USA > Pennsylvania > Bucks County > History of Bucks county, Pennsylvania, from the discovery of the Delaware to the present time, Vol. III > Part 54
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Jesse L. Johnson (father) was born on the old homestead in Bensalem town- ship, September 5, 1822. He attended the district school at Eddington, and after completing his education settled on the old homestead, where he followed agricultural pursuits successfully during his lifetime. Like his father, Mr. John- son served in the capacity of vestryman of the Episcopal church, and cast hr vote for the candidates of the Demo- cratic party. He was a member of t! Independent Order of Odd Fellows. He was united in marriage to Anna P. Levis, a daughter of Robert Levis, a tanner of Mt. Holly, New Jersey, later .of Maryland. Mrs. Johnson was reared by her aunt, Eliza Renshaw, of Edding- ton. Ten children were the issue of this marriage, namely: Lizzie, Elmer L., Mary, Josephine, Clark, deceased; Louisa, deceased; Clara, John, Jesse, de- ceased; and Annie. Jesse L. Johnson (father) died September 25, 1901; his wife passed away May 12, 1895, after one day's illness.
Elmer L. Johnson attended the public schools at Eddington, thereby acquiring a practical education which qualified him for the many duties and responsibilities of life. He engaged in farming pursuits, having become familiar with that line of work by assisting his father, and in due course of time succeeded to the old homestead of one hundred and fifty acres, which is one of the best cultivated and most productive farms in that sec- tion of Bucks county. The neat and thrifty appearance of the property be- speaks the careful supervision of one thoroughly versed in the details of farm work. Mr. Johnson follows in the foot- steps of his forefathers in religious and political affairs, being a vestryman of the Episcopal church, and a Democrat. He is interested in all matters pertaining to the welfare of the community, and in every relation of life has proved him- self an honorable and conscientious man. On April 2, 1890, Mr. Johnson was married to Elizabeth I. Schaffer, who was born in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, a daughter of Godfrey Schaffer. Their
children are: Jessie A., born April 30, 1894; Helen I., born January 1, 1899; and Elizabeth V., born December 3, 1903.
J. HERMAN BARNSLEY. Thomas Barnsley, major in "His Majesties 60th Royal American Regiment of Foot," came with his regiment to America during the French and Indian War of 1756. At the close of the war he resigned his commission and returning to England brought over to Bucks county his wife Bersheba and his nephew John Barnsley. In 1763 he purchased six hundred acres in Bensalem, part of the Tatham tract, and erected thereon a handsome and commo- dious mansion house, the bricks for which were brought from England. He died in 1771, and his wife died some years earlier. The property was sold by his executors to John Swift in 1772, and remained in the Swift family until 1883, when it was pur- chased by Sallie B., wife of Dr. Richard Dingee. The mansion house is still stand- ing.
John Barnsley inherited a fourth interest in his uncle's estate, but it was paid him in Continental money and became prac- tically worthless. He was one of the com- mittee for driving off cattle in Bensalem to prevent them from falling into the hands of the British, and was with Washington's army in January, 1777, in the march from Trenton to Princeton, his team having been impressed to haul ammunition. He purchased a farm in Newton township, where he lived until his death, February 2, 1796. His wife was Elizabeth Van Court, who was born at Huntingdon Valley in 1751, and died in 1824. The children of John and Elizabeth (Van Court) Barnsley were : Thomas, born January 21, 1774, removed to Maryland; WILLIAM, born November 8, 1775; Mary, born March 21, 1778; Eliza- beth, born August 3, 1780; George, born November 8, 1783; Moses, born February 23, 1788; Sarah, born March 10, 1791; and Ann, born October 14, 1795.
William Barnsley, second son of John and Elizabeth, married Jane Van Horn, born in Makefield, July 25, 1784, and died July 25, 1861. They were married January 21, 1808. Their children were: Mary, born 1809, died unmarried January 16, 1889; John, born August 26, 1811; Thomas C., born October 21, 1815, died September 5, 1866, and Joseph Barnsley, born June 9, 1820, died near Hartsville, January 12, 1888. William Barnsley died at Newtown, August 21, 1848.
