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{"id":3677,"date":"2012-06-22T13:51:55","date_gmt":"2012-06-22T17:51:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/?p=3677"},"modified":"2020-11-18T20:20:49","modified_gmt":"2020-11-19T01:20:49","slug":"the-last-chapter-of-the-saxtonville-mill","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/the-last-chapter-of-the-saxtonville-mill\/","title":{"rendered":"The Last Chapter of the Saxtonville Mill"},"content":{"rendered":"

After John R. Hamilton disappeared, leaving James Major, Mindert Wilson and Geo. Holcombe with the mill lot on their hands, the State Bank at New Brunswick\u00ac\u2020sued either James Major or Mindert Wilson (I\u201a\u00c4\u00f4m still not sure which) in chancery court for the outstanding mortgage. The court ruled in the Bank\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s favor, and issued a writ of fieri facias to seize the mill lot at Saxtonville “whereon Myndert Wilson formerly resided,” along with its appurtenances (dwelling house, grist mill and saw mills), and offer them for public sale. Sheriff John Cavanagh conducted the sale on March 17, 1820. John Bray Esq. bid on behalf of the bank, and the property was conveyed to the State Bank at New Brunswick on April 1, 1820 for $4000.1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

According to the deed, the mill was still encumbered by Wilson\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s mortgage of $6994.50\u00ac\u2020to George Holcombe.\u00ac\u2020By this time, there should have been no connection between George Holcombe\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s obligations and the mortgages on the mill lot. Perhaps James Major was having problems repaying Mindert Wilson after John R. Hamilton disappeared. At least we know where James Major went. By 1820, he and wife Fanny Major had left Hunterdon County behind, settling in South Brunswick. That year they sold their Kingwood property of 55 acres, and thereafter remained in South Brunswick until James Major\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s death in 1837.<\/p>\n

I doubt that the bank directors were pleased to have the mill lot on their hands. The Bank was unable to find a buyer for it until 1823, when Nicholas D. Baird, another \u201a\u00c4\u00famerchant of New Brunswick,\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 purchased the 10-acre lot and buildings for a mere $5,525. The deed stated it was the property on which Myndert Wilson had formerly resided in Saxtonville, but made no mention of either James Major or John R. Hamilton.2<\/a><\/sup> On the same day, April 21, 1823, Baird and his wife Susan got a mortgage from the bank for the full amount of the purchase, at 6% interest.3<\/a><\/sup> Security for the mortgage was John Baird of Montgomery Twp., probably the father of Nicholas D. Baird. The mortgage required that half of the amount be paid on March 1, 1824.<\/p>\n

Nicholas D. Baird<\/h3>\n

Nicholas D. Baird was born in April 1797 in Griggstown, Somerset County, to John Baird and Catherine DuBois; hence the “D.” in his name. He was only 26 years old when he bought the Saxtonville mill, and just recently married to his wife Susan.\u00ac\u2020They settled in the village and did their best to make the mill operation a success and to become part of the community. In 1825 Baird was named one of the Overseers of Roads for Amwell Township.<\/p>\n

One item of special interest that year was a meeting of the county board of freeholders in May at which Baird applied to view the road where it crosses the mouth of the \u201a\u00c4\u00faNiaaglan Creek\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 to see if a bridge was needed there. The freeholders agreed to meet at the house of William Johnson on June 2nd.4<\/a><\/sup> Johnson owned the tavern at Painter\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Ferry, and the fact that the freeholders met there rather than in the village at what we now call Saxtonville Tavern suggests the Tavern was not yet in operation. On the other hand, if \u201a\u00c4\u00faNiaaglan Creek\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 was actually the Lockatong Creek (which has a long history of odd misspellings), then it would make more sense to meet at Johnson\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Tavern, since it was closer to the creek.<\/p>\n

