History of Monmouth County, New Jersey. Pt. 2, Part 71

Author: Ellis, Franklin, 1828-1885
Publication date: 1885
Publisher: Philadelphia : R.T. Peck & Co.
Number of Pages: 994


USA > New Jersey > Monmouth County > History of Monmouth County, New Jersey. Pt. 2 > Part 71


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71


Prior to 1836 most of the land north of the main street to the Feidler line was open commons. In that year it was divided into lots and sold at auction. A few years later, about 1846, a school- house (still standing) was erected and used until


892


HISTORY OF MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


the present public school-house was completed, in the spring of 1870, at a cost of three thousand five hundred dollars. The district at present contains two hundred and thirty- five children of school age.


Wolf Hill District, No. 84, embraces Oceanport and a territory south of it, to the east of Mon- mouth Park. An old. one-story frame school- house stood on the present school-lot many years, and in 1869 it was moved to the main street near the railroad, where it is now used as a dwelling. It stood on land donated by Edmond West. The present two-story frame school building was erected in the winter of 1869-70. A school-house was built in Oceanport soon after 1829, and was used until the winter of 1869-70, when the Wolf Hill school-house was built and the districts were con- solidated. The district now contains one hundred and seventy-nine children of school age.


Mechanicsville District, No. 86, embraces the village of Branchburg. In this place Alexander McGregor, soon after his settlement in 1807, donated a lot for a school-house and a church. On this lot, about 1810, a school-house was erected, in which Francis Martin was an early teacher. The present school-house is upon a lot about fifty yards northwest from the old house. It is a frame building, two stories in height, and was built in 1869-70. The district now contains one hun- dred and thirteen children of school age.


Pine Grove District, No 89, is located in the pines, on the road from Eatontown to Oceanville. The first-school-house here was built in about 1856. It is a one-story frame building, about twelve by fourteen feet in size, still in use. The district con- tains sixty-seven children of school age.


MONMOUTH PARK is situated about a mile east from Eatontown and about three miles westwardly from Long Branch. The grounds are adjoining the track of the Eatontown Branch of the Rari- tan and Delaware Bay Railroad.


In May, 1878, the Monmouth Park Railroad Association was formed and incorporated to build a railroad one and a half miles in length to connect with the Central Railroad of New Jersey about one hundred feet from where the railroad bridge crosses Parker's Creek. The land on which the park was laid out belonged to the Corlies estate, and in 1866 was bought by Richard R. Hulett,


who, on the 13th of September, 1869, sold one hundred and twenty-eight acres, with dwelling. house, barn and wagon-house, for thirty-two thous- and five hundred dollars, to J. McB. Davison and J. F. Chamberlain, who fenced the grounds and laid out a race-track of one mile circuit.


An act was passed March 29, 1865, to encour- age agricultural, horticultural and mechanical manufacturing and scientific arts and productions, and for the improvement of bloodcd stock in this and other States. Under this act the company was incorporated. Its corporators were Charles Haight, Henry S. Little, William D. Davis, Sam- uel Laird and Francis Corlies. The association was designated the Long Branch and Sea-Shore Improvement Company. Time elapsed and nothing was done, and on February 9, 1870, the incorporation was revived, and Charles S. Lloyd was named as a corporator in place of William D. Davis, deceased.


This association came into possession of the land purchased by Davison and Chamberlain (as above mentioned) and issued stock for the purpose of its improvement, which was carried out by the building of the sheds, out-buildings, stables. grand stands and club-house. The company came to financial em- barrassment, and on foreclosure, David D. With- ers, of New York, bought the property for the sum of $57,146.46.


An association was then formed by the name and style of the Monmouth Park Association, who filcd a certificate of incorporation May 17, 1878. The property purchased by Mr. Withers was conveyed to this association, who now own the property. Large additions have been made to the grounds and buildings since the purchase by the asso- ciation.


The capital stock of the association is sixty thousand dollars, which is owned by August Bel- mont, David D. Withers and Pierre Lorillard, of New York ; George Peabody Wetmore, of New- port; and George Lorillard, of Islip, Suffolk County, N. Y., the latter of whom is president of the asso- ciation.


الجهة المعنية


EATONTOWN TOWNSIIIP.


893


BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.


