Janet and Robert Wolfe Genealogy --- Go to Genealogy Page for Preserve Brown --- Go to Genealogy Page for Mary

Notes for Preserve Brown and Mary

1679 The birthplace of Preserve Brown has been reported to be Shrewsbury, Monmouth County, New Jersey [undocumented].

1701 Edward Andrews deeded to Preserve Brown, son of Abraham Brown, both yeomen of Burlington County, a plantation of 200 acres in Mansfield Township, Burlington County, inherited from his father, Samuel Andrews, and deeded by his brother, Mordecai Andrews, April 17, 1699, and 40 acres of upland and meadow, (bordered by) West: George Parker, East: Joshua Newbould, South: John Calow, North: William Ellis. Dated April 24. [1] [2] [3] [4]

1705 Preserve Brown served on the "Traverse Jury" with Judge Thomas Revell for a case involving a horse shooting. [5]

1707 Abraham Brown deeded 125 acres, part of 1/40th of a proprietary share of East Jersey, to William White. Witnesses: Hugh Hutchin and Preserve Brown. Dated March 18. [6] [7]

1710 Preserve Brown and his wife were granted a certificate to move from the Chesterfield Friends Meeting to the Burlington Monthly Friends meeting on 3rd day 6th month. [8] [9] [10]

1710 Preserve Brown, yeoman, of Burlington, West New Jersey sold land to Caleb Brown [his brother], yeomen, of same, for £200. Signed Preserve Brown. Wit: Isaac Marriot, Peter Frotwel & Thomas Rapier. Dated November 4. [11]

1711 Preserve Brown had land bordering that of Peter Fretwell in Burlington Town. [12]

1711 Abraham Brown, of Welinborow Twp, Burlington County, married Hannah Adams [single woman] on 20 of month 1 [March], in Chester Twp, Burlington County. Witnessed by Preserve and Mary Brown and others. [13]

1712 Preserve Brown witnessed the will of Edward Andrews of Little Egg harbor, Burlington County. [14]

1712 Abraham Brown, son of Abraham, married Phebe Addams on July 17, at Springfield meeting, Burlington County. Witnessed by Preserve Brown, and others. [15]

1713 Preserve Brown, of Mayfield Twp, Burlington County, West New Jersey sold to Solomon Smith, carpenter, of Burlington, West New Jersey, for £235, house & lot in Burlington. Signed Preserve Brown. Wit: Thomas Raper, Thomas Brian, William Pancoast & Benjamin Brian. Dated May 8. [16]

1714 Preserve Brown was named as a son in the will of his father Abraham Brown. [17]

1718 Preserve Brown, yeoman of Mansfield Twp, Burlington County, New Jersey sold land to Robert Stork, tailor, for 60 pounds. Dated May 22. The land had been purchased from brother Abraham Brown, who inherited it from father Abraham Brown. [18]

1720 Preserve Brown purchased, from Isaac Ivins, both of Mansfield Twp, Burlington County, 16 acres of land partly in Mansfield and partly in Chesterfield Twps, Burlington County. There were buildings and orchards on the land. The land was part of the 100 acres of land Isaac Ivins had purchased from Abraham Brown on June 13, 1719. Dated February 21. [19]

1724 Preserve Brown Jr. and Mary French were married on October 15. Witnessed by Preserve Brown and others. No female Brown was listed as a witness, so perhaps Preserve was widowed at this time. [20] [21] [22]

1728 Quaker members of the grand jury of West New Jersey, held at Burlington, including Preserve Brown (perhaps this one or his son), signed a letter to the King of England expressing support, especially with regard to the conflict against Spain. Dated May 7. [23]

1729 Benjamin Shreeve and Rebecca French were married on April 23, in Upper Springfield, Burlington County. Witnessed by Preserve Brown and Preserve Brown Jr and others. [24]

There are several entries for Preserve Brown in the New Jersey records. Since Preserve had a son and a grandson named Preserve, who lived in New Jersey, they are not easily distinguished here: 1724 two Preserve Brown's were listed in Mansfield [25] [26], 1733 (election returns) [27], 1739 (election returns) [28].

