USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 21
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sellor, Mr. Hyer opened offices in Rahway, occupying those of the late firm of Shafer & Durand, both members of the firm having then recently died. Since that time he has had a gradual increasing law practice. In 1903 Mr. Hyer was admitted to practice in the United States supreme court. For a number of years he acted in the capacity of associate editor of his father's paper, the Union Democrat. In 1904 he was honored by the appointment of city attorney for five years, but resigned at the end of one year, finding that the duties inter- fered with his general practice of law. In 1908 he became Democratic candidate for New Jersey state senator from Union county. He is now attorney and director of the Rahway National Bank. Mr. Hyer is a member of Lafayette Lodge, No. 27, Free and Accepted Masons, of New Jersey; of Chapter No. 26, Royal Arch Masons; of Lodge No. 1075, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; of the Royal Arcanum; and of the Sons of the American Revolution. He is also an ex-secre- tary of the Union County Bar Association, and a trustee of Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church, Rahway. He married, in Elizabeth, January 12, 1898, Edith, daughter of James H. and Mary (Phillips) Cook, who was born in Jersey City, November 25, 1874. Children : Virginia, born February 23, 1904; Frederick Lewis, born October 2, 1907.
MORFORD George Taylor Morford, the first member of this family of whom we have definite in- formation, was a native of Monmouth county, New Jersey. He married Maria Wardell. Children : 1. Jane, married Robert W. Parker. 2. Caroline, married John Githeus. 3. Char- lotte, married George Klots. 4. Thomas, mar- ried Hannal Voorhees; two children. 5. Jo- seph, married Jane Van Dorn; two children. 6. John Aken, referred to below. 7. Jarratt, married Annin. 8. Julia, married Jacob C. Parker.
in New Britain, Connecticut, with her daugh- ter, Mrs. Joseph E. Hance. Children : I. Maria, married Abram Trafford Vandervere ; children : Frederick, Anna Conover, and Julia Vandervere. 2. Tylee Conover, referred to below. 3. Elizabeth A., married Joseph E. Hance; children: Clifford, Joseph and Sarah Hance.
(III) Tylee Conover, son of John Aken and Sarah Ann (Conover) Morford, was born in Long Branch, New Jersey, February 16, 1840. After receiving his education in the public schools he went into his father's store, and when nineteen years of age became a member of the firm of John A. Mor ford & Son. He left this in order to serve in the Union army dur- ing the civil war, at the close of which he came back to the store, and later for a period of eight years served as cashier of the Long Branch Banking Company. For one year he was super- intendent of schools for Ocean township. After the death of the father he gave up the general store and retired from the bank and established a department store which he conducted under the name of Morford, Brown & Company, until 1890, when he retired from mercantile life and opened his office as justice of the peace, to which post he had been appointed. He also wrote editorials for the Long Branch Press, and soon afterwards for the Taxpayer and Workingman. In 1903 he began his work in the interests of "Citizens out of office," which led him into his fight with the city charter. He married, at Aston, Rhode Island, Annie, daugh- ter of Jonathan and Lucy (Hammond) Har- rington. Children: John, died in infancy ; Harold Conover, referred to below; Sarah; Lucy, married Charles Blakeley.
(IV) Harold Conover, son of Tylee Cono- ver and Annie (Harrington) Morford, was born at Long Branch, Monmouth county, New Jersey, July 26, 1881, and is now living in that city. After receiving a public school educa- tion he graduated from the Long Branch high school, and entering Columbia University, graduated with the class of 1904. He then read law with Charles M. Vreeland, of Jersey City, and was admitted to the New Jersey bar as attorney in 1905. Since that time he has specialized in the law concerning real property, and practices in Jersey City and Long Branch, in both of which places he is looked upon as one of the coming generation of New Jersey's legal lights. Mr. Morford is a Democrat, and
(II) John Aken, son of George Taylor and Maria (Wardell) Morford, was born at Red Bank, Monmouth county, New Jersey, in 1809, and died in 1881. For fifty years he kept the general store at Long Branch, where he was one of the school trustees and a director of the Long Branch Banking Company. He was always interested in public affairs, and from 1849 to 1851 was Democratic state senator for Monmouth county. He married Sarah Ann . a vestryman of St. James' Episcopal Church, Conover, born in October, 1813, and still living,
Long Branch.
