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The County House, part one

This is one of my favorite photographs.1 The building is Mount’s Hotel on Flemington’s Main Street, across from and a little north of the Union Hotel. It was replaced in the 1970s by the group of shops called ‘New Market,’ built by Don Shuman.

Larason’s Tavern

For some time, I have been writing articles about the early taverns in Hunterdon County, knowing how important they were to both travelers on Hunterdon’s earliest roads and the communities that built up around them. One of the taverns on my to-do list was Larason’s Tavern on the Old York Road north of Ringoes. Fortunately, […]

Beers-Stryker

Pittstown Inn, part 3

The history of the Pittstown Inn, from 1800 to 1880, includes the many residents of the Pittstown neighborhood.

Century Inn - featured

Pittstown Inn, part two

Following the Revolution, Moore Furman moved back to Trenton and left his Pittstown properties to son John & Benj. Guild, until it was time to build anew.

1778 Faden-Hoffs Map

Pittstown Inn, part one

The Pittstown Inn, once located in Hoff’s Town, was in business as early as 1754, and probably earlier.

Cornell-Pittstown map

Quakertown’s Taverns

The fact that a little village like Quakertown boasted two taverns in the early 1800s tells us how important they were to their communities.

Cherryville detail

Cherryville’s Tavern

Mr. Bush is an invaluable source for local history, but we don’t always agree.

1804Andreson1 copy

James Anderson’s Tavern

The tavern that predated the Klinesville tavern and the Point Tavern was just up the road in Cherryville.

The Sine Farm

March 10, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Dalrymple, Delaware Township, Holcombe, Kitchen, Moore, Rounsavell, Sandbrook, Sine, Sutton Tags: early settlers, Haddon Tract, land titles

For the final installment of my study of the Haddon Tract,1 I am turning to the remainder of the property that was left to Nicholas Sine. As a reminder, Nicholas Signe/Sayn/Sine was a partner with another German immigrant, Jacob Sniter, in the 1748 purchase of 1300 acres of the Haddon Tract, a 2,000-acre plot that was surveyed for John Haddon in 1711. Daniel Robins had purchased the other 700 acres.

Continue reading »

Buckwheat Cakes & Trimmer Stew

February 24, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in E. T. Bush, Historians Revisited

An interesting view of 19th century rural cooking from the perspective of one who grew up on it, and was able to compare it to the food available in the 1930s, when food processing had begun to be modernized. Commercial food production was just coming into its own back then. If Mr. Bush could take a stroll down the aisles of today’s supermarkets, he would be astonished, and probably dismayed. In many ways things have gotten worse.

But they have also gotten better, especially in Hunterdon County. We have access to wonderful locally grown produce and natural ingredients, especially in our many local farmers’ markets. And today there are many creative cooks who have figured out how to make better use of some of these ancient cooking techniques, as well as new ones.

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Hoppock Farm Over 600 Acres

February 17, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, E. T. Bush, Heath, Hoppock Tags: early settlers, Haddon Tract, land titles, roads

Not long ago I published some articles about properties located in what was once known as The Haddon Tract (The Haddon Tract, part one). Today’s article by Egbert T. Bush concerns a very large farm located in that tract that I have not yet written about. It was sold by Jacob Sniter and Nicholas Sayn to John Peter Foxe of Amwell, who subsequently sold it to Jost Hoppock in 1749.

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Tavernkeeper of Skunktown

February 3, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Families, Gordon, Kitchen, Lair, Lake, Rockafellar, Sergeantsville Tags: houses, taverns

Most of you, my dear readers, know that the famous Rockafellar family had its roots in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County. And we’re all familiar with one particular descendant of this German immigrant family, a man who prospered hugely from the opportunities afforded him in America—the famous John D. Rockafellar. Another descendant, although not a direct ancestor of John D., became the tavernkeeper at Skunktown (now known as Sergeantsville), and I am much more interested in him.

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Defying the Blizzard of ’88

January 20, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in E. T. Bush, Historians Revisited, Hunterdon County

We are getting some warmer days this weekend, and they are welcome after the very cold weather we’ve had lately. But cold as it was, it was nothing compared to the Blizzard of 1888, apparently the most intense weather ever experienced in Hunterdon County history. There are many stories and photographs depicting it, including this letter by Egbert T. Bush describing how he tried to defy it.

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Col. David Bishop

January 13, 2018 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County, Ringoes Tags: architecture, Going, houses, stores, The Revolution

For anyone traveling north on Route 579 from the village of Ringoes in East Amwell, Hunterdon County, there is a landmark that will surely catch your eye, standing opposite the old Bel-Del railroad station. It is a three-story house that was once a showplace but has been deteriorating for at least 25 years. People like me who have been watching it all this time marvel that it is still standing.

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Cornelius H. Barber

December 16, 2017 By Marfy Goodspeed in Barber, Delaware Township, Lambertville

Sometimes in my researches on Hunterdon people of the past, odd things turn up. Something very odd turned up when I came across Cornelius H. Barber, who lived from 1804 to 1884. I had been asked about the Prall tanyard, which was located a short distance south of Sergeantsville in the early 1800s, and discovered that Barber had briefly been an owner.

So let me tell you a little about Cornelius Hoppock Barber before describing the odd thing I found.

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The Barns-Bearder Farm

December 9, 2017 By Marfy Goodspeed in Bearder, Delaware Township, Fulper, Kitchen, Raritan Township, Robins, Rounsavell Tags: early settlers, Haddon Tract, houses, roads

My previous article discussed the Bearder family and the home of Andrew Bearder, Sr. on the Locktown Flemington Road. Just east of this farm was another tract that Bearder shared with his son Jacob, but whose ownership goes back much further.

Andrew Bearder, Sr.’s homestead farm was part of Jacob Snyder’s plantation. But the farm next to it on the east was part of the 700 acres first sold by the Haddons to Daniel Robins. (For background on the Haddons, see The Haddon Tract, part one.)

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Pysong & Peartree

December 1, 2017 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Township, Bearder, Delaware Township Tags: early settlers, Haddon Tract, houses, roads, The Revolution

This is part two of a series on some of the properties created in the Haddon Tract of Amwell Township, Hunterdon County.

Jacob Peter Sniter and Nicholas Sayn jointly purchased 1300 acres in Amwell Township from Elizabeth Haddon Estaugh in 1748. The two men sold off several lots and then divided the land remaining between them. Part One dealt with Nicholas Sayn/Sine, who acquired the southern half. This article deals with Jacob Peter Sniter who got the northern half.

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Haddon Tract, part one

November 11, 2017 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Township, Hunterdon County, Rounsavell, Sine, West New Jersey Tags: early settlers, Haddon Tract, land titles, maps, proprietors

I have recently finished reading a book titled Elizabeth Haddon Estaugh, 1680-1762, Building the Quaker Community of Haddonfield, New Jersey, 1701-1762, by Jeffery M. Dorwart and Elizabeth A. Lyons.

It is an excellent book, and I highly recommend it for anyone interested in the life of one of West New Jersey’s early settlers—a young woman who came to the Province on her own in 1701.

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