USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 62
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(IV) Daniel Van Ripen, son of Cornelis and Aeltje (Van Winckel) Van Rypen, was born in Bergen county, New Jersey, June 26, 1736, and died there July 23, 1818. He was a black- smith by trade, and it is said possessed little education but much good sterling common sense. During the revolutionary war he was a staunch and unyielding patriot. For a short time he was lieutenant in the militia. He was taken prisoner by a Tory named Van Wart and was locked up in the "old sugar house" prison in New York City. When brought be- fore the British officer for examination, Colo-
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nel William Bayard, the celebrated Tory, and one time owner of the island of Hoboken, and Van Wart, his captor, were present. The latter asked Van Rypen where his "rebel coat" was. Van Rypen replied "the coat does not make the man." "What does then?" asked the officer. Putting his hand over his heart, the patriot replied. "This, Sir." Colonel Bay- ard wished to have Van Rypen held a prisoner, but the officer in charge was so pleased with him that he discharged him with the assurance that he would do the same as often as he was arrested. Daniel Van Rypen was judge of the court of common pleas of Bergen county for a number of years after the revolutionary war, and his name appears on many papers and records of his day. He married, October 13, 1761, Elizabeth Terhune, born July 15, 1738, died June 1, 1811. Children : I. Catlyntje, born September 2, 1762 ; died November 14, 1833; married as second wife, May 2, 1779, Garret, son of Johannis and Margrietje ( Van Winckel) Van Ryoen, and grandson of Gerrit Juriaense, re- ferred to above, who was born February 4, 1749, died August 31, 1831, and married (first) Catlyntje Van Wagenen. 2. Cornelius, born May 23, 1767, died January 6, 1842 ; mar- ried (first) January, 1787, Elizabeth Vreeland, (second) Vrouwtje Gerrebrantse Gerritsen, of Slosterdam, (third) Aeltje Van Horn, widow of Michael Van Houten. 3. Derrick, referred to below.
(V) Derrick (Dirck, or in English, Rich- ard), son of Daniel and Elizabeth (Terhune) Van Ryper, was born in Bergen county, New Jersey, August 28, 1772, and died there July 3, 1851. He married, in October, 1792, Jen- neke, born 1775, died July 1, 1848, daughter of Michael and Annatje (Vreeland) Vreeland. Children : 1. Michael, born November 8, 1793 ; died April 22, 1868; married December 21, 1816, Cecilia Cadmus. 2. Elizabeth, born No- vember 23, 1795; died September 3, 1796. 3. Annatje, born June 25, 1797; married, No- vember 30, 1816, Abraham Vreeland. 4. Eliz- abeth, born July 9, 1800. 5. Aegie, December 19, 1801 ; died unmarried. 6. Daniel R., re- ferred to below. 7. Cornelius R., born March 27, 1805 ; married, September 15, 1827, Mary Sickles. 8. Catharine, born September 24, 1807; died December 31, 1868; married No- vember 7, 1822, Albert Zabriskie. 9. Jane, born December 27, 1809; died June 14, 1872; married, January 17, 1828, Egbert Wauters. IO. George, born September 23, 1811; died May 3, 1864; married, September 13, 1862, Gitty Outwater ; no children. II. Helena, born
April 20, 1813, died May 6, 1813. 12. Aletta, born October 6, 1819, died March 29, 1855; married, October 29, 1840, John S. Tuttle.
(VI) Daniel R., son of Derrick and Jenneke (Vreeland) Van Ryper, was born in Bergen county, New Jersey, September 7, 1803, and died there April 22, 1873. He married, Sep- tember 7, 1826, Jane, daughter of Adrain M. Post. Children: 1. Eliza, born July 1, 1826; married Henry B. Beaty. 2. Richard, referred to below. 3. Adrain, born November 7, 1832, married Sarah Jane, daughter of John Van Pelt, of Millstone. 4. John M., born July 25, 1835, died April 27, 1868; married, March 27, 1860, Louisa, daughter of John Gurney. 5. Hannah Jane, born August 21, 1839; married, January 15, 1869, Walter Gurney. 6. Clara P., born April 3, 1842; married, April 13, 1869, John Wallace Jr. 7. Daniel, born Octo- ber 21, 1844. 8. Catharine Emphemia, Au- gust 22, 1847 ; died August 10, 1858. 9. Aletta, born April 1, 1850.