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SHEDAKER John Henry Shedaker, son of John (q. v.) and Eliza- beth (Rodman) Shedaker, was born in Burlington, New Jersey, April 15, 1831, and died in March, 1887. He was reared on the home farm and received a good common school education. He followed in the foot- steps of his father in selecting an occupation, and became a farmer. Following the custom of his section, his farming was principally along the line of vegetables and small fruit culture. To this he added the manufacture of pickles, establishing the business so firmly that it is still a profitable feature of the business of his son, William B. Shedaker. He erected a fac- tory and did a successful business as long as he lived, and retained an active personal inter- est in his business affairs up to the time of his death. In politics he belonged to the Repub- lican party, and served as township committee- man and surveyor of highways. He was an active, interested member of the Patrons of Husbandry, holding membership in Burlington Grange; and was a member of Burlington Lodge, No. 22, Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Mr. Shedaker married Mary Borton, born near Moorestown, New Jersey, in 1832. Children: 1. Frederick W., now a farmer of Burlington county, New Jersey ; married Lizzie Scott ; children : Walter, John and Parker. 2. Hannah, deceased. 3. William B., see for- ward. 4. Elizabeth, deceased; was wife of Charles Parker, a farmer of Burlington coun- ty, New Jersey. 5. Sarah M., resides with her mother in Camden, New Jersey. 6. Amy married Edward Johnson, since divorced; she resides in Camden, New Jersey, with her daughter, Mary Johnson.
(II) William B., third child of John H. and Mary (Borton) Shedaker, was born in Bur- lington, New Jersey, September 5, 1865. He received a good education in the public schools of Burlington, and grew up on the farm, learn- ing all the details of farming as practiced in that section and of his father's manufacturing. He chose the latter as his principal line of effort, and has established himself firmly in a most profitable line of pickled fruits and vegetables. He annually contracts with neigh- boring farmers for the raising and delivering to him of small cucumbers and other products for pickling, to an amount surprisingly large. His goods are well and favorably known in the different surrounding markets. This line of business is inherent in the family, as Jacob D. Shedaker, of the fourth generation, built and operated successfuly the first cannery for
small fruits in Burlington, although the manu- facture of an exclusive line of pickles and con- diments began with John Henry Shedaker, of the preceding generation. In politics Mr. She- daker is Republican, and has taken active part in his township government. For two years he has been chairman of the township com- mittee ; since 1903 president of the township board of health; and in 1909 a member of the Burlington county grand jury. His religious connection is with the Methodist Episcopal church, and fraternally he is united with Bur- lington Lodge, No. 22, Independent Order of Odd Fellows; Burlington Lodge, No. 996, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and Burlington Grange, No. 150, Patrons of Hus- bandry. He married, July 12, 1883, Hannah E., daughter of Peter F. and Mary A. (Kim- ble) Mattson, of Burlington township, Bur- lington county, New Jersey. Mr. and Mrs. Shedaker are the parents of five children: I. Hannah May, born February 4, 1886. 2. Ray- mond B., January 20, 1888 ; married Lilly Ris- ley, May 1I, 1909. 3. Florence M., June 19, 1890. 4. Vernie E., July 25, 1892. 5. J. Earl, February 4, 1896.
ST. JOHN This ancient English family comes into New England colo- nial history with the other Puritans, and in the early records the sur- name is found written variously St. John, Sen- sion and Sention; but however written the record refers to the immigrant ancestor of the family here treated or to some of his de- scendants.
