USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume IV > Part 54
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wholesale trade, from his previously obtained intimate knowledge of railroad routes, rates and traffic, and his thorough acquaintance with the communities and people of New Jersey. The company, soon after Mr. Gaddis's en- trance, became incorporated as a firm of wholesale grocers, millers, and manufacturers and importers of pure food products, and it has grown to-day to be one of the largest establishments of its kind in the country, with branches in New York and Chicago, and ex- tensive creameries and important milling indus- tries in all parts of the United States.
Mr. Gaddis was a keen student of all ques- tions concerning public affairs, and having identified himself from his early youth with the Republican party, he not only exerted con- siderable influence, but was more than once honored by his party with its confidence. In 1892 he was delegate at large to the Repub- lican national convention at Minneapolis, and his unswerving fidelity to his friends and his characteristics as a formidable opponent were admirably shown in the contest which resulted in the election to the United States senate of General William Joyce Sewell, his intimate friend, in which contest he took a very active part. His interest was also felt in the wave of reform which swept over New Jersey in the nineties of the last century, and rebuked cor- ruption in high places, and he was liberal in his contribution to the great cause. As alderman he served the people of Newark with remark- able fidelity for six years ; but the sound basis of his popularity in New Jersey was his excel- lence, his success, his sterling abilities as a business man, and his companionable character- istics in social life. He was most highly esteemed in every circle in which he moved, and was a member of many of the most exclusive associa- tions in the state, including the Essex Club, the Essex County Country Club, the Carteret Club of Jersey City, the Lawyers Club of New York, the Garfield Club of Newark, and a number of other social and political organiza- tions. His ample means requiring investment, and the desire of other prominent men to secure his co-operation in the management of enterprises of moment, resulted in his election as president of the New Jersey State Agri- cultural Society, vice-president of the Consoli- dated Traction Company of New Jersey, vice- president of the Newark Passenger Railway Company, and director of the Jersey City and Bergen railroad and of the Newark Plank Road Company. His most prominent trait, however, was his executive ability, which was
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well demonstrated in his management of the enormous business of Wilkinson, Gaddis & Co., which he systematized to such an extent that he was able to accomplish daily an amount of work which would have severely taxed the energies of four men of ordinary mould, and yet he had time for self improvement and enjoyment.
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He married, November 12, 1868, Mary A., daughter of Charles Campbell, a member of an old and prominent Newark family. She possessed ripe literary attainments, culture and refinement, held an enviable position in social circles, took an active interest in church work, and was devoted to her home and family. Children: I. Mary Campbell, born November 4, 1870; married, in Newark, April 23, 1890, Matthias, son of Matthias and Josephine (Ter- hune ) Plum ; (see Plum). 2. David, born Sep- tember, 1874, died in March, 1877. 3. Sara E., born November 28, 1878; married, in New- ark, April 22, 1903, Edgar, son of Frederick and Annie J. (Traud) Heller ; (see Heller).
(The Bergen Line).
(II) Jacob Hansen, son of Hans Hansen (q. v.) and Sara (Rapalye) Bergen, was bap- tized in New Amsterdam, September 21, 1653, and died after 1738. He resided on and owned a plantation in South Brooklyn, com- prising a part of his father's-in-law patent. In 1715 he was supervisor of Brooklyn. He married, July 8, 1677, Elsje Fredericks, daugh- ter of Frederick Lubbertsen, of Brooklyn. Children : Hans, baptized May 12, 1678, mar- ried Sarah, daughter of Jeronimus Rapalie ; Frederick, referred to below; Jacob, baptized January 20, 1684, married Margaret (or Maria) Croesen (or Crocheron) ; Sara, bap- tized August 5, 1688; Catryna, married Johan- nes Sleght; Marretje, married Gysbert Boo- gert Jr .; Breckje, married John Croesen (or Crocheron) ; Elsje, married Hendryk Croesen ; Cornelia, married Dirk Croesen.
