Information: The first column shows data points from Pennington, William, 1796-1862 in red. The third column shows data points from Pennington, William David. in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
William Pennington (May 4, 1796 – February 16, 1862) was an American politician and lawyer, the Governor of New Jersey from 1837 to 1843, and served as Speaker of the House during his one term in Congress.
Born in Newark, New Jersey, he graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in 1813 and then studied law with Theodore Frelinghuysen. He was admitted to the bar in 1817 and served as a clerk of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (where his father was a judge) from 1817 to 1826.
As a member of the Whig party, he was elected to the New Jersey General Assembly in 1828, and then was elected Governor of New Jersey annually from 1837 to 1843. His tenure as governor was marked by the "Broad Seal War" controversy. Following a disputed election for Congressional Representatives in New Jersey, Pennington certified the election of five Whig candidates while five Democrats were certified by the Democratic Secretary of State. After a lengthy dispute, the Democrats were eventually seated.
In November 1858, Pennington was elected as a Republican to represent New Jersey's 5th congressional district in the U.S. House during the 36th Congress. Following a protracted election for speaker of the House of Representatives, 44 ballots over the course of eight weeks (December 5, 1859 through February 1, 1860), he was elected to the post. This was the third time since 1789 that the House elected a freshman congressmen as its speaker (after Frederick Muhlenberg in 1789 and Henry Clay in 1811); such a feat has not been repeated since.
In March 1861 he penned his name on the Corwin Amendment, a proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution shielding state "domestic institutions" (slavery) from the constitutional amendment process and from abolition or interference by Congress. Submitted to the states for ratification shortly before the outbreak of the Civil War, it was not ratified by the requisite number of states.
After running unsuccessfully for reelection in 1860 to the 37th Congress, he returned to New Jersey. He died in Newark of an unintentional morphine overdose and was interred at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Newark.
Wikipedia article, William Pennington, accessed July 20, 2020
<p>William Pennington (May 4, 1796 – February 16, 1862) was an American politician and lawyer, the Governor of New Jersey from 1837 to 1843, and served as Speaker of the House during his one term in Congress.</p>
<p>Born in Newark, New Jersey, he graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in 1813 and then studied law with Theodore Frelinghuysen. He was admitted to the bar in 1817 and served as a clerk of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (where his father was a judge) from 1817 to 1826.</p>
<p>As a member of the Whig party, he was elected to the New Jersey General Assembly in 1828, and then was elected Governor of New Jersey annually from 1837 to 1843. His tenure as governor was marked by the "Broad Seal War" controversy. Following a disputed election for Congressional Representatives in New Jersey, Pennington certified the election of five Whig candidates while five Democrats were certified by the Democratic Secretary of State. After a lengthy dispute, the Democrats were eventually seated.</p>
<p>In November 1858, Pennington was elected as a Republican to represent New Jersey's 5th congressional district in the U.S. House during the 36th Congress. Following a protracted election for speaker of the House of Representatives, 44 ballots over the course of eight weeks (December 5, 1859 through February 1, 1860), he was elected to the post. This was the third time since 1789 that the House elected a freshman congressmen as its speaker (after Frederick Muhlenberg in 1789 and Henry Clay in 1811); such a feat has not been repeated since.</p>
<p>In March 1861 he penned his name on the Corwin Amendment, a proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution shielding state "domestic institutions" (slavery) from the constitutional amendment process and from abolition or interference by Congress. Submitted to the states for ratification shortly before the outbreak of the Civil War, it was not ratified by the requisite number of states.</p>
<p>After running unsuccessfully for reelection in 1860 to the 37th Congress, he returned to New Jersey. He died in Newark of an unintentional morphine overdose and was interred at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Newark.</p>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Pennington
eng
Latn
Citation
Source
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Pennington
0
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress biography, William Pennington, accessed July 20, 2020
PENNINGTON, WILLIAM, (cousin of Alexander Cumming McWhorter Pennington), a Representative from New Jersey; born in Newark, N.J., May 4, 1796; completed preparatory studies; was graduated from Princeton College in 1813; clerk of the United States district court 1815-1826; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Newark in 1820; member of the State general assembly in 1828; served as sergeant at law in 1834; Governor of New Jersey from 1837 to 1843; appointed Governor of Minnesota Territory by President Fillmore but declined to accept; elected as a Republican to the Thirty-sixth Congress (March 4, 1859-March 3, 1861); Speaker of the House of Representatives (Thirty-sixth Congress); unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1860 to the Thirty-seventh Congress; died in Newark, N.J., February 16, 1862; interment in Mount Pleasant Cemetery.