(I) Matthias St. John, immigrant, was born in England and first appears in New England as of Dorchester, Massachusetts, 1631-32, and was made freeman there September 3, 1634; had a grant of lands January 14, 1635, "at the bounds betwixt Roxbury and Dorchester." In 1636 the town ordered "that Matthias Sension and Thomas Stampford shall keepe the cowes this yere to begin the 17th day of April and to continue the keeping of them till the 15th of November to have for their pay in keepeing 5 shills the head for as many as are brought in ; the sayd five shill p' head to be payd 1-3 in hand 1-3 at halfe the tyme and the other at the end of the tyme." The Dorchester records show that Matthias St. John became possessed of several small tracts of land in the town, some by grant and others by purchase, but in 1640 he left that town and took up his abode in Windsor, Connecticut, where he was one of the early planters, and where he acquired
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lands by grant and by purchase. There he was known as Mathias Senchon, Mathewe Sension and also as Matthias Sension. He is men- tioned among the first settlers of Wethers- field, between 1636 and 1645, but he was grand juror in Windsor in 1643. He was "Juryman in Particular Court" at Hartford in 1650, and 1651, also afterward, and he appears to have been frequently chosen to perform public serv- ice, from which it may be assumed that he was a person of some consequence in the plantation. In 1654 he removed with his family to Nor- walk, and there he discharged important duties in connection with the affairs of town govern- ment. His will is dated October 19, 1669, and he died in that or the following month. His will mentions his wife, but does not give her name. His estate was inventoried as of the value of three hundred pounds. Children: I. Matthias, born 1630; died December, 1728-29. 2. Mark, 1633-34; died August 12, 1693. 3. Samuel, 1637-40; died January 14, 1685. 4. Mercy, June 8, 1645. 5. James, 1649; died May 9, 1684.
(II) Matthias (2), first son of Matthias (1) St. John, was born probably in England in 1630, died in December, 1728-29. He lived in Norwalk, Connecticut, and held various offices; was selectman, fence viewer in 1659, and his name appears frequently in the records as having discharged various duties, some of them of an important character in the affairs of the town government. The baptismal name of his wife was Elizabeth, but her family name does not appear. Children: I. Ebenezer, born about 1660, died 1723-24; married Elizabeth Comstock. 2. Matthias, born in Norwalk, 1667- 68; see forward. 3. Mary, married Thomas Hyatt, a soldier in King Philip's war; died March 29, 1698. 4. James, born 1674; died in January, 1754; married, December 18, 1693, Mary Comstock.
(III) Matthias (3), son of Matthias (2) and Elizabeth St. John, was born in Norwalk, Connecticut, 1667-68; died (says one author- ity ) August 17, 1748, in Wilton, Connecticut. He owned land at what was called Flaxhill, in 1699, and was a husbandman. He also filled various town offices, assisted in building the school house, was fence viewer, and was selected "to beat ye drum on Sabbath days." This last duty was imposed on his son in case he should not do it himself. He had various grants of lands in Norwalk and Ridgefield, Connecticut. In March, 1734-35, he served as juror. He married Rachel Bouton, born December 16, 1677, daughter of John Bouton Sr., of Nor-
walk, who married Abigail (or Elizabeth) St. John, and had ten children: I. Ebenezer. 2. John, born about 1685; died March, 1773; married (first), April 29, 1724, Eunice Hayes ; married (second), 1749, Sarah Scribner. 3. Matthew, born 1686; died August 3, 1755; married, October 13, 1709, Anne Whitney. 4. Samuel, born about 1688; see forward. 5. Nathan, born 1692; died March 10, 1749 ; mar- ried, June 7, 1721, Hannah Seymour. 6. Mat- thias, born 1695; died 1732; married, about 1723-24, Elizabeth Trowbridge; she married (second) Nehemiah Gregory. 7. Benjamin, born about 1700; married (first), 1729, Mary -; (second) Elizabeth, widow of Rich- ard Everett. 8. Rachel, born about 1700, died 1774; married, April 27, 1721, John Marvin. 9. Hannah, born about 1700; died in Sharon, Connecticut, February 5, 1774; married, 1721, Captain Ebenezer Carter. 10. Elizabeth, born about 1717-18; married Ezra Hickok.
