USA > New Jersey > Mercer County > Genealogical and personal memorial of Mercer County, New Jersey > Part 7
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(V) Rev. William Miller Paxton, D.D., LL.D., son of Colonel James Dunlop (4) and Jane Maria (Miller) Paxton, was born at Maria Furnace, Adams county, Pennsylvania, June 7, 1824. His youth was passed chiefly at Gettys- burg, whither the family had removed to be near the family of his mother. His boyhood was a sunny and happy one, and he won affection on all sides by the brightness of his disposition. There he received his primary schooling and his collegiate training. the latter at Pennsylvania College, which had been founded a short time prior to this period. He was graduated from the collegiate department of the Pennsylvania Col- lege at Gettysburg, with high honors, in 1843 After having studied law for two years in Cham- bersburg, Pennsylvania, he entered the Theolog- ical Seminary at Princeton, New Jersey, in the fall of 1845, and took the full three years' course there, being graduated in 1848. He was licensed by the Presbytery of Carlisle, June 1, 1847, and ordained by the same Presbytery. October 4, 1848, being at the same time installed pastor of the Presbyterian church at Greencastle, Pennsyl- vania. This connection was dissolved December 5. 1850, in order to accept a call to the First Presbyterian Church of Pittsburg, where he was installed January 28, 1851, and where he re- mained until June 28, 1865. He became a pro- fessor of Sacred Rhetoric in the Western Theo- logical Seminary at Allegheny, adding the duties of this chair to those of his pastorate for five years of his stay in Pittsburg, and continuing them until 1872, some years after his removal to the city of New York. He was pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of New York city from February 1, 1866, until July 9, 1883, and for two years of this time, 1871 to 1873. in- structor of Sacred Rhetoric in Union Theolog- ical Seminary, New York. He gave up his New York charge upon being called to the chair of Ecclesiastical, Homiletical, and Pastoral Theol-
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ogy in Princeton Theological Seminary, New Jersey, and took up his work there in the fall of 1883. In the spring of 1902 he was obliged to lay down the burden of his work on account of the growing infirmities of age, and at that time was made professor emeritus. He received the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity from Jef- ferson College in 1860, and that of Doctor of Laws from Washington and Jefferson College in 1883. He held many positions of trust and re- sponsibility in the church.
He was a director of the Western Theological Seminary at Allegheny, 1852-1860; a director of the Princeton Seminary, 1866-1883; a trustee of Union Seminary, New York, 1873-1884 ; a trustee of Princeton University from 1867 until his death; a trustee of the general assembly of the Presbyterian church from 1892 until his death; moderator of the general assembly at Madison, Wisconsin, in 1880; a member of the Board of Home Missions, 1866-1880, and its president 1876-1878; a member of the Board of Foreign Missions from 1866 until his death, and its presi- dent 1881-1884; was a trustee of the Leake and Watts Orphan Asylum and of the Sailor's Snug Harbor, both of New York ; was a commissioner to the general assembly at Rochester in 1860, at Columbus in 1862, at Philadelphia in 1870, at Madison, Wisconsin, in 1880, and at Buffalo, New York, in 1881. He was frequently called upon for addresses on special occasions and many of these were published. Among them may be men- tioned : Two Discourses upon the Life and Char- acter of Rev. Francis Herron, D. D., 1860; Dis- course on the Panic of 1857; The Nation: Its Relation and Duties to God: The Nation's Grat- itude and Hope, 1862; Christian Beneficence, 1857; Inaugural Address when made a professor in Princeton Seminary, 1884; The Church: Its Strength and Weakness, 1881; How We Spend Our Years, 1875; The Mission of the Presby- terian Church, a sermon, 1880; A Sermon on Salvation as a Work, in the Princeton Sermons, 1893. A syllabus of his course in Homiletics was printed but not published. Dr. Paxton died in Princeton, November 28, 1904, as the result of a stroke of paralysis received two weeks pre- viously, and from which his advanced age pre- vented his rallying. His remains were interred in the Princeton cemetery. He was popular as a preacher in the two cities where he held long pastorates,-Pittsburg and New York,-and in Princeton with students and residents of the
town alike. His themes were taken from a wide field, ranging from the strictly theological to the intensely practical. His discourses were always thoroughly prepared and evidenced careful thought. They were delivered without notes, yet the language was chaste, the sentences well round- ed, and the delivery fluent. His voice was clear and penetrating, his articulation distinct, and all his movements graceful. He always had complete command of himself and made the impression of great reserve force. He was charming in his diction and so clear in his analysis and treat- ment of a subject that it was easy to keep in memory the line of thought of the sermon or lecture. In the classroom he was the Christian gentleman finely polished, being kind, tender, sympathetic, and laborious in his efforts to have his students in Homiletics learn how to develop the thought of their chosen texts. He made a public confession of his faith in the Falling Spring Presbyterian Church of Chambersburg, Pennsyl- vania, when nearly twenty-one years of age. Dr. Paxton often referred with interest to the family tradition that both his grandfathers, William Paxton and William Miller, had been present and taken part in the battle of Princeton.
