USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 33
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RobertoMl becky Johnson-
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town, Pennsylvania, and of Alexander Mack Jr., whose father, Alexander Mack, was born in Schreisheim, Bavaria, Germany, 1679, and died in Germantown, Pennsylvania, in 1775. Alexander Mack ( 1679-1735) was the founder of the German Baptist or Dunkers religious faith at Schreisheim, Germany, in 1708. His parents were exiles from Switzerland in 1672 and found refuge from religious persecutions in Bavaria, where Alexander married Anna Newgarth and came to America in 1729, and took up land in Germantown, Pennsylvania, where Alexander Mack Jr. was born and where he married and had a daughter Anna Margaret Mack, who in turn married Emanuel Fox and had a son John Fox, who accepted the faith of his great-grandfather Alexander Mack, and preached the Dunkard faith in all parts of Pennsylvania and New Jersey for forty years. This John Fox married Catherine Fisher and by this marriage Catherine Fox was born in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, February 7, 1830, and the other children were : Justin Fox ; Mary M. Fox, who married Samuel McCutchin; Margaret, who married James Sutton; Sarah Fox, who married William Owen, and Samuel Fox, who married Catherine Stoyer. The chil- dren of Colonel John Daniel and Catherine (Fox) Johnson were: 1. Catherine Fox, born April 22, 1848; married Barkley H. Moore, who died in Mt. Holly, New Jersey, October 3, 1908, leaving a widow and one daughter Florence Johnson Moore, born August 1, 1883. 2. Robert Montgomery, see forward. 3. Sarah F., who married Benjamin Deacon, of Mt. Holly, and had children: Catherine, Marion, Benjamin H., Joseph and Charles S. Deacon. 4. John Daniel, born in Hainesport, New Jer- sey, October 10, 1862, was a pupil in the Bap- tist Institute of Bridgton, New Jersey, and be- came associated with his father in the iron business, when sixteen years of age, and he has since continued in the business in con- nection with his brother. In 1898 the cor- porate name was changed from the Columbia Iron Works to the Ronalds Johnson Company, manufacturers and dealers in plumbing sup- plies, of which corporation he was elected president, and his brother Robert Montgomery Johnson continued as general manager. He affiliated with the Republican party and was made a member of the Union League Club of Philadelphia. His religious affiliation is with the Baptist church. He was married in 1883 to Elizabeth S., daughter of Thomas A. and granddaughter of Ardin Atkinson, and their only son John Daniel Jr. was born in July,
1884, married Mary, daughter of Judge Hild- reth, of Cape May, and is connected with the Ronald Johnson Company. Their daughter Elizabeth was born December 17, 1889, and their son Thomas Arthur, February 13, 1900.
(IV) Robert Montgomery (2), eldest son and second child of Colonel John Daniel (2) and Catherine (Fox) Johnson, was born in Hainesport, New Jersey, June 9, 1856. He was educated at Charles Aaron's private school at Mt. Holly, New Jersey, and on graduating went into his father's foundry to learn the business of founding and finishing iron for useful and ornamental work. He was taken into the concern as a partner when he reached his majority, and was made superintendent and general manager of the same, having al- ready occupied that position for two years, or since the death of his father in 1875. When the business was incorporated in 1898 as the Ronalds Johnson Company, he was, at his own request, continued in the position of general manager, his brother John Daniel Johnson accepting the office of president. In 1905 he retired from active business, retaining his inter- est in the corporation as a stockholder and di- rector. In 1909 he organized the Mt. Holly Iron Works, located at Mt. Holly, being presi- dent of the company. He was originally a Democrat by right of inheritance, but became independent of party politics later in life. He served in the Lumberton township committee and his fraternal affiliations have been with the Mt. Holly Lodge, No. 14, F. and A. M. His religious faith was that of the German Bap- tists and commonly called Dunkers or Tunkers, from the German tunken, to "dip." He was married, March 27, 1878, to Kate C., daughter of James and Catherine (Clark) Henderson, of Philadelphia, and their children were as fol- lows: I. Robert Montgomery, born January 27, 1879, died July 31, 1879. 2. Ella S., Au- gust 15, 1882. 3. Grover Cleveland, April 10, 1885, in Hainesport, attended the Friends' high school at Moorestown and completed his education at the Peddie Institute, Hightstown ; after leaving school he became secretary and treasurer of the Mt. Holly Iron Works.
