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JAMES B. VREDENBURGH
JAMES B. VREDENBURGH is of Holland
descent, the respectability of which has been strengthened by
intermarriage with the Coles, Schuremans, Van Dorns, Brinckerhoffs,
and other of the most prominent Holland families.
Isaac Van Vredenburgh (1), a well-to-do
citizen, resident, and burgher of the City of Hague, in Holland,
had a son who bore the somewhat elongated name of William Isaacsen
Van Vredenburgh (2), who, while yet a very young man, enlisted
as a soldier in the service of the Dutch West India Company and
came to America in May, 1658, on board the good ship "Gilded
Beaver." He seems to have done military duty in and about
New Amsterdam for several years, during which time, on October
19, 1664, he married Apollonia Barents, a daughter of Barent
Jacobsen Cole (Kool), a prominent officer of the West India Company,
of Amsterdam, Holland. He continued in the military service after
his marriage, being stationed and residing with his family, part
of the time, at Fort William Hendrick, and part of the time in
the new fortification at New Orange. In 1677 he must have left
the military service, as he then, and as late as 1680, was living
with his family at Esopus, N. Y. His children were eight in number,
the eldest of whom was Isaac Van Vredenburgh (3), baptized in
New York, October 4, 1665, and who married March 7, 1694, Janneken
Joosten, a daughter of Joost Carelszen, by whom he had six children.
William (4), the second of these six, baptized in New York, October
4, 1696, died February 4, 1773, married April 22, 1717, Catharina,
daughter of Patrick Schott or Scott, of Kingston, N. Y. William's
children were nine, the fourth of whom, Petrus Benedit Vredenburgh
(5), born July 30, 1721, died July 26, 1810, married (1) Margarita,
daughter of Jacobus Schureman, and (2) Elizabeth Fisher. His
children by his two wives were eleven in number. He removed to
New Brunswich, N. J., in 1742. One of his sons, Petrus (6), baptized
in New Brunswich, N. J., August 4, 1745, died August 24, 1823,
married December 17, 1772, Margarita, daughter of John Schureman.
This Peter was for many years a prominent merchant at New Brunswick,
where he became one of the most influential men in Middlesex
County. He was County Collector of that county for forty-one
years (from 1782 to 1823) and a member of the New Jersey Assembly
from 1790 to 1795. He also held many local offices, including
that of Justice of the Peace. Of his two children Petrus (7)
born in New Brunswick, October 5, 1778, removed to Somerville,
N. J., where he became one of the most prominent physicians of
the State, and where he died September 15, 1848. He married December
20, 1804, Maria, daughter of Joseph and Sarah (Vanderbilt) Van
Dorn, who was born April 7, 1783, and died April 2, 1855. Petrus
(7) left a large family of children, one of whom, Peter Vredenburgh,
Jr., (8) born at Somerville, N. J., October 31, 1805, entered
Rutgers College and was graduated therefrom in 1821. He read
law at Somerville and was admitted to the New Jersey bar in 1829.
Soon afterward he removed to Freehold, N. J., where he commenced
the practice of his profession. In due time he was appointed
Prosecutor of the Pleas for Monmouth County, and soon after was
elected to the State Legislature as a member of the Council.
Subsequently he was made an Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of New jersey, which position he held for fourteen years
from 1854. Many of the opinions which he rendered were beautifully
expressed and are continually quoted as precedents. He married
April 19, 1836, Eleanor, daughter of Abraham and Catherine (Remsen)
Brinckerhoff, born July 1, 1815, died March 29, 1884. Judge Vredenburgh
died at Freehold, N. J., March 24, 1873. His children were Peter,
William H., and James B. (9). Of these the eldest was Major of
the Fourteenth Regiment of New Jersey Volunteers in the War of
the Rebellion. He served as Inspector-General of the Third Army
Corps, on the staff of General William H. French, and was present
and took part in all the battles in which his regiment was engaged.
At the battle of Oppequan Creek, near Winchester, on September
19, 1864, while in command of his regiment, he was killed while
bravely leading it in a charge.
On his mother's side James R. Vredenburgh
is descended from an old New Jersey family, the founder of whom
was Joris Dircksen Brinckerhoff, who came to America from Drenthe
in the United Provinces in 1638, settling on Staten Island and
subsequently in what is now Brooklyn. His sons subsequently settled
in Bergen and Hudson Counties.
James B. Vredenburgh, the subject
of this sketch, is of the seventh generation from William Isaacsen
Van Vredenburgh, and was born at Freehold, N. J., October 1,
1844. He received his early education in Freehold, was graduated
from Princeton University in 1863, read law with Aaron R. Throckmorton,
of Freehold, and was admitted to the bar of New Jersey as an
attorney in June, 1866, and as a counselor in June, 1869. Upon
his admission he located in Jersey City and soon came into prominence
as a lawyer of ability, industry, and perseverance. In 1872,
when the late Isaac W. Scudder was elected to Congress, Mr. Vredenburgh
formed a partnership with that eminent man and thus acquired
an equal share in an extensive and lucrative practice. This partnership
continued until the death of Hon. Isaac W. Scudder in 1881. In
1883 Mr. Vredenburgh associated himself with Judge Abram Q. Garretson,
and the two have ever since carried on a large and successful
business, practicing in all the State and United States courts,
the firm name being Vredenburgh & Garretson. Mr. Vredenburgh
succeeded his former partner, Judge Scudder, as counsel for the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company and still holds that position.
He has appeared in all the important cases affecting the interests
of that company and in many others of note. He served on the
staff of Governor Joseph D. Bedle with the rank of Colonel, has
always taken an active interest in public affairs, and is a member
of the American Bar Association.
He has never sought political preferment,
yet he has discharged the duties of the citizen with characteristic
energy and is widely known as a man of commanding influence.
He has maintained the high reputation, not only of his father,
but of his ancestors, and has displayed those sterling attributes
and high legal qualifications which have distinguished the family
for generations.
Mr. Vredenburgh married Miss Emily
H. Van Vorst, a descendant of the well known Van Vorst family,
the founder of which was Cornelis Van Voorst, who came to this
country from Holland as early as 1636. Their children are Peter,
James, John, William, Eugene, and Eleanor.
Source: Genealogical
History of Hudson and Bergen Counties, New Jersey, Editor,
Cornelius Burnham Harvey, The New Jersey Genealogical Publishing
Company, 1900, page 103-105. |