(IV) Captain Samuel, son of Matthias (3) and Rachel ( Bouton) St. John, was born prob- ably about 1688, died at Cortland Manor, New York, 1755. He went with his father from Norwalk to Ridgefield and was one of the original proprietors in that town in 1708, when a colony of twenty-four settlers bought lands there from the Indians. In the subsequent division of their purchase Captain St. John re- ceived lot No. 1, which was "Granted by ye Proprietors of ye Town of Ridgefield unto Serjeant Samuel Saint John and recorded unto the said Samuel Saint John his heirs and as- signs forever." Subsequently he had other lands and appears to have been one of the principal men of the town. He was one of three men appointed to "look over town and propriety votes and as much as they think necessary, order for file," in 1715; was made townsman, 1718; fence viewer in 1720-21 ; lister in 1724; townsman in 1727-28; surveyor and moderator of the town meeting in 1729: appointed lieutenant of the train band of Ridgefield in 1718, and became captain in 1727. He evidently removed to Cortland Manor in Westchester county, New York, about 1740, perhaps earlier, for in a deed executed by him in 1740-41, he is described as "Samuel Saint John lately of Ridgefield now living on Cort- land Manor in ye County of West Chester." In 1742 he describes himself as "late of Ridge- field, now living in Cortland Manor in ye County of Westchester and Province of New York." Captain St. John married Rebecca Olmstead, born about 1681, daughter of Lieu- tenant John and Elizabeth Olmstead. She sur-
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vived him and married for her second hus- band a Lockwood. Captain Samuel and Re- becca (Olmstead) St. John had eleven chil- dren: I. Samuel, born about 1703; see for- ward. 2. Joanna, married, December 21, 1727, Christopher Burt. 3. Jane, married in Ridge- field, August 27, 1730, Ebenezer Brooks. 4 Peregrina, married, August 27, 1730, Nathan Northrup. 5. Abigail, died April 28, 1720. 6. Abigail, married John Warren Jr. 7. Rebecca, married Samuel Lobdell. 8. Noah, born 1713; died October 5, 1778; married, October 6, 1737, Jane Smith. 9. Daniel. 10. Job. II.
Ebenezer.
(V) Samuel (2), son of Captain Samuel (I) and Rebecca (Olmstead) St. John, was born in Norwalk, Connecticut, about 1703-04, died in Ridgefield, Connecticut, November 9, 1777. He was one of the founders of the church in Ridgefield in 1769, and appears to have been a man of influence and means. The records show that he owned several tracts of land in different localities. He married (first) March 6, 1727-28, Sarah Northrup, born July, 1702, died June 20, 1731; married (second) January 8, 1735-36, Sarah Wallace, born De- cember I, 1714, died January 6, 1754; married (third) Hannah Hyatt, who died April 26, 1765. His children : I. Sarah, born May 31, 1729. 2. Samuel, May 4, 1733. 3. James, born October 27, 1736; died February, 1829; married, April 13, 1758, Jerusha Thomas. 4. Thomas, October 12, 1738; died January 12, 1816; married (first), March 8, 1759, Sus- anna Northrup; married (second) April 14, 1760, Betty Thomas. 5. John, 1740; died April 14, 1746. 6. Rebecca, June 18, 1743. 7. Jacob, August 30, 1745. 8. Daniel, July 16, 1748; died March 29, 1813; married, February 26, 1768, Abigail Holmes, of Bedford, New York. 9. Martha, January 2, 1750; married (first) September 19, 1767, John Thomas; married (second) August 29, 1782, Solomon Goodwin Jr. 10. John, April II, 1753; died October 22 or 26, 1825; married, October 22, 1779, Hannah Fitch.