Hans Hansen, ancestor of the BERGEN Bergen family, was a native of Bergen, Norway, and a ship car- penter by trade, who emigrated thence first to Holland and in 1633 to New Amsterdam, where he took up his residence, working at his trade, and at one period cultivating a tobacco plantation. About 1643 he removed to his
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planataion of four hundred acres at the Walla- Jorisse, referred to below. 5. Jannetje, bap- tized May 27, 1688; married (first), January 21, 17II, Hendrick Vroom, of Brooklyn ; (sec- ond), January 18, 1745, Dortie Dumont, a widower. 6. Annetje, baptized March 9, 1689- 90; married, March 12, 1720, Arnouret Arnout Abrahamz. 7. Jan, baptized May 17, 1694. 8. Breckje, baptized May 24, 1696. 9. Joris, died before April 8, 1749 ; married Tramyntje - -. IO. Catharine, married September 21, 1726, Pieter Ewetse, of Brooklyn and New York. bout, for which he obtained a patent March 30, 1647. He married, in 1639, Sarah, born at Albany, June 9, 1625, daughter of Joris Han- sen Rapalie. In a petition to the council ask- ing for a grant of land in 1656, she describes herself as the "first born Christian daughter in New Netherland," and this expression has been interpreted by some authorities as meaning that she was the first white female child of European parentage born in the colony, and by other authorities as merely implying that (III) Hans Jorisse, son of Joris Hansen she was the first child of any colonist baptized. and Sara (Strycker) Bergen, was baptized in
in New Netherland. Children: I. Anneken, baptized July 12, 1640; married (first), Janu- ary 17, 1661, Jan Clerq, of Brazil; (second), October 8, 1862, Derck Janse Hooglandt, of Flatbush. 2. Breckje, baptized July 27, 1642; married Aert Anthonize Middagh. 3. Jan, baptized April 17, 1644, died after 1715; mar- ried Jannetje, daughter of Teunis Myssen. (See Denise). 4. Michael, baptized November 4, 1646, died after January 22, 1731 ; married Fenmetje, daughter of Teunis Myssen. 5. Joris, referred to below. 6. Marretje, baptized October 8, 1651 ; married Jacob Ruthzen. 7. Jacob, baptized September 21, 1653, died after 1738; married, July 8, 1677, Elsje Frederick, daughter of Frederick Lubbertsen, of Brook- lyn. 8. Catalyn, baptized November 30, 1653. (II) Joris (or George) Hansen, son of Hans Hansen von Bergen and Sarah Jovisse Rapalie, was baptized in New Amsterdam, July 18, 1649, and died after 1736. He was a car- penter by trade, and took the oath of allegiance in Brooklyn in 1687. He was commissioner of Brooklyn, 1690-99, and in 1698 he bought a farm of nearly forty acres, east of Smith street and north of the mill creek, formerly the property of Gerrit Wilfertsen van Cowen- hoven. From 1703 to 1705 he was supervisor of Brooklyn, and in 1697 was one of the com- missioners appointed to divide and apportion the common lands of the town. He mar- ried, August II, 1678, Sara, daughter of Jan Strycker, of Flatbush. Children : I. Lam- metje, baptized December 26, 1679; married ( first) Joris, son of Rem and Marytje (Van- derbilt) Remsen, and grandson of Rem Rem- sen Vanderbeeck and Jannetje, daughter of Joris Jansen de Rapalie ; married (second) a wife, name unknown. 2. Sara, baptized March 13, 1681. 3. Aaltje, baptized October 15, 1862, died about 1724; married, August 17, 1707, Rem Remsen, son of Joris and Femmetje, daughter of Dirck J. W. Woortman, and grand- son of Rem Jansen Vanderbeeck. 4. Jans
Flatbush, Long Island, August 31, 1684, and died in 1726. He resided at first in Flatbush and Brooklyn, but later removed to Hemp- stead, Long Island, where he died. At one period he owned a grist mill later known as Remsen's mill, within the present boundaries of the Brooklyn navy yard. He married, Au- gust 16, 1711, Sytje, daughter of Everet Janse von Wickelen and Elizabeth Fredericks, daugh- ter of Frederick van Liew, of New Lotts. Children: 1. George, born October 9, 1712; died about 1784; married (first), June 3, 1738, Grietje Dumont ( according to another account Hoagland), (second), September 14, 1744, Maria -. 2. Evert, referred to below.
