• 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

Delilah Buchanan’s Tavern License Application

August 13, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in Hunterdon County Tags: Buchanan's Tavern, taverns

I sometimes lose track of the information I have collected in my researches. Today I stumbled across these photographs I took of Delilah Buchanan’s 1829 tavern license application, on file at the Hunterdon County Archives. Delilah Buchanan got a lot of my attention while researching Buchanan’s Tavern. (The series of articles can be found by clicking on the topic in the right-hand column.)

Continue reading »

Boarshead Tavern

August 9, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in E. T. Bush, Families, Heath, Historians Revisited, Lair, Lake, Moore, Raritan Township, Rittenhouse, Robins, Thatcher, Warford Tags: early settlers, land titles, taverns

Boarshead Tavern One of the Earliest to be Established
Efforts to Find How Long It Has Stood Have Been In Vain
Dr. Pyatt’s Varied Career

By Egbert T. Bush, Stockton, N.J.

Continue reading »

Samuel G. Opdycke Esq., continued

August 3, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Flemington, Hunterdon County, Opdycke Tags: crime and punishment, debt

For the first part of this story, please visit Samuel G. Opdycke Esq.

Samuel G. Opdycke was a young man of promise. Thanks to the Opdycke Genealogy, we have a description of what he looked like, and, even better, we have a portrait:

Continue reading »

Samuel Green Opdycke Esq.

July 13, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Flemington, Hunterdon County, Opdycke Tags: debt, Downtown Flemington, politics

“Ascending!

FINDING the room on the first floor of the Court House rather too much confined for an office, and the passage too much obstructed by lockage for the free ingress and egress of clients, I have selected, for a summer office, a beautiful airy chamber in the extreme front of the building. This pleasant apartment is situated immediately over the portico of this lofty edifice, and overlooks the main street of the village; After rising three inclined planes, clients will arrive at the summit level of my office; the door opens toward the east between two windows; No toll demanded until they arrive at the summit. – Passage back, free of expense; Samuel G. Opdycke, Flemington, May 19, 1830.”1

Continue reading »

The Jubilee Continues

July 3, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in Flemington, Hunterdon County, Lambertville Tags: politics, taverns, The Revolution

Liberty Pole copy

Now the fun begins–the 1826 Celebration of the Fourth of July in Flemington, NJ. (Part Two of the reprint of my article in the Hunterdon Historical Newsletter, Spring 2006. You can read Part One here.)

Continue reading »

The Jubilee of 1826

July 2, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in Flemington, Hunterdon County Tags: politics, taverns, The Revolution

In celebration of this year’s Fourth of July, it seems appropriate to reprint (in two parts, and slightly updated) my article published in the Hunterdon Historical Newsletter, in the Spring issue of 2006 (pp. 981, 983-87).

Continue reading »

Going Going Gone (3)

June 28, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Fulper, Trout Tags: architecture, early settlers, Going, houses, land titles

The Fulper House on Biser Road

This house is just about gone. It won’t be long. This past March, I wandered through the honeysuckle and multiflora to try to get some decent pictures, but wasn’t very successful. Sleeping Beauty would never be wakened in that place, it so well guarded by weeds and fallen trees. Sadly, what is probably the oldest part of the house has already caved in. If I could have gotten closer, I might have been able to see some of the old woodwork inside, but that just wasn’t possible.

Continue reading »

In My Library: Two Hunterdon Books

June 17, 2013 By Marfy Goodspeed in Hunterdon County, In My Library Tags: Buchanan's Tavern, Civil War, D&R Canal, quarries, railroads

Hunterdon County Needlework and Hunterdon County in the Civil War.

On Saturday (June 1st) I visited the Hunterdon County Historical Society in Flemington to see what had become of the familiar old Deats Memorial Library. Significant changes have been taking place there, triggered by the need to meet building requirements for handicap access. The results are impressive, and I am looking forward to spending time in these new digs.

Continue reading »
«‹ 46 47 48 49›»
GOODSPEED HISTORIES
  • Home
  • About
  • List of Posts
© GOODSPEED HISTORIES 2025
Powered by WordPress • Themify WordPress Themes

↑ Back to top