(III) Frederick Jacobse, son of Jacob Han- sen and Elsje Fredericks (Lubbertsen) Ber- gen, was baptized in Flatbush, November 27, 1681, and died before November 22, 1762. He lived on a farm in the North Precinct of Staten Island, which he bought from Catha- rine, widow of George Hooglant. In 1715 he was a private in Captain David Aersen's com- pany, of Brooklyn, and in 1738 lieutenant of militia in Richmond county: In 1727-28 he was a deacon in the North Side Reformed Dutch Church of Staten Island, and previous to November 2, 1752, when he and his wife
were admitted by certificate to the First Re- formed Dutch Church of New Brunswick, he removed to Somerset county, New Jersey. He married Garretje, daughter of Gerrit Vechte. Children : Jacob, referred to below ; Gerritje, baptized April 29, 1722, married John Van Dyck Jr., of Six Mile Run; Hendrik, bap- tized September 26, 1725, married Cornelia
-; Elsje, baptized March 12, 1732, mar- ried Koenraedt Ten Eyck Jr.
(IV) Jacob, son of Frederick Jacobse and Gerritje (Vechte) Bergen, was baptized July 19, 1719, and died in 1781. From 1778 to 1780 he was commissioner of deeds, and lived at Rocky Hill. He does not appear to have served during the revolution, but the account books of the committee of safety of New Jer- sey, show him to have been an ardent patriot. He married Margaret Lane, who died before July 24, 1797, as a widow. Children: Fred- erick, baptized August 25, 1751; Jacob, re- ferred to below ; Hendrik, died 1816, married Mary (or Polly) Cowenhoven; Charity (or Gerithe), died 1822, married Abraham Quick, a widower, and colonel in the revolution ; Elsy, baptized September 28, 1760, died in 1840 or 1841, married Schenck ; daughter, name unknown.
(V) Jacob (2), son of Jacob (I) and Mar- garet (Lane) Bergen, was baptized at Six Mile Run, New Jersey, July 7, 1756, and died at Rocky Hill, Somerset county, New Jersey, September 2, 1782. He was a farmer by occu- pation. He married Tunche, daughter of John and Gerritje (Bergen) Van Dyke, born March I, 1758, died January 25, 1826. Children : Aaron, born October 12, 1777, died January 27, 1849, married, November 1I, 1801, Eliza, daughter of Thomas and Betsy King, of Lennington, New Jersey ; Matthew, born Oc- tober 1, 1779, died October 16, 1843, married Rebecca Monfort; Margaret, referred to below.
(VI) Margaret, daughter of Jacob (2) and Tunche (Van Dyke) Bergen, was born at Six Mile Run, New Jersey, July 31, 1781, and died at North Branch, on the Raritan, November 28, 1860. She married, in 1806, Andrew Gad- dis.
The pioneer ancestor of the CORNELL Cornell family was Guilliame Corneille, son of a French merchant in Rotterdam, who emigrated to Long Island about 1650 and located at Flat- bush, where he died in 1666, leaving five chil- dren: Peter, Guilliam, Cornelis, Jacob, and
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Maria, who have left numerous descendants in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and distant parts of the United States.
(I) Gilliam Cornel (as he spelled the name), doubtless a descendant of the ancestor men- tioned above and first of the line herein traced of whom we have definite information, was born October 12, 1729. He married, May 8, 1756, Margaretta Schenck, born September I, 1735, died July, 1806. Children: I. Cornelia, born March 17, 1757, died January 3, 1758. 2. John, born December 3, 1758, died May 16, 1760. 3. Abraham, born May 26, 1761. 4. Phennorelye, born July 16, 1766. 5. Gilliam, born September 13, 1768, died February 5, 1773. 6. Cornelia, born April 17, 1769. 7. Margaretta, born October 13, 1771, died Sep- tember 15, 1793. 8. John, see forward. 9. Maria, born June 16, 1778.