Dr. Paxton married (first), August 1I, 1852, in Chestertown, Maryland, Hester V. B. Wickes, who died August 13, 1854. By this marriage he had one child, also deceased. He married (sec- ond). November 8, 1855, in Pittsburg, Pennsyl- vania, Caroline Sophia Denny, born October 18, 1829, daughter of Hon. Harmar Denny, who had served the church with devotion for a generation as elder, and granddaughter of Ebenezer Denny, who had been identified with its fortunes almost from its origin. The children of this marriage were: I. Elizabeth Denny. 2. Rev. James Dun- lop. D. D., an alumnus of the Princeton Seminary, is (1907) pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Lynchburg, Virginia. He married Helen J. Paxton. 3. Amy M., married Frank C. Roberts, a civil engineer in Philadelphia, and has four children, Katharine, William Paxton, Frank C. Jr., and Harmar Denny Roberts. 4. William Miller, married Sarah Elizabeth Thomas, dauglı- ter of Seth Thomas of New York. 5. Caroline Denny, married Rev. Lewis Seymour Mudge, an alumnus of Princeton Theological Seminary, who was pastor of the Presbyterian Church of Beverly, New Jersey, and of the First Presbyterian Church of Trenton, New Jersey. 6. Harmar Denny, died 1896. 7. Margaretta. 8. James Donaldson, a
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civil engineer of Philadelphia, married Myra R. "doubt built of logs, and this was succeeded in a Gulick, of Princeton, and had two children, Will- iam Miller and Myra Gulick Paxton.
P. A. V. VAN DOREN, a prominent citizen of Princeton, Mercer county, New Jersey, is a de- scendant of one of the pioneer families of the state. Among the families entirely of Dutch or- igin none were or are now more distinguished for their regular, industrious and religious habits than the van Doren.
(I) Pieter van Doorn, the ancestor of this branch of the van Doren family, resided on Long Island, from whence, as was common before a minister resided there, it was the custom to take children to New Amsterdam to be baptized. He probably died when his children were all young as there is no mention of his name among those who took oath of allegiance in 1687, or in the preserved tax list of those times. He married Jannetje Rauchen, and had a number of children, among them being: Jacob or Jacobus, of whom see forward; and Jannetje, baptized, as appears from the records of the Collegiate Church in New Amsterdam, April 12, 1659.
