USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume III > Part 83
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(III) James, son of William Richards, was born about 1722, and baptized in the Old Swedish (now Prostestant Episcopal) Church of St. Gabriel's, at Morlattom, Douglassville, on the Schuylkill. He was a farmer, and lived first in Amity township and later in Cole- brooksdale township, Berks county. During the revolution he served as sergeant in Cap- tain Tudor's company, Fourth Pennsylvania Continental Line, enlisting May 10, 1777. He was a man of immense brain and great physi- cal strength, and his life was full of adven- tures. He died in 1804. By his wife Mary he had children : William, born January 27, 1754; Frederick; Elizabeth, married Enoch Rutter ; James; Owen; Mary, married Henry Fox; Sarah, married Henry Schmale; Hannah, died unmarried ; John, married (first) Rebecca Ludwig, (second) Louisa Silvers; seven chil- dren. It is from among these children that the ancestry of Enoch Richards, of Ardmore, Pennsylvania, referred to below, must be sought.
Enoch Richards, of Ardmore, Pennsyl- vania, married Rebecca, daughter of John Tay- lor, of Ardmore, and among their children was Jacob Rickerbaugh, referred to below.
Jacob Rickerbaugh, son of Enoch and Rebecca (Taylor) Richards, was born at Ard- more, Pennsylvania, July 11, 1856, and is now living at Atlantic City, New Jersey. For many years he was a contractor and builder in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but in 1882 he established at South Carolina and at the
Boardwalk, Atlantic City, the well-known Richards Baths. These are among the finest, if not actually the very best, of the bathing establishments at that famous summer resort, and it is not an uncommon thing for them to accommodate four thousand bathers in a single day. Mr. Richards has made himself extreme- ly popular, and by his attention to the needs and desires to his patrons he has won a well deserved reputation and popularity, which is second to none.
Mr. Richards married Martina Maida Spah- mer (see Spahmer ), October 13, 1882, and they have one child, Lewis Emerson Richards, born July 9, 1884, who graduated from the Atlantic City high school in 1902, then entered the lower department of the University of Penn- sylvania, from which he graduated with a degree of LL. A. in 1906, and is now a rising young lawyer of the Atlantic City bar, with offices at 516-517 Bartlett Building. He is unmarried.
(The Spahmer Line).
The Spahmer family which has intermarried with the Richards belongs with the nineteenth century comers to this country.
Anton Adam Spahmer, the founder of the family in this country, was born April 23, 1818. at Frankfort-on-the-Rhine, and is now living in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Before coming to this country he served as one of the old guard of France. He married Maida Pretcht. Children : 1. Charles, born 1856; married Miss Kenny ; children: Marie, married Mr. Sim- mons, of Brooklyn, New York, and George, unmarried. 2. Anton Adams Jr., married Mary Keys, of Baltimore, Maryland; chil- dren: Alice and Howard. 3. Adolph, mar- ried Miss Leney. 4. Josephine, married Ed- ward Skinner, of Hempstead, Long Island ; one child living, Clarabel, married Alfred Far- geon, a banker, of New York City. 5. Mar- tina Maida, referred to below. 6. Delia, mar- ried Frederick Jefferies, of Irvington-on-the- Hudson, an expert accountant. 7. Domingo, married Isaac Stewart, of Philadelphia, and has one son, Paul.
(II) Martina Maida, daughter of Anton Adams and Maida ( Pretcht) Spahmer, was born December 1I, 1861, and married, Octo- ber 13, 1882, Jacob Rickerbaugh Richards (see Richards ).
Among the numerous families of SMITH Smiths which have played such a prominent part in New Jersey's history, one of the oldest is the branch at pres-
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ent under consideration, which traces its an- Men, of Millville, and a member of Court cestry back as far as and beyond the revolu- tion.
(I) Asa Smith, first of the line of whom there is certain knowledge, was a colonel in the New Jersey state militia during the war of 1812 and as such took part in the repulse of the British at Cape May. Among his children was Robert, referred to below.
