A gateway to discovering and tracking the descendants of the original New Netherland Brouwer progenitors, namely Adam Brouwer of Gowanus, Jan (or Johannes) Brouwer of Flatlands and Willem Brouwer of Beverwijck (Albany). As well as some diversions covering other Brewer and Brower families with origins in Colonial America
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Monday, December 17, 2012
First Reformed Church Raritan (Somerville), N. J. Baptisms
The baptism records for the church were published in the Somerset County Historical Quarterly beginning with volume 2, issue no. 1 in 1913. The first installment opens with a history of the church and his followed by the baptismal register beginning in the year 1699. Issue nos. 2, 3 and 4 of SCHQ volume 2 continue the records until May 27, 1744. A PDF of the scanned pages is now available online.
Raritan Baptisms (1699-1744), SCHQ v.2, 1913
BGB 210
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I am seeking the baptism records of Thomas Auten Sr. baptized Feb. 20, 1762 at First Reformed Dutch Church, Rarity, New Jersey. He also married Elizabeth Van Tuyle on October 31, 1783 and they had a son Thomas Auten Jr., born December 11, 1805. I am not sure where the marriage or Thomas Jr.s' record of birth or baptism was recorded.
ReplyDeleteAny assistance would greatly be appreciated.
Dr. Jerry Stubben
jerrystubben@gmail.com
Jerry, The Find-A-Grave memorial (#40004980)which you're probably aware of) states that your Thomas born in 1805 was born in New York (state). Checking the 1810 U.S. census the only Thomas Auton (sic) found in NY State is in Hector, Seneca County, age over 45 which certainly fits the description of your elder Thomas Auten. There is a male age 10-15 in the household, but no male under age 10 (but sometimes these census counts have errors, and the household does include a female under 10). The town of Hector is now in Schuyler Co., NY. I am not finding a Thomas Auten on the 1800 U.S. census (anywhere)but, the 1800 census records for New Jersey have been lost. Perhaps the family was still in NJ in 1800. Assuming the Thomas Auton in Hector in 1810 is the one your looking for, then perhaps he relocated there between 1800 and 1805, in which case searching for church records in the vicinity of Hector would be your starting point. However, from my own experience in searching in Seneca Co., in the very early 1800s (surnames Garrison and Hooper), I can say that records there are thin. Few exist. You may want to check with local Historical Societies in and near Hector.
ReplyDeleteA baptism record for the younger Thomas is not in the Raritan Church records (again you probably already searched there and know this), but if you haven't done so already, you may want to look at some of the other New Jersey churches nearby (Readington in particular).
Thank you for scanning these records and posting them. It is helping me with my Van Meter genealogy.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this. A godsend.
ReplyDeleteHi! Our family tree and history notes that Judith Van Neste was the first baby baptied in the First Dutch Reformed Church or Raritan on March 8, 1699. (She later was married to Gerrit Van Vliet). Is this the same church? Is the church building still standing and can we visit? Thank you!
ReplyDeleteFor a history of the Reformed Church at Raritan, now known as the United Reformed Church, see https://urcsomerville.org/index.php/about-us/our-history.
DeleteIn 1699, there was a congregation, but no church building per se.
Hello Chris - do you happen to know if records were recorded and are available after 1744? I'm interested in the period from about 1750 to 1800. Can't seem to find where the Raritan records may be. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteBaptisms starting with the year 1745 are found in the Somerset County Historical Quarterly vol. 3 (1914) starting at page 56. They continue through volumes 4, 5 and 6 (which starts with the year 1824). I think that you can now find these online on the Internet Archive site
DeleteThank you very kindly for that info!
DeleteBaptisms starting with the year 1745 are found in the Somerset County Historical Quarterly vol. 3 (1914) starting at page 56. They continue through volumes 4, 5 and 6 (which starts with the year 1824). I think that you can now find these online on the Internet Archive site.
ReplyDelete