Vroom, Peter Dumont, 1791-1873. Papers, 1820-1893.
Title:
Papers, 1820-1893.
Correspondence, diaries, case files, and other papers, reflecting Vroom's career as a lawyer in Schooleys Mountain, Hackettstown, Flemington, Somerville, and Trenton, N.J., state legislator, governor, congressman, U.S. minister to the court of Prussia (1854-1857), and law reporter for the New Jersey Supreme Court (1865-1873), and his activities in the Whig Party and Dutch Reformed Church.
Vroom, Peter Dumont, 1791-1873. Papers, 1820-1893.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
referencedIn
Papers, 1789-1899.
Clement, John, 1769-1855. Papers, 1789-1899.
Title:
Papers, 1789-1899.
Personal legal and financial documents; papers created and acquired as executor or administrator of several estates; papers as legal agent for others (including absentee property owners); papers relating to Clement's judicial career; documentation of Clement's militia activities; and other papers. Also included are miscellaneous papers of his descendants, including a son of the same name.
ArchivalResource:
Sorted items: 1.2 cubic ft. (3 boxes)Unsorted items: ca. 1.6 cubic ft.
Correspondence, legal papers, court records, sermons, and genealogical material. Persons represented include Josiah Hornblower (1729-1809), British engineer who constructed the first steam engine in America at John Schuyler's copper mine in Belleville, N.J., and served as a member of the New Jersey Legislature (1779-1780) and New Jersey Council (1781-1784); Joseph C. Hornblower (1777-1864), Newark lawyer, who served as chief justice of New Jersey Supreme Court (1832-1846), was active in home and foreign missionary societies, and was the first president of New Jersey Historical Society; and his son, William H. Hornblower (1820-1883), pastor, First Presbyterian Church of Paterson (1844-1871), and professor of sacred rhetoric, pastoral theology, and church government at Western Theological Seminary of the Presbyterian Church, Allegheny, Pa. (1871-1883). Includes letters of D.S. Baldwin, John Beatty, John L. Blake, Joseph P. Bradley, Abraham Brittin, Peter Carter, Salmon P. Chase, Samuel H. Cox, William L. Dayton, Benjamin Drew, Richard Stockton Field, Charles Hodge, William Holmes, C.W. Hornblower, Jonathan Hornblower, William Churchill Houston, Thomas D. Hoxsey, John Kinney, Jr., Charles Kip, Nicholas Longworth, Joseph Mico, James S. Nevius, William C. Noyes, David Bayard Ogden, William Pennington, Henry W. Pickering, Caleb S. Riggs, Sylvester D. Russell, Gerrit Smith, Henry Van Dyke, Jr., L.A. Ward, Ira C. Whitehead, William A. Whitehead, and Philip Williams.
Record of a testimonial dinner in Jersey City, April 20, 1853, held to honor Gregory upon his retirement from politics and his announced intention of removing to New York City.
Bradley, Joseph P., 1813-1892. Joseph P. Bradley papers, 1836-1943.
Title:
Joseph P. Bradley papers, 1836-1943.
This collection consists of items from Joseph P. Bradley, his son Charles Bradley, and his daughter Caroline Bradley Hornblower, as well as his grandson Joseph Gardner Bradley. The majority of the material is from Joseph P. Bradley, from 1836-1892, and consists of correspondence, diaries, law practice and case notes, court opinions and records, searches, deeds, wills, statements and a legal directory. There are writings on non-legal subjects, as well as speeches, written articles, and ephemera. Materials relating to Bradley's nomination to the Supreme Court, including a letter of recommendation from Frederick T. Frelinghuysen to President Ulysses Grant, are also included. In addition to correspondence between members of the Bradley family, the collection also includes letters from Chester A. Arthur, John Jacob Aster, Robert F. Ballantine, Hamilton Fish, Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, Benjamin Harrison, John Cotton Dana, Joseph C. Hornblower, Cortlandt Parker, William Pennington, John P. Stockton, William Howard Taft, and Peter D. Vroom. Major court cases documented in the legal records includes those involving the American Telegraph Co., the Morris Canal, the Camden and Amboy Railroad and the Delaware and Raritan Canal.
