USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 46
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(III) William Burrell, son of Charles Clark and Mary (Lott) LaRue, was born at Scotts- ville, Southampton township, Bucks county, Pennsylvania, and is now living in Bound Brook, Somerset county, New Jersey. He was educated in the public schools, and when seven- teen years old entered the employ of the Phila- delphia & Reading railroad as telegraph oper- ator. Here he was promoted again and again, each time to a more important station, and finally posted at Bound Brook. In 1902 he resigned his position with the Reading railroad and formed the partnership with his brother in the gentlemen's furnishing business. He has been justice of the peace and tax collector for many years, and is also custodian of the school funds. He is a Republican in politics, and a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, of which he is steward, besides being on a number of important committees. He is a member of the Junior Order of United Amer- ican Mechanics and in 1910 was state vice councilor of this order. He married, Septem-
ber 1, 1891, Adella, daughter of John and Han- nah (Lacey) Worthington, of Bucks county, Pennsylvania. Children: Mervin W .; Archi- bald C .; LeRoy B .; Edwin D .; Winifred W.
Nehemiah Taylor, the first TAYLOR member of this family of whom we have definite information, came to this country from England in the 18th century with several brothers who settled in various parts of the country. Nehemiah finally settled in Springfield, New Jersey, be- came a farmer, and his old home is still stand- ing (1910) on the Morris turnpike road in Springfield, near the crossing of the Lacka- wanna railroad over the said road. He, with his wife and a number of his descendants, are buried in the cemetery of the Methodist Epis- copal Church.
(II) John N., son of Nehemiah Taylor, was born in Springfield, June 25, 1812, the young- est of five brothers-Aaron, Benjamin, Caleb, Jotham. John had no middle name, and added the middle initial "N" in his young manhood. He became a merchant tailor in Morristown, New Jersey, and moved to Newark, New Jer- sey, about 1854. He died November 8, 1856. His wife was Sarah Mead Comstock, of Con- necticut. Children: I. Sarah Jane, married Elias Sanders, of Morristown, New Jersey ; children : George E. Sanders, who was twice married, no children; Elizabeth Sanders, un- married ; and Emma Sanders, married Charles Naylor. 2. James W., married Amanda At- wood; is now living in Millbrook, New York ; children : Frank Taylor, of Waterbury, Con- necticut, and Lulu, who married Elijah Rus- sell, of Millbrook, New York, and have three children. 3. William H., married Lydia Mor- gan, of Fremont, Ohio. 4. Margaret S., mar- ried Rev. R. F. Elsden ; children : Robert Ed- ward Elsden, of Housatonic, Massachusetts, married ; and Paul Elsden, of Waverly, Iowa. 5. Lucy Jane, married Henry R. Williams, of Newark ; children: J. Harry Williams, Irving Wilbur Williams (q. v.), Elwood M. Williams, Howard C. Williams, and Sarah Lucy Will- iams. 6. John Nehemiah, referred to below. 7. Charles Edward, married; one daughter.
(III) John Nehemiah, son of John N. and Sarah Mead (Comstock) Taylor, was born in Whippany, Morris county, New Jersey. After receiving his education in the public schools of Newark he learned the jeweler's trade with Smillie & Dorrance and Shafer & Douglas of Newark, and in 1871 was given a position as traveling salesman by the latter
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firm. In February, 1879, he was employed by Krementz & Co., with whom he remained as employee and afterward partner until 1908, when he decided to retire from business perma- nently. However, during 1908 he was induced to again go into business with his son-in-law, George H. Wright and his friend Archibald Rutherford, and in January, 1909, with them formed the corporation of Taylor & Co., inc., manufacturers of jewelry. Mr. Taylor is a Republican in politics, and for many years was an active official member first of the Methodist Protestant Church, and afterward of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church. He is a member of the Philadelphia Jewelers' Club, of the Boston Jewelers' Club, a former president of the Brotherhood of Traveling Jewelers, and a member of the Baltusrol Country Club of Short Hills, New Jersey. On January 31, 1872, he married Margaret V., born in New- ark, July 14, 1851, daughter of James Comp- ton and Hester V. (Westervelt) Tingley. Chil- dren: I. Adelaide V., referred to below. 2. John Nelson, born November 30, 1878, died July 18, 1908, unmarried.