(VI) Daniel, son of Samuel (2) and Sarah (Wallace) St. John. was born July 16, 1748, died probably March 29, 1813. He married, at Bedford, New York, and is supposed to have spent the greater part of his life in that state. In 1796 he is mentioned as of Scoduck, Van Runsleywck county (Rensselaer ). He married, February 26, 1768, Abigail Holmes, of Bedford ; children : I. Azuba, married Amos Bowen. 2. Noah, born April 2, 1769; see for- ward. 3. John, August 17, 1770; married, No-
vember 27, 1796, Jane Brown. 4. Stephen, February 7, 1772; died August 28, 1773. 5. Daniel, November 7, 1775. 6. James, about 1778; died about 1826; married Betsey Brown. 7. Enos Frost, married Martha Waterbury. 8. Wallace. 9. Arna.
(VII) Noah, son of Daniel and Abigail (Holmes) St. John, was born April 2, 1769; died October 25, 1854. There was a Lieuten- ant Noah St. John in the New York militia in 1798, who is thought to have been the head of the family here under consideration. He married Betsey Waterbury, born in 1769, died September 24, 1857. Children : I. John Water- bury, born April 24, 1789; died July 31, 1855 ; married Sally Fancher. 2. Stephen, 1790; died 1863; married Polly Webb. 3. Daniel, Janu- ary 15, 1793; died September 23, 1879; mar- ried Belinda Rhodes. 4. David, November 24, 1794; see forward. 5. Enos, married Eliza- beth 6. James, married Louisa Webb. 7. Noah, married Eliza Webb.
(VIII) David, son of Noah and Betsey (Waterbury) St. John, was born November 24, 1794; died December 31, 1857. He mar- ried (first) Tamer Rhodes, born in 1794, died in 1837. He married (second) about 1842, Mary Johnson, born in' 1811, died in 1891, daughter of Caleb and Kate (Ross) Johnson. He had seven children, three by his first and four by his second wife: I. George R., born 1814; died 1852; married Emeline Tubs and had Almeda, Isabella, Hiram T. and Amasa. 2. Emeline, married (first) Ira Owen; (sec- ond) Clark Sherman and had one child, Charles. 3. Marietta, married Francis Wager. 4. Elizabeth Tamer, born 1844; died 1875. 5. Catherine Townsend, August 17, 1845; mar- ried, January 2, 1867, Harvey Wesley Bell. 6. Mary T., twin, March 27, 1849; married Charles Hochstrasser. 7. David, twin, see for- ward.
(IX) Dr. David (2), youngest child of David ( I) and Mary (Johnson) St. John, was born March 27, 1849, in Berne, Albany county, New York. He first took up the study of medicine in the office of his brother-in-law, Dr. H. W. Bell, in his native town; later he entered the office of Professor James H. Arms- by, M. D., at that time the leading surgeon of Albany, New York. After taking a course at the Albany Medical College and the Buffalo Medical College, he entered the Bellevue Hos- pital Medical College in New York City, whence he graduated with the degree of M. D. in 1875. After graduating he located in Hack- ensack, New Jersey. In 1888 he was instru-
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mental in organizing the Hackensack Hospital, and has been a prominent factor in contrib- uting to the success and high rank of this insti- tution. He is the medical and surgical di- rector, president of the medical board and visit- ing surgeon. At his own expense he added a wing to the hospital containing two wards, and these were refurnished after the death of Mrs. St. John, by the Ladies' Auxiliary, as a me- morial to her. In 1886 he was appointed by Governor John W. Griggs a manager of the State Hospital at Morris Plains, which posi- tion he still holds. As a physician and surgeon, Dr. St. John enjoys the confidence and respect of a large clientele, and in addition to his pro- fessional duties takes an active interest in the civic welfare as a public-spirited citizen. He is first vice-president of the Hackensack Trust Company, a director of the Hackensack Na- tional Bank, a director of the Spring Valley National Bank, New York; president of the Gas and Electric Company of Bergen County, New Jersey; president of the Hackensack Heights Association. He is now president, and was formerly vice-president of the State Medical Society of New Jersey, and a member of the American Medical Association, also a member and ex-president of the Bergen Coun- ty Medical Society, member of the New York State Medical Association and the New York Academy of Medicine. Dr. St. John married (first) October 1, 1879, Jennie Angle, born November 25, 1855, died in Hackensack, Sep- tember 8, 1903, daughter of John and Mary (Reed) Angle. Children: I. Olive Graham, born March 12, 1882; graduate of Dana Hall, Wellesley, Massachusetts. 2. Fordyce Barker, February 10, 1884; graduate of Princeton University in 1905, graduate of College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York, 1909, and is now serving a two years course in Roosevelt Hospital in New York. 3. Florence Angle, June 26, 1887 ; graduate of Dana Hall, Wellesley, Massachusetts, 1907. Dr. St. John married (second) September 27, 1907, Alice Vera Connell, daughter of William N. Con- nell, Esquire, of Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada.