(II) Jacob or Jacobus van Doorn, son of Pieter and Jannetje (Rauchen) van Doorn (1), re- moved from the western end of Long Island and settled in Monmouth county, New Jersey, about 1698. The first record of his name is a notice of his reception as a member of the Church of Brooklyn, in 1695. He served on a jury in Mon- mouth in 1699, and we find his signature as a witness to a deed in 1700, which shows an un- usual excellence in penmanship for those times. The land in possession of Jacob van Doorn at that time consisted of about six hundred and seventy-six acres, near the present village of Hills- dale, and was very fertile. It embraces the present farms of Thomas Ely, Jonathan Holmes and Dr. Cook. The northwestern corner of it is a piece of woodland now ( 1906) owned by Daniel van Doren. These lands were probably pur- chased between 1695 and 1699, for in the latter year Mr. van Doorn appeared as a permanent resident in that country. He probably procured the Indian title to the land, and also the prop- rietary rights from William Penn and William Gibson, to whom these lands are assigned on Reid's map of 1685. The original residence of the family was on the point of the hill about one mile west of the village of Holmdel, and near what is now known as Ely's Mills. It was no
few years by a more pretentious place of abode. Jacob van Doorn erected a grist mill on the stream coming down from the hills encircling Pleasant Valley, at an early date, when the wants of the surrounding community called for such a convenience. It remained in that location until 1829, when a new mill was erected about two hun- dred yards lower down on the stream, and the old one demolished. He was a man of more than or- dinary intelligence and business tact, as evidenced by his possessing so large a tract of land and at- tending to all the business detail of the mill, and he took an active part in sustaining the good in- fluence of the church, having been one of the first deacons in 1709, and an elder in 1714. He died between April 24, 1719, and March 21, 1720, when the larger number of his children were still minors, and the youngest was but four or five years of age. He married, about 1695 or even a year or two earlier, Marytje, who was still living in 1731, daughter of Arie or Adriaen Willemse Bennet and Angenietje or Agnes Jans, daughter of Jans Thomasse van Dyke, of Gowanus. Arie Willemse Bennet, Jacques and Bantyn, in 1636, purchased nine hundred acres of land at Gowanus from the Indians. The chil- dren of Jacob and Marytje (Bennet) van Doorn were: I. Aria, born about 1695, died in 1748 or 1749, was about three years of age when his parents removed to Monmouth county. He mar- ried, about 1730, Antje, daughter of Jan Schenck and Saartje Couwenhoven, and she survived her husband. They had children: I. Maritje bap- tized March 31, 1731, married John Couwen- hoven, of Middletown. 2. Jacob, baptized Jan- uary I, 1734, unmarried, was living in 1767. 3. Sarah, born about 1736, unmarried. 4. Antje, baptized March 25, 1739, married Cyrenius van Mater, who lived near the Stone Hill north of Cole's Neck. 5. Neltje, baptized May 16, 1742, married (first) Hendrick Smock, of Freehold, and (second) Garret Hendrickson, of Middle- town.
2. Engeltje, born about 1697, married, about 1718, Roelof Schenck, brewer, born April 27, 1697, died August 22, 1768. Their children were: 1. Garret, baptized May 31, 1719, died about 1793. He married (first) Mary van Sick- les, born 1720, died January 14, 1778; and (sec- ond) Anne Ten Eyck. He was the father of Captain John Schenck, an officer in the revolu- tion; grandfather of the late Peter C. Schenck,
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of Clover Hill; and great-grandfather of Rev. Dr. N. H. Schenck, of Brooklyn. 2. Maritje, baptized July 17, 1720, died about 1755; married, November 12, 1741, Jacob Sutphen, of Amwell. 3. Neltje, baptized January 17, 1724, married, February 18, 1743, Derick Sutphen, of Peapack. 4. Ann, baptized May 1, 1726, married, about 1748, John Tice, of Monmouth; died September 25, 1812. 5. Jacob, baptized May 1, 1726, died December 19, 1786. He married Mary Conover and settled at Penn's Neck, they had one child : Catherine, who married Joseph Stout. 6. Will- iam, born in 1727, died December 13, 1806. He settled in Amwell, and married Mary Winters, born in 1732, died January 29, 1818. They had many children. Of the sons: Rulief moved to Johnstown, New York; John, to Hackettstown, New Jersey; Josiah settled near Millstone, New Jersey ; and William and Abraham remained in Amwell. 7. Catherine, baptized May 22, 1730, married, about 1755, Ort van Dyke, who settled at Minisink, and subsequently at Red Stone, near Pittsburg. 8. Margaret, born about 1732, mar- ried Mr. Emmons, near Somerville. 9. Agnitie, baptized May 5, 1734, married (first), about 1756, her cousin, John van Dorn, of Peapack ; and, sec- ond Honce Voorliees. IO. Roelof, born April 8, 1737, died October 22, 1803. He settled in Amwell, and married (first) Ann Hoagland, born 1742, died April 15, 1793; (second) Rebecca Hoagland, born October 8, 1759, died May 9, 1832. They had two sons who remained in Am- well. II. John, born February 3, 1740, married his cousin, Mary van Doorn, born November 3, 1746. He settled at Penn's Neck and was a captain in the Revolutionary army. He had a numerous family of whom Rulief, the eldest, re- moved to the state of Ohio; Jacob, to Catskill, from thence to Oswego Falls; Garret to Water- 100, New York ; Isaac to Western New York ; and John I. and William remained at Penn's Neck.
