. Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey ... a Republican and in religion is acommunicant of the Protestant Episcopalchurch. Lord Hartman Burr married (first)]\Iary Hartman, who bore him one child, LordHartman, Jr., who won the University ofPennsylvanias scholarship to the West Indies. Mr. Burr married (second) , and by this marriage he has had three children : Alfred,Elizabeth and Jeannette, twins. I Joseph Pancoast, son ofPANCOAST John and Elizabeth Pancoast of Ashen, fieve miles fromNorthampton Town, in Northampton Shire,England, born 1672 the 27th of eighth monthcalle
. Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey ... a Republican and in religion is acommunicant of the Protestant Episcopalchurch. Lord Hartman Burr married (first)]\Iary Hartman, who bore him one child, LordHartman, Jr., who won the University ofPennsylvanias scholarship to the West Indies. Mr. Burr married (second) , and by this marriage he has had three children : Alfred,Elizabeth and Jeannette, twins. I Joseph Pancoast, son ofPANCOAST John and Elizabeth Pancoast of Ashen, fieve miles fromNorthampton Town, in Northampton Shire,England, born 1672 the 27th of eighth monthcalled October; and in the year i(j8o, C_)ctober4th came into America in the ship Paradise,William Evelyn, master: and I settled in WestNew Jersey, Burlington County, and on the14th of the eighth month, October 1696, I tookto wife Thomasin Scattergood, daughter ofThomas and Elizabeth Scattergood, of Step-ney Parish, London, who also transportedthemselves into Burlington County in Amer-ica. The above quotation is from an olddocument in the possession of Henry Pancoast. ^^t&OA^^M^ ^^^ STATE OF .NEW [ERSEY. 561 of Mesopotamia, Ohio, and tells us the originof the Pancoast family in this country. (1) John Pancoast, the founder of thefamily, came, as the document says, to WestJersey in 1680, bringing with him his familyof children. It is uncertain whether his wifeaccomi)anied him or whether she died veryshortly after her arrival in America. At anyrate John Pancoast was married a second timewithin two years of his coming, and shortlybefore his death he took to himself a His children are believed to have been allof them the issue of his first marriage. He set-tled at the mouth of the east branch of creek, was one of the signers ofthe noted Concessions and .\grecments, andowned proprietary rights in the province. In1681 he was appointed regulator of weightsand measures for P)Urlington county, in 1683he was chosen constable, and in 1685 he waselected a member of the
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectnewjers, bookyear1910