(IV) Evert, son of Hans Jorisse and Sytje (Van Wickelen) Bergen, was born in Hemp- stead, Long Island, in 1717, and died at Royce- field, Hillsborough township, Somerset county, New Jersey, November 17, 1776. His father dying when he was about eight years old, he spent his boyhood days with his grandfather, Evert Jansen Van Wickelen, in New Lotts, at that time within the bounds of Flatbush. Just before reaching his majority, in 1737, he bought and settled on a plantation of one hundred and forty acres in Roycefield, about three miles from the present town of Somerville, New Jersey, and also bought a farm at Whitehouse, nine miles from Somerville. When he left Flatbush he took with him a pear tree which he transplanted on his Roycefield property and which bore fruit until 1861, a period of over twenty-one years, when it was blown down in a violent hailstorm. There is also a tradition among his descendants that he brought with . him from Flatbush a colt which shortly after- wards was missed from the pasture where it was kept and finally located in its old home in Flatbush. He married Jane, daughter of Denyse Hegeman. Children : I. John, born September 26, 1746, died June 6, 1828; married Alche (or Alte) Rapalye. 2. Jane or Yannitie, bap-
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tized August 5, 1750, died March 20, 1812 ; mar- ried (first) George Rapalye, (second) Abra- ham Voorhees, (third) Jeronymus Rapalye. 3. James, referred to below. 4. Evert, born in 1756, died December 6, 1777, unmarried ; revo- lutionary soldier, and fought at Monmouth Court House.
(V) James, son of Evert and Jane ( Hege- man) Bergen, was born in Roycefield, Somer- set county, New Jersey, September II, 1755, and died January 30, 1830. He inherited from his father and occupied the homestead farm in Roycefield, to which he added two hundred and twenty acres by purchase. Dying intestate, this property was divided equally among all his children. He married, May 20, 1779, Annache, born February 20, 1761, died January 1I, 1852, daughter of Zacheus Van Voorhees. Chil- dren : 1. Evert J., born October 30, 1780; mar- ried, September 14, 1804, Jane Stryker. 2. Mary, born March 5, 1786, died March 12, 1861 ; married, November 16, 1802, Abraham Staats. 3. John V., born February 19, 1790; married, May 29, 1830, Phebe Totten. Zacheus, born October 1, 1792; married, Janu- ary 18, 1816, Mary Simonson. 5. Jane, born March 15, 1794; died October 10, 1795. 6. Jane, born October 4, 1797; married, October 4, 1817, William Willson. 7. James, referred to below.
(VI) James (2), son of James (I) and Annache (Van Voorhees) Bergen, was born in Roycefield, August 30, 1799, and died there August 16, 1855. He was a farmer at Royce- field, and lived on the plantation of about one hundred and forty acres which he received as his share of his father's estate. He married, February 17, 1820, Phebe Patterson, born Sep- tember 8, 1801. Children : 1. Garret P., born November 20, 1820; married (first) April IO, 1849, Mary K. Thompson ; (second), October 14, 1861, Henrietta, sister of his first wife. 2. John J., referred to below. 3. James, born September 19, 1825; married, April 18, 1855, Jane Tunison. 4. Vanderveer, born Septem- ber 24, 1827 ; died April 19, 1858; unmarried. 5. Zacheus, born September 1, 1829; married, October 23, 1856, Sophia C. Thompson. 6. Elizabeth, born October 12, 1831 ; unmarried. 7. Evert, born June 24, 1834; married Mary Elizabeth Husted. 8. Cornelius, born Janu- ary 31, 1838 ; married, in October, 1860, Sarah Jane Ballard ; he was a lieutenant in the Union army during the civil war, and was wounded. 9. William, born August 10, 1840; unmarried. 10. Ann, born August 16, 1846; unmarried.