(II) Rev. John Cornell, son of Gilliam and Margaretta (Schenck) Cornel, was born at Northampton, Pennsylvania, May 27, 1774, died at Millstone, December 16, 1835. He pursued his classical studies at the "Log Col- lege," Pennsylvania, later studied under Liv- ingston, and was licensed to preach by the classis in New York, 1798. Rev. John Cornell performed missionary labor for a couple of years in North Branch, Somerset county, New Jersey, beginning in 1798, this being his first call. It was before the erection of a house of worship there. He took his bride to his field of labor. They commenced housekeeping in the old Demund house. He served as pastor at Allentown and Nottingham Presbyterian churches from 1800 to 1827, and during his pastoral charge was highly respected as a gifted and faithful teacher of the Gospel. The impaired state of his health compelled him to withdraw from stated public duties, and he then removed to Somerville, New Jersey, and subsequently to Millstone, where his death occurred. He served as principal of acade- mies at both places, at the former from 1821 to 1828, and at the latter from 1828 to 1835, and he numbered among his pupils several who became prominently useful in the ministry and other learned professions. Although reared and educated in the Reformed church, his active ministry was spent wholly in the Pres- byterian church, but he was again connected with the Reformed church while conducting his academies. As an instructor he was marked by great thoroughness and ability. He mar- ried, April 20, 1798, Maria, daughter of Gen- eral Frederick Frelinghuysen, of revolutionary memory, and sister of Hon. Theodore Fre-
linghuysen, the Christian statesman. She pos- sessed great amiability and eminent piety, and her bright example was invaluable and her presence always inspired pleasure and com- fort. Children: 1. Margaretta S., born June 21, 1799. 2. Gitty Ann, born February 5, 1801, died July 7, 1802. 3. Anna Maria, born January 16, 1803, died April 4, 1834. 4. Fred- erick F., born November 16, 1804, died August 7, 1875. 5. Louise Mercer, born August 21, 1806, died November 30, 1809. 6. John F., born July 19, 1808, died October 31, 1809. 7. Catherine L., born October 18, 1810. 8. John F., born November 3, 1812, died January 5, 1814. 9. Theodore F., born August 6, 1814, died October 22, 1880. 10. Sarah Elizabeth, born July 29, 1816, died December 21, 1879. II. James A., born August 29, 1818. 12. John F., born April 14, 1820. 13. Charlotte Mercer Frelinghuysen, born April 3, 1822, died Sep- tember 12, 1903. The mother of these children was born March 12, 1778, died April 13, 1832.
(III) Rev. Frederick Frelinghuysen Cor- nell, fourth child and eldest son of Rev. John and Maria (Frelinghuysen) Cornell, was born at Allentown, New Jersey, November 16, 1804, and died August 7, 1875, at his home in Som- erville, New Jersey. Having prepared chiefly in the school of Rev. Isaac V. Brown, D. D., at Lawrenceville, New Jersey, he entered the College of New Jersey, Princeton, and was graduated there in 1825 with the first honor of his class (which he shared with A. O. Zabriskie, afterwards Chancellor of New Jer- sey). He was a private tutor in Mr. Need- ham Washington's family in Virginia for nearly a year, studied theology in the Semi- nary of the Reformed Church at New Bruns- wick, New Jersey, was professor in the Col- lege of Mississippi, at Natchez, in 1829-30, and was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Newton in 1830. He received his honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity from Union Col- lege, Schenectady, New York. Entering the ministry of the Reformed church he served as a home missionary at Stuyvesant and Colum- biaville, New York, for eighteen months, and then accepted a call from the Reformed church of Montville, New Jersey, where he remained four years, from 1832 to 1836. While there he was married to Barbara Ellen Doremus. Then he became pastor of the Reformed church of Manhattan, on the east side of the city of New York, and continued there from 1836 to 1856. Two children were born,-Frederick F., in 1840, and Anna Maria in 1843. Both Mrs. Cornell and Anna Maria died in 1843. His
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labors there were principally among the poorer classes, and are characterized as severe, self-sacrificing and successful. His health becoming impaired he then returned to Som- erville, New Jersey, his early home, in 1852, and December 15, 1856, was unanimously called to become pastor of the Presbyterian church of Pluckamin. He began his work on January 18, 1857, and was installed pastor on the third Tuesday of May. His ministry covered a period of six years, and to his untir- ing labors and generous gifts the church owed much of its prosperity. While pastor of this church he resided on his place between Som- erville and Raritan, driving back and forth from the services on Sundays. Eventually it seemed best, both to him and the congregation, that the church should have a pastor residing in the midst of them, and for this reason he asked the congregation to unite with him in requesting Presbytery to dissolve the pastoral relation existing between them. The congre- gation assented, with expressions of regard, and on January 16, 1863, Presbytery granted the joint request and dissolved the pastoral relation. Dr. Cornell was tall, erect, graceful and courteous, a gentleman of culture, a ready preacher, a hard-working pastor, a kind friend, and a liberal benefactor.
