USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume IV > Part 36
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Connecticut, were Caleb, Benjamin and Joshua Abel, presumably brothers, and Joshua was probably the father of Sergeant Caleb. Ser- geant Caleb Abel was chosen constable in 1684, townsman in 1689, appointed to keep a tavern in! 1694, and enrolled with his military title in 1704. He died August 7, 1731, in the eighty- fifth year of his life. In July, 1669, he married Margaret, daughter of John Post, and she bore him eleven children. She died in 1700, and he married (second) Mary, widow of Stephen Loomer. Three of his sons-Samuel, Caleb and Joshua-married sisters-Elizabeth, Abi- gail and Rebecca Sluman. Children of Jared and Mollie (Abel) Clarke: I. Philotha, bap- tized December 12, 1756; married Ezekiel Kel- ley ; died 1838. 2. Jared, born April 9, 1758. 3 Mary, October II, 1761; married Darius Warren. 4. Simon, September 1I, 1763; died April 28, 1846; married (first) Rebecca F. Peabody; (second) Jerusha Chapin ; died April 28, 1846. 5. Abel, November 24, 1765. 6. Ambrose, June 18, 1769. 7. Cyrenas, twin with Ambrose. 9. Solomon, born June 17, 1775 ; died 1814. Mrs. Moilie Clarke survived her husband and married (second) her cousin. Zebulon Metcalf, who died April 26, 1802, and she died in 1814. (N. B .- After 1750 the ma- jority of this family dropped the final "e" from their name).
(V) Abel, third son and fifth child of Jared and Mollie (Abel) Clarke, was born in Leb- anon, and baptized November 24, 1765; died in Litchfield, Connecticut, March 2, 1842. He settled in Litchfield when a young man and be- came a very prosperous farmer. He married Lois Smith, and the only one of his children known to the writer is Samuel, an account of whom follows.
(VI) Samuel Clark, son of Abel and Lois (Smith) Clark, was born in Litchfield, Con- necticut, April 1, 1810, where he was brought up on a farm and given a good education in the superior public schools of his native town. He left Litchfield before he attained his majority and went to west- ern New York, living for a time in Roch- ester, and going thence to Pennsylvania. In 1835 he returned east and settled in Lebanon, Hunterdon county, New Jersey, where he married Sarah, daughter of James and Margaret (Hoffman) Ramsey. She was born in Lebanon, New Jersey, 1818. Her father came from the north of Ireland when a young man. He was of Scotch descent and the Ramsey's belonged to the Covenanters who fled to the north of Ireland and founded the
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sterling Scotch-Irish race which so largely peopled Pennsylvania and New Jersey. He married in Lebanon, New Jersey, Margaret Hoffman, who was a descendant from Martin Hoffman, who came from Holland in 1657, married Emerentje de Witt, settled first at Esopus on the Hudson river and became the progenitor of noted men in American history, including: Beekman Ver Planck Hoffman (1789-1834), an officer in the United States navy, the war of 1812; Charles Fenno Hoff- man (1806-1884), lawyer, editor and author ; Charles Frederick Hoffman (1830-1897), and his brother, Eugene Augustus Hoffman (1829- 1902), lawyer, figures in the history of the Protestant Episcopal church in New Jersey and New York as clergymen, authors and ben- efactors; (David) Murray Hoffman (1791- 1878), the eminent jurist, churchman, and author ; John Thompson Hoffman (1828- 1888), governor of New York, mayor of New York City; Ogden Hoffman (1794-1856), naval officer, lawyer, state legislator, represen- tative in the United States congress, attorney- general of New York and United States dis- trict attorney for southern district of New York; Wickham Hoffman (1821-1900), sol- dier and diplomatist. Samuel Clark made his home in Lebanon, where he became an active man of affairs, and a leader in mercantile and civic life, conducting an extensive business from 1838 to 1848, and holding offices of honor and trust in the township, of which he was a chosen freeholder. In 1848 he removed to New Germantown in the same county, where he conducted a large and popular hotel up to 1868, when he retired from the cares of active business life and he enjoyed thirty-five years of freedom from care except the management of his private estate. He died in New Ger- mantown, . Hunterdon county, New Jersey, May, 1903, his wife having been spared . to him up to April, 1901, when she died at the age of eighty-three years. Children of Samuel and Sarah (Ramsey) Clark were: 1. Austin, died in 1898. 2. Alvah Augustus, see forward. 3. George, who was living in Lebanon, New Jersey, 1909. 4. Margaretta, married George F. Martens, a lawyer in New York City ; died in 1893. 5. Ophelia, married Dr. Robb, of Brooklyn, New York; died 1898. 6. John, who in 1909 was living in Califon, New Jer- sey. 7. Charles, in 1909 a resident of Cali- fornia.
