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The County House, Part Two

A Tavern & A Courthouse The history of a hotel that once stood on the west side of Flemington’s Main Street has quickly turned into something much more. Part One began with Flemington’s first European property owners and ended with the Revolution. This article goes on from there, but only as far as the 1790s, […]

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.

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 Civil War Tax Assessments

October 30, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Hunterdon County Tags: Civil War, taxes

Sometimes you stumble upon a source of information that just knocks your socks off. This is one.

I was researching some names in the Holcombe-Riverview cemetery north of Lambertville when Ancestry.com gave me a glimpse of this amazing source of information of which I was heretofore unaware. For learning about mid-19th century New Jersey residents, this just can’t be beat. I’m talking about the Civil War tax assessment lists that the National Archives have allowed Ancestry.com to digitize. Here’s a sample page:

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Archival Sources

October 29, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Bibliographies, Burlington County, West New Jersey

This article is waiting for some major updating.

Wills and Estates

“Burlington Records”

In this post [under “Early Estates”], I mentioned a source identified by William Nelson in Abstracts of Wills, N. J. Archives, as “Burlington Records.” This mystified me but I did not pursue it. Fortunately for me, a reader, Jeff Moore, took the trouble to visit the State Archives and ask Bette Epstein about it. She informed him that the record is titled “Burlington Records 1680.” Jeff referred me to this link on the NJDARM website where the Records are listed as Reel 6, GSU #459321. Jeff pointed out that the GSU number is the same as the Family History Catalog film number (“FHL”), and that a film of the records can be obtained from the Family History Library.

The Cemeteries of Delaware Township

October 20, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Kitchen Tags: "The Post", cemeteries

It’s mid-October and my thoughts turn to cemeteries. Some time ago I published several articles on the cemeteries of Delaware Township on the “The Delaware Township Post.” I would like to publish them here on my website also, with any additions or corrections that occur to me. The following (somewhat expanded) was published on the Post on January 8, 2008.

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James Wasse’s Surveys

October 17, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Burlington County, Gloucester County, Other Sources, West New Jersey Tags: early settlers, proprietors

Once again, Jerseyman has caught me by surprise. He has published a fascinating post relating to early maneuvering before the first Quaker settlers arrived in the Delaware River.

The blog is “History–Now and Then,” by “Jerseyman” and the post in question is The Best Laid Schemes o’Mice an’ Men, Gang aft Agley

Under instructions from the Quaker trustees, James Wasse and Richard Guy had a survey made by Richard Hancock, which was published by John Thornton and Robert Green and titled “A Mapp of Virginia Mary-land, New-Jarsey, New-York & New England,” probably around 1677 or 1678. It showed three designated areas for settlement, one being at “Bethlem” which became Gloucester, another called Antioch where Salem was located, and the third was 5000 acres at the Falls.

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John Reading’s Diary

October 17, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Township, In My Library, Reading Tags: land titles, surveying

This past Saturday, a group of Reading descendants, who have joined together as “The Mount Amwell Project,” gathered in Sergeantsville for one of their regular meetings. I was honored to be asked to speak to the group, and took the opportunity to try out on them a first chapter to a history of Delaware Township that focused on John Reading and his discovery of “Mount Amwell.”

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West New Jersey, 1689, Part Two

October 5, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Burlington County, Gloucester County, Reading, West New Jersey Tags: Daniel Coxe, early legislation, early settlers, land titles, proprietors, surveying

The Council of Proprietors’ Other Business

During their meetings held in 1688 and 1689, the Council of Proprietors was setting up rules for how surveys would be obtained, and naming registrars for Burlington and Gloucester counties, who were Samuel Jennings and John Reading, respectively. They did not act for Salem County because it was still under John Fenwick’s control. But there were other matters to attend to.

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West New Jersey, 1689 – Part One

September 29, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Reading, West New Jersey Tags: Daniel Coxe, early legislation, thoughts

I read recently that whatever is on your mind when you’re falling asleep or washing the dishes or taking a walk is probably what is most important to you, and until you resolve whatever you are pondering, you can’t focus well on anything else. My particular distraction was moving my history office from Washington, DC to Sergeantsville, NJ. I simply could not think of anything else until the move was made. Now that I’ve arrived and unpacked, and have only some filing to do, my thoughts are returning to West New Jersey.

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J. M. Hoppock: The Old Opdyke House

August 22, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, Headquarters, J. M. Hoppock, Opdycke Tags: early settlers, houses, mills, The Revolution

by Jonathan M. Hoppock
published July 27, 1905 in the Democrat-Advertiser

The John Opdycke House in 1905

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Benjamin Tyson’s Mill

August 22, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Delaware Township, E. T. Bush, Families, Headquarters, Historians Revisited, Kitchen, Opdycke Tags: land titles, mills, roads

Mr. Bush is seldom wrong but in this case the headline writer and Mr. Bush were both mistaken about disclosing the location of Tyson’s Mill, but certainly correct about the meagerness of the old records. For my version of this mill’s history, see Tyson’s Mill at Headquarters.

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Tyson’s Mill at Headquarters

August 22, 2010 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Township, Delaware Township, Headquarters, Howell, Opdycke, Reading Tags: "The Post", early settlers, mills, The Revolution

Modified from part of an article first published in The Delaware Township Post, July 21, 2006, as “A History of Headquarters Mill.”

John Opdycke sold Headquarters Mill to Joseph Howell in 1763, at the end of the French and Indian War. This was probably a shrewd decision on Opdycke’s part, since demand for flour would certainly drop off with the end of the war.

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