(II) Robert, son of Asa Smith, was a farmer of Fairton, New Jersey. His children were: Asa, Joseph, Robert, Phebe, Mary Jane, Eliz- abeth, Emily, Josiah Franklin, referred to below.
(III) Josiah Franklin, son of Robert Smith, was born at Fairton, New Jersey, September 24, 1836. He married Anna Maria, daughter of David Campbell, of Atlantic county, New Jersey, who was born near Weymouth, March 9, 1839. Her grandfather, Donald Campbell, of Atlantic county, is said to have been a colo- nel in the revolutionary army and to have been present at the battle of Trenton. One of his sons, Archibald, was also a revolutionary sol- dier. Josiah Franklin and Anna Maria (Camp- bell) Smith had six children, five of whom died in infancy, and Joseph F., referred to below.
(IV) Joseph F., only child who reached matu- rity of Josiah Franklin and Anna Maria (Han- nah) (Campbell) Smith, was born at Bridge- ton, New Jersey, September 17, 1880, and is now living at Millville. He came to this place with his parents while he was yet a child, and for his early education was sent to the public schools there. After leaving school he took up the study of law in the office of Lewis H. Miller, Esquire, and was admitted to the New Jersey bar by the supreme court as attorney in November, 1903, and as counsellor in Febru- ary, 1907. He became a special master in chancery, October 28, 1908. He has ever since been engaged in the general practice of his pro- fession in Millville, and in the fall of 1901 was elected justice of the peace. Mr. Smith is a Republican and has always been active and prominent in his party, and his remarkable abilities have been so well recognized by the community in which he lived that in the fall election of 1907 he was chosen as mayor of Millville for a three year term. He is thus almost without doubt the youngest person ever chosen to that position in the state of New Jer- sey. On January 8, 1908, he entered into the office. Mr. Smith is a member of the Benev- clent and Protective Order of Elks, Millville Lodge, No. 580. He is also a member of Tus- cola Tribe, No. 176, Improved Order of Red
Cumberland, Order of Foresters of America. Among his clubs and societies Mayor Smith numbers the Cumberland County Bar Associa- tion and the New Jersey Bar Association.
The records of this branch of CRAMER the Cramer family begins with Alfred Cramer, who emigrated from England in 1750, and settled on Long Island, where he remained until 1780, when he removed to New Jersey, locating in Cumber- land county. His descendants have intermar- ried with the different families of South Jer- sey, and can trace to revolutionary ancestors along several lines. The great-grandfather of Lewis Wheaton Cramer was Frederick Steelman,who was a revolutionary soldier, as was his son Andrew and several of his brothers. The Steelmans descended from James Steel- man, a Swede, who was of the New Castle, Delaware, Swedish colony prior to 1690. He was the owner of the southwest end of Abse- quam Beach, which he bought of Thomas Budd. James Steelman died in 1734. Fred- erick, his grandson, died in 1778. Andrew, son of Frederick Steelman, was killed on Long Island during the revolutionary war by John Bacon, a Tory.
(I) George Henry Cramer was born at May's Landing, New Jersey, in 1835. He was a sea captain, and during the civil war was in the government transport service. He married Sarah Wheaton, born in 1833, daughter of George Wheaton, of May's Landing. She was a sister of Rev. William Lewis, Edward and Henry Wheaton, all deceased. Her sister, Lottie (Wheaton ) Somers, resides in Burling- ton, New Jersey. Her father, George Wheaton, was a shipbuilder, having yards at Mays Landing. In 1844 he was appointed lay judge of Atlantic county, serving with dignity and honor. Children of Captain George N. and Sarah ( Wheaton ) Cramer : I. Lewis Wheaton, see forward. 2. William M., born 1860, mar- ried L- Neild, and had a daughter Mary, who married Theodore Townsend, of West Collingswood, New Jersey. 3. Mabel Willits, born 1863; married Orris R. Estelville; re- sides in Kane, Pennsylvania.