(VII) Alvah Augustus, second son of Sam- uel and Sarah (Ramsey) Clark, was born in Lebanon, Hunterdon county, New Jersey, Sep-
tember 13, 1840. He was prepared for college by the Rev. Dr. Blauvelt, of Lamington, Somerset county, New Jersey, but for want of funds to carry him through college, he commenced the study of law in the office and under the instruction of John C. Rafferty, of New Ger- mantown, and he was admitted to practice as an attorney-at-law in 1864 and he began prac- tice in New Germantown. In 1867 he was admitted to practice as a councillor and re- moved to Somerville, Somerset county, where he established himself in the general practice of law, and he met with unusual and immediate success. His popularity as a lawyer extended beyond the limits of Somerset county and his activity in the Democratic party made him a candidate for representative in congress in 1876, and he was elected to represent his dis- trict in the forty-fifth congress, and in 1878 was re-elected to the forty-sixth congress, serving in the lower house of the United States congress, 1877-81. As a member of the committee on military affairs, he advocated and secured reforms in the signal service of great benefit to the farming community. He served for a short time as a member of the sinking fund commission of the state of New Jersey, but resigned, as it interfered with his pro- fessional duties, especially with a large corpo- ration practice. Mr. Clark married, June 9, 1864, Anna M., daughter of John B. and Catharine (Longstreet) Vanderbeek, of Lam- ington, New Jersey. Children, born in Somer- ville, New Jersey : I. Katherine, born October 27, 1867 ; married Hon. C. A. Reed, of Plain- field. 2. Madeline, February 14, 1873. 3- Eugene, July 2, 1875.
BAILEY The name of Bailey was repre- sented by several immigrants in the early settlement of Massa- chusetts Bay, all of whom left a very large progeny, which has become scattered through- out the country and has been identified with the moral, intellectual and material develop- ment of all sections. It has been conspicuously engaged in scientific research, and with all forces that make for human progress. The name is probably of ancient Scotch origin, but came to America from England, and besides the form used above is frequently found in the early records spelled Baley and Bayley. These are found on both sides of the Atlantic. The family most numerously represented is that descended from Richard Bailey, who was born about 1619, and is said to have come from Yorkshire, England. According to Coffin's
Engraved by Che s.b. Ha.i . N.i.
Clarakad
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"History of Newbury, Massachusetts," he came from Southampton in the ship "Bevis," a vessel of one hundred and fifty tons, com- manded by Robert Batten, and was then aged fifteen years. According to Savage, he arrived in 1638, and other authorities place it at 1635. He settled in Rowley, Massachusetts, and was a man of recognized piety and influence in the community. He was one of the company that set up the first clock mill in this country, at Rowley, where he died in February, 1648, being buried on the 16th of that month. His wife, Edna Holstead, survived him, and after his death was married September 15, 1649, to Ezekiel Northend, of Rowley. It is probable that the persons mentioned in the following article were descended from this Richard Bailey. He left an only son, Deacon Joseph, born about 1635, who settled on the Merrimac river, in the north part of Rowley, near the Newbury line, in what is now Grobeland, Massachusetts. He was a leading man of Bradford, where he was selectman twenty- three years, between 1685 and 1710, and was deacon of the church from 1682 until his death, October II, 1712. He married Abigail Trum- bull, who survived him and died in Bradford, November 17, 1735. Children : Abigail, Rich- ard, Ann, Elizabeth, Joseph, Edna, Deacon John and Sarah.