3. Christyjan, or Christian, concerning whom see forward.
4. William, born about 1701, married Altje, daughter of Cornelius Couwenhoven and Mar- garet Schenck. He died young and without issue. His widow married Cornelius Middach.
5. Jacob, born January 21, 1703, died February 26, 1779. He married (first) Maritje, daugh- ter of John Schenck and Sarah Couwenhoven, born August 8, 1712, died October 31, 1756; mar- ried (second), October 27, 1763, Rachael, daugh- ter of Garret Schenck and Neltje Voorhees, bap-
tized April 2, 1710, and widow of Guysbert Long- street. He resided on a portion of land compris- ing three hundred and seventeen acres, a part of his father's estate, adjoining the present village of Hillsdale. Jacob van Doorn had children : I. Jacob, born January 15, 1731, died October 19, 1761, unmarried. 2. John, born June 6, 1733, married, about 1756, his cousin, Agnitie, daugh- ter of Roelof Schenck and Engelje van Doorn, as before stated. He removed to and settled at Peapack in 1760, and had children : Jacob, Will- iam, Roelof and Ann. 3. William, born Decem- ber 3, 1736, died October 4, 1816. He married Rachel, daughter of Guysbert Longstreet and Rachael Schenck. She died about 1765, and he married (second) Mary Hunt. He removed to Peapack, and had children: Jacob and Gilbert. 4. Isaac, born January 24, 1739, died in youth, October 5, 1749. 5. Sarah, born February 20, 1741, married, about 1761, John Antonides, of Dutch Lanes, near Freehold. 6. Aaron, born Sep- tember 14, 1744, died July 14, 1830. Married, May 9, 1765, Ghacy, daughter of John Schenck and Jacamyhtji Couwenhoven, born February 14, 1748, died February 3. 1820. He removed to Peapack in 1766, and had a large family. 7. Mary, born November 3, 1746, married, as be- fore stated, her cousin, Captain John Schenck, of Penn's Neck. 8. Isaac, born March 14, 1752, died May 7, 1831. Married, July 3, 1784, Anne, daughter of Garret Conover and Eleanor Schenck, born May 21, 1754, died June 11, 1843. He lived in the village of Middletown, had a fine estate and was greatly respected. He had an only son -Garret-who lived to be married but died child- less. 9. Peter, born July 4, 1755, died May, 1834. Married, about 1779, Janetje, daughter of Elbert Williamson and Willemptje Schenck, bap- tized July 12, 1758. Peter lived and died on the homestead of his father, and had seven sons and four daughters. 10, Anne, born October 27, 1756, married Lewis Thompson, and died a few years since at an advanced age.