(II) Lewis Wheaton, son of Captain George H. and Sarah (Wheaton) Cramer, was born at May's Landing, Atlantic county, New Jer- sey, October 30, 1855. He was educated in the public schools of his native town and at Bryant and Stratton's Business College. His first business was as a clerk in the freight office
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of the Camden & Atlantic railroad, after which he was a conductor on a street car. He had a desire to follow a sailor's life, and shipping with his father as seaman, he followed the sea for ten years. He rose to be first mate, and finally captain of a vessel engaged in the coast- ing trade. In 1887 he received the nomination of the Republican party for county clerk. He was elected the following November, and through subsequent re-elections held that office for ten years until 1897. He was next ap- pointed deputy postmaster of May's Landing under Postmaster Lewis E. Jefferies, and con- tinued under Postmaster Captain S. S. Hud- son. In 1906 he was appointed by President Roosevelt postmaster at May's Landing, and is now serving his first term. He is a thor- oughly experienced, efficient and popular offi- cial. Mr. Cramer is a Master Mason of Unity Lodge No. 96, an Odd Fellow, and chaplain of Atlantic Lodge No. 20, and for the past eight years treasurer of Lodge No. 121, Order United American Mechanics, all of May's Landing. He married, January 15, 1878, Mary Jane, born in April, 1857, daughter of William Veal, of Buena Vista, New Jersey. Mrs. Cramer traces to revolutionary ancestors, her grandfather Ackley having been a soldier of the revolution. Children of Lewis Wheaton and Mary Jane ( Veal) Cramer: I. Bertha Ferrill, born at May's Landing, in October, 1882 ; graduate of New Jersey State Normal School, class of 1885 ; for the past twelve years has been assistant principle of May's Land- ing high school. 2. Arthur Garfield, born in December, 1886; graduate of Spring Garden Institute, Philadelphia; an electrician in the employ of the Pennsylvania railroad ; married, January 23, 1909, Elizabeth, daughter of Adolph Pennington.
DIX The Dix family, although it has several notable representatives in New Jersey who have done more than sustain their noble name in its new environment, have for centuries been at home and among the foremost makers of history in the Old Domin- ion. From here the scions of the Dix family have spread into various colonies and later into the states of the Union, where their de- scendants have become such noted men as Governor Dix, of New York, and Rev. Morgan Dix, so long the rector of Trinity Church, New York City.
(I) Levi J. Dix, of Accomac Court House, Virginia, was one of the largest of the old plantation slave owners of that state, where
his house was noted for its southern hospitality, the beauty and brilliancy of its women and the wisdom and ability of its men, as well as the happiness and prosperity of its quarters. Mr. Dix was one of the most noted among a race of noted fox hunters and sportsmen, and many was the gathering that met in the early dawn at his home to follow the hounds through the scented woods. His wife, who was one of the greatest belles of that section of the country, was Lovey Wright, whose father had come from England. Among their children was Asa Thomas, referred to below.
(II) Asa Thomas, son of Levi J. and Lovey (Wright) Dix, was born at Accomac Court House, Virginia, September 4, 1818. He was a physician, and practiced all of his life at Accomac Court House. He married Lidia Jennett, daughter of William Kane, born in Baltimore, Maryland, who started the piano business in that city, being the maker of the Steep and Kane piano. Their children, twelve of whom are now living, were: George H., of Parksley, Virginia ; Preston B .; Charles C .; Catharine ; Jefferson A .; Jennett ; Lily; Levi J .; John Morgan, referred to below; Norma L .; Rose E .; Minnie ; Sherwood ; Asa Thomas Jr .; Jewel.