Bradley, Joseph P., 1813-1892. Joseph P. Bradley papers, 1836-1943.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
referencedIn
Papers, 1836-1937.
Bradley, Joseph P., 1813-1892. Papers, 1836-1937.
Title:
Papers, 1836-1937.
Correspondence, diaries (1843-1891), speeches, journal of law cases (1842-1869), legal papers, genealogical material, and other papers. Other correspondents include Melville W. Fuller, Archer Gifford, Horace Grey, John Marshall Harlan, Benjamin Harrison, Joseph Henry, George F. Hoar, Joseph C. Hornblower, William Hornblower, John P. Jackson, James G. King, Thomas T. Kinney, L.Q.C. Lamar, Martha J. Lamb, S.P. Langley, Robert Todd Lincoln, Arthur MacArthur, A.W. Markley, Weir Mitchell, Lot M. Morrill, Franklin Murphy, William Nelson, Cortlandt Parker, William Pennington, Benjamin Perley Poore, Rodman M. Price, Theodore F. Randolph, Charles H. Reed, George M. Robeson, Elihu Root, Martin Ryerson, Carl Schurz, Thomas Scott, John Sherman, Benjamin Silliman, Jr., Ellen L. Stanton, R.H. Stevens, John P. Stockton, Robert Field Stockton, William Howard Taft, Peter D. Vroom, Morrison Remick Waite, John Wanamaker, Marcus L. Ward, Stephen Wickes, Joseph G. Wilson, and Beatrice Winser. Correspondence is indexed in the manuscripts catalog.
Chiefly legal papers relating to Dodd's law practice and his activities as prosecutor of the pleas for Essex County, member of the New Jersey General Assembly (1826-1827) and Senate (1829), judge advocate of the Essex Brigade of Militia (1810-1823), and as a Freemason and National Republican.
Jackson, John Peter, 1805-1861. Correspondence, 1828-1860.
Title:
Correspondence, 1828-1860.
Chiefly letters received by Jackson; together with one from him to his daughter, Mary (Jackson) Henry. Correspondents include Henry Clay, Philemon Dickerson, Edward Everett, Cyrus W. Field, Hamilton Fish, Theodore Frelinghuysen, Charles G. McChesney, Senator James Alfred Pearce, William Pennington, Samuel L. Southard, and Governor Isaac H. Williamson.
Winthrop, Robert C. (Robert Charles), 1809-1894. Letter : "Uplands," Brookline, Mass., to William C. Pennington, 1889 August 25.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
referencedIn
Papers, 1737-1942.
Boggs family. Papers, 1737-1942.
Title:
Papers, 1737-1942.
Correspondence, legal papers, genealogies, and other papers, of the Boggs family in New Jersey and New York, and of the related Blauvelt, Kearny, and Lawrence families. Other persons represented include David Ogden, Charles Olden, James Parker, Robert E. Peary, William Pennington, Henry C. Pitney, Theodore Roosevelt, Bayard Stockton, Charles E. Strong, John C. Ten Eyck, John Vanderbilt, Peter D. Vroom, Garret D. Wall, Marcus L. Ward, Charles Wilkes, Peter Wilson, and Joshua G. Wright.
Letters received, 1822-1860 (with gaps), personal and family receipts, 1821-1868 (with gaps), clipped signatures (many of Pennington and family members) and miscellaneous legal documents, 1798-1838, most or all acquired by Pennington in connection with his legal practice.
Ward, Marcus L. (Marcus Lawrence), 1812-1884. Papers, 1683-1912.
Title:
Papers, 1683-1912.
