I am a direct descendant of Richard Stockton Signer of the
Declaration of Independence, so I am going to give you the history. I
have found the book that was given to us as descendants "The Ancestors
and Descendants of Two Stockton Sisters." By Ruth Ellen Stampe.
To
those who do not believe it. Here is fact proof from the book. My
plans are to write the Congressional Congress Library to see if I can
obtain copies of these letters to keep in the family.
Origin and History of the Stockton Name
The
name Stockton comes from two Saxon words; STOC, meaning the stock or
stem of a tree, and TUN, meaning an enclosed place. The people who
lived in this place ( the enclosed forest) thus became known as
Stoctun. A surname was originally kind of a title. Those adopted
during the feudal era generally indicated a territorial standing, or
place, as did Stoctun. Surnames did not become generally used until
the early part of the fourteenth century, for previously the custom
prevailed of calling one man the son of someone, as John, son of
Richard. Quite naturally then, such a man became John Richardson as
surnames were taken.
When the feudal system existed
tenures of the land were free as long as they could be held. the
Stocktons' held their estate under the barony of the Malpas in Cheshire
County, England, and there they built the great manor of Stockton and
the current owner was known as Lord of Stockton Manor.
In
the British Museum, history records the name written de Stoctun in
ancient Latin deeds, and in later times as Stockton. This is the only
change the name has undergone in the last eight hundred years, and this
change resulted from the English spelling the Saxon word.
Long
before Richard Stockton came to America, the prefix "de", which is an
ancient mark of nobility, had been modestly dropped from the name.
The Stockton Coat of Arms.
The
motto of the Stockton family is "Ominia Deo Pendent" --- all depends on
G-d. Long ago only military chiefs bore coat of arms, and heraldic
honors were confirmed to the nobility.
The Stockton coat
of arms is found as early as the year 1200. The arms originally granted
the family show three stocks of trees shorn of their branches, a lion
rampant supporting an Ionic column. The shield is green, the stocks of
trees silver, the crest natural colors. These arms were last worn by
William, son of Owen Stockton, and are registered to him at the Herald's
College.
A second coat of arms was granted the Stockton
family and this is the one we (I) inherit and which has been borne by
our branch of the family for centuries in England and America. A
replica of the arms was included in this book.
A family
coming honestly by a coat of arms has a perfect right to make use of it;
a coat of arms is as much a man's property as his purse. The Stockton
coat of arms belonging to the Malpas ancestors is often seen on ancient
tombstones and plaques in England, the same coat of arms found on the
watch engraved in London and given to Richard "The Signer" (watch is
still in the family). The coat of arms was also engraved on the silver
brought over from England.
There is no doubt of the
direct connection between the Malpas family and the New Jersey Stocktons
in America, first founded in this country by that Richard Stockton who
came to Flushing, Long Island around 1656.
Stocktons in History
Stockton
Manor was in the town of Malpas. It was on an elevation near the river
Dee, not far from Chester, a very old city probably built by the
Romans, 168 miles northwest of London. David de Stockton inherited
Stockton Manor from his father in 1250. in 1470-71 the Right Honorable
John Stockton was Lord Mayor of London, a position of rank only second
to the King of England. He was the son of Richard who was knighted in
the field by King Edward IV.
A Sir Edward Stockton was
vicar of the church of Cookham, in Berkshire, and leader of one of the
expeditions to the Holy Land. A memorial to John Stockton, of
Kiddington, who died in 1700, says he was an Esquire, a rank second to
knight in England in those times. An Owen Stockton is called a
"gentleman"; he died in 1610.
One of our ancestors of the
New Jersey line, a John Stockton, has this inscription on his tombstone
in Latin; (translation in part reads) "The son, well-born, has erected
this to the father, well-born, who died Dec. 2, 1610."
Ormerod,
in his History of Cheshire, says the Manor of Stockton descended to the
late Earl Grosvenor about 1789. So Stockton Manor was lost to the
Stockton name when a female heir Isabella inherited it. She married a
Robert de Eaton and their descendant John de Eaton had issue Johanna,
wife of Ralph Grosvenor Esquire, who received with her Stockton Manor.
In
the church in Cheshire are many memorials to ancient Stocktons; on
brass plates may be read some extremely interesting inscriptions in
Latin. One I especially like: " I, Stoctonus, ever a most gentile
promoter of peace, here laid under hard marble enjoy peace."
It
would not be possible to list all the Stocktons in America who have
become famous. Perhaps the best known of all is Richard Stockton, "The
Signer" He was tutored by Reverend Samuel Finley, President of
Princeton, where he graduated with the first class in 1748. He then
studied law, was admitted to the bar and became a great lawyer. He
tutored many illustrious lawyers , among them the Honorable Elias
Boudinot. Richard "The Signer", was Judge of the Supreme Court and
member of the King's Council for New Jersey before the Revolution. He
went to England in 1776-67 and the nobility covered him with honors.
