Who are the parents of Reuben Levy Bishop, my fourth great grandfather? He died in Morristown, Morris County, New Jersey in 1856, age 52.
In the prior post I demonstrated why the father of Reuben is likely not Stratton Bishop (1760-1823) of Bridgeton in Cumberland County, New Jersey.
Reuben Bishop married Susan C Bell in the 1830s. Her parents were John Bell and Jane Bockoven- according to her 1881 marriage record to Edward deGroot.
From this union five children have been identified:
1. Mary Jane Bishop, born about 1836, died in 1910. Married Edward Skinner in 1854.
2. Emma Louisa Bishop, born about 1839, died in 1888. Married Silas Totten in 1856.
3. Julia Bishop, born about 1841, died in 1902. Married George Joseph Ward and William Condon.
4. William Reuben Bishop (my third great grandfather), born about 1842, died in 1915. Married Susan Jane Marsh.
5. George F Bishop, born in 1848, died 1919. Married Mary E Frances Garrabrant.
In the 1840 census, "Rheubin" Bishop was enumerated in Morris Township, Morris County, New Jersey. Two adults, one male and one female, resided with two female children under age 5. These were probably Mary Jane, born around 1836, and Emma Louisa, born around 1839.
1840 United States Federal Census Morris Township, Morris County, New Jersey |
Reuben Bishop, age 8, is William Reuben Bishop |
Register of Marriages and Deaths, Morris County, New Jersey, 1848-1867. Volume Z. |
When Reuben Bishop died in 1856, New Jersey was not issuing individual certificates. A record of his death was entered as a single line in a ledger book. (This ledger book, Volume Z, appears at Ancestry in the collection titled New Jersey, U.S., Death Index, 1848-1878, 1901-2017.) His occupation was listed as Hostler. This was someone who either tended to horses or transported cargo.
His birthplace could hold the best clue. Reuben was born in "one of the Eastern States." Hmm. So not New Jersey? We will return to this.
Places of burial are not listed on this page in the death ledger. A cemetery is also omitted from the death notice in the local paper. A possible match is in Evergreen Cemetery in Morristown, Morris County, New Jersey.
findagrave.com/memorial/173374681/ |
The date of death is off by one day. Curiously, the burial date was years later in 1873.
I called and visited Evergreen Cemetery. The records, if any exist, cannot be shown to me. The staff did kindly bring me to this site in Section O. There is no marker for Rueben Bishop.
I wrote to the creator and manager of this memorial on Find A Grave, but have yet to receive responses. How did this person access this record? Where was Reuben from 1856, when he died, until 1873, when he was buried at this location? (I submitted updates to other memorials managed by this person. The changes were made on September 14, 2024. Thus, someone is monitoring the account.)
Materials for Evergreen Cemetery are available for in-person use at the Morristown and Morris Township Library in the Caroline Rose Foster North Jersey History and Genealogy Center. Among the items are maps, section maps, transcriptions of gravestones, and published books.
Section map of Evergreen Cemetery, Morristown, New Jersey available at the Morristown and Morris Township Library |
Section O map, Evergreen Cemetery, Morristown, New Jersey. Ruben Bishop owned plot 53. |
1- William Bishop (1768-1844) and his wife, Susan Scofield (1773-1852), were buried at First Presbyterian Churchyard in Morristown. They were from Connecticut.
Bishop family grave at First Presbyterian Churchyard, Morristown, Morris County, New Jersey. |
William Bishop and Susannah Scofield married March 31, 1796 in Stamford, Fairfield County, Connecticut. Transcription. Collection at Ancestry |
Was my Reuben from Connecticut also? Is this why his death record listed his birth as "one of the Eastern States?"
My Reuben named a son William.
2- An earlier Reuben Bishop of Morris County.
In 1829 Reuben Bishop sold property in Chatham to Vincent Boisaubin and Dr Henry Prentiss Green.
Reuben Bishop appeared on an 1814 tax list in Chatham. He owned one horse.
3- Levi Bishop and family were enumerated in the 1855 New Jersey State census in Chatham. Only heads of household are named. In this residence were an adult male and female, two female children, and two male children.
I wonder if this is my Reuben Levy Bishop listed by his middle name.
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