(VII) Richard, son of Daniel R. and Jane (Post) Van Ryper, was born in Bergen coun- ty, New Jersey, December 3, 1829. He mar- ried, April 16, 1851, Sarah G., daughter of James Tallman. Children: I. Jennie Louise, referred to below. 2. Sarah Elizabeth, born December 10, 1854; married, May 8, 1873, John A. Bumsted. 3. Daniel, born June 10, 1857. 4. Clara, December 5, 1860. 5. Mary, March 5, 1865. 6. Richard, August 20, 1866.
(VIII) Jennie Louise, daughter of Richard and Sarah G. (Tallman) Van Riper, was born in Hudson (before 1840 Bergen) county, New Jersey, April 5, 1853. She married, in June, 1873, Henry Butler, son of Rev. William and Sophronia (Hoyt) Rollinson ; (see Rollinson).
The origin of the Garrison GARRISON family at present under con- sideration is Dutch. The name appears in the old records as Garrison, Garretson, Gerritson, Gerritse and Gerritsz, all of them being patronymic forms of Garret, and indicative of the Christian name of the emigrant ancestor or of one of his immediate descendants, the Dutch in this country not having adopted surnames as a general rule until about 1730, using instead for each gen- eration the name of the man's or woman's father with a suffix denoting son or daughter. By this method the patronymic changed with each generation, and owing to the common- ness of the name Garret it is an extremely dif- ficult matter to determine the correct ancestry prior to 1725. The first member of the fam-
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ily of whom we have definite information ap- pears to have settled in Somerset county, New Jersey, where we find at least four of his chil- dren: I. Jacobus, died between December 23, 1745, and June 3, 1746 ; married Sarah ; and left two children, Sara and Jacobus. 2. Rem, died between April 1, and December 18, 1786; married Mary - -. 3. Samuel, re- ferred to below. 4. A daughter, married John Koerte.
(II) Samuel, son of Garretson, of Somerset county, died between June I, and August 5, 1801, the dates of the execution and proving of his will. He married Ann Ten Eyck, a widow with one daughter, Ann Ten Eyck. Children : Rem and Jacobus.
(III) Jacobus, or James, son of Samuel and Ann (Ten Eyck) Garrison, lived in Windsor township, Somerset county, and left a son Samuel.
(IV) Samuel, son of Jacobus Garrison, of Windsor, was a farmer. He married (first) -; (second) Rhoda, daughter of William Scott. Children, all by second marriage : Annie, Eliza, Mary, Bathsheba, Catharine, John, Sam- uel, referred to below.
(V) Samuel (2), son of Samuel (I) and Rhoda (Scott) Garrison, was born in Windsor township, Mercer county, New Jersey, in 1845, and died in Bordentown, New Jersey, in De- cember, 1896. He was educated in the Wind- sor township public schools and several years before reaching his majority enlisted in one of the New Jersey regiments for the civil war, serving for three years and being promoted sergeant of his company. After being muster- ed out of service at the close of the war he secured employment as clerk in the grocery store of Daniel Smith Mershon, of Borden- town, New Jersey, and later he established himself in a grocery business of his own which he carried on most successfully until his death. He also owned a large cranberry bog which was very profitable. He was a member of Mount Moriah Lodge, No. 28, F. and A. M .; Mount Moriah Chapter, No. 20, R. A. M .; Ivanhoe Commandery, No. 1I, K. T., of Bord- entown, and of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. He was a Republican in politics, and at one time served as commissioner of appeals. He was a vestryman of the Protestant Epis- copal Church in Bordentown. He married Hannah Gary, daughter of Daniel Smith and Anna Mershon, whose father was his former employer and owner of a line of packets, who had fitted out two gunboats for the use of the government during the civil war. Children:
I. Frances Anneta, died aged eighteen years. 2. Daniel Mershon, of whom further. 3. Sam- uel Frederick, referred to below. 4. Mary Gihon, died young. 5. Anna Beatrice, died April, 1902.
