Judge Jonathan PETTIT

Male 1721 - 1769  (48 years)


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  • Name Jonathan PETTIT  [1
    Prefix Judge 
    Born 1721  [1
    Gender Male 
    Died 1769  Hardwick NJ Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Person ID I2695  Jay Moore Family Tree
    Last Modified 21 Apr 2014 

    Father Justice Nathaniel PETTIT
              b. Abt 1676
              d. Abt 1768  (Age 92 years) 
    Mother Elizabeth HEATH
              b. Abt 1690
              d. Yes, date unknown 
    Married Y  [1
    Family ID F1022  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Deborah ROBBINS
              b. 1723, Amwell Twp. NJ Find all individuals with events at this location
              d. 1791, Hardwick NJ Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 68 years) 
    Married Y  [1
    Last Modified 19 Apr 2014 
    Family ID F1021  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Married Deborah ROBBINS in Easton PA
      Will dated Oct 20, 1768 Probated 4 Feb 1769 probably Easton
      County courts were established by executive order of the NJ governor
      Sussex County was formed on 8 June 1753. Jonathan's tavern/public house
      in Hardwick Twp, the "Dark Moon", became the courthouse. Five judges included Jonathan Pettit.

      PETTIT, Jonathan of Easton, Northampton Co., PA. 134S - W. 20 Oct 1768; Filed 4 Feb 1769. Wife: Deborah. Sons: Nathaniel, Jonathan, Isaac, Andrew, John and (youngest child) William (a minor). Daughters: Dinah and Elizabeth. Others: Bro, Nathan PETTIT; bro-n-law, William ROBINS. Executors: Wife, Deborah PETTIT, bro, Nathan PETTIT and b-n-l, Willliam ROBINS. Witnesses: William LEDLIE, John GODFREY and Robt. TRAIL.

      Calendar of New Jersey Wills, Administrations, etc., Volume II, 1730-1750; Honeyman, A. Van Doren; Somerville NJ 1918.
      Page 377: Amos Thatcher and Job Robins [Robbins] performed an inventory, dated 26 Dec 1748, on the estate of Andrew Pettit, of Amwell, Hunterdon Co., will date 21 Oct. 1748. (Lib. 6, p. 76)


      Jonathan Pettit was born in 1721.7 John Reading, a large landholder in
      colonial New Jersey, mentioned writing a deed to Jonathan Pettit in his
      diary entry of May 26, 1749. The deed was written at the home of Samuel
      Green who lived in the area that later became Sussex County14 (63:47).
      Jonathan Pettit became a justice of the peace on May 13, 1749 in Morris
      County.28 Sussex County was erected from Morris County in 1753 and one
      of the first acts recorded in Sussex County was Jonathan's application
      for a tavern license on Nov. 20, 1753.18 He was appointed one of the
      first justices of Sussex County.29 The first court in Sussex Co. was
      held at the house of Jonathan Pettit in Hardwick (now Frelinghuysen)
      Township. The next year the county built a jail near Jonathan's tavern
      and the place received the name "Log Gaol". It is now called
      Johnsonburg and became part of Warren County when that county was
      erected in 1824. The family later moved to the southwest corner of
      Sussex County where they owned land on both sides of the Delaware River
      at Easton, PA and Phillipsburg, NJ.7 Jonathan Pettit wrote his will on
      Oct. 20, 1768 and it was proved Feb. 4, 1769. The inventory of his
      estate was done on Nov. 15, 17684 (33:327). Jonathan Pettit married
      Deborah Robbins.13 She survived him and moved back to Hardwick Twp.,
      Sussex County, NJ. She died in March 1791. Her will was written Mar.
      21, 1791 and proved Mar. 31, 17914 (37:282). Jonathan and Deborah
      Pettit had children including these (my grandparents):
      [1]

  • Sources 
    1. [S219] Bingle, Paul gedcom file, compiled by Paul Bingle, Brampton, ON.