GOODSPEED HISTORIES
New Jersey History and Genealogy
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Home
  • About
  • Families
  • Localities
  • Index of Articles
  • Contact

Pysong & Peartree

December 1, 2017 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Twp, Bearder, Delaware Twp 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.

Continue reading »

Haddon Tract, part one

November 11, 2017 By Marfy Goodspeed in Amwell Twp, Hunterdon, 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.

Continue reading »

Who Was the Artist?

November 4, 2017 By Marfy Goodspeed in West New Jersey Tags: politics, proprietors

William ‘Kid’

William Kidd and Samuel Jennings

In the previous post, concerning the life and death of Capt. William Kidd, I speculated on who the person was who drew these pictures

Unfortunately, I was basing my conclusions on a faulty citation, which is an egregious error for an historian, amateur or not. I had concluded that the most likely person was John Tatham, who was not only an ardent opponent of Samuel Jennings, but also a strong supporter of Gov. Jeremiah Basse and of the claims of Daniel Coxe, and later the West Jersey Society, to vast tracts of land in West New Jersey. The circumstance I relied on to identify Tatham was my mistaken notion that the drawings were made on a blank page of the minute book of the West Jersey Board of Proprietors. And I made that mistake by relying on my memory rather than verifying the source.

Continue reading »
«‹ 68 69 70 71›»

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Stockton & Anderson, continued
  • Anderson v. Stockton
  • County House, Part Five
  • The Stewarts of Flemington
  • The Freeholders’ Surprise
  • A Tavern & A Courthouse
  • The County House
  • Larason’s Tavern
  • Pittstown Inn, part 3
  • Pittstown Inn, part two
GOODSPEED HISTORIES
  • Home
  • About
© GOODSPEED HISTORIES 2026
Powered by WordPress • Themify WordPress Themes

↑ Back to top