(III) John Morgan, ninth child and sixth son of Asa Thomas and Lidia Jennett (Kane) Dix, was born at Accomac Court House, Vir- ginia, January 14, 1867, and is now living at Cape May Court House, New Jersey. For his early education he attended the schools at Accomac Court House, and afterwards went to the Academy at Onancock, Virginia, after graduating from which he entered the school of medicine of Baltimore University, at Balti- more, Maryland, from which he graduated with the degree of M. D. in 1894. In the fall of this year he became an assistant at the medical college of John Hopkins University, Baltimore, where he became chief of clinics and demon- strator in obstetrics, and at the same time was engaged in the general practice of his profes- sion in the city. In 1899 the Doctor came to Cape May Court House, where he has been engaged in the practice of his profession ever since. He is a member of the New Jersey State Medical Society, the American Medical Asso- ciation, and the Cape May County Medical Society, and his papers before these various bodies have been not only instructive and valu- able, but have been the subject of much wide- spread favorable comment and discussion. Dr. Dix is a member of the Baptist church in Cape May Court House, and in politics is an Inde-
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pendent. He is a member of the Cape May County Board of Health, and of the Cape May Court House Board of Education. He is also a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and of the order of Red Men. In his fine and beautiful home at Cape May Court House the traditions of his family are nobly preserved, and the Doctor is one of the worthi- est and most respected members of a com- munity, which is one of the noblest in the state.
John Morgan Dix, M. D., married (first) Nannie, daughter of Augustus Wessels, of Accomac Court House, Virginia, who died in April, 1895, leaving two children: Lester, born August 13, 1890, now at the Model School, Trenton, New Jersey ; and Rosa, born October, 1892, who took the scholarship prize at the high school at Cape May Court House, where she graduated.
In September, 1898, John Morgan Dix, M. D., married (second) Jennie, daughter of Jo- seph T. Yerby, of Virginia, who served in the Confederate army during the civil war, under General Stonewall Jackson, and is now living in Baltimore, Maryland. Child of John Mor- gan, M. D., and Jennie (Yerby) Dix: Isabella Yerby, born March 15, 1902.
ENDERS The Enders family of Rahway and Newark, New Jersey, are most probably a branch of the family of the same name which has been for so long prominent in Dauphin county, Penn- sylvania, and elsewhere, but as yet no records have come to light which will establish the exact relationship. In fact it is so far impos- sible to get further back than John Enders of Rahway the founder of this particular branch of the family.
(I) John Enders, of Rahway, was a Quaker, who lived near the mill pond to which his name has been given, about the middle and latter part of the seventeenth century. His wife's name has become lost. Children of John End- ers : I. William. 2. Phebe, married a Mr. Payne. 3. James. 4. Joseph. 5. Gideon. 6. John. 7. Mary, married John Ludlow.
(II) William, son of John Enders, of Rah- way, was born October 19, 1790, and died Sep- tember 9, 1826. He became a Presbyterian. and was married twice. February 15, 1820, he married, in the church at Westfield, Phebe, daughter of Aaron and Jemima (Lambert) Hatfield, of that place. She was granddaugh- ter of Matthias Hatfield, of Westfield, by his
first wife Mary, great-granddaughter of Mat- thias and Hannah ( Miller ) Hatfield, of Eliza- bethtown, whose daughters Phebe and Han- nah married respectively Colonel Robert and Samuel Ogden. She was great-great-grand- daughter of Isaac, and great-great-great-grand- daughter of Matthias Hatfield, the emigrant. and Maria, the daughter of the famous Jacob Melyn, of New Amsterdam. Phebe ( Hat- field) Enders was born in Westfield in 1799, and died in Rahway, March 1I, 1822. She was mother of one child, Mary. After her death William Enders married Anna Bloom- field Luke, born December 3, 1802, died Feb- ruary 20, 1888, daughter of Captain Robert Luke, a revolutionary soldier, whose five chil- dren were: Mary, Jane, Anna, Martha and Robert.
(III) William Barton, son of William and Anna Bloomfield (Luke) Enders, was born in Rahway, New Jersey, January 14, 1827, about five months after his father's death. At first he was sent to a private school in Rah- way, and after that he went to the Rahway semi- mary, under the management of Rev. William Martin. When he was fifteen he went into a general store as clerk and remained there for two years, and then, April 1, 1844, secured a position with James M. Quimby & Company, manufacturers of coaches and hearses, New- ark. With this firm he remained nine years, and in 1852 started for himself in the carriage making business in company with John T. Lev- erich, the firm name being Leverich & Enders. In 1884 Mr. Enders retired from active busi- ness life. He has been called upon by the courts to appraise many estates, this showing him to be a man of sound judgment.
