• Home
  • Subscribe to Email Newsletter
  • Contact
GOODSPEED HISTORIES
New Jersey History and Genealogy
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
RSS
  • About
  • List of Posts
  • Families
  • Localities
  • Index of Articles

The Rounsavell Tree

June 15, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Rounsavell Tags: family trees

The Rounsavells originated in England before coming to Stratford, Connecticut, then to Southampton, Long Island, and finally to Hopewell, New Jersey in the early 18th century. That first couple to settle in Hopewell was Richard (1658-1704) and Hannah Rounsavell. I have begun this tree with their son Richard (c.1695-1775), even though they had one other son, Benjamin, and a daughter Martha. It was this second Richard who settled in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County.

Continue reading »

Martin Kaffitz & Hattie Fritts

June 9, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Glen Gardner, Hunterdon County

Martin Kaffitz & Hattie Fritts

While researching for my article on the Rake Cemetery part two, I came upon one Philip Kaffitz who married into the Sergeant family. Knowing next to nothing about him, I checked on the abstracts of the Hunterdon Republican newspaper compiled by Bill Hartman.

Continue reading »

Wolvertons aka Kallikaks

June 2, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Hopewell Township, Wolverton

Emma W icon

or The Misuse of Genealogy

 

On May 29th, my son, Carl Zimmer, published a book titled She Has Her Mother’s Laugh: The Powers, Perversions and Potential of Heredity. This is a book that all genealogists and geneticists will love. (I’m not biased at all!) And there is a special reason for New Jersey genealogists to love it.

In his chapter concerning Mendelian eugenics, Carl wrote about Henry Goddard of the Vineland Training School in south Jersey, and his study of one particular family that proved to him that feeble-mindedness and “moral degeneracy” were inherited. A member of that family was institutionalized at the school, which was established to care for “mentally-defective” children.

Continue reading »

The Woolverton/Wolverton Tree

June 2, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Wolverton Tags: family trees

The Wolverton family of New Jersey began with Charles Wolverton and Mary Chadwick, who first settled in Burlington County in the late 1690s and came to Amwell Township as early as 1714, one of the very first families to settle in present day Hunterdon County. They quickly became one of the most prominent and widespread families in the County.

This tree was updated 11/25/2020.

Continue reading »

Rake Cemetery, part two

May 25, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Families, Godown, Gordon, Lake, Rounsavell, Sandbrook Tags: cemeteries

Gordon Mary 1

Burials in the Rake Cemetery

In 1922, Hunterdon historian Hiram Deats visited the Rake Cemetery. He found 44 unlettered stones and 25 lettered ones. Those 25 stones were listed in the Hunterdon Historical Newsletter (vol. 3 no. 3, p. 2) and are give here.

Continue reading »

Lake Family Tree

May 25, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Lake Tags: family trees

The first of the Lake family to arrive in America was John Lake and wife Ann Spicer, who came from Hertfordshire to Gravesend, New York. John Lake died there in 1696, wife Ann died about 1709. I have very little information about this first family. The had 8 children, as seen below, stayed mostly in New York. Son John Lake, Jr. and wife Neeltje came to New Jersey.

Continue reading »

Gordon Family Tree

May 25, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Gordon Tags: family trees

The Gordon family of Hunterdon County is connected back to Thomas Gordon of Scotland (1652-1722) who emigrated as one of the early proprietors to Perth Amboy, with his second wife Jannette Mudie. Of her six children, son Thomas acquired land in Amwell Township in 1722, and will be treated here as the first generation.

Continue reading »

Godown Family Tree

May 25, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Godown Tags: family trees

The first of the Godown family to appear in Hunterdon County was Jacob Godown, born about 1675. He was present in Burlington County in 1703 when he was listed in the accounts of the estate of Joseph Adams. But at the time, Hunterdon did not yet exist.

Continue reading »
«‹ 21 22 23 24›»
GOODSPEED HISTORIES
  • Home
  • About
  • List of Posts
© GOODSPEED HISTORIES 2025
Powered by WordPress • Themify WordPress Themes

↑ Back to top