(IV) Adelaide V., daughter of John Nehe- miah and Margaret V. (Tingley) Taylor, was born in Newark, and married George Hill Wright, April 27, 1901.
Mr. Wright was born in Mt. Kisco, New York, was educated in the public schools of New York and Newark, and after being con- nected as employee and director of Unger Bros., silversmiths, for fourteen years, be- came secretary and treasurer of Taylor & Co., inc., jewelers, of Newark, New Jersey.
Elisha Moody, the first member MOODY of this family of which we have definite information is the de- scendant of an old Massachusetts and New Hampshire family whose founder, William Moody, emigrated from Ipswich, England, to Newbury, Massachusetts, where he died Oc- tober 25, 1673. He married Margaret , and among his children was Edward M., re- ferred to below.
(II) Edward M., son of Elisha and Mar- garet Moody, married Eleanor R., daughter of Amos and Ellen Sophia ( Briggs) Holbrook. Among their children was Edward Erle, re- ferred to below.
(III) Edward Erle, son of Edward M. and Fleanor M. (Holbrook) Moody, was born in Lockport. Niagara county, New York, May 6, 1877, and is now living at 45 Walnut street,
Newark, New Jersey. After receiving his early education in the Berkeley School, New York, he attended Williams College, and then came to New Jersey, where he became state agent for the Provident Savings Life Insurance Company, and after serving two years in this capacity was appointed cashier of the same company in New York. He is a Republican in politics, and for five years has been a mem- ber of the Essex Troop, First New Jersey ( avalry. He is a member of several college societies, of the Union Club of Newark, the Baltusrol Golf Club, and the Town and Coun- ty Club. Through his mother (see Briggs) he is a member of the Society of the Cincinnati as the representative of Captain Jeremiah Stiles. He is a communicant of Trinity Prot- estant Episcopal Church in Newark. He mar- ried, in Newark, February 8, 1906, Helen Mat- thews, daughter of Edward Nichols and Cor- delia Catharine (Matthews) Crane, who was born in Newark, New Jersey, February 27, 1876; (see Crane in index).
(The Briggs Line).
Eliphalet Briggs, Sr., married a daughter of Captain Jeremiah Stiles. Her father was born in Lynchburg, Massachusetts, February 23, 1744, and died in Keene, New Hampshire, December 6, 1800. During the revolutionary war he commanded Captain Jeremiah Stiles's company, Colonel Paul Dudley Sargent's regi- ment of Massachusetts militia. He enlisted April 21, 1775, for three months and eighteen days service, he at that time belonging to the town of Keene, New Hampshire. He fought at the battle of Bunker Hill, and wrote the only official account of the death of General War- ren, to a committee of the Continental Con- gress then sitting in New York City. He was also a member of the committee of safety, and a delegate to the state convention to form a plan for the government of New Hamp- shire.
(II) Eliphalet (2), son of Eliphalet (I) and (Stiles) Briggs, was born Febru- ary 22, 1788.
(III) Ellen Sophia, daughter of Eliphalet Briggs, Jr., was born September 2, 1813. She married Amos Holbrook, who was born May 25, 1809, and their daughter Eleanor R. mar- ried Edward M. Moody, and became the mother of Edward Erle Moody, referred to above, who is the present representative of Captain Jeremiah Stiles in the Society of the Cincinnati.