John Barnsley, eldest son of William and Jane, resided on the homestead at Newtown until his death, January II, 1880. He was a justice of the peace for thirty-five years, and transacted a great deal of business in settlement of estates and in transfers of real estate. He was a man of more than ordinary ability and very much respected in the community. He was county treasurer
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HISTORY OF BUCKS COUNTY.
about 18.48. He married October 27, 1835, Mary Hough, born October 15. 1814, in Doylestown township, daughter of Ben- jamin and Hannah (Simpson) Hough, and a first cousin to the mother of General U. S. Grant. She died at Newton. September 25, 1895. Their children are: Anna J., born 1836, married Captain Henry Y. Pickering ; William, born February 17, 1838, died October 27, 1902, married Mary Ellen Paff, and has one daughter, Lily H., the wife of Edward P. Hicks, of Newtown. Hannah H., born 1839, married October 16, 1860, Cap- tain Thomas P. Chambers. Elizabeth J., born July 4, 1844, married Major Samuel Comfort. Wilhelmina, born 1847. Mary. born 1850, married George C. Worstall. John Herman, born December 12, 1854, married April 23, 1902. Elizabeth. daughter of Colonel E. A. L. Roberts, of Titusville, Pennsylvania.
J. Herman Barnsley, son of John and Mary (Hough) Barnsley, was born in New- town, December 12, 1854. He was educated in the public schools and Newtown Acad- emy and later took a course at a business college. He has traveled extensively in this country and abroad and spent several years in Kansas. He filled for some time a cler- ical position with the Standard Oil Company at Titusville, Pennsylvania, and later opened an office in Newark, New Jersey, and con- ducted a brokerage business. He married April 23, 1902, Elizabeth C. Roberts of Titusville. He purchased the old home- stead, "Sharon," near Newtown, Pennsyl- vania, which he remodeled, and resided: there one year when he sold the property to Mr. John J. Tierney, of West Virginia, the present owner, and the following year erected a handsome residence on North Chancellor street, Newtown, where he now resides. His only child, John, was born March 15, 1903.
HOWARD P. WHITE, of Doylestown, coroner of Bucks county, was born in War- rington township, Bucks county, Pennsyl- vania, September 2, 1859, and is a son of the late Jonathan and Mary Anna (Brunner) White. The paternal ancestors of Mr. White were residents of Solebury, Bucks county, for several generations. William White having purchased a farm of 125 acres on the Carversville road below Peters Cor- ner in 1729.
William White, the grandfather of How- ard P. White, was a lifelong resident of Solebury, residing near Carversville, and a shoemaker by trade. He married Mary Delaney, and they were the parents of sev- eral children, among whom was Jonathan White, the father of the subject of this sketch.
Jonathan White was born in Solebury, September 2. 1825. and was reared in that township. He learned the shoemaker's trade with his father, and followed that vocation for a few years. In 1857 he was
appointed deputy sheriff by Albert Phillips, the sheriff of Bucks county, and served during the three years' term of Sheriff Phillips, closing with the year 1853. In the fall of that year he was elected to the office of clerk of Orphans' court, and served in that office for three years. On his retire- ment from office he became proprietor of the Frog Hollow Hotel in Warrington township, Bucks county, which he con- ducted until the breaking out of the war. in 1861, when he enlisted in Company D, One Hundred and fourth Pennsylvania Volun- teers, Colonel W. W. H. Davis, Captain Jacob Swartzlander, and was commissioned sergeant of his company. He served dur- ing three years of arduous service, partici- pating in many hard fought battles, the record of the gallant One Hundred and Fourth being too families to the people of Bucks county to be recounted here and was mustered out September 25, 1864. He re- turned home badly broken in health, and never fully recovered from the effects of the hardships endured in the service of his country. After a few months rest he became the proprietor of a hotel at No. 1220 Market street which he conducted for three years; he then returned to Bucks county and kept a restaurant at Buckingham at the present location of the "Ottaway House," where he died in 1868. He mar- ried Mary Anna Brunner, daughter of Thomas and Theresa (Fredericks) Brun- ner, the latter a native of Germany, and the former of German descent, his ancestors having emigrated from Germany and settled in New Britain several generations back. Thomas Brunner was proprietor of the Willow Grove Hotel for two years, and then purchased the mills at Bridge Point, now Edison, Bucks county, of which he was the proprietor for many years, residing in Edison in all over fifty years. Mary Anna (Brunner) White resides with her son in Doylestown. Jonathan and Mary Anna (Brunner) White were the parents of two children: Howard Phillips and Arthur Cernea White, the latter of whom died in 1806.