Rev. Dr. Cornell married, March II, 1845, Elizabeth Clock Bell, born February 28, 1822, died February 21, 1882, daughter of Jacob and Phoebe (Clock) Bell, who were married May 10, 1821. Jacob Bell, son of John and Deborah (Clock) Bell, was born December 17, 1792, died July 21, 1852; Phoebe (Clock) Bell, daughter of Abraham and Elizabeth (Waring) Clock, was born September 1, 1789, died April 19, 1840. Children of Dr. and Mrs. Cornell : I. Harriet Elizabeth, born August 22, 1846; married, December 1, 1875, to Rev. Samuel Parry, (q. v. below). 2. Jacob B., born De- cember 26, 1848; graduate of Rutgers College and College of Physicians and Surgeons of New York; unmarried. 3. Theodore Freling- huysen, born July 31, 1851. 4. Phoebe M. B., born March 16, 1856; married Dr. William J. Swinton ; children : i. Arthur C., born March 26, 1879; ii. Florence Bell, born May 9, 1888. 5. Anna L. C., born January 19, 1859; mar- ried Henry Hardwicke ; children : i. Harold C., born March 21, 1891; ii. Elizabeth B., born January 24, 1894.
Rev. Samuel Parry was born at Lambert- ville, New Jersey, March 29, 1845, son of Sam- uel and Selinda (Van Syckel) Parry ; he was reared at Clinton ; united with the church there
1862; studied at Blairstown Presbyterian Academy, 1862-64 ; graduated at Yale College, 1868; taught at Blairstown Academy, 1868- 69; studied at Princeton Theological Semi- nary, 1869-71; graduated at Union Theolog- ical Seminary, 1872; preached at Upper and Lower Litchfield churches, Hargrave, Canada, for three months, during vacation, in 1870, and supplied Wicomico Church, Salisbury, Mary- land, three months, in summer of 1871; was installed pastor of the Presbyterian church of Pluckamin, April 30, 1873.
Richard Whitaker, the WHITAKER founder of his name in South Jersey, was a native of London, and formed one of the company that accompanied John Fenwick to West Jer- sey in 1677, not only having bought land of Fenwick for himself but also having been appointed attorney for William Hancock. From 1676 to 1702 Richard Whitaker was one of Fenwick's council of proprietors. Until about 1690 he lived in the town of Salem, but about that time he finally settled in Cohansey, not far from New Englandtown, where together with Henry Buck he kept a store and, by means of a sloop that they owned, traded with New York and Boston. His name ceases to appear in the old account book of the store in 1709, and it is believed that he died in the following year, aged about sixty-six years. He married, March 17, 1679-80, Elizabeth Adkin, of Alloways Creek. Children of record: Rich- ard (2), referred to below; a daughter, mar- ried Samuel Alexander. There were probably others.
(II) Richard (2), son of Richard (I) and Elizabeth (Adkin) Whitaker, died between June 5, 1718, and January 1, 1730-I, the date of the signing of his will and the appraising of his estate. He married (first) Abigail who died after June 5, 1718; (second) Hannah -, who survived him and administered on his estate. Children, all by first wife: I. Eliz- abeth 2. Thomas, referred to below. 3. Katharine. 4. Nathaniel, born about 1694; died in December, 1752; married (first) Feb- ruary 18, 1729-30, Mary Ann Dixon, who died September 13, 1738; (second) Ruth Buck.