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Peter Lorry Sebring, the first SEBRING member of the family of whom we have definite information, was born in Somerset county, New Jersey, October 26, 1799, and died there September 6, 1884. He may have been the son of the Abra- ham Sebring who died intestate in 1813, and he was undoubtedly a descendant of Roelof Sebring, of Drenthe, Holland, whose sons Jan, Jacob and Daniel Roelofse emigrated to Amer- ica and settled on the Raritan prior to 1699, and whose daughter, Willemptje Roelofse, was in Flatbush before 1677, and was second wife of Steven Coerte van Voorhees, the emigrant ancestor of that family in this country. Peter Lorry Sebring learned the trade of cabinet making, and later conducted a grain and gen- eral store near Millstone. He also ran a line of boats between Millstone and New York City. He married, October 30, 1823, Cath- arina Wortman Van Nest, who was born Janu- ary II, 1801, and died July 14, 1885, aged eighty-four years six months three days. Chil- dren: I. Abraham, referred to below. 2. John Van Nest, born September 28, 1826; died October 28, 1828. 3. Mary Elizabeth, born September 19, 1828; died June 16, 1830. 4. Emiline, born April 5, 1831; died August 20, 1831. 5. Louisa, twin with Emiline, died August 20, 1887; married Ambrose Smalley. 6. Maria Cornell, born June 1, 1833 ; died No- vember 18, 1868; married, January, 1862, Al- bert Drake. 7. Peter P., born June 21, 1835; died April 11, 1863 ; married, March 13, 1861, Elizabeth Price. 8. Theodore Frelinghuysen, born June 16, 1838; still living ; married, Janu- ary I, 1862, Susanna Maria Rockfellow. 9. Gertrude Broach, born December 23, 1840; died May 28, 1850. 10. Margaret Ann, born December 13, 1844; died February 2, 1845. II. Frances DuBois, born February 27, 1847; still living ; married, November 12, 1868, Peter Boice Randolph.
(II) Abraham, son of Peter Lorry and Catharine Wortman (Van Nest) Sebring, was born at Millstone, Somerset county, New Jer- sey, August 21, 1824, and died March 3, 1879, being killed by a pair of vicious mules in a runaway. On coming of age he settled down to farming near Bound Brook, Somerset coun- ty, New Jersey ; he was a Republican in poli- tics, and he attended the Bound Brook Pres- byterian Church, of which his parents had been members since 1823. He married, De- cember 24, 1846, Margaret Maria, daughter of John and Margaret ( Fisher) Fulkerson. Chil-
dren : Peter A., referred to below; John ; Kate M.
(III) Peter A., son of Abraham and Mar- garet Maria (Fulkerson) Sebring, was born in Bound Brook, New Jersey, June 7, 1853, and is now living in that place. For this early education, he attended the district schools near his home, and afterwards worked on his father's farm until he became of age, when, after a period of working out for the farmers near by, he found a position with the company building the railroad between Bound Brook and Somerville and between Bristol and Doylestown, Pennsylvania. After this he was employed by large financial interests to repre- sent them in Spanish Honduras and Guate- mala, and after making his second trip to these places he took charge of a large force of men who cleared 1830 acres which were planted with bananas. He also had charge of the work of constructing the dikes which were needed to protect the lowlands of the plantation from the rivers, and he was also manager of the company store. Mr. Sebring has the credit of having introduced unto Honduras the first mowing machine ever seen there, and his life was not without excitement during his sojourn in the tropics, for he was involved in three revolutions, and in the memorable "Southern Coast Flood," and at one time nearly lost his life from yellow fever. In 1906, after his return home, he accepted a position with the Pathe Freres, moving picture manufacturing company, with whom he still is. He is a Re- publican in politics. He married, April 5, 1876, Mary, daughter of Abiel and Jennie (Smith) Price. Children: Abraham; Mar- garet, married Charles H. Dunster (q. v.)
HENDRICKSON The Hendricksons of South Jersey are the descendants of that noble band of Swedes who came to this coun- try and were among the earliest settlers along the shores of the Delaware. As with the Dutch colonists, the Swedes had no system of sur- names, and it becomes a matter of extreme difficulty to trace back the generations, espe- cially in instances like the present, when the christian names are not uncommon ones. An additional difficulty is found in the fact that there were several families of Hendricksons in the colony of West Jersey, and the records at present in existence and accessible are too scanty to admit of a detailed classification of individuals.