(VII) John J., son of James J. and Phebe
(Patterson) Bergen, was born in Roycefield, New Jersey, June 27, 1823. He removed to the town of Somerville and engaged in the lumber trade. He married, February 17, 1847, Mary Ann Park. Children : I. James, referred to below. 2. M. Fannie, born July 15, 1849. 3. William, born September 12, 1852; married, August II, 1873, Pauline, daughter of William P. Major, of Somerville. 4. Maria Emmans, born October 19, 1855. 5. Emma L., born De- cember 15, 1857 ; died August 30, 1858.
(VIII) Hon. James J. Bergen, justice of the supreme court of New Jersey, son of John J. and Mary Ann (Park) Bergen, was born in Somerville, New Jersey, October 1, 1847, and is now living in that city. He attended the old brick academy in his native town, and was graduated from Calvin Butler Seminary of the same place in 1863. At the early age of seven- teen he entered upon the study of law with the late Hugh M. Gaston, of Somerville, with whom he remained until he was admitted as an attorney at the November term in 1868, the year in which he attained his majority. Dur- ing the following year he practiced his pro- fession in Plainfield, New Jersey. On Janu- ary I, 1870, he returned to Somerville and formed a law partnership with his preceptor, Mr. Gaston, which was continued under the firm name of Gaston & Bergen for twenty years, when Mr. Gaston withdrew. In No- vember, 1871, he was made a counselor at law. In 1877 he was appointed by Governor Bedle as prosecutor of the pleas of Somerset county, which office he held for six years. In March, 1904, he was appointed a vice-chancellor by Chancellor Magie for a full term of seven years. On October II, 1907, Governor Stokes nominated him as a justice of the supreme court, and the nomination was confirmed by the senate without reference-an eloquent trib- ute to his great ability as a jurist and his purity of personal character. His term will expire in 1914. His circuit comprises the counties of Union and Middlesex.
Mr. Bergen is a Democrat in politics, and was elected to the legislature in 1875,1876, 1890 and 1891, serving as speaker of the as- sembly during the sessions of 1891-2. In 1896 he was a deputy to the Democratic national convention. He was previously president of the Somerville board of commissioners, and was especially active in organizing the police and fire departments, and is credited with creating the public sentiment which made it possible the introduction of a sewage system and other public improvements. He has also
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served as president of the Somerville Savings Bank, and as director of the First National Bank of Somerville. He married (first) Sarah L., daughter of Theodore L. Young. She died in 1881, leaving two children-Mary T. and Herbert S. He married (second) Helen A., daughter of James S. Huggins, of New York City. The children of second marriage are: Guy H., Francis L. and Helen A. Bergen.
HAND According to the records of East- hampton, Long Island, the Hand family came originally from Stan- stede, county Kent, England, and according to Judge Alfred Hand, of Scranton, Pennsyl- vania, their arms are : Argent, a chevron azure between three hands gules. Crest : on a wreath argent and gules a buck trippant or.
(I) John Hand, the first of the name in this country, appears on a whaling list in Southamp- ton in 1644. At the time of the settlement of Easthampton, Long Island, in 1648, he was one of the company from Southampton who founded the new settlement. He was born in 16II, and died in 1660, leaving seven children by his wife Alice, daughter of William Stan- borough, of Canons Ashbie, England, and sister of Josiah Stanborough, of Lynn and Southamp- ton : I. John. 2. Stephen, died 1693; had eight children, one of whom, Joseph, was in West Jersey in 1705. 3. Joseph. 4. Benjamin, who removed with his family to Cape May county, whence his descendants spread into Burling- ton and Hunterdon counties, New Jersey. 5. Thomas, referred to below. 6. Margaret, or Mary. 7. Shamgar.
