Notes |
- . 1782 Apr 24, Muster Roll of a Detached Corps under the Charge of Lt. DeBeak, New York Volunteers. [i.e. officers from NY]
# 10, Private Charles Meredith, Taken prisoner 19 Oct 1781 [along with 12 others].
from C. Bramons, North Carolina Independent Company.
. 1782 Aug 25 to month Apr.? 24th, Lancaster. Muster Roll of Capt Bransons?, Company of Ind. North Carolina Volunteers, attached to the NY Volunteers, # 4, Charles Meredith.
* 1782 Jun 24, Lancaster, Muster Roll of Capt. Bransons's North Carolina Independent Company, Prisoners of War, #10 Charles Meredith, Missing 23 Oct 1781. Taken prisoner 19 October, 1781.
* 1782 Apr 20, Landcaster, Muster Roll of Capt. Bransons's North Carolina Independent Company, Prisoners of War, #10 Charles Meredith, [xblurry]' Fredricksburg, 24 Oct 1781, Present.
Ref: Ward Chipman Muster Master's Office, Archives of Canada,
. 1797 Nov 24 Land Sale:
John Mingles & Zerviah, [i.e. Sophia] his wife, of Hardwick to
Conrad Shere (?) Conrad Sherer(?) …139 acres in Knowlton. Part of a tract he bought of Ebenezer Colwell in line of Benjamin Swayzer & Joseph Stout; Henry Snover, Thomas Anderson.
Signed in German, John & Zervuag Nubgke,
Witnesses: Elias Teeter & James Bishop, John Sippulin (written in Germna) & Henry Mingle.
. 1801 Jun 17, they deposed to Thomas Anderson. Ref: Pg. 336
Research Note1: No Upper Canada Land Petition found for John Mingle UE but there are land petitions for sons John Mingle & Adam Mingle, dated 1818, at York aged 21 years.
. 1810
. 1810 May 1st, WILL OF JOHN MINGLE:
In the Name of God Amen. I John Mingle of the Township of Hardwick in the County of Sussex being very sick, weak in body but of perfect mind & memory thanks be given unto God-calling unto mind the mortality of my body & knowing that it is appointed for all men once to die do make & ordain this my last will & testament. That is to say principally the first of all - I give & recommend my Soul into the hand of almighty God that gave it & my body. I recommend to the earth to be buried in decent Christian manner at the discretion of my executors noting doubting but at the general resurrection I shall receive the same again by the mighty power of God & as touching such worldly estate where with it has pleased God to bless me in this life.
I give: Bequeath & Dispose of the same in the following manner & form
. First I give, & bequeath to my oldest son John Mingle's children $80. to be equally divided amongst them share & share alike.
Secondly, I give & bequeath to my son William Mingle the sum $160.
Thirdly, I give & bequeath to my daughter, Mary Felker, the sum $80.
Fourthly, I give & bequeath to my datter Caterreen Arvine a certain, note in my hands against Caunrad Arvine, [Conrad] for the Principle & Interest;
Fifthly, I give & bequeath to my datter Elizabeth the sum $80. The above mentioned Legacies is not to be paid until one year after my decease.
. Item I give and bequeath to my 2 datters Sarah & Christieen Mingle that farm where Jacob Felker now lives on, the rent to be equally Divided between them from my deceased until above said 2 datters, share & share alike. They are never to sell it without it is to each other & it is not to be sold from both of them or their heirs for ever.
The aforesaid Sarah & Christeen is to have there beds & bedding & there wheals? & there cows & all there property that they now own - I also give & bequeath to my beloved wife Sufiah the big room on the second floor at the west end of the house a & bed & bedding & reasonable household furniture to keep house with & who ever owns the place. I now live an shall find her good & sufficient maintenance & is to keep one cow for her as he keeps his own cows & is pay her $13.33 in cash yearly & every year all which is to be performed during the time she remains my widow.
I also give & bequeath to my son Henry Mingle the privilege of having my homestead farm with the provision he sees fit to pay & use my wife as above, & pay to my son Jacob Mingle the sum of $666.66 & pays $80. to my daughter Elizabeth which is her aforesaid legacies & if he doth not see fit to take it on the above conditions - then my son Jacob Mingle may take my homestead farm if he will pay & use my wife as aforesaid & will pay Henry Mingle the sum of $666.66 & will pay Elizabeth on the above condition then the place is to be sold by my executors & the money to be divided between my 2 sons Henry Mingle & Jacob Mingle - & if either of them should see fit to take the farm on the above condition then he shall pay the $80 as above in 1 year after my decease to pay to the other $133.33 within one year after my decease & so on yearly & every until the aforesaid sum of is paid.
Lastly I appoint my beloved & trusty friends Isaac Read & Henry Mingle, my beloved son Executors of this my Last Will & testament this 1 day of May 1810.
Witness: Signed sealed & declared by the said John Mingle to be his Last Will & testament In presents of us:
John Mingle, Jacob Lanterman*, Jacob France & Marget X Conkle, Her mark.
Will filed 1819 Aug 19.
Note2: Jacob Lanterman's daughter married John' son Henry Mingle.
Note3: Will dated at the time (1810) was in Hardwick, Sussex, NJ.
> He had a wife, Sufiah & the following children:
John (1761), William, (1770), Mary (1769), Cathereen, Elizabeth, Sara, Christeen, Henry & Jacob.
The first 3, although born in Sussex, died in Canada - in Gainsborough Twp.
XRef: Sussex Count Deeds,Estate of Wm. Cox, of Burlington, NJ, to John Mingle of Sussex Co, NJ, £100, dated Apr 1 1806. On the North side of Paulinskill, on which Joseph Felkel, formerly resided on which Geo Kuncle now lives.
. History of Warren County, New Jersey
An Indian trail known as the "Minisinks' Path" ran across this township from the gap in the mountains above Sand Pond to Marksboro, & on past Allamuchy & Budd's Lake to Elizabeth. It was wide enough for men to travel in on horseback when first visited by white men in 1715. It was along this path over the mountains that the early settlers in Hardwick had to take their grain to mill on horseback to the earlier settlement in Pahaquarry.
The settlers of the Paulins Kill Valley in this township were nearly all Germans. The first settlers came about 1740. John Teel & John Mingle both located here about 1755. Jacob Armstrong was at one time owner of the larger part of what is now Hardwick Township. In 1771 a church was built at Stillwater, then in Hardwick, for the use of the German Lutheran & German Calvinist congregations, who worshipped on alternate Sundays.
> At a Supreme Court held at Philadelphia for the Province of Pennsylvania, before Wm. Allen, John Lawrence* & Thos. Willing, Esquires, Judges of the same Court the 24 Sept, 1770, between the hours of 9 & 12 of the clock in the forenoon of the same day, the following Persons being Foreigners:
... The persons hereafter named being Foreigners, 7 of the people called Quakers & other Protestants who conscientiously scruple to take an Oath, severally took the affirmation & made & repeated the Declaration...Act of 13 King George 2, ... as are settled or shall settle in any of his Majesty's Colonies in America, & of an Act of General Assembly of the Prov. of Penn. made in the 1742:
John Mingle, Oxford Twp., Sussex Co., in New Jersey.
Note4: Verify date, the paragraphing obscures the date.
- Transcripts by P J Ahlberg, U.E. Thank you. - - - [1]
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