EDMOND WEST .- Mr. West, who is the oldest living resident of Eatontown township, is the grandson of Joseph West, one of whose nine children was James, born in Monmouth County on the 10th of December, 1731. He married Ann Wing, whose birth occurred August 14. | land of most of the clergymen of the Episcopal 1729, in Shrewsbury township, the children of this marriage being a son, John, and two daugh- ters. John West was born in 1753, and spent his life in agricultural pursuits on the farm now


He recalls many events of interest in his youth, notably the death of General Washington, which occurred when he was a mere lad. Mr. West enjoyed no opportunities for a thorough education, the War of the Revolution having deranged the school system and occasioned the recall to Eng- Church and others engaged in teaching. He assisted in the cultivation of the farm, and subse- quently embarked in mercantile ventures, but not finding these pursuits congenial to his tastes, re-


-----


:


Edmond West


owned by his son Edmond, where his death oc- sumed his farming employments. The land which came to him by inheritance from his father em- braced marl-beds, which rendered the soil pro- duetive and materially increased the profits accru- ing from the year's labor. Mr. West was married to Rachel, daughter of John Drummond, of the same township, a descendant of Lord Drummond, one of the proprictors of East Jersey. Her death occurred on the 23d of September, 1880. Mr. West has been during his lifetime a firm and con- curred on the 14th of March, 1829, in his seventy- sixth year. He married Meribah, daughter of John Sloeum, of Monmouth County, and had children, -James, Elisha, Joseph, Edmond, Ga- briel, John H., Revoc, Rebecca (Mrs. Thomas Morford ) and Ann (Mrs. John A. Taylor). Edmond West was born on the 9th of March, 1791, on the homestead where, with the exception | iof a brief interval of three months when a soldier n the War of 1812, his whole life has been spent. I sistent Democrat, but has never held official


1


894


HISTORY OF MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


position with the exception of a service of thirteen years as surveyor of highways. He is a member and senior warden of St. James' Protestant Epis- copal Church at Long Branch. Though in his ninety-fifth year, he still enjoys vigorous health and exhibits rare mental acuteness.


WILLIAM HENRY SLOCUM, the son of Webley and grandson of Samuel Slocum, was born in New York City the 10th of June, 1813. His mother, Jemima Turnier, was of Huguenot and Dutch ex- traction. His great-grandfather Turnier was a Presbyterian clergyman in Paris, and fled to America to save his life at the time of the Robes- pierre Revolution. He received his early educa- tion in the Warren and Union Hall Academies of the city of New York. For two years, from the spring of 1828, he was engaged as clerk with Messrs. Maintain & Thorne, at the corner of South and Beekman Streets, and then became a partner with his brother, John W., in the retail grocery business, at the corner of Division and Attorney Streets, New York. That business becoming dis- tasteful, he sold his interest to his brother and apprenticed himself to Andrew Turnbull to learn the trade of carpenter and builder. At the age of seventeen years he assisted his brother, John W., in the organization, under the New York Fire Department Act, of the Veto Hose Company, No. 4, of which the latter was chosen foreman and he secretary and treasurer. His appearance at this time was that of maturity far beyond his years, and the city authorities issued to him a fireman's certificate without a question as to his age.


On the advent of cholera in New York, in the year 1832, Judge Slocum removed to Long Branch, N. J., the home of his ancestors, and married, on the 17th of July, 1834, Mary Slocum, who was born August 16, 1816, daughter of Peter and Abigail Slocum: He has had three children, viz. : Walter L., Mary Melissa and Fanuic A. Walter L. is married and resides with him; Fannie A. is a widow living in Camden, N. J. ; Mary Melissa is deceased. Mrs. Slocum died July, 1883. The next ten years of his life were passed in building, farming and school-teaching In the autunm of 1841 he was nominated by the Monmouth County Democratic Convention as representative to the New Jersey Legislature, without his knowledge or


