|
Sometime
in 1743, Jacobus Vanderveer, the elder, whose grandfather had come
to New York from North Holland in 1659, became the first Vanderveer
to settle in the Bedminster area. He purchased 439 acres along the
North Branch of the Raritan River where he established a homestead
and successful grist and saw mills.
Throughout the 18th and 19th
centuries the Vanderveers were well-known members of the community.
Jacobus, the elder, served in several ways. He was Justice of
the Peace, an active member of the Dutch Reformed Church and instrumental
in forming the church's Bedminster congregation. In 1759, Vanderveer
donated land where the church was built north of Pluckemin. Aside
from their civic and religious contributions, Vanderveer family
members were staunch supporters of the American struggle for
independence. Elias Vanderveer, "an active and spirited Whig," was
taken prisoner during a British cavalry raid on Pluckemin
in 1776. Lawrence Vanderveer served as a surgeon during the
war and was also taken prisoner by the British. Jacobus Vanderveer,
the younger, is known to have helped supply the army.
|