Howard P. White resided with his par- ents to the age of seventeen years, and then became a clerk in the store of E. H. Worth- ington, at Edison. and filled that position for four years. In 18SI he went to Phila- delphia and filled various positions there for two years. In 1883-4 he was employed at Cresson Springs, Pennsylvania. He then accepted a position as steward on Jay Gould's yacht and later was bookkeeper of the Philadelphia Art Club of Philadelphia for several years, resigning in 1897, since which time he has been engaged in the mer- cantile business at Doylestown. In the fall of 1904 he was elected to the office of coroner of Bucks county, and is now filling that position. In politics he is a Republican, and is one of the well known men of the county seat. He is a member of Aquetong Lodge No. 193, I. O. O. F., St. Tammany
TILL
Mon 9. Moyer
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HISTORY OF BUCKS COUNTY.
Castle, K. G. E .; and the Doylestown Man- naerchor Society.
He married, May 12, 1889, May Emma Roberts, born May 12, 1861, daughter of John and Susanna (Kratz) Roberts, of Doylestown. On the maternal side she is descended from John Valentine Kratz, who was born in the Palatinate in 1707, and came to Pennsylvania at the age of twenty years in the ship "Friendship," arriving at Philadelphia, October 15. 1727, and settled in Upper Salford, now Montgomery county. The grandparents of Mrs. White are Isaac H. and Sybilla (Duke) Kratz; her great- grandparents Abraham and Elizabeth (Fretz) Kratz; and her great-great-grand- parents Isaac and Mary ( Yellis) Kratz, Isaac being a son of John Valentine, the emigrant. The only child of Howard P. and Mary Emma (Roberts) White is Ed- ward Earle, born February 18, 1890. The family are members of the Presbyterian church.
WILLIAM G. MOYER, a venerable and eminently esteemed resident of the borough of Chalfont, for many years an active and potent factor in the agricultural, political and social interests of New Britain town- ship, was born at Pleasant Valley, Spring- field township, Bucks county, Pennsylvania, February 14, 1834. a son of Abraham D. and Mary (Geisinger) Moyer.
The founder of the American branch of the family was the Rev. Peter Moyer, who with his brothers William, Jacob and Henry, and their sister and widowed mother, came to America in 1741. The family were na- tives of Switzerland, and were forced to flee from their native country during the fierce persecution of the Mennonites by the Calvinists, or State Reformed church, to the Palatinate in Germany, where they remained with friends in the vicinity of Kerbach for about one year, when they emigrated to America. The mother mar- ried Nickey Schaafroth; no issue. Of the brothers, Peter was the oldest and Henry the youngest. Peter, William and Henry settled in Springfield township, Bucks county, and Jacob settled at Center Valley, Saucon township, Lehigh county. They all became farmers, and were active members of the Mennonite church. The supposition is that Peter was a minister in Switzer- land, and he was one of the early minis- ters of the church in Springfield township: Jacob was also a minister and preached at Coopersburgh.
