gust, 1787, Sarah Black, the date of the license being July 24, 1787. Children: Ezra; Clay- ton ; Amy; Ann; Thomas, referred to below ; Martha R .; Elizabeth ; Sarah Ann.
(VI) Thomas (2), son of Thomas (I) and Sarah ( Black) Aronson, was born in Mans- field township, Burlington county, New Jersey, April 18, 1795, and died in Columbus, Burling- ton county, where he had removed a number of years previous to his death, July 8, 1867. He married Ann Foster, who died April 6, 1834. Children : Thomas Elwood; Robert, referred to below; Mary P .; Martha R .; Ed- ward R.
(VII) Robert, son of Thomas (2) and Ann (Foster ) Aaronson, was born in Mansfield township, Burlington county, New Jersey, Jan- uary 5, 1823, and died in Columbus, New Jer- sey, January 3, 1894. After receiving a com- mon school education he taught school in Mans- field for a time, and then took up farming on his father's farm, and followed this until 1866, when he moved into Columbus and went into a general store in company with his brother, Thomas Elwood Aaronson. Later he carried on the business alone until about 1880, when he bought a canning business in Columbus, which he conducted until his death, under the firm name of Aaronson, Harvey & Company, the members of the firm being Robert Aaron- son, John Harvey and R. Howard Aaronson. Mr. Aaronson was a Democrat, and took an active interest in politics, served as a member of the assembly in 1873, and as a member of the board of freeholders at various times. For twelve years he was collector of taxes for the
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township, serving as such during the civil war. He was a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows of Columbus. He married Caro- line B., daughter of John B. and Susan B. (Woolman) Taylor, who was born July 13, 1833. Children: 1. Francis, born March 15, 1854; died in infancy. 2. Robert Howard, re- ferred to below. 3. Susan Elizabeth, born July 16, 1857 ; widow of Dr. Daniel G. Van Mater, of 537 Penn street, Camden, New Jersey, with whom her mother is now living. 4. Charles Taylor, born April 25, 1866; formerly assistant and paying teller in the Trenton Bank, but now and for several years past with Jacob E. Ridg- way, operating in real estate and mining prop- erty, and living in Camden, New Jersey.
(VIII) Robert Howard, son of Robert and Caroline B. (Taylor) Aaronson, was born in Burlington county, New Jersey, May 5, 1855, and is now living in Bordentown, New Jersey. He was educated in the local schools, and then became interested in the canning business with his father. February 1, 1887, he came to Bordentown in order to take charge of a can- ning factory in that place, and after conduct- ing this for five or six years he opened a real estate and insurance office there in 1894, and to this he has since devoted his whole time and attention. He has been a director in the Borden- town Banking Company for twelve years, and he is also a director and the treasurer of the Bordentown & Philadelphia Transportation Company, of which he was one of the incor- porators when the company was organized in 1899. He is also a director of the Mount Holly Safe Deposit and Trust Company, with which he has been connected since its organiza- tion in 1902 ; and until the work was taken over by the Public Service Corporation he was also superintendent of and collector for the Borden- entown Gas Light Company. He was collector for the Bordentown Water Company until the city took charge of the supply, and is now col- lector of water rents for the city ; and until the road was sold was also secretary and treasurer of the Columbus, Kinkora & Springfield Rail- road Company. He is a member of Mount Moriah Lodge, No. 28, Free and Accepted Masons of Bordentown, and of Mount Moriah Chapter, No. 20, Royal Arch Masons; also of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and treasurer of the Citizens' Hook and Ladder Company. April 23, 1901, Mr. Aaronson mar- ried Ada E., daughter of Davis C. and Mary A. Wells, of Pemberton, Burlington county, New Jersey, and they have one child-Robert
Howard Jr., born at Bordentown, January 15. 1902.
BANNARD
William Umney Bannard, the first member of the family of whom we have definite in-
formation, was born in England, and emigrated with his family to America, in the early part of the nineteenth century. Children : John ; Will- iam, referred to below ; Alfred.
(II) Rev. William Bannard, son of William Umney Bannard, was born in England, and died in Asbury Park, New Jersey. He was brought to this country by his father, and after preparing for the Presbyterian ministry became pastor of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church, corner of Twenty-ninth street, which he served faithfully and acceptably more than twenty years. He then resigned in order to accept a call to Kingsboro, New York, which he resigned in turn in order to go to Salem, New Jersey, where he remained until his re- tirement, when he went to live in Philadel- phia. He married Frances, daughter of Will- iam Heath. Children : 1. William Newell, mar- ried Mary Blanchard, of Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania ; children: William Newell Jr., and Margaret. 2. Horace Brown. 3. Arthur Um- ney. 4. Charles Heath, married Eliza Clem- ent, of Salem, New Jersey ; children : Charles Heath Jr. and Margaret C.
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