6. Angenyctie, baptized May 29, 1705, mar- ried, about 1729, William Wykoff, who lived near Freehold and died in 1782. They had children: I. Jacob, born 1730, died March 5, 1812. Mar- ried Sarah, daughter of William Couwenhoven and Anne Hendrickson, born 1733, and died Au- gust 25, 1796. They had a son-William-who was a colonel in the war of the Revolution, and was the father of the late Nathaniel P. Wykoff, of Manalapan; Ann, married Dr. John T. Wood-
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hull; Charlotte, married Dr. Gilbert Woodhull ; Amanda, married Rev. William H. Woodhull; and Matilda, married John C. Smith, a merchant of Philadelphia. 2. Peter, born about 1735, re- sided in Philadelphia, and was aide to General Washington at the battle of Monmouth. He married Althea Cox, and they were the grand- parents of Chevalier Henry Wykoff, at one time editor of the "Democratic Review." 3. Isaac, baptized November 4, 1739. Married Martha Cox, a resident of Philadelphia, and had a son, William, who removed to Baton Rouge, Louis- iana, and married Giousa, sister to the last Spanish governor of that state, some of his descendants settling in Louisiana, and others in Easton, Pennsylvania. 4. John, unmarried, died in the West Indies in 1768. 5. William, baptized December 3, 1850, married Louisa Watts, and settled at Opelousa, Louisiana. 6. Eleanor, born in 1737, died August 26, 1793. She married Col- onel John Conover, who resided near the present Marlboro, Monmouth county. 7. Maria, baptized October 28, 1733, married Abraham Hendrick- son. 8. Ann, baptized August 9, 1731, died un- married. 9. Margaret, died unmarried. IO. Agnes, baptized August 21, 1743, died unmarried. II. Catherine, baptized May 11, 1746, married Ezekiel Forman, of Freehold. Many of the descendants of this branch of the family were men of superior education and were graduates of Yale and Princeton universities.
7. Catherine, born in 1707, married Cornelius Wyckoff, presumably of Somerset county.
8. Abraham, baptized October 20, 1709, set- tled at Middlebush, Somerset county, and was sheriff of that county.
9. Peter, baptized September 2, 1711, was probably drowned in early manhood at Shoal Harbor.
IO. Isaac, baptized March 13, 1774-5, was un- married, and lived at or near the old homestead. He had a tannery, shoemaker's shop, and store, and amassed considerable wealth.
(III) Christian van Doren, second son and third child of Jacob van Doorn (2) and Marytje (Bennet) van Doorn, was baptized September 17, 1699. He removed from Monmouth county to Middlebush, Somerset county about 1723 and with his brother Abraham purchased five hun- dred and twenty-five acres of land on the north side of the present "Amwell Road." Here he built and lived in a log house about one hundred and fifty yards east of the present church. He
planted an apple orchard, and two of these trees bore fruit until 1865. He owned three hundred and fifty-nine acres, fronting on Amwell Road, and his brother owned one hundred and sixty- six acres to the north of this. For a time after its purchase these farms were in the possession of and properly owned by John Bennett, Christian and Abraham having bought from a false agent of the first owner. They repurchased the land, March 19, 1763, paying five dollars and seventy- five cents per acre. Christian was a member of the consistory of the Reformed Dutch church in New Brunswick, in 1752, and he was elected an elder. A frame house was later substituted for the original log house, and corresponding outbuildings were put up. The house stood in good condition for one hundred years, and was then destroyed by fire. A new building has been put up on the site of the old one, and is now occupied by John B. Welsh. The original frame of the barn is still standing, but has undergone repairs and remodeling. Christian was early known as a great raiser of wheat. His land at the time of its clearing was pronounced to be the best adapted for the raising of wheat of any in the county. By the old assessment list of 1745 he was assessed on three hundred and fifty acres of land, thirty-three head of cattle, and nine sheep, the small sum of two dollars and eighty- six cents, it costing very little to maintain the government in those days. The original tract of five hundred and twenty-five acres is now (1906) composed of seven farms: Walter J. Toulmin, Ellen V. Egbert, Marcus Bennett, Mr. Burbank, Mr. Woolsey, Mr. Vreeland and John B. Welsh, who lives on the homestead part.