(VI) Daniel Mershon, son of Samuel and Hannah Gary ( Mershon) Garrison, was born in Bordentown, New Jersey, May 3, 1874. He graduated from the Bordentown Military In- stitute in June, 1891, and from the United States Naval Academy in June, 1895. He served on board the U. S. S. "Indiana" during the Spanish-American war, and was presented with a medal by Congress for participation in the battle of July 3, 1898, and with service medals for campaigns. He was chief-engineer of the expedition which surveyed the route across the Pacific for the submarine cable since laid. He was on guard duty in Chemulpo, Korea, and Chefoo, China, during the Russo- Japanese war. He was promoted to lieutenant (junior grade) July 1, 1900; to lieutenant, July 4, 1902; to commander, August, 1907. He is professor of mathematics at the U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland. He is a mem- ber of the Council of the Graduates Associa- tion ; member of the Military Order of Foreign Wars, and various patriotic and scientific soci- eties. He married Jessie Croft, daughter of Colonel William Aiken and Jessie Ball (Croft) Kelly, of Charleston, South Carolina, Septem- ber 26, 1901. Children: Jessie Croft, born September 20, 1902 ; and Daniel Mershon (2), born August 29, 1903.
(VI) Samuel Frederick, son of Samuel and Hannah Gary (Mershon) Garrison, was born in Bordentown, New Jersey, October 15, 1879, and is now living in that place. After receiving his early education in the public schools he graduated from the Bordentown Military In- stitute in June, 1897. He then studied law in the office of Linton Southwaite Esq., of Tren- ton, New Jersey, and was admitted to the New Jersey bar in November, 1901, after which he started in the practice of his profes- sion in Bordentown, where he has been ever since. In addition to his professional duties he continues the lucrative cranberry business established by his father. He is an Independ- ent in politics, a member of Mount Moriah Lodge, No. 28, F. and A. M., and Mount Moriah Chapter, No. 20, R. A. M., of Borden- town. He is a vestryman of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Bordentown. He mar- ried, April 17, 1906, Agnes W., daughter of George Le Baw and Annie Lloyd (Hendrick- son) Howell, who was born September 9, 1880.
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Children : I. Frances Agnes, born March 20, 1907 ; died August 10, 1907. 2. Samuel Fred- erick (2), born September 8, 1908.
Dr. Ora M. Walker, of Dover,
WALKER New Jersey, is present day representative of an old fam- ily of Western New York, where its members have been known for generations as among the most respected citizens of Orleans county.
(I) William Norton Walker was born April 5, 1817, and died January 15, 1869. His father was a general in the revolutionary war. He was a farmer of Orleans county, New York. He married, March 1, 1843, Mary, born Au- gust 23, 1823, died January 3, 1875, daughter of Samuel and Mary (Bushman) Ingalsbe. Among his children was Judson L., referred to below.
(II) Judson L., son of William Walker, of Orleans county, was born in Alabama, Gene- see county, New York, January 3, 1845, and is now living in West Shelby, Orleans county. For several years before locating in West Shel- by he lived at North Ridgway. He is a farmer, and also a veterinary surgeon, and his agricul- tural specialty is fruit, of which he has raised a great quantity. He is a Democrat, and has held several local offices. He married, Decem- ber 27, 1871, Lenora, daughter of Ansel Chase ; she was born at North Ridgway, October 27, 1852, and is now living. (See Chase). Among their children was Ora M., referred to below.
(III) Ora M., son of Judson L. and Le- nora (Chase) Walker, was born in West Shelby, New York, May 17, 1884, and is now living in Dover, New Jersey. After receiving his early education in the county schools and in the high school at Medina, Orleans county, New York, from which he graduated in 1904, he entered the American School of Osteopathy, at Kirksville, Missouri, and received his di- ploma in June, 1908. He then located in Sil- ver City, New Mexico, where he remained for a year, and in June, 1909, settled in Dover, New Jersey. He is a member of the Atlas Club, of the American School of Osteopathy, and is an Independent in politics. He married, June 6, 1908, Caroline, daughter of Daniel and Elizabeth (Dufford) Spangenberg; she was born in Washington, New Jersey, graduated from the American School of Osteopathy, in February, 1908, and is now practicing with her husband.