Mr. Enders is a Republican, and so little of an office seeker is he that he has steadily refused all offers to have him run for or be appointed to any office, although he was more than once pressed to do so. He is a member of the First Dutch Reformed Congregation of Newark, of which his family are members.
January 8, 1852, William Barton Enders married Joanna, daughter of John and Zeruah (Danialson) Sutphen ( see Sutphen). Chil- dren: I. Charles Frederick, born July 24, 1852, died June 18, 1854. 2. William Barton Jr., born September 8, 1856, died August 17, 1860. 3. Addie Matilda, born May 15, 1860. 4. Joanna Virginia, December 14, 1861. 5. Mary Anna, November 7, 1863, died August 28, 1864. 6. Ida, born March 9, 1865, died April 28, 1865.
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John Headley, the first member HEADLEY of this family of whom we have definite information, married Mary, daughter of Nehemiah and Elizabeth (Cranmer ) Mathis, she was born June 9, 1768, and died March 17, 1863. (See Mathis). Chil- dren: I. Elizabeth. 2. Job, married Mary Lemonyon ; children : James, Joseph, Thomas, Emeline, Alice. 3. Samuel, referred to below. 4. Sarah, married Jabez Parker. 5. Jemima, married Elvin Smith. 6. John (2), married Phebe Lamson, of Mannahawkin. 7. Mary, married Richard Parker ; of her four children, John Parker, the eldest son, was drowned while saving seamen on a stranded wreck on Barnegat Beach. 8. Joseph, married Ann Bur- ton; children: John, Phineas, Richard, Je- mima, Sarah. 9. Jesse, married Mary Rock- hill; children: Subonian, William, Charles, Sarah, Lydia, Georgiana, Jesse and Amanda.
(II) Samuel (or, as his name is sometimes written, Samuel B.), son of John and Mary ( Mathis) Headley, lived in Mathistown, Little Egg Harbor township, Gloucester county, New Jersey. Under the firm name of Samuel B. Headley & Sons he and his sons conducted for many years a large mercantile established at Tuckerton. He married Mary Foster. Chil- dren : Joseph, Alfred, Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, Dorcas, Samuel C. (referred to below), Ed- ward, Esther, Charles.
(III) Samuel C., son of Samuel B. and Mary (Foster) Headley, was born in Manna- hawkin, New Jersey, and lived for the greater part of his life at Tuckerton, where he was in partnership with his father. He married Helena Pharo, born at West Creek, New Jersey; she died when her only son was an infant of a few years old. Children : Harry, referred to below; Marian, died at four years of age.
(IV) Harry, son of Samuel C. and Helena (Pharo) Headley, was born at Tuckerton, New Jersey, March 25, 1869, and is now living at Ocean City, New Jersey. For his early edu- cation he attended the public schools at West Creek, New Jersey, and when his parents moved back to Tuckerton he went with them and learned the trades both of carpenter and of mason, at which he has worked from time to time in almost all parts of the country. Com- ing to Ocean City, New Jersey, he for one year worked at these trades, and then began to take contracts for building, which his previ- ous experience as a practical carpenter had eminently fitted him to do with success. In 1901 he became engaged in the real estate and insurance business in Ocean City, and added
this to his contracting business. In this latter field he has been quite if not more successful than in his former work. Mr. Headley is a Republican, and a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He is active in public af- fairs, and is considered one of the most earn- est workers for his party, and has been reward- ed for his energetic services by being appointed commissioner of deeds, and by being elected by popular vote of the people of Ocean City, in 1894, a member of the city council, in which capacity he has served continuously up to this time with the exception of four years. At the present time he is still in office, and he has served longer than any other man who has ever been elected to that or similar position in the town. He is a member of the Junior Me- chanics, and president of No. I Volunteer Fire Company of Ocean City. He has just return- ed from a trip to Jamaica. He married, June 27, 1895, Gertrude Lydia, daughter of John T. and Lydia (Lake) Price, who was born at Bargaintown, Atlantic county, New Jersey, November 20, 1870. (See Lake).