Correspondence, letter books, speeches, financial records, and other papers, documenting Ward's business and political careers, philanthropic and reform efforts, and patronage of artists. Other correspondents include Charles Gillespie, Horace Greeley, George A. Halsey, John Hay, Joseph Henry, Abram S. Hewitt, William R. Hillyer, Sanford B. Hunt, Anthony Q. Keasbey, John C. Littell, Thomas Longworth, H.W. Low, James McCosh, Thomas Nast, William A. Newell, Charles S. Olden, Adaline Oliver, Cortlandt Parker, Joel Parker, William Paterson (1817-1899), William Pennington, William A. Richardson, George M. Robeson, F.W. Seward, John Sherman, W.C.H. Sherman, Charles Sitgreaves, Edwin M. Stanton, John F. Starr, Thaddeus Stevens, John P. Stockton, Robert Field Stockton, William S. Stryker, John C. Ten Eyck, Samuel Tuttle, John C. Underwood, Eugene Vanderpool, Marcus L. Ward, Jr., Gideon Wells, William A. Whitehead, and Edward S. Wilde.
Ward, Marcus L. (Marcus Lawrence), 1812-1884. Papers, 1683-1912.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
referencedIn
Charles Lanman Manuscripts Relating to New Jersey, 1858-1868.
Lanman, Charles, 1819-1895. Charles Lanman Manuscripts Relating to New Jersey, 1858-1868.
Title:
Charles Lanman Manuscripts Relating to New Jersey, 1858-1868.
This collection comprises Charles Lanman's correspondence and manuscripts of autobiographical notes of 8 congressmen from New Jersey -- Lucius Quntius Cincinnatus Elmer (1793-1883), Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen (1817-1885), George Armstrong Halsey (1827-1894), William Pennington (1796-1862), Nehemiah Perry (1816-1881), William Wright (1790-1866), Philemon Dickerson (1788-1862), Peter Dumont Vroom Jr. (1791-1873).
ArchivalResource:
0.42 linear ft. (1 Hollinger box)
Lanman, Charles, 1819-1895. Charles Lanman Manuscripts Relating to New Jersey, 1858-1868.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
referencedIn
High Street Presbyterian Church collection, 1852-1950.
High Street Presbyterian Church (Newark, N.J.). High Street Presbyterian Church collection, 1852-1950.
Title:
High Street Presbyterian Church collection, 1852-1950.
This collection consists of a record book of missionary efforts by the High Street Presbyterian Church in cooperation with the First German Church, a record book for the Church's Sunday School, and four scrapbooks compiled by a long-standing member of the church containing numerous materials interfiled. These materials range in date from 1852 to 1950, and include Sunday school roll books, brochures, photographs, manuals, financial reports, lists of congregation members, notes on church history, service books, newspaper clippings and other miscellany. The materials document the founding members of the church, its finances over the years, the various church groups hosted by High Street, the social and fundraising events organized by these groups, the biographies of some of the prominent members of the congregation, and many of the services and sermons delivered throughout the history of the church.
Pennington, William, 1796-1862. William Pennington papers, 1795-1915 1820-1865.
Title:
William Pennington papers, 1795-1915 1820-1865.
The papers largely consist of the correspondence, court documents, contracts, and financial documents of William Pennington (1796-1862), dating from 1795-1915, with bulk dates of 1820-1865. Most of the correspondence in the collection is written to William Pennington (1796-1862), with a lesser number of letters to Caroline Burnet Pennington, William Pennington (1869-1922), and Albert P. Condit. Correspondents of William Pennington (1796-1862) include Alexander M. Cumming, Israel Crane, Robert Campbell, John Cox, Joseph C. Hornblower, James Robertson, and Anthony Rutgers, and the letters mostly pertain to legal matters and court cases. Pennington's legal career is also documented in the court records contained in these papers. There are briefs, arguments, notes, opinions, pleas, notices, depositions, warrants, summons, subpoenas, and power of attorneys for various cases Pennington was involved in. There are also the charges in a case brought by Samuel Pennington (1765-1835) and Stephen Gould against Robert Hays regarding a breach of contract to sell and deliver the Newark newspaper, The Centinel of Freedom. The papers contain, too, contracts and financial documents of William Pennington (1796-1862) and his business acquaintances, friends, and family. These items include land deeds for Newark and Pequannock, New Jersey, bonds, an inheritance agreement, promissory notes, checks, court bills, and a small collection of signatures including the autograph of Buffalo Bill.