Rev. Peter Moyer, great-grandfather of William G. Moyer, was born in Switzer- land about 1723, married He set- tled in Springfield township, Bucks county, Pennsylvania, near Pleasant Valley, where on May 28. 1752, he purchased his farm consisting of 107 acres (old measure) from Joseph Green. The property was bounded by lands of William Bryan, Joseph Un- thanks, and James Green, and is owned
now by Mary Moyer Geissinger, wife of Charles A. Geissinger, daughter of Abra- ham G. Moyer, a great-grandson. Rev. Peter Moyer was one of the early minis- ters of the Mennonite church of Spring- field. Children: Christian, John. Jacob, William, Henry, Isaac. Mary (Mrs. Kulp), Barbara. Two daughters married Kulps, and three children died young.
William Moyer, grandfather of William G. Moyer, was born in Springfield town- ship, Bucks county, June 7, 1764. His oc- cupation was that of a farmer. He was united in marriage to Mary Overholt, who was born December 27, 1767, and their children were: Magdalena, Nancy, Han- nah, Kate, Mary and Abraham D. The death of William Moyer occurred February 12. 1848; he was survived by his wife, who passed away September 1, 1850.
Abraham D. Moyer, father of William G. Moyer, was born on the old Peter Moyer farm in Pleasant Valley, June 6, 1798. He was reared on the homestead, received a good common school education, and throughout his active career followed farm- ing as a means of livelihood. He was the leader of the singing in the Mennonite church. In 1832 he married Mary Geis- inger, who was born in Upper Milford, Lehigh county, September 18, 1811, a daughter of Philip and Fanny ( Hestand) Geisinger. Their children are: William G., mentioned hereinafter; Fanny, who be- came the wife of Nathaniel Bechtel, of Berks county; Mary and Abraham. The father of these children died September 15, 1871; the mother passed away December 9, 1900. They were honest and industrious people, and in every relation of life per- formed their duties conscientiously.
William G. Moyer spent his childhood and early manhood years on the farm owned by his father, and his education was ob- tained in the schools of Springfield and Quakertown. For ten years, from 1855 to 1865, he served in the capacity of teacher, achieving a fair degree of success in this vocation owing to the fact that he was able to impart to others clearly and concisely the knowledge he wished them to receive. From the latter named year until 1872, a period of seven years, he engaged in farm- ing in Springfield township, after which he removed to New Britain township, where he owns a fine farm in the borough of Chal- font. He is practical and progressive in his methods, and, being familiar with all the details of this branch of industry, derives a goodly income from his labor. He has been active and prominent in political affairs, and has been chosen the incum- bent of several offices of trust and respon- sibility. He was township auditor for six years ; secretary of the school board for a similar period and jury commissioner for Bucks county, having been elected in June, 1903: and was first president of the council of Chalfont. serving three years. For many years he has served as correspondent
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HISTORY OF BUCKS COUNTY.
and reporter for the United States Agri- cultural Department. He is a prominent member of the Mennonite church, and a Republican in politics.
In 1860 Mr. Moyer was married to Mary Swartley, who was born in New Britain township, in 1835, a daughter of John Swartley. Their children are: I. Emma, born December 17, 1861, died January 9, 1881. 2. Levi, born May 22, 1864, married Anna Detwiller, and they are the parents of the following named children: William D., born December 25, 1887; Sarah Amelia, born July 27, 1889; Hannah Theresa, born October 23, 1891; Mary Maria, born April 17, 1894; Irene, born February 2. 1896; Enos, born July 5, 1898; Eva, born Febru- ary 9, 1900; Nora, born in June, 1901. 3. Abraham S., born November 7, 1866, mar- ried Susie M. Fretz, daughter of Eli Fretz, of Bedminster, and one child is the issue of this union, Alvin, born October 18, 1900. 4. William, born November 29, 1868. a mer- chant of Chalfont. 5. Menno S., born November 18, 1870, was educated in the State Normal School at West Chester, and Haverford College. After his graduation he taught school for a number of years, and now is a member of the firm of Moyer Brothers, merchants of Lansdale. He married Annie Souder, and their children are : Evelyn Elizabeth and Margarette, born February 2, 1904. 6. Harvey. born March 16, 1877, married Macie Johnson. The mother of these children died January 2, 1888. Mr. Moyer married for his second wife Mrs. Hannah Slifer Weis, who was born near Quakertown, Richland township, Bucks county. October 6, 1837, a daughter of Joseph Slifer.