consent, which honor he respectfully declined, not- withstanding the certainty of his election, as the county was largely Democratic. The same nomi- nation was again tendered him a few years after- wards and again deelined. Although a Democrat of the Jeffersonian school, he did not desire to be- come a politician, knowing that such a course would necessarily take him into associations not congenial to his nature. But while refusing higher offices, he exhibited a very commendable spirit, in accepting various neighborhood and township offices, to which his neighbors repeatedly elected him from early manhood until 1868, since which date he has declined to serve. In the year 1844 the New Jersey Legislature appointed him one of the judges of the Court of Common Pleas for Mon- mouth County. The same year he was deputized as an officer of United States customs and served three years in that capacity. By rendering timely assistance in discharging cargo to lighten ships, sometimes in the night and in severe storms, valua- ble stranded vessels, with their cargoes, have been saved from destruction along the New Jersey coast. In the year 1848 he connected himself with the late Captain James Green, of Long Branch, in the hotel business, and continued thus occupied for nineteen summers. The hotel was only kept open in the summer season and was widely known as the Bath Hotel, the oldest, at that time, on the sea-shore at the Branch. It was wholly destroyed by fire in the spring of 1867. During his connec- tion with this hotel Judge Slocum became ac. quainted in a business way with a number of men prominent in the State aud nation, with several of whom the acquaintance ripened into intimacy.


In the year 1856 he was appointed a Master in Chancery for life by Chancellor Williamson, of New Jersey.


In the year 1857 he was elected judge of elec- tion, which office he held for seven successive years. In the year 1863 he was elected a justice of the peace for five years. In the year 1865 he was ap- pointed a notary public for life by Governor Joel Parker. He has been elected and acted as one of the town committee several times at intervals sinec 1837. In the year 1866 he was elected inspector of registry and elections and commissioned by Gov- ernor Ward.


He took an active part in the organization of


EATONTOWN TOWNSHIP.


895


the Eatontown and Sea-Shore Turnpike Company in 1865, and was chosen one of the directors, and for several years served as treasurer, and in 1876 he was elected president of the company, which position he still holde. He is also a mem. ber of the board of directors of the Shrewsbury Mutual Fire Insurance Co., of Eatontown, N. J.


Throughout his life he has taken great interest in the welfare of laboring men. He was the prime mover for the introduction of the ten-hour system


continued until the dissolution of the firm, in 1876. Since this date he has abandoned all business ex- eept conveyancing and the settling of estates, whieli was followed, in connection with other busi- ness, since 1844.


His counsel on legal questions has been fre- quently sought and freely given, and though often tendered a fee for the same, he has always declined receiving it, nor has he ever accepted a fee or com- mission for aiding others to procure a loan of


in Monmouth, N. J. which superseded the old plan requiring, during the summer months, work from sunrise to sunset as a day's labor. He has also given considerable attention to schools, and he aided in the organization of the graded system now in successful operation in his neighborhood.


In the year 1868 he connected himself with the firm of William Haynes & Co.,-which was soon succeeded by Drummond, Maps & Co.,-of Ocean- port, N. J , lumber dealers, and proprietors of a steam saw and planing-mill, in which connection he


money. In all positions of trust which he has been called upon to fill he has never been asked to give bond or any security for the faithful performance of his duty, and has never failed to render a full and true account. In business he has always been industrious, persevering and economieal, which virtues, with his judieious habits and man- agement, have brought him the full seore of hap- piness, for


" Reason's whole pleasure, all the joys of sense, Lie in three words-health, peace, and competence."


.


896


HISTORY OF MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


In the spring of 1844, Judge Slocum removed from Long Branch village-where he had resided since his marriage-to a small farm which he had purchased near Branchburg. In November, 1854, he completed and occupied his present residence, which is pleasantly situated near Wolf Hill, on the turnpike between the villages of Long Branch and Eatontown-one mile and a half from each-and near the village of Oceanport. He is a member of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Eatontown, and now acts as its treasurer and warden.


sided. He remained with his parents until his marriage, on the 9th of May, 1849, to Eliza, daughter of Yeomans and Sarah Gillingham, of Frankford, Pa., when Oceanport, Monmouth County, became, and is still, his residence. Mr. Williams, in the spring of 1844, under the firm- name of J. & T. T. Williams, embarked in mer- cantile pursuits at Poplar, and continued thus en- gaged until 1847, when the store and stock was sold to William Cook, and, removing to Oceanport, he entered the firm of B. Drummond & Co., lum-