Pennington, William, 1796-1862. William Pennington papers, 1795-1915 1820-1865.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
creatorOf
Manuscript Group 25, Miscellaneous Manuscripts, 1664-1956
New Jersey Historical Society. Miscellaneous manuscripts, 1664-1956
Title:
Manuscript Group 25, Miscellaneous Manuscripts, 1664-1956
Correspondence and other documents of the following persons, many prominent in New Jersey history: Samuel Aaron, A.J. Auten, Frank Bergen, Elias Boudinot, Joseph P. Bradley, Benjamin Brewster, Viscount James Bryce, James Buchanan, William Burnet, John Calvert, Frederick A. Canfield, Philip Carteret, Joseph R. Chandler, Abraham Clark (1726-1794), Grover Cleveland, William Colgate, Silas Condict (1766-1848), Franklin Conklin, Henry Cothreal, Philemon Dickerson, Amzi Dodd (1793-1838), Zephaniah Drake, Alfred E. Driscoll, William Duer, Thomas Alva Edison, Lucius Q.C. Elmer, Edward Everett, Cyrus W. Field, Frederick Frelinghuysen, Philip Freneau, Jay Gould, Charles J. Guiteau, Edward Everett Hale, Alexander Hamilton, Francis Hopkinson, Josiah Hornblower, Richard Howell, Edward Hyde (Lord Cornbury), J.N. Joralemon, Philip Livingston, William Livingston, John D. Long, Seth Low, George B. McClellan (1826-1885), Alexander Macwhorter, James Monroe, Robert Morris (ca. 1745-1815), and William A. Newell, Charles S. Olden, Cortlandt Parker, James Parker (1725-1797), William Paterson, (1745-1806), William Pennington, Mahlon Pitney, Rodman M. Price, William Rankin, Henry Remsen, and John D. Rockefeller. Other persons represented include Caesar Rodney, John Rutherford (1760-1840), Winfield Scott, Jared Sparks, James Speed, Richard Stockton (1764-1828), Edward C. Stokes, Charles C. Stratton, J.S. Sutter, Daniel D. Tompkins, Joseph Trumbull, Samuel Tucker, George Vail, Elias Van Arsdale, Ralph Voorhees, Peter Dumont Vroom, Theodore Dwight Weld, William A. Whitehead, William Carlos Williams, John Wood, George Wurts, George Wythe, and Isaac Young.
Williamson, Isaac H. (Isaac Halsted), 1767-1844. Papers, 1817-1846 (inclusive).
Title:
Papers, 1817-1846 (inclusive).
Letters received, 1817-1844, relating to legal matters and Wiliamson's service as governor; bill of sale, 1826, for four slaves purchased by Williamson; and receipts, 1844, 1846, including one for advertising in, and a subscription to, the New-Jersey Journal.
Williamson, Isaac H. (Isaac Halsted), 1767-1844. Papers, 1817-1846 (inclusive).
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
creatorOf
Boggs family papers, 1737-1950.
Boggs family. Boggs family papers, 1737-1950.
Title:
Boggs family papers, 1737-1950.
This collection consists of the papers of the Boggs family, as well as the allied Blauvelt, Kearny and Lawrence families. The materials range in date from 1737 to 1950, and include correspondence; composition notebooks; diaries; estate, financial and legal papers; genealogies; and musical scores. Also included in the collection are estate papers for various individuals, Robert Hunter Morris, Robert Morris, (ca. 1745-1815) and Michael Kearny (1725-1797), that were maintained by Robert Boggs (1766-1831) in his duties as executor and attorney in New Brunswick, New Jersey. Included are letters and documents of: John S. Blauvelt, Joseph Bloomfield, Christina Newton Boggs, James Boggs, Charles J. Bonaparte, Joseph P. Bradley, Roswell L. Colt, W.H. Corbin, John Jacob Faesch, Richard Stockton Field, D. Frelinghuysen, James L. Graham, Henry Woodhull Green, John W. Griggs, Alexander Hamilton, John Heard, Peter A. Jay, Lawrence Kearny, Elisha Lawrence, John Lawrence, Thomas Lawrence, Robert R. Livingston, Frank T. Lloyd, John Longstreet, John Moore, Robert Morris, James S. Nevius, David Ogden, Charles S. Olden, James Parker, Robert E. Peary, William Pennington, Henry C. Pitney, Robert Ray, Anthony Reckless, Theodore Roosevelt, Bayard Stockton, Charles E. Strong, John C. Ten Eyck, John Vanderbilt, Garret Voorhees, Peter D. Vroom, Garret D. Wall, Marcus L. Ward, Anthony White, Charles Wilkes, Peter Wilson, Joshua G. Wright, William Alexander, Lord Stirling.
Daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, and other cased photographs, 1840-1870.
Daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, and other cased photographs, 1840-1870.
Title:
Daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, and other cased photographs, 1840-1870.
This collection includes daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, tintypes, and other cased photographs. Approximately half of the images are identified although the inventory contains brief descriptions of unidentified images by age, gender, or clothing style. Many of the daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, and tintypes have full cases, while others may only have half-cases. The collection includes portraits of children, Civil War soldiers, men and women (some at the time of their marriages), a funeral image, a Civil War regiment, a factory, several buidings and a pet dog. Families represented by the images include: Andreuss, Baker, Baldwin, Cairns, Canfield, Clark, Coddington, Coe, Comer, Congar, Dickerson, Dodd, Douglas, Drake, Furman, Halsey, Halsted, Holden, Lee, Marsh, Mulford, Munn, Landau, Ross, Sayre, Smalley, Symington, Van Wagenen, and others. Individuals represented include: Mrs. Nathaniel Camp, John Willard Coddington, Rev. John Ford, Gen. N.H. Halsted, Rev. Matthew H. Henderson of Trinity Church in Newark, Jenny Lind, Henry K. McDowell, Dr. S.C. Marsh, Isaac Mulford, Gov. William S. Pennington, General Jose Paer, and General Winfield Scott.
Daguerreotypes, ambrotypes, and other cased photographs, 1840-1870.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
creatorOf
Peter D. Vroom papers, 1783-1891.
Vroom, Peter Dumont, 1791-1873. Peter D. Vroom papers, 1783-1891.
Title:
Peter D. Vroom papers, 1783-1891.
This collection consists of general correspondence from 1783-1869, individual legal case files from 1813-1891, letter books from 1840-1857, personal financial records from 1813-1861, diaries from 1850-1874, subscription and nominations lists from 1832-1868, and written personal opinions from 1822-1870. The collection also contains record books from various New Jersey churches, organizations, and individuals from 1821-1856 and Supreme Court cases from 1840-1894. Included in this collection are materials from prominent people in New Jersey history, including: Robert Adrain, Andrew Allen, William T. Anderson, Augustus W. Bell, John S. Blauvelt, Joseph P. Bradley, Lewis Cass, Salmon P. Chase, Cadwallader Colden, John S. Darcy, Edward Nicoll Dickerson, Philemon Dickerson, Amzi Dodd, Andrew Dutcher, Alphonse L. Eakin, Lucius Q.C. Elmer, Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, Theodore Frelinghuysen, Daniel Haines, William Halsey, Joseph C. Hornblower, Richard W. Howell, John P. Jackson, P.B. Kennedy, James S. Nevius, Charles Parker, James Parker, Joel Parker, William Pennington, Stacy G. Potts, Joseph F. Randolph, Theodore F. Randolph, George M. Robeson, John M. Sherrerd, Samuel L. Southard, Robert Field Stockton, Elias Van Arsdale, Martin Van Buren, James Vroom, John P. Vroom, Garret D. Wall, Marcus L. Ward, Asa Whitehead, and Isaac H. Williamson.
Vroom, Peter Dumont, 1791-1873. Peter D. Vroom papers, 1783-1891.
0
Pennington, William, 1796-1862
referencedIn
Papers, 1819-1847.
Rutgers family. Papers, 1819-1847.
Title:
Papers, 1819-1847.
Letters, 1827-1834 and undated, drafted or received by Anthony Rutgers; letters, 1819-1847, received by Sarah A. Rutgers (later Birch); letter, 1832, sent to Mrs. R.B. Rutgers; valuation, 1840, detailing the annual income of Margaret S. Rutgers; verse, 1846, dedicated to members of the Birch family; and an undated letter written by (and to?) a Rutgers family relative.
We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.