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Pine Hill Cemetery, Revisited

August 30, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Gordon, Sergeant, Sergeantsville, Williamson Tags: cemeteries

Pine Hill Cemetery is one of the most interesting of the old family burial grounds in Hunterdon County. I have written about it before, in an article that listed the known graves with some biographical information.  But I had just scratched the surface; there is so much more to be said.

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Ellicott’s Diary, February 1863

August 29, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Warford Tags: Civil War, Ellicott's Diary

A difficult month in a difficult year. Benjamin H. Ellicott’s diary, continued, brings us close to the trials and tribulations of Americans in the middle of their Civil War.1 Previously, I omitted Ellicott’s comments on the weather, but this time I’ve decided to keep them; they seem to enhance the immediacy of time. It’s February, after all, not August.

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Fisher-Reading Mansion

August 16, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Fisher, Flemington, Hunterdon County, Larison, Reading Tags: architecture, Downtown Flemington, Going, houses, portraits

The Reading Mansion
The Fisher-Reading Mansion at 119 Main Street, Flemington, NJ, 
photograph by the Historic American Buildings Survey, 1936

Beautiful, isn’t it? One of the most extraordinary buildings to be found in Flemington, a town with more than its share of great old buildings. It is an outstanding example of Greek Revival architecture.1

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Rittenhouse Road

August 8, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Rittenhouse, Sergeantsville Tags: early settlers, maps, roads

Map of Rittenhouse and Buchanan Roads, from Google Maps
Map of Rittenhouse and Buchanan Roads, from Google Maps

There is an odd sort of road in Delaware Township, running south from Sergeantsville, that I have often wondered about. It is called Rittenhouse Road, and for much of its length, it runs straight as an arrow, then suddenly does a zigzag before ending at Sandy Ridge Road.

Quite often the very straight roads in Hunterdon County were created as a result of the early, large proprietary tracts that forced roads to run along their borders. But that is not the case here. This road ran through the middle of Daniel Robins’ 700+ acres, surveyed in 1722.

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A Barn Raising Was A Big Event

August 1, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in E. T. Bush, Fulper, Green, Historians Revisited, Rittenhouse, Sergeantsville Tags: architecture, old ways

Feeding Fifty Men Was Not Uncommon on Such an Occasion
Eatables in Great Abundance

by Egbert T. Bush, Stockton, N.J.
originally published by the Hunterdon Co. Democrat, July 24, 1930

Note: I have included the punctuation as it appeared in the original article, even though I disagree with the editor’s use of commas, and wonder if that was how Mr. Bush wrote it. Also, when Mr. Bush refers to “the young generation,” he means people born in the late-19th and early 20th-century. Mr. Bush was born in 1848.

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Old Barns Were Built For The Ages

July 25, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in E. T. Bush, Historians Revisited Tags: architecture, old ways

Processes of Lining, Scoring, Boring and Hewing Described
‘The Big Thrashing Floor’

by Egbert T. Bush, Stockton, N. J.
published in the Hunterdon County Democrat, July 17, 1930

There is no genealogy in this article; it is simply about how to build a barn.

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Ellicott’s Diary, January 1863

July 18, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Warford Tags: Civil War, Ellicott's Diary

I have previously published excerpts from the diary of Benjamin H. Ellicott, describing how he and wife Mary Ann Warford traveled from their home in Baltimore to Flemington, and then Locktown, to escape the difficulties of the Civil War, and how they decided to return to Baltimore after a few months.

The Ellicott Diary continues through the year 1863, describing the events of the War as seen through the eyes of a southerner who supported the Union cause, but disagreed heartily with the Lincoln administration. He was very much in sympathy with the Locktown Copperheads and members of the Delaware Township Democratic Club.

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Rittenhouse Cemetery, part two

July 10, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Families, Howell, Hunterdon County, Prallsville, Rittenhouse Tags: cemeteries

This is the conclusion of my article on the Rittenhouse Cemetery overlooking Prallsville, on the border between Delaware Township and Stockton Borough. For a discussion of the earliest stone and of the history of its ownership, see Rittenhouse Cemetery, part one.

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The Rittenhouse Cemetery, part one

July 3, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Green, Howell, Prallsville, Reading, Rittenhouse Tags: cemeteries

Several years ago (in 2007), me and my cemetery buddies (pardon the grammar) visited the mysterious and lovely Rittenhouse Cemetery overlooking the old Prallsville quarry. I have wanted to write about this place for some time, but put it off because of concern that by making it known it would be more vulnerable to vandals. It appears that my restraint did not make much difference. Bob Leith visited recently and found one of the stones with graffiti and another one with a shotgun blast to its face. So, there is not much point in secrecy anymore. But there is another reason why I am inspired to write about the cemetery now. It has to do with the oldest stone there.

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The Kitchen Cemetery

June 27, 2015 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Kitchen, Sandbrook, Thatcher Tags: cemeteries

Also known as the Thatcher Cemetery,
but is not to be confused with the Thatcher Burying Ground in Sergeantsville.

One of the most interesting private cemeteries in Delaware Township lies hidden among the trees on an old farm located near Routes 523 and 579. In 1931, Egbert T. Bush wrote that half of the cemetery was located on the Thatcher farm and half on a farm owned by A. J. Dalrymple. Bush identified a few of the stones, and on a visit in 1995 I found a few more, for a total of 18 gravestones with initials.1

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