Richard Hartshorne (settler) explained

Richard Hartshorne
Birth Date:1641
Birth Place:Hathern, Leicestershire, England
Death Place:Middletown, Province of New Jersey
Occupation:Farmer, politician
Parents:William Hugh Hartshorne
Katherine Roobottom
Children:11

Richard Hartshorne (; 1641 – May 22, 1722) was a Quaker settler and politician who was instrumental in the English settlement of the Navesink Highlands and Sandy Hook in New Jersey.[1] Hartshorne, who farmed nearly 2,400 acres in modern day Middletown and Atlantic Highlands, would also serve in the provincial assembly. Hartshorne's decadents would remain influential in the region, and Hartshorne Woods Park, situated on land acquired by Hartshorne, is named after him.[2]

Life and career

Hartshorne was born in Hathern, Leicestershire in 1641 to William Hugh Hartshorne and Katherine Roobottom. Hartshorne emigrated to Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in c. 1669, and married Margaret Carr in 1670. Hartshorne hosted Quaker religious leader George Fox in while in Rhode Island.[3]

Motivated by the granting of the Monmouth Tract to Quaker settlers in 1664, Hartshorne settled in what he called "Portland Poynt" in modern day Middletown Township, New Jersey in 1674. Hartshorne purchased land from the neighboring Lenape Navesink people,[4] including Sandy Hook in 1678, in which he was sold "all the liberty of pluming on Sandy Hook, hunting fishing and fowling, getting cannowes upon Sandy Hook or any part of the lands of the new sands". Hartshorne's land holdings eventually grew to nearly 2,400 acres, covering nearly all of Sandy Hook and the Highlands.[5]

Hartshorne served in the provincial assembly, and also wrote a pamphlets promoting the Navesink Highlands for settlement. Hartshorne had eleven children and died in 1722.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Richard Hartshorne (1641-1722) : Settler of the Jersey Shore . www.hathernhistory.co.uk . 3 August 2024.
  2. Web site: Historic Portland Place . www.monmouthcountyparks.com . Monmouth County Park System . 3 August 2024.
  3. Web site: The Story Of Highlands, New Jersey . www.highlandsnj.com . 3 August 2024.
  4. Veit . Richard . Hartshorne: Eight Generations and Their Highlands Estate Called Portland . New Jersey Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal . 11 January 2017 . 3 . 1 . 203–205 . 10.14713/njs.v3i1.77. 3 August 2024 . en . 2374-0647. free .
  5. Web site: The Hartshorne Legacy Historical Marker . www.hmdb.org . Historical Marker Database . 3 August 2024 . en.