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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 6114A response to the article by Egbert T. Bush on August 7, 1930 titled Anyone who has attempted to sort out land titles in the 18th<\/sup> century, particularly in New Jersey, knows what frustration is. It\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s true, there are some records, but they are so incomplete, so full of hints that can\u201a\u00c4\u00f4t be verified, that I feel just a little uneasy about the claims I am about to make. But make them I will.<\/i><\/p>\n When Isaac Robins, son of Daniel Robins Jr., wrote his will in 1741, he left his homestead plantation of 200 acres in Amwell Township to his sons Vincent and Joseph, and named his wife Azubia and \u201a\u00c4\u00fafriends\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 Job Robins and Amos Thatcher his executors. Job Robins was actually his brother, and Amos Thatcher probably his brother-in-law.\u00ac\u2020They both lived at Sergeantsville. One of the witnesses was Amos Thatcher\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s wife Lydia. Amos Thatcher was probably the brother of Azubia Robins; their father was Bartholomew Thatcher, one of the most notable early settlers in Hunterdon County.<\/p>\n The 200 acres that Isaac Robins left to his sons Vincent and Joseph was up on Robins Hill. We know this because in 1737, Isaac Robins had gotten a mortgage on this land and it was bordered by Thomas Kitchen, Gov. Penn and John Haddon, among others.1<\/a><\/sup> It was described as \u201a\u00c4\u00fabeing part of a large tract of land formerly surveyed for said Haddon, being that plantation that Daniel Robins dec\u201a\u00c4\u00f4d, father of the said Isaac Robins, formerly lived upon.\u201a\u00c4\u00f9\u00ac\u2020Sons Vincent and Joseph Robins apparently had no use for this property, so they sold it to their uncle, Job Robins.2<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n
\n\u201a\u00c4\u00faBuchanan\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s, A Tavern With A Long History<\/a>\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 and\u00ac\u2020a continuation from Part One<\/a>,\u00ac\u2020A History of the Old Stone House on Robins Hill (Raritan Twp. Block 60 lot 40)<\/p>\nThe Robins Heirs<\/h3>\n