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J. D. Howdietrong
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(I) Job Hendrickson, of Gibbsboro, Cam- den county, New Jersey, is the first of this branch of the Hendrickson family of whom we have definite record, but there are many indications to prove that he was not the first member to settle in that vicinity. He was a dealer in timber and lumber land, and also manufactured charcoal which he sold in the Philadelphia market. He cleared much of the land in and around Gibbsboro at an early day. In politics he was a Democrat, and he and his family were members of the Methodist Episcopal church. Mr. Hendrickson married and his children were: I. William Everhart, see forward. 2. Joseph. 3. John, died at the age of twenty-one years. 4. Anna, married William Dill. 5. Elizabeth, married James Masterson, of Philadelphia. 6. Mary, married Jesse Pratt, of Blackwood, Camden county, New Jersey. 7. Lydia, married Henry C. Cattell, of Washington, District of Columbia. 8. Deborah, married Philip Dixson, who lost his eyesight in the civil war.
(II) William Everhart, son of Job Hend- rickson, of Gibbsboro, was born in 1818. He married Emeline, born September 12, 1821, one of the eight children of Richard Davis, of Chew's Landing. Children: I. Harriet A., married Espin Ashton, who died in 1893 (?). 2. Mary E., married Isaac Pidgeon. 3. Joseph Davis, see forward. 4. Richard D. 5. William E. 6. Emma Minerva, married Jacob Ander- son. 7. Levi L. All of these children were living in 1909.
(III) Joseph Davis, third child and eldest son of William Everhart and Emeline ( Davis) Hendrickson, was born in Gibbsboro, New Jer- sey, December 12, 1843, and is now residing in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He attended the public schools of Camden county, New Jersey, but at the outbreak of the civil war left school and September 2, 1862, enlisted from Center township, Camden township, as a private in Company I, Twenty-fourth Regi- ment New Jersey Volunteers. He served for nine months and was an active participant in the battles of Fredericksburg and Chancellors- ville. In addition to these he was engaged in several other skirmishes. At the expiration of his term of enlistment he returned to his home, living for a time on his father's farm, then went to Philadelphia, where he became a clerk in the store of his uncle, who was one of the largest produce dealers in the city at that time. With this uncle, James Masterson, he remained until 1868, when he started in the produce business for himself in Philadelphia. The
style of the firm was at first Taylor & Hend- rickson, but, after a number of changes in the firm name, it was incorporated in 1909 as the J. D. Hendrickson Company, with Mr. Hend- rickson as president. In addition to the re- sponsibilities of this concern, Mr. Hendrick- son has found time and energy to engage in a number of other business enterprises, in all of which he fills the office of president. Among them may be mentioned: The Art Workers' Building and Loan Association, one of the largest and most successful organizations of its kind in Philadelphia ; The Ledger Building and Loan Association of Philadelphia ; and The Lee Pope Fruit Company, of Crawford coun- ty, Georgia, a corporation having at the pres- ent time, in active bearing, one hundred thous- and peach trees, from which in 1908 there were shipped from Georgia sixty-three thous- and crates of fruit. Mr. Hendrickson is also
a director in the Philadelphia Cold Storage Warehouse Company, and a member of the Manufacturers' Club of Philadelphia. His Masonic affiliations are many, and in this field he is enthusiastic and prominent. He became a Mason in Vaux Lodge, No. 393, Free and Accepted Masons, of Philadelphia, withdraw- ing from it in order to become a charter mem- ber of Robert A. Lamberton Lodge, No. 487, of Philadelphia, and of this lodge he is the senior past master and its representative to the Right Worshipful Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania. He is also a member of St. John's Chapter, No. 232, Royal Arch Masons, of Philadelphia ; he has taken all of the Scottish Rite degrees in Freemasonry up to and including the Thirty- second ; he is a member of Mary Commandery, No. 36, Knights Templar, of Philadelphia, and of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. In politics Mr. Hendrickson is a Republican, and is a member of the New Jersey Association of Philadelphia.