TERRELL The original form of this fam- ily name was Tyrrell. The Terrells, originally a New Eng- land family, came to New Jersey from the state of Ohio. The great-great-grandfather of William Jones Terrell, a prominent citizen of Burlington, New Jersey, was a soldier with General Wolfe at the taking of Quebec from
the French, afterward settling in the state of Connecticut, where he married and reared a family.
Jonathan Terrell, grandson of the emigrant, was born in Litchfield, Connecticut, 1776. He married, and was the father of sons: Judson, Jonathan, Reuben and Sherman, and other chil- dren.
Sherman, son of Jonathan Terrell, was born in Woodbury, Connecticut, October 5, 1805 ; died in February, 1875. He was a farmer, and at one time was in the employ of Rev. Lyman Beecher, father of Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, removed to the state of Ohio, residing there for the remainder of his days. He was also a local preacher of the Methodist Episcopal de- nomination. He married, at Hartford, Ohio, December 26, 1831, Olive Jones; children : Lorena; William Jones, see forward; Mary ; Elzaida ; Leavitt, Albert, Leavitt. (See Jones).
William Jones Terrell, eldest son and sec- ond child of Sherman and Olive ( Jones) Ter- rell, was born in Johnston, Trumbull county, Ohio, November II, 1834. He attended the common and select schools of his native town ; Hartford and Farmington academies, Trum- bull county ; Kingsville Academy, Ashtabula county, adjoining Trumbull, leaving that insti- tution at the close of 1859; in 1861 he attend- ed the literary department of the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor. Later he engaged in school teaching, thus obtaining the means for the further prosecution of his studies, and in 1864 again entered the Univerity of Michi- gan, this time in the law department, graduat- ing therefrom in June, 1865. He was admitted to the practice of law by the supreme court of Michigan, held at Detroit, immediately after his graduation, and in Missouri by the circuit court, and practiced as attorney and counsellor of law from August, 1865, to June, 1889, in Missouri, and from July, 1889, to March, 1892, in Ohio. He was admitted to the practice of law in the circuit court, eighth judicial circuit, and in all federal courts of the United States. In 1865 he was commissioned by the governor of Missouri as superintendent of public schools for Cass county, and elected in 1866 to the same office. He served as county solicitor with criminal jurisdiction two terms of two years each, the last time by appointment of a Democratic county court ; was chairman of the Republican county committee from 1870 to 1889, member of congressional committee for two terms up to removal to Ohio in 1889, nomi- nated as Republican elector for fifth district of Missouri, 1880, and nominated and can-
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vassed the sixth district for congress, 1882. In June, 1865, Mr. Terrell located in the state of Missouri, and in September of that year settled in Harrisonville, the shire town of Cass county. Later he established himself in busi- ness at Youngstown, Ohio, where for three years he was a member of the law firm of Jones, Andrews & Terrell. He was a lawyer of good repute, and handled some very important legal cases with gratifying result to his clients and credit to himself. During the four years that he was prosecuting attorney he made a vigorous and able prosecutor, and gained popu- larity with all classes except wrong-doers.
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