Thomas MWilliams


THOMAS T. WILLIAMS. - The great-grandparents of Mr. Williams were Elihu and Ann Wadey Willianis, who were married April, 1750. His grandparents were Israel and Bathsheba Wood- mancie Williams, the former of whom was tlie owner of several plantations, which he distributed among his sons. Daniel Williams, one of these · sons, married Mary Tilton, and was the father of Thomas T. Williams, whose birth occurred March 27, 1819, at Poplar, Monmouth 'County, N. J., where his ancestors for three generations had re-


ber dealers. Retiring from this firm in 1850, he embarked alone in the same business, and in 1857, again changing, invested his capital in a stock of furniture, crockery and general merchandise. In 1863, Samuel W. Griscom was admitted as a part- ner, under the firm name of Williams & Griscom, and this business association continued until 1882, when the senior partner retired, and has since de- voted his time to agricultural pursuits. Mr. Wil- liams has had neither taste nor leisure for affairs of a political or public nature, but has frequently


1


-


EATONTOWN TOWNSHIP.


897


been called to fill the office of administrator and executor, which duties have been discharged with unerring fidelity. He is a member by birthright of the Society of Friends, and worships with the Shrewsbury Monthly Meeting.


SAMUEL WILLIAM GRISCOM. - Mr. Griscom is of Scotch descent, his grandfather, William Gris- com, having been a native of Salem County,


lingham, of Philadelphia, whose children are Sam- uel W., George L., Elwood, Yeamans, Sarah L. (Mrs. Thomas D Holmes), Nancy S. (Mrs. Reed Nuckles) and Mark Stewart.


Samuel William Griscom was born in Frank- ford, now included withiu the corporate limits of Philadelphia, and in youth removed with his parents to Virginia. Receiving there a rudimen- tary education, he began active life as a merchant's


Swo giver


N. J., where he pursued the blacksmith's craft. He married Ann Stewart, whose children are Samuel S., William, John D., David J., George, Charles W. and Mary W. Samuel S., also a native of Salem County, early in life re- moved to the vicinity of Philadelphia, where he engaged in teaching. On a subsequent migration to Virginia, he became favorably known as a sur- veyor and conveyancer. Mr. Griscom married · Sydney, daughter of Yeamans and Sarah L. Gil- 57


clerk, remaining thus employed until October 10, 1859, when he removed to his, present residence, Oceanport, and entered the store of T. T. Wil- liams. After continuing for several years this bus- iness association, he was admitted to a partnership as the owner of a half-interest, and in 1882, on the retirement of Mr. Williams, become sole pro- prietor of the business, which he still conducts. Mr. Griseom has been and is a prominent Demo- crat in his political affiliations, and while occa-


898


HISTORY OF MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


sionally a delegate to party conventions, has not sought office nor encouraged the proffer of honors easily within his . grasp. He is a member of the Agricultural Society of the county. He still ad- heres in religion to the belief of the Society of Friends, and worships with the Shrewbury Friends' Meeting.


CHARLES ANTONIDES .- The ancestors of Mr. `Antonides emigrated at an early day from Hol-


19th of October, 1804, in Monmouth County. learned his father's trade, which he continued until his marriage to Miss Lydia, daughter of Reuben Tilton, of the same county. The children of this marriage are Delia Ann, Charles, Mary Elizabeth (wife of Charles Wilson Ten Brook), Ira, Eleanor L. (deceased), Deborah Jane, Emeline (wife of Charles Curtis), William W., Laurah (wife of Lewis Lane) and Stephen S. Charles Antonides was born on the 29th of Sep-


Chas Antonides


land to the United States, and settled in Mon- mouth County, N. J. His grandfather, Jacob, was born on the 8th of October, 1780, in New Jersey, and probably in Monmouth County, where he fol- lowed the trade of a blacksmith. He married, on the 18th of December, 1800, Miss Elizabeth Sutphen, whose birth occurred October 1, 1781. Their children were John (born in 1801), Abram, Sarah (born in 1807), Archibald (in 1808), Phebe (in 1810), Deborah (in 1812), Eliza (in 1816). Abram Antonides, whose birth 'oceurred on the


tember, 1829, in Leedsville, Monmouth County, and removed in youth to a farm purchased by his father from the estate of his maternal grandparent. Here lie remained until eighteen years of age, meanwhile receiving instruction in the English branches at the neighboring schools and respond- ing to the demand for his services on the farm. He then determined to render himself independent by the acquirement of a trade, and entered the carriage-shop of Daniel Herbert, of Middletown. | Being already very skillful in the handling of


EATONTOWN TOWNSHIP.