While in Scotland he persuaded Dr John Witherspoon to become President
of Princeton.
In 1774, Stocton became Judge of the
Supreme Court. he was a member of the Continental Congress and signed
the Declaration of Independence. His lovely wife, Annis Boudinot,
sister of the Honorable Elias Boudinot, was known as most gracious
hostess; she was descended from a French Hugenot family and was a woman
of culture. The celebrated grounds at Morven were of her designing
and her husband brought back from England many choice roots and flowers
for her. Great men were entertained at Morven, George Washington being
a frequent visitor and which was best friends with Stockton. When
Congress sat at Princeton, Annis B Stockton entertained them in the
mansion Morven. See http://historicmorven.org/home
The
tension between the colonies and the mother country caused Richard
Stockton great concern. We must remember this family had for centuries
held offices of great importance for the crown. It was at considerable
personal sacrifice that he separated himself from the Royal Council.
Indeed several Stocktons, unable to take sides against their English
King went to Canada where they took up residence and became very
prominent men in that country but that is another story.
At
first Richard Stockton worked to reconcile the differences between the
colonies and the crown but as difficulties progressed he had to choose
and he did so. In 1776 he was chosen by the Provincial Congress of New
Jersey to be delegate to Congress and he took active part in the work
of that Congress which developed the Declaration of Independence. In
the Congressional Library, Washington DC are letters in Richard's
Handwriting informing John Hancock, the President of the Continental
Congress, the exact state of affairs of the American forces. Richard
had visited all points of conflict, at his own risk.
Richard's
signing of the Declaration of Independence made many enemies for him
among the Loyalists. He rushed to his home on Morven to rescue his wife
and children when the British descended on Princeton. The Stocktons
took refuge with friends but a Loyalist betrayed their hiding place. In
the dead of the night the Judge was dragged from his bed and brutally
beaten and thrown into prison. The distinguished, jurist, who had worn
handsome robes of the colonial court, now shivered in a common jail,
abused and all but starved. It was his best friend George Washington
who rescued him.
Invalided by the harsh treatment he had
received, he returned to Morven to find his furniture and clothing
burned, his fine horses stolen, and his library, on of the finest
private collections in the country, completely destroyed. The hiding
place of the exquisite family silver, hastily buried by a servant. The
Stocktons were so destitute they had to accept charity. For the
Judge's fortune was gone. He had pledged it and his life to his
country. He lost both. He did not live to see the Revolution won.
Richard,
"The Signer" had a most amazing family. His eldest son Richard, "The
Duke" was a lawyer, a US Senator from New Jersey from 1796 to 1799 and a
member of the House of Representatives from 1813 to 1815. He held a
Doctor of Law Degree from two colleges.
Lucuis Horatio
Stockton, second son of "The Signer" settled in Trenton. He was a
successful lawyer and prosecuting attorney of Mercer County.
All
three of "The Signer's" Daughters married men of great distinction.
Julia became the wife of Dr. Benjamin Rush, who also signed the
Declaration of Independence. The brother of "The Signer" , Samuel
Witham Stockton graduated from Nassau Hall in 1767 was Secretary of the
American Commission to the Court of Austria and Russia. He negotiated a
treaty with Holland, was Secretary of the Convention of New Jersey to
ratify the Constitution of the US in 1787. In 1794 he was Secretary of
State of New Jersey.
Phillip Stockton, another brother of
"The Signer" , graduated from Princeton in 1773 and became a well known
clergyman. Richard Stockton, eldest son of "The Duke", went to
Mississippi and here became Justice of the Supreme Court and later
Attorney General of that State. He was killed in a duel
Commodore
Robert Field Stockton was the son of Richard, "The Duke". He was a
Princeton student at the age of 13. Later he returned interested in
American Colonization. The US Navy equipped a vessel for him; he
established a colony on western coast of Africa, which became Liberia.
In 1840, He declined the offer of Secretary of Navy offered him by
President Tyler. He was the mans of establishing a civil government
over California before the Mexican War closed. In 1849 Commodore
Stockton resigned his command in the US Navy and in 1851 was elected to
the US Senate from New Jersey. He was instrumental in construction of
the Delaware and Raritan Canal and the Camden and Amboy railroad. He
led a most exciting life, engaged in several duels but lived to be 91
years of age.
Phillip Augustus Stockton was also a naval
hero, serving on the old Constitution. He had the rank of lieutenant
and was consul-general of Saxony for six years.
The sons
of Commodore Stockton also achieved prominence. John P. Stockton was
attorney general of New Jersey. In 1857 he was appointed by President
Buchanan as US Minister to Rome, being the youngest man ever appointed
Minister. Elected to the US Senate in 1865 and again in 1869, he was
then appointed attorney general of New Jersey in 1877 and served twenty
years.