Matters got a little complicated for Baird in 1826, when he took his neighbors, William and Joseph Dilworth, to court for non-payment of debts. Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s attorney was Peter I. Clark of Flemington. The Dilworths owned Bull’s Island and were constructing a sawmill there. Perhaps they failed to pay Baird for lumber to construct their mill.\u00ac\u2020The Court ruled in Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s favor and ordered the Dilworth\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s property to be sold. Notice of this decision appeared in the Hunterdon Co. Gazette on Feb. 16, 1826, but no advertisement for a sale of the Dilworths\u201a\u00c4\u00f4 property appeared, and no deed of sale was recorded. The Dilworths must have managed to get some kind of settlement with Baird.<\/p>\n

In 1827 Baird witnessed the will of Robert Nailor who lived near Saxtonville. On July 18, 1827, Baird announced in the Gazette that he and his partner, Oliver Creed, operating under the name of Baird & Creed, were dissolving their partnership \u201a\u00c4\u00faby mutual consent,\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 and requested all those who wished to settle business with them to visit them at Bool\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Island. Once again, there was nothing further in the Gazette and we are left to speculate. It was probably in the mid 1820s that Baird built a linseed oil mill on his property at Saxtonville, a separate structure from the grain and saw mills.5<\/a><\/sup> Perhaps the business was run by Baird and Creed. Creed was from Trenton, and may have helped to market products from the Saxtonville mill.\u00ac\u2020He\u00ac\u2020appeared in the Trenton census records of 1830 and 1840.6<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

Baird tried other ways to earn money. In 1828, he got the patent rights for a cider maker which he advertised for sale in partnership with Isaac Lawshe.<\/p>\n

\u00ac\u2020\u201a\u00c4\u00faImportant to Cider Makers. The subscribers having purchased the patent rights of Farnham\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Greater Cider Mill, for the townships of Amwell and Kingwood, offer Rights for sale on reasonable terms, and to make machines, if required. Isaac Lawshe, Nicholas D. Baird.”7<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n

In 1828, when John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson were facing off in the presidential election, Baird began to dabble in politics. In April that year he was listed as a candidate for the County Board of Freeholders, although he failed to get elected.8<\/a><\/sup> In October, he joined the \u201a\u00c4\u00faCommittee of Vigilance\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 of the National Republican party, which was the party supporting President Adams. Baird was named a delegate to the Republican state convention in Trenton for that month.9<\/a><\/sup> Like Nathaniel Saxton, Baird wanted the federal government to spend more on canals, national roads and other improvements. But Saxton stayed away from party politics this year.<\/p>\n

1828 was a year of optimism for Baird. On April 28, 1828, he expanded his holdings by purchasing 55 acres from James McAllister, a farm that was once owned by James Major. It was not far from Raven Rock, and Baird paid about $780 for it. He financed the purchase with a mortgage, co-signed by Charles Bartles, from David Johnes who lived near Headquarters. Shortly afterwards, on May 1, 1828, Baird bought another property once owned by James Major, the farm of 64 acres in Kingwood on the Delaware River, which included a share in the Green Briar Fishery.10<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

In 1829, a cloud appeared on Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s horizon, in the form of a suit by James B. Cox to recover $2088 plus damages for failing to pay the State Bank at New Brunswick for the mortgage on the mill lot. Despite this, Baird continued to be involved in politics. He was one of many nominees for the State Assembly in September 1829. The following year, he was named a substitute delegate for the State Convention to be held in Trenton.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, things were moving slowly in the courts. A writ of fieri facias was issued by the Chancery Court on April 6, 1830 to levy on the mill property, but Baird must have found a way to put things off, as no action was taken immediately.11<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

In 1830, Nicholas D. Baird was counted in the Amwell Township census with a household of 10 people. The oldest resident in the household was a man in his 60s, living with a female in her 50s; there was a couple in their 20s, some children, and one free colored male who was probably working in the mill. Baird should have been around 32 years old in 1830, and wife Susan 31 years old. I have found no record of their having had children. (It is a great frustration that the 1830 census only names the head of household and none of the other residents. The census of 1850 suggests that Baird might have been born in 1801 rather than 1797.)<\/p>\n