899


tools, his apprenticeship was completed at the ex- piration of the second year, after which he spent a year, partly as journeyman, in the same establish- ment. At the age of twenty-one he removed to Hillsdale, in Marlboro' township, and opened a shop for the prosecution of his trade. Two years later he bceame a resident of Holmdel, and re- mained six years engaged in business, when Mechanicsville (now Branchburg) presented a favorable opening, and has sinee that time been the scene of his successful career as a carriage


his father in manufacturing ; and Isaae V. D., de- eeascd. Mrs. Antonides died October 29, 1881, and he was again married, in November, 1882, to Mrs. Lydia A. Brown, daughter of Joseph Thompson, deceased, of Leedsville.


Mr. Antonides is in polities a Prohibitionist, having formerly voted the Republican tieket. He has been a member of the township committee, but accepted no other offices, his attention being chiefly oceupied with his own business pursuits. He is a member of Arioeh Lodge, No. 77, Inde-


Kenny bouleis


manufacturer. A large demand was soon estab- lished for his wares, light earriages being especially popular with his customers. The increase of busi- ness rendered more spacious quarters necessary, as purchasers were not confined to the vieinity, but extended to New York City and its suburbs. Mr. Antonides, therefore, enlarged his shops to kcep pace with the increase of business. He was, on the 17th of November, 1853, married to Eleanor H., daughter of Isaae Van Dorn, whose children are Lydia Maria ; Adolphus V. D., associated with


pendent Order of Odd-Fellows of Long Branch. He is connected with the Reformed Church at Long Branch village in which he fills the office of deaeon.


HENRY CORLIES .- Britton Corlies, the grand- father of Henry Corlies, who resided upon the farm now owned by the latter, was born No- vember 27, 1738, and died October 31, 1816. He married Sarah, daughter of Benjamin Woolley, whose children were Ann, Elizabeth,


1


1


900


HISTORY OF MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


Britton, Deborah, Britton (second ), Joseph W., Jacob W., and Benjamin W. The last named was born February 9, 1797, in Monmouth Coun- ty, where his death occurred May 24, 1884, in his eighty-eighth year. He married Miriam T., daugh- ter of Tyler and Elizabeth Williams, who was born October 8, 1797. Their children are Henry, Tyler W., Edward, (deceased,) Francis, Sarah (wife of E. A. Osborn), Susan (deceased), and Eliza H. (wife of Dr. Henry Townsend). Henry Corlies was born on the 20th of October, 1821, in Shrews-


Monmouth County, whose death occurred January 18, 1854. He was again married, on the 25th of December, 1856, to Miss Mary, granddaughter of Captain Hendrick Hendrickson, of Revolutionary fame, and daughter of William and Eleanor Du- Bois Hendrickson, of Middletown, and sister of ex-Senator William H. Hendrickson. Their children are William H. H., born May 16, 1858, who died August 16th of the same year ; Charles Du Bois, whose birth occurred August 25, 1859; and Willie H., born June 21, 1862, who died No-


.


bury (now Eatontown) township. He acquired a thorough English education at the Friends' Board- ing-School at Westtown, Chester County, Pa., and later at Wilmington, Del, on the completion of which course of study he returned to his home and engaged in farming employments. In 1852 he purchased a portion of the land owned by the family, and has since been devoted to the varied pursuits of an agriculturalist. Mr. Corlies was, on the 8th of September, 1852, married to Miss Ellen L., daughter of Ruloff Van Derveer, of Poplar, Society of Friends, but at present worships


vember 23d of that year. Mr. Corlies has always affiliated with the Whig and Republican parties in politics, and was an advocate of anti-slavery doc- trines, but has found little leisure for matters apart from the routine of his daily business. He was formerly president, and is now a d 'r of the Shrewsbury Mutual Fire Insurance Col 7. He


is also a member of the Monmouth Co . Ag-


ricultural Society. Mr. Corlies is descend . Quaker ancestry, and is a birthright menbe.


r


1


EATONTOWN TOWNSHIP.


901


the congregation of the Shrewsbury Presbyterian Church.