(II) Thomas, son of John and Alice (Stan- borough) Hand, of Easthampton, Long Island, removed from Long Island to Cape May coun- ty, New Jersey, and died there in 1714, leaving a will written October 21, 1709, proved No- vember 3, 1714, in which he mentions his wife, three daughters and four sons, two of whom, however, he does not name, and disposes of personal and real property, including slaves. The witnesses are his brother Shamgar Hand, Tohn Townsend, and Samuel Matthews. The inventory of his personal estate made October 9, 1714, by John Paige and John Parsons, amounted to £502 14s. By his wife Katharine he had children : I. John. 2. Recompence, referred to below. 3-4. Two sons, mentioned, but not named in his will. 5. Deborah. 6. Alce or Elsie. 7. Prudence, married a Crowell.
(III) Recompence, son of Thomas and Kath- arine Hand, died intestate in 1769, letters of adminstration on his estate being granted to
his widow Martha, March 22 that year. His son Recompence had died about four years previously without issue, another son Jona- than is referred to below.
(IV) Jonathan, son of Recompence and Mar- tha Hand, died intestate in 1789 or 1790, letters of administration on his estate being granted to Eli or Elijah Townsend, February 19, 1790. From 1773 to 1776 he served in the colonial assembly, and from 1776 to 1778 was a mem- ber of the revolutionary council of the state. His wife, who was possibly a Townsend, prob- ably predeceased him, and it is probable also that he had only one son surviving him, Jona- than, referred to below.
(V) Jonathan (2), son of Jonathan (I) Hand, was put under the guardianship of Eli or Elijah Townsend, probably his mother's brother, two letters of guardianship being granted, the first dated November 27, 1794, and the second August 29, 1796. Like his father, he died intestate in Cape May county in 1834, having been for the last four years of his life and at the time of his death, county clerk. By his wife Sarah Moore, who was one of the young girls who strewed flowers in the path of General George Washington when he made his triumphal entry into Trenton on his way to his inauguration as the first president of the United States, he had a son Jonathan, referred to below.
(VI) Jonathan (3), son of Jonathan (2) and Sarah ( Moore) Hand, was born in Cape May county, December 22, 1818, and died in Cape May Court House, March 2, 1897. From 1840 to 1845 he was county clerk of Cape May county, and for nine more successive terms afterwards, making a continuous serv- ice in that office of fifty years in all, being re- elected each time usually without opposition. He is said to have been the most efficient coun- ty clerk the state has ever had. In 1852 he became a master in chancery, and in 1862 draft commissioner. By his wife Judith W. he had three sons and three daughters: Mor- gan; Winfield Scott, referred to below ; Jona- than; Laura W .; Julia, married William H. Van Gilder : Sarah M.
(VII) Winfield Scott, second son of Jona- than (3) and Judith W. Hand, was born in Cape May Court House, March 14, 1860, and is now living in Ocean City, New Jersey. He was educated in the public schools and by pri- vate tutors, and then procured a responsible position in the office of the county clerk, under his father, with whom he served for ten years before the latter's retirement from office. It
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was here that he acquired and developed the promptness, courtesy and accuracy for which he is so noted, and which have procured him such success in his present position. He has now become one of the leading citizens of Ocean City. May 15, 1899. he entered the em- ploy of the Central Trust Company at Ocean City, and January 1, 1901, he was elected as the company's local agent. When the First National Bank bought the building and the business of the Trust Company, January I, 1902, Mr. Hand was elected cashier of the bank, which position he now holds. He is enterprising and public-spirited, and has been particularly efficient in aiding, developing and advancing judicious measures conducive to the prosperity of his city and his native county. He is a member of the board of stewards of the Methodist Episcopal Church, of which his family are members. He takes his recreation in shooting and fishing. He is the only mem- ber from Cape May county on the "Ocean Boulevard Committee of New Jersey."