General Robert Field Stockton was a State Comptroller and later Adjunct General of New Jersey.
Richard
Stockton of Trenton, son of former attorney general was the youngest
Consul of US ever appointed. He served in Rotterdam and was in charge
of affairs at The Hague.
There are many towns in the US
named Stockton, the most important perhaps is Stockton California in the
San Joaquin Valley named for the Commodore. One of the principal
streets in San Francisco is also named for the Commodore.
There
is a memorial plaque in the National Museum in Washington DC
commemorating the conquest of California with Commodore Stockton's
flagship riding in the San Diego harbor. A memorial window is in St
Peters Chapel, Mare Island Navy Yard, and the statue of Richard "The
Signer" is in the Capital at Washington DC.
Along with
the Adams family of Massachusetts, the Jay family of New York, the
Stockton family of New Jersey has ranked prominently in America for over
300 years.
Introduction~
The
author of "The Stockton Family" , Dr T C Stockton, asserts that
exceptional as the record of the New Jersey Stocktons, the descendants
in other states are equally honorable. New Jersey sent her sons
generaously into the tide of westward emigration to form par of the bone
and sinew of the great American pioneer movement, and while the hard
conditions of pioneer days may have obscured their talents for a time,
they have produced ministers, teachers, lawyers, physicians of eminence
and devotion. The history of the middle west , the northwest and the
far west cannot be written without including some of the achievements
of descendants of Richard Stockton.
Our branch of the
Stockton family that first came to the midwest was William King
Stockton, his wife Harriet Green Stockton and their four children, Mary
Martha, Sarah Ann, Richard Eli and Joseph Henry. they came to Illinois
in 1855. Some say they spent a year in Jersey County, then came to
Logan County in 1857 and settled near Hartsburg. The last daughter,
Emma, was born in Illinois in 1859. Mary Martha, the eldest daughter
married a neighbor Joseph Franklin Fisher. Sarah Ann ( whom I descended
from ) married Wesely Trollope and Joseph Henry married a brother and
sister in the Trollope family. All were of English extraction. That
the two families had known each other perhaps in another century in
another country is a very good possibility. A memorial to John Stockton
of Kiddington says he died in 1700. Kiddington was also the home of
the Trollopes in England.
William King Stockton and his
family lived in Illinois until 1872. He was 63 and his wife Harriet 57
when they moved to Nebraska to homestead. He lived to be 99 years , 2
months and 25 days old and Harriet died at 82. Anyone interested in
longevity will find a fascinating story in this family.
All
the Stockton family except Mary Martha moved to Nebraska, including
Emma, Joseph Henry, Richard Eli and the married daughter Sarah Ann
Stockton Trollope. Sarah Ann and Wesley Trollope had farmed in Illinois
near Delavan in Tazewell County, and when they moved their fifth
child, Mary Harriet, was only a baby. This child just passed away in
Sept 1968 at the age of almost 97 years. Sarah Ann was 32 years of age
and Wesley (who my oldest son is named after) Trollope 43 when they
moved to Nebraska. She lived to be 92 and Wesley 79.
Logan
County Illinois has been the home of most of the Fisher family since
first John Nelson and his brother Joseph Franklin arrived from New
Jersey in 1855 and Joseph Franklin married Mary Martha Stockton to
begin the Fisher line. At the end of 8 generations of the Fisher
family there is only one male to carry the name. He is the son of
William John Fisher and is named Joseph Paul. He was 13 at the time.
The
counties of Furnas Phelps York Harlan Seward and Red Willow in
Nebraska bound in the descendants of the Stockton line but none carry
the name for Joseph Henry Stockton's ( son of William King Stockton)
only child was a daughter Harriet Jane, who married George A Trollope.
So it is the Trollope name that we find. AT the end of the fifth
generation of Trollopes there are five males to carry on the Trollope
name, all in the Lamon Trollope line They include his sons Lester
George, Larry Eugene and Lynn Elvin, and his grandsons Gary Lynn and
Ronald Lee.
The first section of genealogy traces the
ancestral line of Mary Martha and Sarah Ann Stockton, daughters of
William King Stockton, from their first ancestor in America, Rickard
Stockton of Flushing Long Island.
The number of
descendants of the two Stockton Sisters represent a remarkable and
interesting contrast Together there are 358 ( when this was written)
descendants 299 of the 358 are of the Sarah Ann line. Sarah Ann was
my Great Grandfather Trollope mother.
My great grandfather
left home in Lincoln Illinois at the age of 8th grade and rode the
west. He was a cowboy, fought Indians and rode the range. He was born
1863 He didn't marry until he was 40 years old. I never got to meet
him but my mom and grandparents told stories about him. I've seen
pictures and he reminded me of Colonel of Kentucky Fried... My mom says
he was quite a character.
No comments:
Post a Comment