(The Chase Line).
Through his mother, Dr. Ora M. Chase is descended from one of the old English families
whose ancestry in England is traceable to the days of Columbus. The present line was of Chasam Manor, Bucks county, England. (I) Thomas. (2) John. (3) Nathan, married Eliza Bould. (4) Richard, married Mary Roberts. (5) Richard, baptized August 3, 1542, married, April 16, 1564, Jane Bishop. (6) Aquilla, born 1580, baptized August 14, 1580. (7) Aquilla, born 1618; came to . New England in 1637, with his brother Thomas; married, in Hampton, Massachu- setts, 1638, Anne Wheeler; moved to New- buryport, Massachusetts, 1646. (8) Moses, born December 24, 1663, the first of the family born in America. (9) Moses, born January 20, 1688. (10) Seth. (II) Josiah, born Feb- ruary 20, 1748. (12) John, born June 3, 1779, in Worcester county, Massachusetts, died May 24, 1867 ; married, October 10, 1802, Roxana Thompson, born in Swanseytown, New Hampshire, December 6, 1782, died Jan- uary 15, 1858. (13) Ansel Chase, born in Central Otsego county, New York, 1807, died 1893. (See Walker above).
NIXON William Nixon, the first member of the family of whom we have definite information, lived at Quakertown, Hunterdon county, New Jersey, where he kept a well and favorably known hotel for many years. He was one of the prom- inent men in his locality and served for two terms as sheriff, elected on the Democratic ticket. He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Quakertown. He mar- ried Annie Meyers. Children: Justus L., re- ferred to below; William; Hiram; John; Eliza ; Harriet.
(II) Justus L., son of William and Annie (Meyers) Nixon, was born in Quakertown, Hunterdon county, New Jersey, February I, 1825, and died there June 27, 1907, aged eighty years five months twenty-seven days. He was born and lived on the home farm which has been in the possession of the family for more than one hundred years, and which has been so devised by will that it cannot be sold or pass out of the hands of its life tenants except to some other member of the family. Mr. Nixon, after receiving a good early education, became a large dealer in blooded cattle and a grower of peaches, in both of which businesses he be- came eminently prosperous and successful. He was a Democrat in politics, was for many years overseer of the poor of Hunterdon county, and also for a long time county collector. He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church
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of Quakertown, and of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. He married Annie Daven- port. Children: William E .; Annie; Lam- bert; Ella; Warford L., referred to below; Elwin ; Jane.
(III) Warford Lock, son of Justus L. and Annie (Davenport) Nixon, was born on the old homestead in Quakertown, New Jersey, and is now living in Raritan, New Jersey. For his early education he was sent to the Fleming- ton public schools and to the business college at Trenton, after which he went to the Tren- ton normal school and the Pennington Semi- nary. He then graduated with the class of 1889 from the Jefferson Medical College of Pennsylvania, and began the practice of his profession in Flemington with Dr. Case, with whom he remained for about seven years. He then went to Raritan, New Jersey, where he opened an office, and at the same time spent a day each week in attendance at St. Michael's Hospital, Newark. He is a member of the national, state and Somerset county medical societies. He is a Democrat in politics, and a member of the Raritan Methodist Church. He married, in 1896, Amelia, daughter of Madison Heacock. One child, Edna.
This branch of the Miller fam-
MILLER ily is not native to New Jersey, but is of Pennsylvania for many generation past. The family is so numerous in that state that from the great number bear- ing similar names it is almost impossible to separate the families and give true line of de- scent.