He married, December 2, 1872, Mary E., horn August 20, 1841, daughter of Michael Eveland, of Bloomfield, New Jersey, and has one child : Jennie Louise, born February 10, 1876.
William Hastings, the first
HASTINGS member of the family of whom we have definite in-
formation, was a farmer of Ayrshire, Scot- land. He married, and had among other chil- dren a son David, referred to below.
(II) David, son of William Hastings, was born in Scotland, September 23, 1821. He was educated there and after his marriage
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went to Ireland, where for many years he was a successful auctioneer of live stock. In religion he was a Presbyterian. He married April 24, 1854, Jennie Dick ; children : Jessie, born March 5, 1856; Flora, December 8, 1857; John, May II, 1859; Margaret, November 8, 1860; Agnes, July 6, 1862; David, see below ; Sarah, born October 25, 1866; William, June 12, 1870, died in infancy.
(III) David, son of David and Jennie (Dick) Hastings, was born February 7, 1864, in Belfast, Ireland. After attending school he entered the office of John Rowan and Sons, Ltd., at the age of thirteen, and remained there five years. In 1882 he came to America, and in December of the same year entered the office of the Bound Brook Woolen Mills, of which he is now secretary. He served three years in the city council at the time when the big trolley fight was on, his sound judgment and business ability proving of much value. Mr. Hastings is secretary of the Bound Brook Water Company; director of the First Na- tional Bank, also of the Building and Loan Association, and a promoter of real estate. He is in religion a Presbyterian ; in politics a Re- publican. He is a Mason, and a member of the Eastern Star Lodge. He married, Octo- ber 27, 1888, Florence, daughter of William Mannel, of Newark, Delaware; children : David M., born July 4, 1895; Anna F., May 17, 1898; Jessie, June 13, 1906; Kenneth Drummond, September 20, 1908.
The family here described KUEHNLE have been Germans as far back as can be ascertained, and in their native country were respectable people of the middle class, the men having trades, and attaining a fair degree of prosper- ity. In this country they have made and taken prominent places among their fellows, and have been of considerable ambition and ability. Their integrity and usefulness have been proven, and they have won reputations for patriotism.
(I) Louis Kuehnle was born January 6, 1827, at Hacmusheim, in the principality of Baden, Germany, and died August 7, 1885, at Egg Harbor, New Jersey. In his native coun- try he received the training requisite for a first class chef, and came to America in 1849, ob- taining employment at some of the leading hotels and restaurants of the country. While in Washington, D. C., he had the honor of presiding as chef at the hotel where President Buchanan boarded. In 1858 he opened the
New York Hotel at Egg Harbor, being con- nected with same until his death. January 9, 1875, he purchased and opened Kuehnle's Hotel, at Atlantic City, New Jersey, placing same under the management of his son, Louis K. He was held in high esteem by his fellow citizens at Egg Harbor, who several times elected him to the office of mayor ; he was also a member of the city council and the school board. He married, in 1852, Katherine Werd- rann, of Germany, and they had three sons- George, Louis and Henry.
(II) Louis (2), son of Louis (1) and Kath- erine (Werdrann) Kuehnle, was born Decem- ber 25, 1857, in New York City, and received a liberal education. In 1875 he became man- ager of Kuehnle's Hotel, opened in Atlantic City by his father, and eventually became sole owner. He is ambitious and enterprising, and has become interested in various other enter- prises. November 3, 1903, Mr. Kuehnle organ- ized the Marine Trust Company of Atlantic City, with a capitalization of $100,000, becom- ing its first president, a position still held by him; this financial institution has been im- mensely successful, and has already accumu- lated a surplus of $100,000. He is treasurer of the Atlantic City Brewery Company, and owner of extensive real estate in Atlantic City, where he is a prominent and much esteemed citizen. He is president of the Board of Water Commissioners, having been appointed by the mayor at the time the water plant became the property of the municipality, and having ably filled the position ever since. He is Republican in political views, and is known as the energetic leader of the party in Atlantic City. He is president of the Consumers' Gas and Fuel Company of Atlantic City.