Another immigrant who left many descend- ants was John Bailey, a resident of Salisbury, Massachusetts, where he came from Chippen- ham, in Wiltshire, England, sailing in the ship "Angel Gabriel," which left England in April, 1635. He was cast away at Pemaquid (now Bristol, Maine), in the great storm of August 15, 1635. He was not accompanied by his wife, and his son John was the only one of his children to come to this country. He was a weaver by trade, and was living in Salisbury in 1640, removing thence in the spring of 1651 to Newbury, where he died November 2 that year, being called "old John Bailey." It is probable that his wife was not living when he came to America, and that he accompanied his son, who cared for him in his old age. He bequeathed his homestead in Salisbury to the son John, and in his will mentions also a son Robert and two daughters then living in Eng-' land. In his will he mentions "my brother John Emery Jr., of Newbury, overseer," from which it is presumed that his wife was an Emery.
John (2), eldest son of John (1) Bailey, was born in England, in 1630, and was a weaver in early life. After settling in New England he
became a husbandman, and remained in Salis- bury until 1643, when he removed to New- bury and there passed the remainder of his life. He was a selectman in 1664, and a free- man in 1669, and died March, 1691. He mar- ried, about 1640, Eleanor Emery, who re- mained a widow until her death, which occurred previous to September 23, 1700, when adminis- tration was granted upon her estate. In 1669- 70 she was engaged in the practice of mid- wifery. Children : Rebecca, John, Sarah, Joseph, James Joshua (died young), Isaac, Joshua, Rachel and Judith.
The third immigrant was Thomas Bailey, who came from England before 1640, settled in Weymouth, Massachusetts, where he was admitted a freeman May 13 that year, and was a town officer in 1645. He died in 1681. The name of his wife is unknown. His will, made May 23, proved October 10, 1681, and men- tions children: John, Thomas and Esther. wife of John King. He also had children : Christian, Samuel, Mary and Sarah. Another immigrant was James Bailey, born in England, about 1612, who came to New England with the early settlers sent out by the Massachu- setts Bay Company, and is found among the followers of "Mr. Ezekiel Rogers," who estab- lished a plantation in the town of Rowley, Massachusetts, September 14. 1639. He mar- ried Lydia Emery, who lived to a great age, and died at Rowley, April 29, 1704, twenty- eight years after the death of her husband, who was born in Rowley, August 10, 1677. Of their nine children, only two sons, John and Jonathan, married and reared children.
The records of Boston, Massachusetts, show that Benjamin, son of Matthew and Lukey Bailey, was born there February 8, 1803. It is possible that he was the father of the next mentioned.
George H. Bailey was born December 16, 1828, in Boston, and settled in Jersey City, where he married Hannah Maria Ryder, a native of this city. He is now employed in the government service in the engineer's de- partment, in Washington, D. C.
Calvin Weston, son of George H. and Han- nah M. (Ryder) Bailey, was born January 20, 1861, in Newark, and was educated in the Newark Academy. At the age of fifteen years he became a clerk in the office of the American Insurance Company at Newark, and his faith- ful attention to his duties and his capability were amply testified by the fact that he rose through various grades to the position of assistant secretary in 1906, and was made sec-
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retary of the company in 1909. He makes his home in East Orange, New Jersey, where he is a deacon of the Congregational church. In political sentiment he is a faithful Republican. He married, May 1, 1895, in Newark, Sara Armour, of Marshall, Michigan, born Febru- ary 16, 1864, daughter of John and Lillias (Cochrane) Armour, both natives of Scotland. Mr. Armour was employed for many years at the Adrian boiler works in Adrian, Michigan, whence he removed to Chicago and is living retired. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey are the parents of a son, Kenneth Weston, born February 28, 1906.