1732 Preserve Brown and Samuel Curtis made the inventory for the estate of Mary Fox, widow of New Hanover Twp, Burlington County. [29]

1736 Preserve Brown provided the rum and sugar at the funeral of Joanna Smith, daughter of Mary Smith of Mansfield Twp, Burlington County, who died 1727. [30]

1739 Preserve Brown, Sr voted in an election in Burlington County, New Jersey. [31]

1742 Preserve Brown married Mary Dawson, both of Burlington on November 3. [32] [33]

1744 Preserve Brown was buried in the Bordentown, NJ Friends burying ground with a gravestone inscription: "In memory of Preserve Brown, who died the 26th day of the 4th month, 1744, age 65." [34] [35] [36] [37] [38]

1745 George Steel, malster and brewer to Mr Preserve Brown of Bordentown, fell overboard and drowned while going thither from Philadelphia. [39]

1749 The inventory of the personal estate of Preserve Brown was dated February 5, 1749, in Hanover Twp, Burlington County, with value £68.0.3; made by John Monrow and Henry Cooper, included bonds of Thomas Stevenson and Samuel Gaskill. On February 6, Mary Brown, widow and administratrix, affirmed to above. [40]

1752 The account for Preserve Brown, dated January 29, 1752, at Burlington County, New Jersey, listed the account of the estate, £68.0.3., by the Adm'x, Mary Brown, who had spent £82.8.7; in paying for the funeral, £5.0.10, and debts due to William Folwell, Marcus Hedding, Daniel Stockden, Richard Bowker, John Monrow, Joseph Scattergood, Josiah White, George Briggs, Jacob Gaskell, William Sorsby, Susannah Tool and Exrs. of Benjamin Jones. [41]

Research Notes:

Preserve Brown may have married more than once. Preserve and Mary Brown witnessed the 1711 wedding of brother Abraham Brown to Hannah Adams. Mary Brown was named as widow and executrix in 1749 and 1752. However, widow Mary may have been a second wife, as suggested by the 1742 marriage of Preserve Brown and Mary Dawson. Mary Nathan Kite has been named as the mother of daughter Lydia by a few sources, but I have found no supporting evidence. [42] Since Preserve has descendants named Abia, and no other Brown descendants have that name, perhaps his wife was Elizabeth Edwards, daughter of Abiah Edwards, who named grand-daughter Neomy Brown, daughter of his daughter Elizabeth in his will. [43] [44] [45]

1730 Neomy Brown, of the town and county of Burlington, married James Killgore, of Burlington, on December 14. The marriage license did not name the parents of Neomy Brown and no other marriage record has been found. She might be the grand-daughter named in the will of Abiah Edwards, the father of of Elizabeth Edwards Brown. [46] [47]


Footnotes:

[1] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 21. (Patents and Deeds, 1664-1703) (1899), 534, citing West Jersey Records, Liber B, Part 2, p 708, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[2] Colonial Conveyances East & West New Jersey. Deed (Book-Page), B-708.

[3] John David Davis, West Jersey New Jersey Deed records 1676-1721 (2005), 156, [FHLBook].

[4] Patents and Deeds and Other Early Records of New Jersey 1664-1703, [AncestryImage], [AncestryRecord].

[5] H. Clay Reed and George J. Miller, The Burlington Court Book. A Record of Quaker Jurisprudence in West New Jersey 1680-1709, Vol. 5 (1944), 297-98.

[6] Monmouth County, New Jersey Deed, F-72, [FamilySearchImage], [FHLCatalog].

[7] John David Davis, West Jersey New Jersey Deed records 1676-1721 (2005), 235, citing Deed F-72, [FHLBook].

[8] Charlotte D. Meldrum, Early Church Records of Burlington County, New Jersey, Vol. 1 (1994), 103-04, Vol 2, p 38.

[9] Charlotte D. Meldrum, Early Church Records of Burlington County, New Jersey, Vol. 3 (1995), 5.

[10] U.S. Quaker Meeting Records, Chesterfield Meeting, Intentions of Marriage and Certificates of Removal, 1685-1756, [AncestryImage], [AncestryRecord].

[11] John David Davis, West Jersey New Jersey Deed records 1676-1721 (2005), 234, [FHLBook].

[12] New Jersey State Archives, Colonial Land Surveys and Warrants, 1670-1727 (online database), Basse's Book: Folio 135 [SSTSE023], survey dated 11 April, 1711, New Jersey Archives, Trenton, [NJ_State_Archives].

[13] Quaker Meeting Records, Haddonfield Monthly Meeting Marriage Certificates, 1681-1741, 45, [AncestryRecord], [AncestryImage].