Mr. Kuehnle is popular and much sought after, and belongs to the following organiza- tions: Trinity Lodge, No. 79, A. F. and A. M .; Trinity Chapter, No. 38, R. A. M .; At- lantic Commandery, K. T., of Atlantic City ; Lulu Temple, Mystic Shrine, of Philadelphia ; Benevolent Protective Order of Elks; Order of Eagles ; Atlantic Avenue Business League ; Republican Club of Atlantic City ; is vice-presi- dent of Atlantic City Automobile Club, and Commodore of Atlantic City Yacht Club. Mr. Kuehnle is unmarried.
George Ross, the founder of the ROSS distinguished family of his name in New Jersey, was a Scotchman by birth, and one of those who were taken prisoner by the parliamentary forces at the
Milan Ross
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battle of Dunbar, September 3, 1650. Owing to his youth, being then scarcely twenty years old, he was sentenced to transportation to the New England colonies, and he was sent over a few months later in the ship "John and Sarah," of London, John Green, master, arriv- ing in Boston before July 28, 1651, when the Rev. John Cotton refers to him in a letter. He was a carpenter by trade, and he found his way to New Haven, before 1658, when he was made freeman of that colony. About 1670 he removed to Elizabethtown, New Jersey, where he was appointed lieutenant December 3, 1683, and one of the judges of small causes May 1, 1686. He was also one of the two deacons of the church in Mr. Harriman's time. He died at Elizabethtown, in January, 1705. He married, in New Haven, December 7, 1658, Constance Little. Children: 1. John referred to below. 2. George, baptized in May, 1662; died in 1717; married Hannah, possibly a Spinning. 3. Daniel, born October 10, 1663 ; married (first) ; (second) Abigail, widow of his brother John. 4. Elizabeth, born December 16, 1665; died in 1742; mar- ried Daniel Price. 5. Hannah, born August 14, 1668.
(II) John, son of George and Constance (Little) Ross, was born in New Haven, Con- necticut, February 23, 1660, and died at West- field, New Jersey, December 9, 1702. He mar- ried Abigail, said to have been an Alling, who after his death became the second wife of her deceased husband's brother Daniel Ross. Chil- dren : 1. John, born 1683; died 1764; married Ursula .
2. George, referred to below. 3 Abigail, born 1687; married Jonathan Mil- ler. 4. Sarah, born 1689 ; married Peter Kings- land. 5. Nathaniel, born 1691; died about 1738; married Jane Price. 6. James, born 1693; died unmarried, 1723. 7. Joseph, born 1695 ; married Elizabeth - 8. Benjamin, born 1697; died about 1760.
(III) George, son of John and Abigail Ross, was born in Westfield, in 1685, and died there in 1750. His wife's name is unknown. Children: John, referred to below; George; David, married Hannah Scudder ; Susanna, married Edward Griffin; Hannah, married Josiah Crane ; Phebe, unmarried in 1750.
(IV) John, son of George Ross, of West- field, was born there December 24, 1715, and died April 7, 1798. In 1748 he was alderman of the borough of Elizabeth. He married (first) June II, 1736, Hannah Talmage, born July 6, 1715, died in 1753. He married (sec- ond) January 22, 1754, Joanna, daughter of iii-16
Alderman William Miller, and widow of Moses Crane, who died September 13, 1779. He married (third) February 27, 1780, Su- sanna, sister to Alderman Miller, the aunt of his second wife, and widow of Jeremiah Crane, who died in November, 1797. Children, all by first marriage : 1. John, born August 26, 1737 ; died 1800; married Sarah Scudder. 2. Re- becca, born June 14, 1739; married (first) Cornelius Ludlam ; ( second), - Frazee. 3. Timothy, referred to below. 4. Sarah, born July 11, 1743; died August 4, 1717 ; married Andrew Miller. 5, Ichabod, born September 24, 1745; died January 24, 1810; married (first) Elizabeth Davis; (second), Elizabeth Lamb. 6. James, born November 9, 1751 ; died October 12, 1826; married (first) Han- nah Thompson; (second), Sarah Thompson.
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