Baird seems to have left no stone unturned in his effort to make a living from his properties. On March 26, 1831 he leased his sawmill to Richard Bennet.12<\/a><\/sup> The lease required that available water should go first to Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s linseed oil mill before being run to the sawmill.\u00ac\u2020But 1831 turned out to be a very bad year for Nicholas D. Baird. Tragedy struck on April 16th, when Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s wife Susan died in her early 30s. Her obituary was published in the Hunterdon Gazette on April 27th:\u00ac\u2020 \u201a\u00c4\u00faDied at Bool\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Island, on the 16th instant, Mrs. Susan Baird, wife of Mr. N. D. Baird, aged 31 years.\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 With the loss of his wife and his debts piling up, Baird became another in a long line of failures at the Saxtonville mill.<\/p>\n

Baird Loses the Mill Lot<\/h3>\n

In 1831, the mill lot was seized by the State Bank at New Brunswick, which placed this advertisement in the Emporium and True American on July 16, 1831:\u00ac\u2020 \u201a\u00c4\u00faSeized as the property of Nicholas D. Baird, Defendant, and taken in execution at the suit of the President, Directors and Company of the State Bank at New Brunswick, Complainant.\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 (It is odd that the sale was not advertised in the Hunterdon Gazette.)13<\/a><\/sup> Before the Sheriff\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s sale was held, a private conveyance was made by Baird on July 23, 1831 to James B. Cox, conveying Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s rights in the mill lot for $1000. The deed noted that the payment was \u201a\u00c4\u00fato go in part satisfaction of the claim of the said James B. Cox secured by mortgage on the premises –and that the said James B. Cox takes the property hereby conveyed subject to the mortgage of the State Bank at New Brunswick on said premises.\u201a\u00c4\u00f914<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

By now it was clear to all that Baird was unable to pay his debts. On August 10, 1831, the Gazette announced that a hearing was scheduled for September 17 in which a decision would be made whether or not Nicholas D. Baird (and several others) should be imprisoned for debt. Six days later, Sheriff Forman held his public sale for the mill property, at which James B. Cox was the highest bidder, offering $7100 for the same lot he had paid Baird $1000 for.15<\/a><\/sup> The deed was acknowledged before Thomas Gordon, master of the Chancery Court, on August 17. On August 23, James B. Cox and wife Frances N. Cox sold the mill lot to Robt. F. Stockton for $10,192.16<\/a><\/sup> This covered Cox\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s expenses of $1000 and $7100, leaving him a respectable profit of $2092.17<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

Nicholas D. Baird Departs<\/h3>\n

On August 27, 1831, the National Republicans of Amwell Township met to chose delegates to the county convention to be held on September 5th.18<\/a><\/sup> Despite his financial troubles, Baird was one of those named, along with John Barber, who was the executor of David Johnes deceased. Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s hearing for imprisonment for debt was supposed to be held on September 17th, but it appears that he managed to avoid that indignity.<\/p>\n

Instead, he had to face two lawsuits, one by his fellow-delegate John Barber to recover the mortgage that Baird had given David Johnes for a 55-acre farm in Kingwood Township, and one by James B. Cox for the mortgage on the 64-acre farm also located in Kingwood. The 64-acre farm and shares in the Green Briar fishery were sold at public auction to John Waterhouse Jr. of Kingwood for an amazing 25 cents.19<\/a><\/sup> The deed was dated January 2, 1832. The next year Barber\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s suit resulted in the public sale of Baird\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s 55 acres in Kingwood, formerly the property of James Major. The Chancery Court ruled in Barber\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s favor in February 1833, but the sale was not held until December 7, 1833, at the house of Richard Bennet, Innkeeper of Amwell, when Thomas Cherry of Kingwood paid $400 for the farm.20<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

During the time that Baird was waiting for the other legal shoe to fall, life in Saxtonville must have been messy and uncomfortable. Construction of the feeder canal had begun early in 1832. The feeder was the part of the canal that began at the northern end of Bull\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Island and used what had been Bull\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Creek, so the disruption extended the whole length of Bull\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Island.21<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

