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BIOGRAPHY OF
JACOB H. HOPPER.
JACOB H. HOPPER.-The Hopper family, it is said, started in
France. They spelled the name Hoppe, and finally changed it to
Hopper. Some of them went to Holland during times of religious
persecution. It is known that Andries (Andrew) Hopper came to
America from Amsterdam, Holland, with a wife (and, perhaps, two
or three children), as early as 1653, and located in the City
of New Amsterdam. The name of his wife does not appear in the
New Jersey records. After their arrival the couple had three
children born to them: William in 1654, Hendrick in 1656, and
Matthew in 1658.
Of the three last named children William (2) married Mynen
Paulus and had issue three children: Christina, Gertrude, and
Belitie (Bridget), all born in New Amsterdam. William's two brothers,
Hendrick (2) and Matthew (2), went to Bergen (Jersey City) in
1680. There, on March 14, of the same year, Hendrick (2) married
Mary Johns Van Blarkum, a daughter of the American emigrant of
that name, and April 15, 1683, Matthew (2) married Ann Peterse,
afterward called Antje Jorckse. It does not appear that Hendrick
and Matthew purchased lands in Bergen. They probably lived on
leased lands while there. William (2) went to Hackensack in 1686,
where he joined the Dutch Church in March of that year. His brothers
Hendrick (2) and Matthew (2) went to Hackensack the following
year. William (2) had a child, Andrew, baptized at Hackensack
in March, 1686, shortly after his arrival. Nothing more is said
of William (2), and the inference is that he died soon after.
Hendrick (2) and Matthew (2), soon after their arrival, each
purchased from Captain John Berry, a farm of between two and
three hundred acres at Hackensack (party in the present village),
and extending from the Hackensack River to the Saddle River.
Each of them settled and built on his farm, where they remained
until their deaths. Both were farmers, but took an active art
in town and church matters. Matthew was a deacon of the "church
on the Green" in 1705.
Matthew's children (of the third generation) were Andrew,
born in 1684, at Jersey City, married Elizabeth Bross; Christina,
born in 1686 (married John Huysman); Lea, born in 1695 (married
Jolin Vanderhoff, of Albany); Rachel, born in 1703 (twice married);
and John, born in 1705 (married Elizabeth Kipp). All except Andrew
were born at Hackensack. Hendrick's children of the third generation
were Andrew, born in 1681 (married Abigail Ackerman); John, born
in 1682 (married Rachel Terhune); William, born in 1684; Catharine,
born in 1685 (married Peter Garretse Van Allen, of Rotterdam,
Holland); Garret, born in 1696; Gertrude, born in 1699 (married
Hendrick Alberts Zabriskie); and Lea (married Christian Alberts
Zabriskie).
Many of these, with their children, removed to Paramus and
scattered through Saddle River, Ridgewood, and Mildland Townships,
where their descendants are to-day numerous. Members of the family
have represented Bergen County in both houses of the Legislature;
others have worn the judicial ermine with dignity and respectability;
still others have become famous as physicians, clergymen, lawyers,
mayors of cities, publicists, mechanics, sailors, soldiers, and
agriculturists.
Jacob H. Hopper, the subject of this sketch, is a lineal descendant
of Andrew Hopper, the first emigrant of the name. He is a son
of John Hopper and Elizabeth (Goetchius) Hopper, and was born
at Saddle River, in Bergen County, August 6, 1823. Having received
a fair common school education in the schools of his native county,
he acquired while quite young the trade of harness-making, which
he followed successfully at Hackensack until 1880, when he was
made superintendent of the cemetery in that village. He still
holds this position, having filled it with great ability and
fidelity during the last twenty years. Mr. Hopper has also been
a prominent figure in public affairs. He was Town Collector of
Hackensack for three years and a Justice of the Peace for ten
years, and has served as a member of the Town Committee. For
forty-nine years he has been a leading member and one of the
chief supporters of the Hackensack Christian Reformed Church.
The ability, faithfulness, and integrity with which he has discharged
every trust, and the active interest he has taken in the progress
and welfare of his town and county, have won for him great respect
and the confidence of all who enjoy his acquaintance. He is public
spirited, enterprising, and patriotic, and a liberal, progressive
citizen, whose energies have been directed toward useful and
charitable ends.
He married Lydia Bogert, a descendant of one of the old Bergen
County families, and their children are Ann Elizabeth, John Henry,
and Martha Amelia Hopper.
Source: Genealogical History of Hudson and Bergen Counties,
New Jersey, Editor, Cornelius Burnham Harvey, The New Jersey
Genealogical Publishing Company, 1900, page 71-72.
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