Growing family trees from leaves and branches. Finding lost relatives. Solving family mysteries. Concentrating in New Jersey and New York.
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Tuesday, October 6, 2015
New Jersey State Census 1905
Among the finds from my weekend trip to the Denville Historical Society and Musuem (New Jersey) were blank census pages for the New Jersey State census, year 1905. I have never physically seen a census page from any year, federal or state. This page seems too large and awkward to handle well. Perhaps this is one reason for the illegible handwriting that beleaguers census images.
Below is a picture with my hand so you can have a reference for the enormity of the page.
The 1905 New Jersey State census is indexed at FamilySearch.org. The actual images are not online anywhere that I know of.
Monday, October 5, 2015
Amanuensis Monday: Marriage record from book, 1861
This certifies
that Mr Edward C Peer and
Miss Sarah L
Miller were by me
united in marriage, according to the law of God and of the
State
of New Jersey at Orange,
Essex Co, N J
Augt 4, [18]61
Rev Wm D Hedden
Original at Denville Historical Society and Museum, October 3, 2015
Notes:
Sarah L Miller (18??-1919) (Gravestone has year of birth 1854. Must be earlier if marriage date is correct.)
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Locating a property from 1748
The past two Mondays featured transcriptions of property conveyances from 1748 in Morris County, New Jersey, when it was part of a colony of Great Britain. You can read about property records from the Colonial period at the New Jersey State Archives here. The collection is indexed online.
You can order a record to be mailed to you for $5.
Searching for Conrad Hopler (1730-1816), a 6X great grandfather of mine, lead to the two featured colonial deeds. Joseph "Hoppel" was Conrad's father. Frederick DeMouth was Conrad's father-in-law. The land was purchased before Conrad Hopler married Elizabeth DeMouth, forever tying the two lines. Were they connected before this marriage?
There are online mentions that Frederick DeMouth was a French Huguenot and the first settler of what is now Boonton Township in Morris County.
The brook called "Rottegie Vall" was intriguing. No mention of this brook online, but instead in a book called The History of Morris County, New Jersey, published by Munsell in 1882. Ancestry offers a digitized version, but my paper copy is much clearer (thank you MT).
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"A brook called by the Dutch Rotegeval, a branch of the Rockaway River." |
The will of Frederick Temouth (notice the variant spelling), was proved in 1766 and mentions several pieces of real property; one was near the Rockaway River. Another was a "plantation where I dwell, of 600 acres." This could be the 600 acre conveyance from 1748. If Frederick was "of Pequannock," these 600 acres could be in Pequanock. A land survey from this time period may be helpful. If anyone knows of one, please write in.
I don't know of Frederick DeMouth's burial place, but the DeMouth burial ground is in present-day Boonton.
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