The
Cumberland County, New Jersey, Historical Archive extends from before 1748
when the County was established to 1830. It offers a potpourri of
materials taken from 178 archive files and includes, among many other
items:
- a handwritten newssheet
from 1775-76
- speeches by Jonathan
and Ebenezer Elmer
- a Federalist Party
poster
- debtors' bonds
- currency from the era
- wills
- an early church history
- sermons by local
pastors
- an account of naval
action off Cape May during the War of 1812
- military officers
commissions
- documents relating to
slave ownership and emancipation and concerning indentured servitude
- family letters
- life sketches of local
doctors
The documents have been
assigned five categories: political, economic, religious, military, and
social. As an introduction to the 1748-1830 archive collection there
are short articles outlining Cumberland County History in each of these
five categories which are presented in this site.
Introductory essays found
within this digital collection have been written by Jonathan E. Wood of
the Cumberland County Historical Society.
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Currently
Featured Items:
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Read
about a brief history of an early county church --
Greenwich Presbyterian.
~ See C-05 |
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Curious
about local Tories? An accusation against a local
resident when it is charged he "joined the army of
the King of England." Of great interest is the
formal accusation against James Benson.
~ See B-05,
R-13 |
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Do
specimens of Revolutionary money that were used locally
interest you?
~ See C-11 |
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Real
life sketches of the earliest Cumberland County
doctors.
~ See C-21 |
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"Take
a hogs head, set it on one head, like a stand
cask." Sound interesting? So begins
Allison's Patent of 1803 for purifying wine, liquor, or
hard cider!
~ See A-01 |
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A
famous first: Bridgetown's first newspaper
(1775-1776). Actually a hand-written sheet posted in
Potter's Tavern in which the crisis with Britain is
discussed.
~ See
P-08_1 |
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Read
Cumberland County legal documents served in the name of
the King! A court indictment of 1774.
~ See C-19 |
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Who
were the money lenders, and what were their terms before
there was a bank in the county? Note the provisions
made for those borrowers planning to flee to the West!
~ See B-08, D-01,
D-12 |
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Read
the address given to Recruits for the War of 1812 at Old
Stone Church by the Rev. Ethan Osborn.
~ See O-02 |
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Was
there schooling for girls? See the arrangements for
the education of Elizabeth Seely in 1801.
~ See S-18 |
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What
about slavery in Cumberland County? Read slave sale
agreements and emancipation papers.
~ See L-05_1,
S-37, S-38,
S-39 |
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Check
out the letter of Revolutionary Solder Samuel Westcott to
his wife during the war.
~ See W-08_1 |
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Learn
first-hand what it was like in Deerfield during the
Revolution: a personal letter of 1786.
~ See M-06 |
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Like
to read a very early maritime record? See how in
1762 Philip Stathem sells the sloop Sally.
~ See D-14 |
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Read
the will of the most famous man in Colonial Cumberland
County: Philip Vickers Fithian.
~ See F-04_3 |
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