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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/goodspeedhist/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114My 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.<\/p>\n
Andrew Bearder, Sr.\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s homestead farm was part of Jacob Snyder\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s 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<\/a>.)<\/p>\n <\/p>\n I have written about Daniel Robins before,1<\/a><\/sup> but just to review\u201a\u00c4\u00eeon November 19, 1709, Daniel Robins, Jr. of Freehold, Monmouth County bought 700 acres of unsurveyed land in Amwell from John Haddon (by his attorney, and son-in-law, John Estaugh) for \u00ac\u00a335.2<\/a><\/sup> Robins did not trouble himself to record deeds, so it is impossible to say exactly what he did with that property. He did make use of some of it for himself, but the rest was divided into smaller lots and sold, without any deeds being recorded. And Robins died in 1737 without writing a will, which also deprives us of information about his property.<\/p>\n What we can say for certain is that the Bearders, Andrew and Jacob, purchased the farm from William Barns\/Barnes. There are two sources for this statement. First, William Barns owned the farm in 1779 when the road return for the Locktown-Flemington Road was recorded.3<\/a><\/sup> Secondly, when Jacob Bearder wrote his will in 1833, he left to his three sons two farms. The first was the farm where his father lived (Block 14 lot 25). The other one (Block 14 lots 1 & 26) \u201a\u00c4\u00faadjoining it on the east side\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 was the one \u201a\u00c4\u00fathat my father and I purchased from William Barns as by deed will appear.\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 Sadly, that deed from William Barns has not appeared.<\/p>\n William Barnes was born about 1720\/22 to Samuel Barnes, who owned land a little north of Mount Airy on the Sandy Ridge-Mt. Airy Road. As you can see, the name was spelled in two different ways, and I tend to use whatever spelling was used in the source I rely on. You can take your pick as there was no consistency.\u00ac\u2020There are very few records for William Barns, but one curious item pertains to the will of Samuel Pitcock, “plantation man” of Amwell, made on November 25, 1742. Pitcock named his two sons, John and Thomas, but did not make them his executors, suggesting that the sons were still young. He also did not name his wife, suggesting that she had died. The executors he did name were his friends Thomas Kitchen and William Barnes. The will was proved in December 1742, but an account of the estate was not given until 1761 by William Barns, with a note explaining that \u201a\u00c4\u00faThomas Kitchin the other executor [was] rendered incapable by age.\u201a\u00c4\u00f9<\/p>\nDaniel Robins<\/h4>\n
William Barnes\/Barns<\/h4>\n