BROWN Christian Brown (or Braun, as his name was then spelt), emi- grated to America in August, 1729. He married Angenisa Catharine
(II) John Adam, son of Christian and Angenisa Catharine Braun, was born in Macungie, Northampton county, Pennsylva- nia, May 18, 1738, and died there March 4, 1806. He married Julianna Catharine
(III) John Adam (2), son of John Adam (I) and Julianna Catharine Braun, was born in Northampton county, Pennsylvania, April 20, 1777, and died October 31, 1853. He was the first in this line to spell his name Brown. He married Margaret Spait.
(IV) Paul, son of John Adam (2) and Margaret (Spait) Brown, was born in North- ampton county, Pennsylvania, February 24, 1807, and died in North Whitehall township, same county, August II, 1877. He was for many years a school director in North White- hall township, where he operated a large iron mine. He married Maria, daughter of John Peter and Elizabeth (Deshler) Wotering or Woodring, who was born in August, 1809, and died January 27, 1883. (See Wotering).
(V) Dr. Louis Richard Brown, son of Paul and Maria (Woodring) Brown, was born in North Whitehall township, Northampton county, Pennsylvania, November 17, 1839; and since 1868 has been practicing medicine in Elizabeth, New Jersey. He married, in July, 1864, Mary Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Charlton and Rebecca (Broome) Kid; (see Kid). Children : Louise Mary, died Novem- ber 14, 1890; Sidney Paul, died June 8, 1891 ; Stanley Robert, married Minnie Constance Keppler ; Alice Eugenia ; Belle Broome, mar- ried David Higgins Townley.
(The Wotering Line).
Nicolaus Wotering, the founder of this fam- ily, was born in Lorraine, France, in April,
1745. He emigrated to America in 1767, and was a private in Captain George Drine's com- pany of the First Battalion, Northampton county, Pennsylvania, militia in 1778. He mar- ried, May 9, 1769, Margaret, daughter of Henri Frantz, who was born in Lorraine, May 8, 1745, and died in Northampton county, Penn- sylvania, June 29, 1823. Her father, Henri Frantz, brought her with him to America in 1747. He was killed by the Indians in 1764, and his daughter Margaret was carried off by them four years before, in 1760. The story is that while she was cleaning a copper kettle in the Mahoning creek, with an armed man sit- ting in ambush near by guarding her, an In- dian snatched her up, and holding her in such a way that for her guardian to fire would im- peril her life, carried her off and placing her on a horse, took her over "a big water," prob- ably the Lehigh river, near Weissport, and travelling towards Stroudsburg, turned into the famous hunting grounds through the Dela- ware Water Gap. Seven years later she found her way home again. She became noted far and wide for her knowledge of herbs and sim- ples, which she had acquired from the Indians, and her services in curing the sick were in great demand.
(III) John Peter, son of Nicolaus and Mar- garet (Frantz) Wotering, was born in North- ampton county, Pennsylvania, June 24, 1776, and died there February 25, 1833. He mar- ried Elizabeth, daughter of John Adam Desh- ler, whose stone house, built in 1760, near Cop- ley creek, is still standing. It was known as Deshler's fort, and the people within a radius of four or five miles were accustomed to flock there for protection whenever threatened by the Indians. During the Indian troubles of 1763 soldiers were quartered there, and Desh- ler furnished provisions for the provincial troops during the French and Indian war from 1756 to 1758.
(III) Maria Woodring, daughter of John Peter and Elizabeth (Deshler) Wotering, was born in Northampton county, Pennsylvania, in August, 1809, and died January 27, 1883. She married Paul, son of John Adam and Margaret (Spait) Brown, referred to above.
(The Kid Line).
Robert Kid, the founder of the family, was born in Scone, near Edinburg, Scotland, August 7, 1760, and died in Burlington, New Jersey, August 17, 1836. He emigrated to America about 1791 and settled in Philadel- phia, where he was a Master Mason of the
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Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania. He married Sarah Charlton, whose mother was of noble birth, and who was born in Dublin, Ireland, December 22, 1778.
