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Dr. Bowne’s Homestead

November 20, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Twp, Bowne Station, Historians, Hunterdon, J. M. Hoppock

This article is meant as a companion to the article by Egbert T. Bush, “The Daybooks of Dr. Bowne.” In this article, Mr. Hoppock goes on at some length about the first owner of the Bowne farm being Jacob Moore. Unfortunately, he was mistaken. As Mr. Bush wrote, Jacob Moore settled on what later became known as the Wagner farm (at Haines and Wagner Roads). The Bowne farm was first settled by Peter Moore, but Mr. Bush does not say when he settled there. It was certainly early, because Peter Moore’s executors (his three sons) sold the farm to Dr. Bowne in 1795.

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The Daybooks of Dr. Bowne

November 20, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Twp, Barber, Bowne Station, Delaware Twp, E. T. Bush, Historians, Hunterdon Tags: early settlers, maps, occupations, old ways

Recently I attended a workshop given by archivist Don Cornelius on the holdings of the Hunterdon County Historical Society. They are extensive, far more than I realized. Among them are the original daybooks of Dr. John Bowne of old Amwell Township, filled with the names of his patients and their treatment. These Daybooks are so important to genealogists that someone at the Historical Society has gone to the considerable effort of indexing the names into a card catalog, and—primitive as it may seem to be today—it’s a very useful genealogical tool for the time period of 1791 through 1857.

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The ‘Wickcheoche’ Tribe of Red Men

November 13, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Twp, Flemington, Hunterdon, Kitchen, Larison, Sergeantsville Tags: Indians, The Revolution

Many years ago, Bob Dilts wrote an article entitled “Sergeantsville’s a Nicer Name.”1 While describing George Fisher’s harness shop (pictured below), on the southeast corner of the main intersection, Dilts wrote a paragraph that really caught my attention:

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The Two John Barbers

November 7, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Barber, Bowne Station, Delaware Twp Tags: Civil War, politics

In the early 1860s, two men named John Barber got involved on opposite sides of the question – should the country support Lincoln’s prosecution of the Civil War, or should it not?1

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Ellicott’s Diary, August 1863

October 29, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Croton, Delaware Twp, Families, Warford Tags: Civil War

This is the last month of Benjamin H. Ellicott’s Diary. He continues to report on war news from his home in Baltimore, but, on August 18th he describes a visit to Croton, New Jersey on August 11th that leads him and wife Mary Ann Warford to decide to relocate there. But he does not explain why that decision was made. Perhaps they felt that the war was getting too close to them. Or maybe Mary Ann’s father, Elisha Warford, was asking them to come live with him.

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Much Mischief Was Blamed on a Witch

October 28, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in E. T. Bush, Historians Tags: old ways

The Good Old People Could Identify Her and Tell of Her Doings
She Rode on a Broomstick

by Egbert T. Bush, Stockton, N.J.
published in the Hunterdon County Democrat, May 1, 1930

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Democrats & Union Men, continued

October 27, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Barber, Buchanan, Delaware Twp, Fisher, Fulper, Hockenbury, Larison, Moore, Rittenhouse, Williamson, Wolverton Tags: Civil War

Here are some more of the Delaware Township gentlemen who took sides during the early years of the Civil War—men who joined the Democratic Club of Delaware Township in 1863, and also men living in the same vicinity who supported the Administration.1

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Ellicott’s Diary, July ’63 continued

October 23, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Warford Tags: Civil War, Ellicott's Diary

This is a continuation of the diary of Benjamin H. Ellicott of Baltimore during the events of the Civil War in 1863. During the latter half of July, the famous draft riots broke out in New York City, and later in the month, Ellicott describes a scene of violence in Baltimore. Meanwhile, Lee and his army become elusive, and the second blockade of Charleston is begun.1

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Ellicott’s Diary, July 1863, part one

October 16, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Warford Tags: Civil War, Ellicott's Diary

The Civil War Diary of Benjamin H. Ellicott continued

As the weather heated up in the summer of 1863, so did the Civil War, with the siege of Vicksburg finally completed, and then the momentous Battle(s) at Gettysburg. Benjamin Ellicott, writing from his home in Baltimore, struggled to make sense of what was happening, in an age when communications were still quite primitive, compared to our instant access to events. Despite telegrams and the telegraph, news was hard to get, and reliable news even harder. Ellicott’s journal shows us how different life is for civilians in a civil war compared to a war fought overseas, on someone else’s territory.1

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1863 Politics in Delaware Township

October 9, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Barber, Delaware Twp, Hockenbury, Hoppock, Sharp, Trout Tags: Civil War, politics

This article is a follow-up to the Democratic Club of Delaware Township, published last spring.

The previous article described the Club’s principles and resolutions, reflecting the alarm felt by Hunterdon Democrats at the war measures taken by President Lincoln. The article was published in the Hunterdon Historical Newsletter.1 But because of length restrictions, short biographies of the club’s officers had to be postponed to a future newsletter.

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