Christian married Alche Schenck, daughter of John Schenck and Sarah Couwenhoven, and they had seventeen children, of whom later. Mrs. Alche (Schenck) van Doren was one of those worthy women of the early days distinguished for their Christian and moral excellencies. She ren- dered good service at the spinning-wheel at the age of ninety-two years, and at the age of ninety- five years was constant in her attendance at re- ligious service in the First Reformed Church in New Brunswick, which was at a distance of almost six miles. She was early accustomed to horseback riding, the bad state of the roads and lack of bridges making this a necessity. It is related of her, that, while living in the log house, a rattlesnake came in through one of the open- ings in the stone chimney, which she seized with
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a pair of tongs, and held in the fire until he was dead. The children of Christian and Alche (Schenck) van Doren were:
I. Jacob, born December 9, 1724. He was a farmer and lived and died in Bedminster. He married (first) Phebe van Derveer, and (second) Jane Ditmars, daughter of Rem Ditmars, of Mill- stone. His children were: Jacob, John, Lena, Maria, who was conspicuous through her life for superior intelligence, affable social qualities, and womanly demeanor. £
She married Peter Stout, and had three children. Her daughter, Janettie, married Isaac van Zandt, and resides in New Brunswick ; Phebe; and Alche.
2. John, born April 23, 1726, was a farmer and lived and died at Millstone. He was said to have been a droll man, and many stories are related of him. He married Maria Lott, and had children : John, William, was both a weaver and farmer, Jacob, Alche, Christian, Cornelius, Alletta, lived at Millstone, and was the wife of Tunis Hoagland ; Abram, lived and died at White House, Hunterdon county, was an active Christ- ian and one of the few who built the old White House Church. He married (first) Charity Ben- nett; (second) Elizabeth Bowman; (third) Catherine Nevius; and (fourth) Rachael Bab- cock. He had seventeen children, six of whom died in infancy, one at the age of forty, and the remainder from seventy-five to ninety years of age.
3. William, born November 13, 1727. He was a farmer, and lived and died in Middlebush. He married (first) Catherine Hoff, and (second) Maria Wyckoff. His children were: Christian, Brogun, William, Jacob, Alche and Catherine.
4. Maria, born February 9, 1729, died in 1822. In her ninetieth year she knit shawls, and spun linen sheets, which are yet to be seen in an excellent state of preservation. She married Petrus Nevius, a farmer at South Branch, and their children were: Roeloff, Christian, Peter, Jacob, Catherine, Saralı, Elizabeth, Phoebe and Alletta.
5. Aaron, born August 8, 1730. He may have lived in Anwell, Hunterdon county, for a time, but afterward removed to Peapack, Somerset county, and the van Dorens at present in that vicinity are descended from him. One of them, General Earl van Doren, was in the Confederate service, and was killed early in the war. The children of Aaron were: John, Christian, Alche and Aaron.
6. Sarah, born February 27, 1732, died No- vember 17, 1816. She married (first ) Jeremialı Lambert ; (second) Robert Hood. She had no children.
7. Christian, born May 15, 1734, was a farmer and lived at Pluckamin. He married (first) Alche van Bryck; and (second) Maria Nevius. His children were: Barnet, Jane and Alche.
8. Alche, born November 18, 1735, died De- cember 13, 1828. She married Simon Wickoff, a farmer living at Middlebush, and had children : Jacob, Peter, Simon, Sarah, Nelly, Christian, Elizabeth, Alche, Maria and Gertrude.
9. Nelly, born May 15, 1737. She married Jacques Voorhees, a merchant and farmer, and resided at Middlebush. Their children were : Jaques, Abram, Alche and Jaques (second).
IO. Abraham, concerning whom see forward.
II. Peter, born March 18, 1740. He was a farmer and lived and died at Millstone. He married Frances Hoff of Neshanic, and had chil- dren: I. Peter, married Mayche, daughter of Abram De Hart, of Six Mile Run, and had children : Margaret; and Sarah, married John S. Voorhees, of Blawenburgh, and is now resid- ing on the De Hart homestead of three hundred and seventy-six acres. 2. Abram, married Maria, daughter of John Wyckoff, Sr., of Millstone. 3. Catherine. 4. Christian.
12. Jane, born October 25, 1741, married John Sutphen, a farmer who lived at Ten Mile Run.
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