The Miller family appears in Chester coun- ty, Pennsylvania, records at an early date. Gayen Miller with Margaret, his wife, was one of the first settlers of Kinnet township, where he bought land in 1702. They were the parents of eleven children born between the years 1696 and 1723. Robert, one of the sons, married Ruth Haines and had seventeen chil- dren. Another descendant was Dr. Warwick Miller, of Sadsburyville, a noted man of his day, born 1785, died 1812. John Miller, per- haps a brother of Gayen Miller, settled at what is now Avondale, Chester county, Pennsyl- vania, 1709. Another settler, thought to be a brother of Gayen and John, was James Mil- ler, who married a daughter of Thomas Light- foot, in Ireland and came to Pennsylvania in 1729, settling at New Garden. Others of the name settled in York and Lancaster counties. It is from the Chester county families that the branch in Edgewater Park descend.
(I) George K. Miller was born at North Coventry, Chester county, Pennsylvania. He followed the occupation of a farmer, owning his own farm in that county, where he died aged sixty-three years. He married Sally Evans, who bore him children: Amos E., see forward, Warren R., Fremont Allen, Sally, Adeline and Carrie.
(II) Amos E., eldest son and child of George K. and Sally (Evans) Miller, was born in Chester county, Pennsylvania, February 12, 1850. He was educated in the common schools of the township, and on attaining a suitable age was apprenticed to a house carpenter. He worked for years at that trade, paying par- ticular attention to stair building at which he was rated an expert. Leaving Chester county he went to Philadelphia, where he established himself as a manufacturer of stairs and be- came well known in the trade. Although in business in Philadelphia, Mr. Miller resides in Palmyra, New Jersey. He is an adherent of the Republican party. He married Ariadne Baugh, of Chester county, Pennsylvania, daughter of Harris Baugh, an attorney of the Chester county bar, and granddaughter of Daniel Baugh. Children: 1. Gertrude, mar- ried William Truman, of West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ; children : Fremont and George Truman. 2. Hugh B., see forward.
(III) Hugh B., only son of Amos E. and Ariadne (Baugh) Miller, was born in Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, December 24. 1877. His parents removed to Palmyra, New Jersey, when he was eight years of age, and his edu- cation was obtained there in the public schools, supplemented by a course at a business col- lege and in drawing at the Young Men's Chris- tian Association night class in Philadelphia. He learned the trades of carpenter and stair builder, working for a time with his father under whose careful instruction he became an expert in the business. In 1903 he embarked in business on his own account in company with George W. Shaner under the firm name of Shaner & Miller. They maintain offices and conduct business operations in Palmyra, where Mr. Shaner is in charge, and at Edgewater Park, New Jersey, where Mr. Miller resides and manages the business. They are well known, reliable and expert craftsmen. Mr. Miller is a Republican, and is an elected justice of the peace at Edgewater Park. For fifteen years he has been a member of the Patriotic Order Sons of America, and is past president of the Palmyra order. Mr. Miller married, in 1902, Elizabeth D., daughter of Henry C. and
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Lovina (Christie) Adams, of Edgewater Park. (See Adams). Children : I. Child, died in in- fancy. 2. Lavinia Helen, born September I, 1905. 3. Warren Adams, February 21, 1907. 4. Hugh Burton, January 20, 1909.
DOBBINS James Dobbins, Jr., so called to distinguish him from his uncle or cousin James Dob- bins, Sr., is the first member of the family of whom we have definite information. He died in Mount Holly, New Jersey, in 1776, aged, according to his tombstone in St. Andrew's Churchyard there, "about forty-six years." He may have been a descendant of either the Widow Dobbins of Delaware Neck, North- ampton county, Pennsylvania, or the family that originated in Fairfax county, Virginia. He was a blacksmith in the days when that trade included the forging of all kinds of iron work from a horseshoe nail to a cannon, and he or his parents probably came to Mount Holly in the pursuit of that calling, the first iron furnace and forge having been started in that place about 1730. In 1775 sheet iron made in these works was used to make camp kettles for the Continental army, and in the following year shot and shell were manufac- tured there. The British learning this, de- stroyed the works, and, so far as Mount Holly was concerned, the iron industry also. James Dobbins, Jr., married Ruth -, possibly before he came to Mount Holly. Children: I. John, referred to below. 2. Rachel ; married, July 30, 1789, Samuel Lewis, a carpenter of Mount Holly, and builder of the courthouse and most of the noted buildings in that county seat. 3. Child, name and sex unknown. 4. James, born November 1, 1767. 5. William, born October 4, 1771; died 1843; married Mary R.