Along with the difficulties that canal construction must have created, there was something much worse. In the summer of 1832, cholera, which had traveled from Europe to America in 1831, finally broke out at Raven\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Rock and other sites along the canal. It\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s victims were mostly the canal workers, who\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s housing was less than adequate. Some of the workers died from the disease and were buried in unmarked graves north of Prallsville and other places along the canal. Ashbel Welch, who was in charge of canal construction at this time, acted quickly to establish public health policies that would contain the epidemic. These measures worked, so that by the following summer the epidemic was over.<\/p>\n

Between the devastation wrought by the cholera epidemic and his own financial devastation, Nicholas D. Baird was probably not reluctant to leave Hunterdon County, just as so many other Raven Rock millers had before him. He was not that old by 1833, but he must have been much less ambitious than before. A man by the name of Nicholas D. Baird appears in the 1850 census for Mullica in Atlantic County, age 49, working as a schoolteacher and living in a hotel. It appears that by 1860 he was living in Hillsborough, Somerset County, but after that I cannot say. N. J. Death Records have a N. Dubois Baird, a married farmer, dying at the age of 57, but no date given, and a Nicholas D. Baird, single, dying on December 17, 1875 at the age of 82. Take your pick.<\/p>\n

The Canal Company<\/h3>\n

As noted before, James Cox did not buy the mill lot for himself. He bought it to recover the debts owed to him and to the State Bank at New Brunswick by Nicholas Baird, but he may also have been acting in cooperation with the Delaware & Raritan Canal Company. Almost immediately after acquiring the mill lot, he sold it to Robert F. Stockton, the president of the company.<\/p>\n

It is safe to assume that the Canal Company had no interest in running a mill. They advertised it for sale on December 2, 1834 in a newspaper I never would have found. Fortunately, Carter Litchfield did find the ad in The Camden Mail and New Jersey Advertiser. It advertised the \u201a\u00c4\u00faBull\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Island Mill Property . . . with Grist Mill, Saw Mill, four Dwelling Houses, a Stone Building formerly used as an Oil Mill, and a building formerly used as a Saw Mill, and also the Machinery belonging to the two latter buildings.\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 With totally unwarranted optimism, the ad continued: \u201a\u00c4\u00faThe above MILLS are at the head of the Delaware and Raritan Canal Feeder, and are well known to be among the best stands for business on the Delaware.\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 Those interested were invited to contact Ashbel Welch, Engineer, in Lambertville. According to Carter Litchfield, no sale ever took place. And no more milling either. The property remained in possession of Robert F. Stockton until long after his death in 1866.22<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n

Postscript: \u00ac\u2020An important resource is missing from this discussion, and that is the court records available at the Hunterdon Archives. If I had taken the time to check them, this article would be much more detailed and accurate, but it would have had to wait much longer to be published. I have also neglected the newspapers published in Trenton during this period, and am therefore especially grateful for the work that Carter Litchfield did during his last years, compiling a history of the linseed oil mills in New Jersey. His book will be published this year, thanks to the efforts of his friend Paul W. Schopp.<\/em><\/p>\n

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After John R. Hamilton disappeared, leaving James Major, Mindert Wilson and Geo. Holcombe with the mill lot on their hands, the State Bank at New Brunswick\u00ac\u2020sued either James Major or Mindert Wilson (I\u201a\u00c4\u00f4m still not sure which) in chancery court for the outstanding mortgage. The court ruled in the Bank\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s favor, and issued a writ […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[233,342,5,4,124],"tags":[178,125,91,219,9,45],"class_list":["post-3677","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-amwell-township","category-barber-families","category-delaware-township","category-hunterdon-county","category-raven-rock","tag-banks","tag-bulls-island","tag-dr-canal","tag-debt","tag-mills","tag-politics","has-post-title","has-post-date","has-post-category","has-post-tag","has-post-comment","has-post-author",""],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3677","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3677"}],"version-history":[{"count":133,"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3677\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":18264,"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3677\/revisions\/18264"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3677"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3677"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goodspeedhistories.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3677"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}