[14] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 23. (Wills and Administrations 1, 1670-1730) (1901), 13, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[15] Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935, Marriages, Births in Burlington Monthly Meeting (Rancocas and Burlington Monthly Meeting), 1712, [AncestryRecord], [AncestryImage].

[16] John David Davis, West Jersey New Jersey Deed records 1676-1721 (2005), 222, [FHLBook].

[17] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 23. (Wills and Administrations 1, 1670-1730) (1901), 63, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[18] John David Davis, West Jersey New Jersey Deed records 1676-1721 (2005), 224-25, [FHLBook].

[19] Colonial Conveyances East & West New Jersey. Deed (Book-Page), HH-73.

[20] Chesterfield Monthly Meeting, Burlington, New Jersey, Births and Deaths, 1675-1750, Vol. K, Marriages, 1684-1724, 47, [AncestryRecord], [AncestryImage].

[21] Chesterfield Monthly Meeting, Burlington, New Jersey, Births and Deaths, 1675-1750, Vol. K, Marriages, 1684-1724, 90, [AncestryRecord], [AncestryImage].

[22] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 22. (Marriage Records, 1665-1800) (1900), 652, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[23] William A. Whitehead, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 5. (Administration 1720-1737) (1882), 187, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[24] Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935, Burlington Monthly Meeting, Minutes, 1677-1777 (includes many different types of records), 223, [AncestryRecord], [AncestryImage].

[25] New Jersey, U.S., Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1643-1890, [AncestryRecord].

[26] New Jersey, U.S., Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1643-1890, [AncestryRecord].

[27] New Jersey, U.S., Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1643-1890, Preserve Brown, [AncestryRecord].

[28] New Jersey, U.S., Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1643-1890, Preserve Brown Sr, [AncestryRecord].

[29] A. Van Doren Honeyman, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 30. (Wills and Administrations 2, 1730-1750) (1918), 186, [GoogleBooks], [HathiTrust].

[30] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 23. (Wills and Administrations 1, 1670-1730) (1901), 430, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[31] John J. Thompson, "Poll Book of an Election in 1739, Burlington County, New Jersey," The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 18 (1894), 185-193, at 191, columns 3 and 4, [GoogleBooks].

[32] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 22. (Marriage Records, 1665-1800) (1900), 114, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[33] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 22. (Marriage Records, 1665-1800) (1900), 35, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[34] Howard Barclay French, Genealogy of the Descendants of Thomas French, Volume 1 (1909), 206, Photo on next page, [HathiTrust].

[35] Friends' Intelligencer 68 (Philadelphia: 1911), 166, [HathiTrust].

[36] Major E. M. Woodward and John Hageman, History of Burlington and Mercer Counties, New Jersey (Philadelphia: Everts & Peck, 1883), 459, [HathiTrust].

[37] Find A Grave Memorial at Ancestry.com, [AncestryRecord].

[38] Find A Grave Memorial 146365812, [FindAGrave].

[39] Kenneth Scott, Abstracts from Ben Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette (1975), [GoogleBooks].

[40] A. Van Doren Honeyman, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 30. (Wills and Administrations 2, 1730-1750) (1918), 69, citing Lib. 7, p. 101, [GoogleBooks], [HathiTrust].

[41] A. Van Doren Honeyman, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 32. (Wills and Administrations 3, 1751-1760) (1924), 43-44, [InternetArchive].

[42] John Osborne Austin, The Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island, Comprising Three Generations of Settlers (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), 28, [GoogleBooks].

[43] Richard W. Cook, "Thomas Cooke of Shrewsbury," The Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey 53 (1978), 97-104, at 104, [GoogleBooks].

[44] John E. Stillwell, Historical and Genealogical Miscellany, Vol. 3 (1914), 131, which hypothesizes that Elizabeth Edwards was the wife of Preserve's brother Nicholas, [InternetArchive].

[45] Janet and Robert Wolfe, Genealogy Page for Abiah Edwards, [JRWolfeGenealogy].

[46] William Nelson, Documents relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey. Archives Vol. 22. (Marriage Records, 1665-1800) (1900), 57, [HathiTrust], [GoogleBooks], [InternetArchive].

[47] Family History Library microfilm, 888710 [reports marriage in Burlington] and 802943 [reports marriage in Monmouth], New Jersey Marriages, [FHLFilmCatalog].