New Jersey as a colony and as a state, one of the original thirteen . r in the Penitentiary, and after-ward as a court officer in Newark. He is at presentchief prosecutors detective of Essex County, N. J. He is a shareholder in the Essex County Buildingand Loan Association of Bloomfield, of which hisfather was a director many years. He Is a member ofthe Elks, the Second Ward Republican Club, andother organizations. Mr. Hummel married Mary J. Carsoh. Children,Floyd, Gertrude, and Robert. THE FRANCISCO FAMILY has longoccupied a position of prominence andconsideration in New Jersey. It isnow repr


New Jersey as a colony and as a state, one of the original thirteen . r in the Penitentiary, and after-ward as a court officer in Newark. He is at presentchief prosecutors detective of Essex County, N. J. He is a shareholder in the Essex County Buildingand Loan Association of Bloomfield, of which hisfather was a director many years. He Is a member ofthe Elks, the Second Ward Republican Club, andother organizations. Mr. Hummel married Mary J. Carsoh. Children,Floyd, Gertrude, and Robert. THE FRANCISCO FAMILY has longoccupied a position of prominence andconsideration in New Jersey. It isnow represented by five brothers, JohnW., J. Houston, Sherman G., EdwardEllsworth, and Frank M. Francisco, sons of the lateEdward Francisco, who was one of the most honoredand useful citizens of his times In Passaic County,serving as member and president of the Board ofFreeholders. The brothers have maintained the sub-stantial reputation of the family, all of them beingmen of active enterprise, and enjoying the respect ofthe community. The late EDWARD FRANCISCO was born In. \ EDWARD FRANCISCO ONY AND AS A STATE 123 Bloomlngdale, Passaic County, N. J., January 5,1826. He was of original Spanish-French ancestry,but the Francisco Family, from its early appearancein this country, has always been characterized by anearnest and patriotic devotion to American institu-tions. Brought up amid rural surroundings at a periodwhen the public school system was in its infancy, hiseducational advantages were necessarily limited; but,possessing an active and inquiring mind, he becameby his own efforts a man of broad information. Hewas married, February 5, 1852, to Ann Forshee, bywhom he had one son, John W., a civil engineer byprofession. Mr. Francisco married, second, in 1858,Mary E. Houston, of Belleville, Orange County, , the now surviving children of this union being , Sherman G., Edward Ellsworth, and FrankM. A portion of his early life was spent in Newark,N, J., where he was engaged a


Size: 1395px × 1790px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1903