WILSON B. MCKINSTRY. Nathan Mckinstry, the founder of the Mc- Kinstry family in this country, was a native of the north of Ireland. He was born in the year 1712 and came to this country when a youth. In connection with a brother-in-law, Hugh Young, they pur- chased in 1744 a tract of 195 acres in Wrightstown, which they subsequently di- vided. Ten years later he sold his Wrights- town farm and removed to that part of Buckingham township now included in Doylestown township. where he purchased a farm of 202 acres and resided thereon until his death, April 15, 1790. He and his wife Mary were active members of Neshaminy Presbyterian church of Warwick township, of which he was a trustee. Their children were John, horn 1736, died 1791 ; Jane, born 1745, married James Kerr, died 1797; Samuel, born 1748. died January 24, 1796; Henry, born 1750, died November 28, 1804: William, born 1752, died -; Robert, born 1756. died July 25. 1834.
Robert Mckinstry, youngest son of Na- than and Mary, was born on the Bucking- ham homestead in 1756, and remained there until his father's death in 1790. He mar-
ried in 1783 Mary Weir, daughter of James Weir, of Warrington. Her sister, Rebecca Weir, married John Simpson and became the grandmother of U. S. Grant. The dis- tinguished soldier and statesman, shortly after his graduation at West Point, paid a visit to his cousins, the Mckinstrys of Warrington. On the marriage of Robert Mckinstry, his father built a house for him on the old homestead, but at the settlement of his father's estate he did not elect to retain any of the paternal, farm, and took up his residence in New Britain. He died July 25, 1834. His wife Mary died April 6, 1846, at the age of eighty-nine years.
Robert and Mary (Weir) Mckinstry were. the parents of seven children, viz: Jane, born 1784, died unmarried April 24, 1869; John, born November 1, 1786, died unmar- ried September 24, 1863; Nathan, born Jan- uary 29, 1791, died December 23, 1862 ; Rob- ert, born 1793, died September 5, 1871 ; Wil- liam, born 1796, settled in Ohio ; James, born 1799, died 1877 ; and Henry, born 1805. Rob- ert Mckinstry, wife and their five sons and one daughter who remained in Bucks county were all active and consistent members of Neshaminy Presbyterian church; John was for a long period a trustee ; and Henry and Nathan were elders. In their later days services were frequently held in their houses. John, Nathan, James and Henry lived in Warrington, and Robert lived and died on the homestead in New Britain; he left no issue.
Henry Mckinstry, the youngest son of Robert and Mary, was reared on the home- stead, and early in life learned the trade of a carpenter, which he followed for several years. In April, 1832, he purchased of Anthony Robinson a farm of ninety acres, and erecting an entirely new set of buildings thereon settled down to agricultural pur- suits. He married, November 29, 1838, Amanda Brady, daughter of Alexander Brady, of Philadelphia, but for many years a resident of Warrington, where he died in 1863. Henry Mckinstry was an elder in the Neshaminy Presbyterian church for a number of years. He was active and prom- inent in social and political matters of his community, and served several years as school director. After a long and useful life, he died in 1885 at the age of eighty years. His wife Amanda died in August. 1902. The children of Henry and Amanda (Brady) Mckinstry were five in number, viz. : Sarah. Mary, Wilson Brady. Henry Martyn, and Franklin Pierce. Sarah mar- ried David Cornell ; Mary married Samuel McNair ; and Franklin married Jennie Boil- eau. He is now a prominent physician of Washington, New Jersey.