(III) Thomas, son of Richard and Abigail Whitaker, was born and died in Cumberland county. The dates of his birth and death are unknown, and so also is the name of his wife. It is most probable, however, that the Thomas referred to below was his son, for the follow- ing reasons : First, the similarity of name ;
ThomasWhitaker
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second, the fact that while Thomas (2) was undoubtedly living in 1752, when Nathaniel Whitaker wrote his will, and also in 1759 when Richard (3) wrote his, neither mentions a son Thomas, and so far as is known the name is not found among their descendants. Third, the only others named Thomas of record out- side of the direct line of Thomas referred to below, are found in the line of John Whit- aker Sr., of Fairfield, who died in 1773, and was in all likelihood a brother of Thomas, re- ferred to below, and likewise a son of Thomas, son of Richard and Abigail.
(IV) Thomas (2), probably son of Thomas (I) Whitaker, died between May 20 and No- vember 30, 1799, the dates of the execution and the proving of his will. He lived in Fair- field township, Cumberland county. His will names his wife Bathnifle, who was probably his second wife, and the Bartha Brown, of Fairfield, who on November 12, 1761, was granted a license to marry a Thomas Whitaker of the same place. Children: I. David. 2. Jeremiah, referred to below. 3. Thomas. 4. Diament. 5. Mary, married Pierson. 6. Priscilla, married Husted.
(V) Jeremiah, son of Thomas (2) Whit- aker, was born about 1755, and died intestate in 1814, in his sixtieth year. He married Sarah Children : I. Priscilla. 2. Jeremiah. 3. John. 4. Henry. 5. William. 6. David. 7. Thomas, referred to below. 8. Lydia. 9. Han- nah. 10. Maria. II. Nancy. 12. Sarah.
(VI) Thomas (3), son of Jeremiah and Sarah Whitaker, was born in Cumberland county, New Jersey. As a boy he was appren- ticed for four years to a woolen manufacturer, after which he set up in business for himself in Centerton, New Jersey. March 4, 1835, he was appointed by Governor Vroom, a judge of the inferior court of common pleas. He mar- ried Deborah Sheppard. Children : Jonathan Sheppard, referred to below; James, died in infancy.
(VII) Jonathan Sheppard, son of Thomas and Deborah (Sheppard) Whitaker, was born in Cedarville, Cumberland county, New Jer- sey, January 26, 1823, and died in Millville, New Jersey, in 1898. In his day he was one of the most prominent men in the county. For a number of years he was president of the board of education of Millville, and, besides being a physician of note, he was for five years one of the lay judges of the court of errors and appeals, having been appointed to that office by Governor Ludlow. He was also past grand master of the Independent Order of
Odd Fellows of New Jersey. For several years before his death he had retired from active practice and from public life. He mar- ried Mary, daughter of John Johnson, of Pitts- grove, now Elmer, Salem county, New Jersey. Children: 1. Lillie, married William Heitz- man ; child, Mazie Heitzman. 2. Thomas, re- ferred to below. 3. John Johnson. 4. Eliza- beth C., married George M. Hogan ; children : Sheppard Hogan and Mary Hogan.
(VIII) Thomas (4), son of Jonathan Shep- pard and Mary (Johnson) Whitaker, was born at Elmer, Salem county, New Jersey, May 30, 1860, and is now living at Millville. He attended the public schools and Pennington Seminary, and then studied law for a time, but finally gave it up. In 1889 he was elected mayor of Millville on the Democratic ticket, this being the first Democratic victory in the town, and due entirely to Mr. Whitaker's pop- ularity and the confidence which was reposed in his judgment and ability by his fellow citi- zens. In 1892 he was re-elected with an in- creased majority, running far ahead of his ticket, and carrying every ward and precinct in the city. In 1907 he was appointed by Gov- ernor Stokes a member of the Cumberland county tax board. Mr. Whitaker has also been a justice of the peace. In religion he is a Pres- byterian. He is looked upon as one of the best business men in the city, and is a represen- tative of twenty-three fire insurance com- panies, and also represents life, accident, plate glass and bond companies. He is a commis- sioner of deeds and notary public, and is con- veyancer and vice-president of two building associations of Millville, and this branch of his business is an important adjunct to his office. He is also an active and prominent secret society man. He is a member of She- kinah Lodge No. 58, Free and Accepted Masons, of Millville, New Jersey; Richmond Chapter, No. 22, Royal Arch Masons, of Mill- ville; Olivet Commandery, No. 10, Knights Templars; Independent Order of Odd Fel- lows ; Order of Knights of the Golden Eagle ; Knights of Pythias. He married, in 1890, Harriet, daughter of Charles and Annie Ford, of Millville.
