Thomas Farnsworth, b. at England

Spouse: Susanna(h), d. bef. 23 January 1714

Married bef. 1673 at England.

Children and grandchildren:

  1. Mary Farnsworth, b. 23 September 1673 at Mansfield, England
  2. Thomas Farnsworth (2), b. 7 November 1676 at Mansfield, England
  3. John Farnsworth, b. 14 November 1679 at Piscatua, East Jersey, d. bef. 28 March 1713
  4. Samuel Farnsworth, b. 2 April 1683 at Mansfield, White Hill, NJ, m. Damaris Howard, 19 November 1709 at Chesterfield, NJ, d. bef. 2 December 1747; 7 grandchildren
  5. Daniel Farnsworth, b. 7 February 1686 at Mansfield, NJ, m. Rachel Pearce, 14 July 1714
  6. Nathaniel Farnsworth, b. 1 January 1689 at Burlington Co., NJ, d. bef. 16 November 1713 when his mother's will notes he is deceased.
  7. my line Henry Farnsworth, b. ca. 1691; 1 grandchild
The first record in America of Thomas Farnsworth is that of his arrival in Philadelphia on the ship Kent in 1677. The passengers came up the river to Burlington in boats. There Thomas acquired land by deed on 2 Apr 1681 at the site of what is now known as Bordentown but then known as Farnsworth's Landing, his holdings eventually extending to over 800 acres. The history of Thomas and his family of those days is best described in the "History of Burlington and Mercer Counties, " by E.M. Woodward and J.F. Hageman, published 1883 as follows:

"All we know of him prior to his leaving England is the statement in Bessee's "Sufferings and Persecutions of the Quakers" that he was sent to prison on the 3d day of the 7th month, 1665 for attending a meeting of the Quakers at Tupton, near North Wingfield, Derbyshire. It is also stated that his brother, Richard Farnsworth of TickhilI, Yorkshire, was tried and imprisoned for not taking off his hat to a justice.

Thomas' wife, Susanna came over in Dec of the next year in the ship "Shield," the first vessel that came up the Delaware to Burlington. She brought with her their children and two servants. Her coming was well known among the settlers, and looked for with some interest as she was a Quaker preacher in the old country of note.

The servants she brought were hardly to wait on her and perform menial service but more probably men who had contracted to work a certain length of time in consideration of their passage being paid and food found From the fact of his being this expense his purchase of five hundred acres of ground within a few years of his landing and his not disposing of his house and lot in Burlington until the 19th of May, 1685, when he conveyed it by deed to Anthony Morris, it is to be presumed he was possessed of considerable means for one in those early days and in a new country. ...

As tradesmen in all new countries are scarce and in demand, and as the population is scattered, and as we find his children different localities, the probabilities are that he "whipped the cat" at his trade of shoemaking for several years before he located on his tract where Bordentown now stands. Where he built his cabin there is not known but he certainly did not reside there permanently prior to 1682-83. Careful investigation proves that Farnsworth's cabin -- the first house built in Bordentown -- was situated on the bluff near the northwest corner of Park Avenue and Prince Street, very near and perhaps on the spot upon which the frame house now stands (1883).

Thomas Farnsworth served as constable of Chesterfield township in 1689. His name never again appears on the township records and sometime between that year and 1693 he died, leaving his widow, Susannah, sons Thomas, John, Samuel, Daniel, and Nathaniel. By his will, dated 8th of the 11th month, January (O.S.), 1889 he left all his real and personal property to his wife, to rent or sell as she might deem best. But in case of her marrying again, his real estate was to be held in trust for his children and she was to have in lieu thereof twenty pounds. She was sole executrix. The will was witnessed by William Quicksall and Elizabeth Foulks Davenport and proved in 1693. The will of Susanna Farnsworth was proved 23 Jan 1713/4.
Farnsworth Memorial II, 2d Edition of the Farnsworth Memorial publ. 1897 by Moses Franklin Farnsworth. Revised 1974 by R. Glen Nye.


1689-90 Jan, 8. Farnsworth, Thomas, of Chesterfield, Burlington, Co., cordwainer; will of. Wife Susanna sole heiress and executrix of real and personal estate to be equally divided after her death amongst the children, no named. Witnesses: William Quicksall, Elizabeth Hovlke, Francis Davenport. Proved May 10, 1693, again sworn to January 26, 1713-14.

1792 June 23 Inventory of the estate (£60.7.-, of which £39.11.1 are debts due by George Ellis (?), John Hornor jun., John Hornor's children, Thomas Lambert, Edward Hunlock, Wm. Beedell, Francis Davenport, Wm. Wattson, Caleb Wheatly, John Milborn, Thomas Gladwin, John Bandridge, Abraham Singer, Thos. Brock and Falfe Sidall); made by Samuel Andrews and Francis Davenport.

1693 May 10. Bond of the widow Susanna Farnsworth as executrix. Francis Davenport of Chesterfield, yeoman, and Abraham Senior of Bulington, innholder, fellow bondsmen.
Burlington Records, p. 20.

Documents Relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey Vol. 23. Calendar of NJ Wills, Vol. 1, 1670-1730, p. 159, edited by William Nelson, published 1901 by the New Jersey Historical Society.


Descendant families report created by Gene 4.2, Mon, Jun 30, 1997


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