Wilson Brady Mckinstry, eldest son of Henry and Amanda ( Brady) Mckinstry. was born March 1. 1816, on the farm where he still resides. On arriving at manhood he assumed the conduct of the home farm which he purchased at the death of his mother. In politics he is a Democrat, hut
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HISTORY OF BUCKS COUNTY.
has never sought or held other than local office. He has been a member of the local school board for nine years, serving both as treasurer and president of the board. He and his family are members of Neshaminy Presbyterian church, with which the family has been connected for four generations. He married in 1876 Matilda Breuhl, born in Philadelphia, in 1855, a daughter of John Breuhl, a native of Alsace, who came to this country when a youth and settled in Bucks county. To Wilson and Matilda (Breuhl) Mckinstry have been born four children, viz : Mary, died in infancy ; William, Henry and Herbert. William and Henry are elec- tricians and are both actively interested in the telephone business. William married Mary Stocker, and lives in West Chester.
H. MARTYN MCKINSTRY was born June 25, 1849, on the farm in Warrington township where his brother, Wilson B. Mc- Kinstry, now resides. He is the second son of Henry and Amanda (Brady) Mckinstry, the children of whom are five în number : Sarah B., wife of the late David Cornell, Southampton : Mary, wife of Samuel Mac- Nair. Mt. Pleasant, Pennsylvania; Wilson B., Warrington, Pennsylvania; H. Martyn, Warrington, Pennsylvania; Frank P., (M. D.) Washington, New Jersey.
Henry Mckinstry was born in 1805. He was a stanch Presbyterian and was a mem- ber of the Neshaminy Presbyterian church of Warwick. For many years and up to the time of his death, he was an elder in the church and although living six miles dis- tant, he was always in his place unless hindered by something over which he had no control. If the condition of the roads were such that he could not drive he quite often walked the whole distance to be able to be in his place. On November 29, 1838, he was married to Amanda Brady, daughter of Alexander and Achsah ( Appleton) Brady, who helped and encouraged him in all duties, both spiritual and domestic. After his marriage he moved to the farm. which he had purchased a short time before, and which his son, Wilson B., now owns. He was a good, practical and prosperous farmer.
H. Martyn Mckinstry obtained his educa- tion at the local school and remained on the home farm, being associated with his brother in its management until 1893. On January 19, 1893, he married Mattie L., daughter of John B. and Adeline E. (Hoover) Walter, born March 9, 1862. Her father, John B. Walter, was born and reared where his daughter was born. in Warrington township. February 14, 1835, and was a son of Samuel and Deborah (Brunner) Walter, and grandson of George Walter. He was a practical and active business man and a prominent member of the Reformed church. He died June 14, 1900. aged sixty-five years. He married on December 2. 1856, Adeline E., daughter of Frederick and Maria (Fleck) Hoover, and
granddaughter of Philip and Mary (Con- rad) Hoover, of one of the oldest and most prominent Pennsylvania German families of the vicinity.
After his marriage H. Martyn Mckinstry purchased a farm belonging to his father's estate, about one mile north of the village of Warrington, where he still resides and on which he has since made many improve- ments. It is now one of the most convenient and comfortable homes in the neighborhood, the house and barn being supplied with water and the house heated throughout. Another of the modern conveniences of this home is the telephone of the local tele- phone company, of which Mr. H. Martyn Mckinstry is the president. He is a mem- ber of the Neshaminy Presbyterian church and in 1890 was elected a trustee and in 1904 he was elected an elder, which offices he still fills. H. Martyn and Mattie L. (Walter) Mckinstry have been the parents of three children : Frank R., born November 3, 1893; and Adeline W. and Amanda B., twins, born January 5, 1895. Adeline died at the age of two weeks.
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