(The Mathis Line).
John Mathis, the founder of this family, was born in England, about 1690, and when a young inan he and his brother, Charles, emigrated to America. They settled first at Oyster Bay, Long Island, and Charles Mathis's descendants finally settled in Shrewsbury township, Mon- inouth county, New Jersey. John Mathis lived on Long Island until 1713, when with William Birdsall and Moses Forman, he bought of Daniel Leeds, of Springfield, New Jersey, the island then known as Biddle's Island, but des- tined to be named after one of his own sons, the Daniel Mathis Island. This island on Bass river was the purchase of John Mathis, in Egg Harbor, but it was only the beginning of a land speculation which resulted in making him the largest landholder in the township, and he finally became the wealthiest and most distin- guished man of Little Egg Harbor. He mar- ried, in 1716, Alice, daughter of Edward (2) and Sarah (Ong) Andrews, and widow of John Higbee, of Long Island. Her father was the founder of Tuckerton, New Jersey, and son of one of the most prominent Quaker min- isters of his day. `She herself is said to have been "possessed of unusual business talents, ordering and arranging her affairs with the utmost regularity and good judgment," and she is described as "a large, tall and muscular woman, of a dark complexion, with black eyes and hair, which she inherited from her father."
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Children : 1. Micajah, born November 9, 1717 ; died November 1, 1804; married, 1747, Mercy, daughter of Joshua and Jane Shreve. 2. Job, born July 13, 1719; married Phebe Leek. 3. Sarah, born September 19, 1721; married (first) Marmaduke Coate, (second) John Leeds. 4. Daniel, born November 7, 1723; married Sophia, daughter of Zebulon and Sophia (Shourds) Gauntt; removed to North Carolina. 5. Jeremiah, born May 14, 1726; married his first cousin, Hannah, daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth (Ridgway) Andrews. 6. Nehemiah, referred to below. 7. Eli, born August 4, 1730; married Phebe, daughter of Richard Devinney Sr.
(II) Nehemiah, son of John and Alice (An- drews-Higbee) Mathis, was born in Little Egg Harbor township, Gloucester county, New Jer- sey, August 13, 1728. He married Elizabeth, daughter of John and Rebecca (Stout) Cran- mer, whose father is said to have been the builder of the first Friends' meetinghouse at . Tuckerton. Children: I. Job, married Sarah Cossaboom. 2. John, married (first) Carter, (second) - --- Baremove. 3. Nehe- miah, married Susan Peterson. 4. Ziba, mar- ried Elizabeth Cranmer. 5. Alice, died unmar- ried. 6. Elizabeth, married William Weather- by. 7. Sarah, married James Roger. 8. Re- becca, married Jacob Headley. 9. Hannah, married John Rockhill. 10. Mary, referred to below. 11. Sophia, married William Wooley. 12. Phebe, died unmarried. 13. Nancy, mar- ried John Mathis.
(III) Mary, daughter of Nehemiah and Elizabeth (Cranmer) Mathis, was born in Little Egg Harbor township, June 9, 1768, and died March 17, 1863. She was noted for her unconimon memory, which she retained until her death, and lived to a greater age than any other descendant of John Mathis. She mar- ried John Headley, referred to above.
(The Lake Line).
(IV) Amariah, son of Daniel (q. v.) and Sarah (Lucas) Lake, was born in Gloucester county, New Jersey, April 5, 1778, and died June 26, 1847. He married, September 20, 1801, Margaret Adams. Children: I. Mary, born 1802; died in May, 1879; married Elijah Adams. 2. Joshua, referred to below. 3. Lydia, born April 1, 1804; died November 3, 1839; married James English. 4. Mark, born February 26, 1808; died February 17, 1868; married, February 11, 1833, Frances Anna Frambes. 5. Enoch, married Eliza Ann Adams. 6. Jemima, died 1833 ; married Jeremiah Baker.
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