(II) Robert Charlton, son of Robert and Sarah (Charlton) Kid, was born in Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania, February 21, 1802, and died there in 1884. He married Rebecca, daughter of William and Mary (Welles) Broome, who was born in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania, in 1807, and died in 1847. Her father was born in England and came to America in 1798, and her mother, born in Eng- land, about 1765, died in 1854.
(III) Mary Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Charlton and Rebecca (Broome) Kid, was born in Amherst, Massachusetts. She mar- ried in July, 1864, Louis Richard, son of Paul and Maria (Woodring) Brown, referred to above.
The Danser family of New DANSER Jersey, and the Weart family of Pennsylvania, have had no more glorious representative than the late James Wesley Danser, of Freehold, who worthily ranks among the foremost of the representative men of his section of the state, not only in personal worth and integrity, but also in what he has done for his fellowmen.
Peter H. Danser, his father, born at Wind- sor, New Jersey, and educated in the common schools, began life as a farmer, and continued so until his death. Most of his life was spent in Clarksburg, New Jersey, where he met and married Mary McKnight, his first wife, and the mother of his children. His second wife and widow, who survives him, is now living at Hightstown, as does also his only sur- viving son, Frank C. Among his other chil- dren, all now dead, was James Wesley, who is referred to below.
James Wesley, son of Peter H. and Mary (McKnight) Danser, was born in Millstone township, New Jersey, February 2, 1862, and died in Freehold, April 10, 1909. He was educated at the Peddie Institute in Hights- town, and started in the wholesale lumber busi- ness when he was a young man, and was engaged in that business with more than good success until the time of his death. He dealt almost exclusively in telegraph and telephone poles and piling. In his religious faith he was a Presbyterian, and in politics a Republican. He was prominent in the councils of his party, and was regarded as one of its strongest men, but he ran for office only once, at which time.
in 1896, he was candidate for the office of sheriff. He was defeated, however, by the Democratic candidate, Houston Fields. For the last nine years of his life he was post- master at Freehold, to which position he was appointed in April, 1900. Mr. Danser was a past master in Olive Branch Lodge, F. and A. M., of Freehold, and was also a thirty- second degree Mason. He was a member of Keith Council, Royal Arcanum, of Freehold, and of Freehold Lodge, Ancient Order of United Workmen. He was also a member of the Trenton Lodge, No: 105, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. When he died he was mourned by the whole community, and the town closed all of its stores and other places of business upon the day of the funeral. The services were conducted by Rev. Arthur W. Remington, assisted by Rev. H. E. Thomp- son, and were held at his late home on West Main street, the interment being made in Maplewood Cemetery. At the grave Olive Pranch Lodge, No. 16, F. and A. M., of Free- hold, conducted the full ritual of the Masonic ceremony. The pallbearers were: County Clerk Joseph McDermott; Surrogate David S. Crater, Oscar Robinson, Charles H. Butcher, Jacob O. Burt, and Frederick D. Bennett.
In October, 1884, James Wesley Danser married Lillie, daughter of Charles D. Weart, of Yardley, Pennsylvania, who survives him. Their children are: I. Elizabeth Weart, born 1887; graduated in 1907 from Walnut Lane School. 2. Harold Wesley Weart, born 1899, a student in Boston School of Technology. 3. Stanley A., born 1897. 4. Mabel, died in infancy
Rutger Hendrickse, the HENDRICKSON first member of this family of whom we have definite information, is said to have been descended through a younger branch of the family from that staunch old medieval knight and Crusader, the Baron Henry of Nyddeck. He married, at Cologne, Germany, in 1470, Gennetje Beeckman. Children : Barent, referred to below ; also two daughters.
(II) Barent Rutgerse, son of Rutger and Gennetje (Beeckman) Hendrickse, married in 1524, Neeltje Evertse. Children: Lambert, see below, and three died in infancy .*
(III) Lambert Barentse, son of Barent Rutgerse and Neeltje (Evertse) Hendricksen, engaged in a seafaring life, became a famous admiral in the Dutch navy, and was a trusted
*In different generations the family appears as Hendricks, as well as Hendrickson.