Winfield Scott Hand married, May 26, 1885, Mary Hand, daughter of Lewis and Mary Ann (Hoffman) Cresse, born May 17, 1864. They have two children: Morgan, born June 29, 1887, and Cecilia, February 12, 1900.
LOGUE This family, according to Irish history, dates back to the tenth century, and the names of Logue and Logan are anglicized names of Lochan, son of Daimhin, king of Argille, and from whom the families are descended. In the eighteenth century, and during the reign of King Louise XVI, the ancestor of the Logue family was in France, and his loyalty to the king led to the confiscation of his property, and he fled to Scotland, thence to Ireland.
(I) John Logue, his son, came to this coun- try a young man, from Dublin, Ireland, in the eighteenth century, settling in New Jersey, and finally in Salem, New Jersey. His brother, James Logue, also came early to this country, and to Pennsylvania, and was a lieutenant throughout the revolutionary war. This same John Logue married Rebecca Sherron, of Salem, New Jersey, granddaughter of High Sheriff James Sherron, formerly of England. One of his sons was John Logue, born Novem- ber 18, 1788, in Salem, New Jersey, but re- sided in Port Elizabeth, New Jersey, where his children were born.
(II) James Lee, son of John Logue (II), was born in Port Elizabeth, New Jersey, al- though reared from a child in Salem, New
Jersey, the home of his ancestors. He married Elizabeth Glendon, of Salem, who bore him the following children : 1. Mary Elizabeth. 2. James Edward (now deceased), married a Miss Gibe, and left one son surviving him, James Edward Logue Jr. 3. Katherine Louisa, married Joseph Winthrop, M. D., of Charles- ton, South Carolina, a descendant of the fam- ily of Governor Winthrop, of Massachusetts, his immediate line coming from Joseph Win- throp. 4. Ida Frances, married Albert Fitz Randolph (now deceased), whose two chil- dren, Courtlandt and Albert, survive. 5. Annie E. B. Logue. 6. William Augustin Logue.
(III) William Augustin Logue was born in Bridgeton, New Jersey (all the other children being born in Roadstown, New Jersey), and is now living in that city. For his early educa- tion he was sent to the public schools of Bridgeton, after leaving which he began the reading of law with Franklin Fisk Westcott, Esq., Bridgeton, New Jersey. He was ad- mitted by the New Jersey supreme court to the bar as an attorney in June, 1875, and in February, 1879, was admitted as counsellor, since which time he has been engaged in the general practice of his profession in Bridgeton. Mr. Logue is a Democrat, and has given a good deal of his energy and ability to laboring for the welfare and advancement of his party. His unfailing courtesy, his splendid executive abilities and his well deserved popularity have won him many marks of confidence, trust and friendship of the community in which he lives. For a number of years Mr. Logue was city solicitor of Bridgeton, and for the last five years he has been, by the appointment of the mayor, president of the Bridgeton City Park Commission. From 1889 to 1899, by the ap- pointment of the governor of New Jersey, he served as prosecutor of the pleas in Cumber- land county. In 1907 he was appointed for the five years term expiring in 1912 as a mem- ber of the New Jersey Board of Fish and Game Commissioners. He is also a member of the New Jersey State Bar Association, and president of the Cumberland County Bar Asso- ciation. Mr. Logue is also much interested in and takes an active part in the financial inter- ests of Bridgeton, being a director in and counsel for many of its largest and most stable corporations, among which should be men- tioned the Cumberland National Bank of Bridgeton, the Bridgeton & Millville Traction Company, and the Bridgeton Electric Com- pany.
March 24, 1880, William Augustin Logue
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married Mary Smith, daughter of Josiah H. Reeves, of Bridgeton, New Jersey, a descend- ant of one of New Jersey's oldest and most prominent families. Their children are: Frank Reeves Logue, born April 15, 1881; William Sherron, died at the age of four years; Law- rence Bateman, who likewise died when four years old; and Mary Louise, born November 29, 1887, and who married, October 20, 1909, Emerson H. Allen, of New York.
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