Richard James Foard, the first FOARD of the family to remove perma- nently to New Jersey and thereby the founder of the New Jersey branch, was a native of the state of Maryland, where for several generations the family bore a promi- nent and honored part. Mr. Foard is engaged
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in the real estate business, a Democrat in politics, and a public-spirited and influential citizen, re- siding on Ivanhoe Terrace, East Orange. He married Lydia Peterson Watkins. Children : I. Richard Watkins, see forward. 2. Malcolm Bay- ard. 3. Frances Whitby, married Paul Berghaus, and has one child. 4. Marie Leroux, unmarried. 5. John Whitby, unmarried. 6. Margaret, un- married.
Richard Watkins, son of Richard James and Lydia Peterson (Watkins) Foard, was born in Odessa, Delaware, October 3, 1880. For his early education he was sent to the public schools and to the Baltimore City College, Baltimore, Maryland. In 1897 he became a messenger boy in the service of the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, and later clerk and stenographer in the same company. In 1900 he was appointed chief clerk of the general agent's office in New York City. In 1906 he was appointed freight agent in New York City, and at present (1910) has the entire charge of Pier 23, North River, New York City. In politics Mr. Foard is an inde- pendent. He is a communicant of the Prot- estant Episcopal church, and a member of the Manhattan Council, National Union, Maple- wood Field Club. He resides in Maplewood, New Jersey. He married, in Newark, May 2, 1906, Helen Josephine, born in Essex county, New Jersey, April 30, 1884, youngest child of William Fortunatus and Julia Bartram (Har- rison) Riker (see Riker). One child, Helene Riker, born in Newark, New Jersey, Septem- ber 16, 1907.
WHEELER Horace Perry Wheeler, a contractor and builder of West Orange, New Jersey, was born on Cleveland street, Orange, New Jersey, March 14, 1869, son of John and Marietta (Herdman) Wheeler, the father hav- ing been a prominent builder in the Oranges.
Horace P. Wheeler received his elementary educational training in the old Day street public school, supplemented by a finishing course in the St. Marks School at West Orange up to fifteen years of age. Like father, like son, young Horace P. began the trade of carpenter, and after a period of three years began as a journeyman carpenter for Henry Plummer, remaining seven years in his employ, subsequently engaging himself to Richard Cusack, where he remained six years, going for a time with Stockton & Lindsay. Shortly after marriage he engaged in the building busi- ness for himself, which has been his chosen
occupation ever since. Mr. V'heeler is a strong advocate of building for speculation, and has erected many residences in his own behalf. He is his own architect, a thorough planner, and is thoroughly conversant with the line of business from beginning to end. He has at various times owned a number of saleable resi- dences in the Oranges, which he has disposed of at a handsome profit. He was reared in the Baptist faith, but he and his family are attend- ants of the Presbyterian church at Orange. He is a Republican in politics. He married, June 26, 1890, Laura Laurinda Williams, born at Pleasantdale, New Jersey, April 14, 1868, daughter of William Hyatt Williams (q. v.) and Rebecca (Day) Williams. William H. Williams is a farmer at Hanover township, New Jersey. Children: I. Ethel Laurinda, born September 24, 1891. 2. Frank Leslie, born June 14, 1893. 3. Harry Alfred Ivino- may, born July 7, 1895. 4. John Leonard, born June 24, 1897, died October 25, 1903. 5. Re- becca Bessie, born July 2, 1899, died July 13, 1899. 6. William Horace, born November 26, 1900. 7. Marion Evelyn, born December 20, 1903. 8. Charles Herbert, born December 12, 1905.
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