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friend of William the Silent. In Motley's "History of the United Netherlands" he is called "Pretty Lambert." He married a daughter of Manuel y Nadal, a woman of Spanish extraction, whose father was an offi- cer in the army of the Duke of Alva. Chil- dren: Cornelis, referred to below; Daniel, lived at Scrool, Holland, and was the father of Gerrit, who came to America in the ship "St. Jean Baptiste," in May, 1661 ; also three daughters.
(IV) Cornelis, son of Lambert Barentse Hendricks, was born at Utrecht, in 1572. He became a navigator, and is said to have been the first white man to set foot on the soil of Pennsylvania and West Jersey. He discov- ered the Raritan and Schuylkill rivers, and explored the Delaware to its falls at the pres- ent site of Trenton. During the latter part of 1614 he explored the coast of New Jersey in the ship "Onrest," the first vessel built in New Amsterdam, by Captain Adriaen Block, when his own ship the "Tiger" was lost. He married Sonnetje Rutgers. Child: Daniel, referred to below.
(V) Daniel, son of Cornelis Lambertse and Sonnetje (Rutgers) Hendricksen, was born in Utrecht, March 4, 1605. He married Emma Van Guelder. Seven children, names unknown except Hendrick, referred to below.
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(VI) Hendrick, son of Daniel and Emma (Van Guelder) Hendricks, was born in 1636, some time before October 9, 1738. He removed first to Irland in Westphalia, but after his marriage emigrated to New Nether- land in the ship "Rosetta," in March, 1663, and the following year served as a soldier under Director-general Peter Stuyvesant. He married Jane Luitgirt. Children: I. Hen- drick, died before October 9, 1738; married Helena, daughter of Jacques Cortelyou, and widow of Claes Van Brunt, and also of Denyse Teunisse. 2-3. Willem and Daniel, both referred to below. Probably others.
(VII) Willem, son of Hendrick and Jane (Luitgirt) Hendricks, was born in Flatbush, Long Island. where he took the oath of alle- giance as a "native" in 1687, and died in what is now Holmdel township, Monmouth county, New Jersey, in April or May, 1711. The first reference to him in the New Jersey records is the mention of him as one of those who broke up the court of Governor Morris, at Middletown village, March 25, 1701. He married Willemptje, daughter of Guysbert Thyssen and Jannetje Adriaense ( Lamberson) Lanen Van Pelt, who was baptized at Flat-
bush, Long Island, September 16, 1677. Chil- dren: I. Guysbert, referred to below. 2, Geesye, married, about 1715, Matthias Pieter- sen. 3. Hans, born about 1700; died March 25, 1789 ; married Sarah Mosier. 4. Jannetje, married Christopher Walmsley. 5. Hendrick, born November II, 1706; died July 28, 1783; 6. married about 1728, Altje Couwenhoven. Daniel.
(VIII) Guysbert, son of Willem and Willemptje (Lanen Van Pelt) Hendricks, died in March or April, 1777. He settled near Yardville, then Nottingham township, Burl- ington county, New Jersey, and helped to organize the first Presbyterian church in Allen- town, Monmouth county. He married, about 1728, Elizabeth, daughter of Johannes and Annetje (Ten Eyck) Polhemus, who was bap- tized August 13, 1710. Children: 1. William, married in February or March, 1768, Rachel Longstreet. 2. John, married, November 14, 1763, Anna Cox. 3. Daniel, born about 1737; married Ann Stewart. 4. Tobias, born July 21, 1740; died May 23, 1811; married, in March or April, 1762, Rebecca Coward. 5. Cornelius, married, in February, 1767, Mary Thorn. 6. Jacob, referred to below. 7. David. (IX) Jacob, son of Guysbert and Elizabeth (Polhemus) Hendrickson, was born in Not- tingham township, Burlington county, New Jersey, in 1744, and died in Upper Freehold township, Monmouth county, New Jersey, Au- gust 15, 1810. He married, in May, 1771, Eliz- abeth Mount, who died July 24, 1832. Chil- dren: Michael, referred to below ; Daniel ; Jacob ; Forman ; Mary ; Hannah; Elizabeth.
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