(II) John, son of James, Jr., and Ruth Dobbins, was born probably in Mount Holly, Burlington county, New Jersey, June 2, 1760, and died there January 16, 1841, and is buried in St. Andrew's Churchyard, Mount Holly. He was one of the most prominent and well known citizens of the town and is generally spoken of as John Dobbins, Sr., in order to distinguish him from his son, who was also a prominent man. He opened and conducted the first store in Mount Holly, which was contin- ued for many years after his death by his two sons, John Dobbins, Jr., and Edward Tonkin Dobbins, under the firm name of John Dobbins & Brother. These last were in turn succeeded by the firm of Burtis & Quick.
John Dobbins, Sr., and his son John were among the incorporators of the Farmers' National Bank of Mount Holly, which, though existing in 1814, received its charter in the following year, the father becoming a member of the first board of directors. He was also for many years from 1811 to 1841 warden of St. Andrew's Church, Mount Holly. One of the most exquisite bits of ecclesiastical archi- tecture in this county is the Dobbins Memo- rial Chapel, which has been erected on the site of the original St. Andrew's Church. He was also connected in some way with the old Camden & Amboy railroad, the first steam railroad in New Jersey, and he was one of the original members of the Relief Fire Company, said to be the second company of its kind formed in South Jersey. He married (first) December 23, 1779, Mary Murrell; (second), February 7, 1796, Susanna (Peat) Ridgway, born July 18, 1765, died November 14, 1838. (See Ridgway). Children, five by first mar- riage: 1. Sarah, born in Mount Holly, Octo- ber 20, 1781, died July 20, 1877; she married, as second wife, Dr. Benjamin Say Budd, of Mount Holly, one of the most popular and prominent physicians of his day ; (see Budd). 2. Mary Murrell, died in 1796. 3. Lucy Mur- rell, born June 1, 1786; died December 2, 1854; married Moses Kempton; no children. 4. John, Jr., born March 5, 1790; died January 7, 1869; married Sarah Budd, daughter of General Samuel Read ; children all died young. 5. Joseph, born in 1793; died in 1798. 6. Ed- ward Tonkin, Sr., born November 26, 1796; died May 7, 1845; married, 1826, Martha, daughter of General Samuel Read; no chil- dren. 7. Joseph Ridgway, referred to below. 8. Richard James, born 1803; died 1831 ; un- married; physician and surgeon. 9. James. Lott, born March 2, 1805; died September 26, 1805. 10. Susanna Ridgway, born 1807, died 1808.
(III) Joseph Ridgway, son of John, Sr., and Susanna (Ridgway) Dobbins, was born in Mount Holly, New Jersey, April 15, 1798, and died there September 19, 1857. Like his. father, he was a prominent and well-known citizen, and owner and operator of the mills at Pemberton, New Jersey, as well as of a num- ber of large farms in the vicinity of Mount Holly. He married, April 17, 1827, Mary Ann, born April 12, 1807, died August 27, 1872, daughter of Eber and Sarah (Summers) Hilyard; (see Hilyard). Children: I. Eber Hilyard, born March 25, 1828, now (1910) living in South Carolina. 2. John James, born
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March 29, 1830; died unmarried, May 7, 1889. 3. Richard James See, born March 24, 1832; died January 8, 1893; married Carolina W. Emmert, of Washington, D. C. 4. Susan Ridgway, born December 26, 1833; died July 24, 1867; married Rev. Robert Green Chase. 5. Sarah See, born March 21, 1836; died June 28, 1870 ; unmarried. 6. Joseph Kemper, born December 27, 1838; died April 16, 1905 ; mar- ried Sarah M. Jemkins, of Georgetown, D. C. 7. Edward Tonkin, born May 29, 1841 ; died unmarried, February 17, 1906. 8. Murrell, referred to below. 9. Walter, born March 12, 1847; died in infancy, June 16, 1848. 10. Mary Ann, born October 7, 1850.
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