JOHN P. CASLER .- The grandfather of Mr. Cas- ler, who was of German origin, settled in Monmouth County prior to the War of the Revolution. His son John, who was a popular landlord in Freehold, married a Miss Clayton, of the latter place, and had sons-Peter, John, Robert and George ; and daughters,-Hannah (Mrs. Joseph Parker), Re-


Joseph Williams), Edward, Peter, Delia (Mrs. Martin), Aaron and Rufus. Mr. Casler was a second time married, to Eliza Paxton, sister of his first wife, whose children are Sallie (Mrs. Ira Borden) and Harriet (Mrs. Charles Wyckoff ). John P. Casler was born on the 21st of February, 1820, in Middlesex County, N. J., and in child- hood removed with his parents to Eatontown town- ship, where he received such advantages of educa- tion as were obtainable at the common schools of


abram V. Mfebrigão


becca (Mrs. Joseph Van Cleef) and Delia (Mrs. [ the county. He then devoted his energies to farm Riehard Worthley). Peter, of this number, resided labor until twenty-two years of age, when a more attractive field presented itself in travel through the West. He finally became a resident of Mid- dlesex County, N. J., and married, in 1844, Miss Elizabeth, daughter of William Rue, of the same county. Their children are Aaron T., Mary Ellen (Mrs. Benjamin Brinker), John Milton, Anne (Mrs. Joseph Hoffman), Emily (Mrs. Lemuel Pullen) and Harriet (Mrs. Albert McNamee). in Eatontown township, where he was a successful farmer, and died in 1883, in his eighty-seventh year. To his first wife, Mary, daughter of John Paxton, of Allentown, Pa., and later of Middlesex County, N. J., were born children,-Joseph, John P., Theo- dosia (Mrs. Edward Lupton), William C., Marga- ret (Mrs. William Throckmorton), Robert, Henry, Elizabeth (wife of Dr. John Cook), Emily (Mrs.


902


HISTORY OF MONMOUTH COUNTY, NEW JERSEY.


Mr. Casler remained eight years in Middlesex County and then removed to his present attractive home in Eatontown township, where he has been for many years engaged in agricultural pursuits and devoted much time to dairying and the raising of produce for the New York market. A Repub- lican in politics, his daily employments have not afforded him leisure for participation in affairs of a political nature. His religious preferences are for the Presbyterian Church, at which his family worship.


ABRAM T. METZGAR -Abram and Dorothea Metzgar emigrated from Germany in' 1801 and settled in Philadelphia. Their children were : John, Christian, Jacob, Al.am, Elizabeth, wife of John Faunch, and Henry. The latter was born in Germany and emigrated when an infant, with his parents, to America, residing, until his twenty-first year in Princeton, N. J., when he re- moved to Rumsen and made it his residence until 1838, when Princeton again became his home. In 1843 he settled at Poplar Monmouth County, where his death occurred in 1866. He married Miss Elizabeth, daughter of Jacob Bennett, and had children, John B., Lydia A., Catherine E., Margaret B. and Abram T. The last-named and youngest of this number was born on the 20th of Tun-, 1940, at Princeton, and removed in child- i.o.t, with his parents, to Poplar, where he became a pupil of the district school, and afterwards en-


1 tered the Quaker City College, Philadelphia where he pursued a two years' course. Returning to his home at Porlar and engaged with his father in farming, which was continued until the death of the latter, when he inherited a portion of the farm as his patrimony, and continued to superin- tend its cultivation. In 1869 he married Susan C., daughter of James Reynolds, of Eastontown, Mr. Metzgar, in 1867, made Branchburg his home, but retained his ownership of the farm until 1871, when, on selling the property, he erected his pre- sent attractive residence, and is now engaged in the raising of produce for the New York market. A Republican in politics, Mr. Metzgar has won the suffrages of both parties. He has, since 1877, filled the office of Assessor of Eatontown town- ship, and been for three years its collector. Mr. Metzgar manifested his patriotism during the late war by enlisting in the 14th Regiment, New Jer- sey Volunteers, and participated in the engage- ments at Manassas Gap, Wapping Heights, Cul- pepper, Brady Station, Locust Grove, Bristow Station, Kelley's Ford, Mine Run, Wilderness, Spottsylvania, Po River, North Anna, Hanover Court-house and Cold Harbor. He was wounded' in the latter conflict, June 1st, 1864, and dis- charged on the 30th of December of the same year. Mr. Metzgar is still engaged in agricul- tural employments, though much of his time is devoted to affairs connected with the township. Both himself and wife are members of the First Methodist Episcopal Church of Long Branch.


.


F-8536.2


6025E





Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.