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    John W. Smith

    Male 1803 - 1862  (~ 59 years)


    Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

    Generation: 1

    1. 1.  John W. Smith was born in May 1803 in Knowlton,Warren County, New Jersey (son of Isaac S. Smith and Catharine Wintermute); died on 27 Sep 1862; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard.

      Notes:

      The Kinney family originated in Holland and first settled near Stroudsburg, Pa. We presently know nothing of them. John W. and Catherine Smith had one son, Isaac Snover Smith (1835-1919) and three daughters: Sarah; Catherine (Mrs. John Kist
      - no issue); and Rachael. Sarah and Rachael did not marry. John W. was injured early in his career as a millwright and lived quietly in Kalarama thereafter. (Roscoe Smith notes) (I bet his middle name was Wintermute. LP)



      Birth and christening dates from Stillwater Presbyterian Church Records in Genealogy Magazine of New Jersey, Vol. 42, No. 1, Whole No. 160. Copy sent to Louise SP by Mary Miller in La.

      Family/Spouse: Catharine Ann Kinney. Catharine (daughter of Frederick M. Kinney and Margaret "Peggy"(Anne) Snover) was born on 21 Jun 1806 in Sussex County, NJ; died on 8 Nov 1899; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

      Children:
      1. Margaret Smith
      2. Catharine Smith
      3. Sarah Maria Smith was born in 1833; died in 1909.
      4. Isaac Snover Smith was born on 29 May 1835 in Kalarama, PA; died on 14 May 1919 in Pleasant Grove, Morris, NJ; was buried on 17 May 1919 in Pleasant Grove, Morris, NJ.
      5. Rachel Smith was born in 1839; died in 1922.

    Generation: 2

    1. 2.  Isaac S. Smith was born on 14 Jul 1778 in Knowlton, Warren, NJ (son of Joshua Smith and Keshia); died on 29 Jun 1854 in Blairstown Township, Warren, NJ; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard.

      Notes:

      Knowlton Prebyterian Churchyard - "Isaac S. Smith d. June 29, 1854, aged 75.11.15; relict Catharine, d. Dec. 5, 1856, aged 74.0.7



      All sons were prosperous farmers and lived in the Township except Isaac F. who took over his father's mill property, also acres of land, later selling to Martin Painter and then locating in Kalamazoo, Michigan and buried there. The parents,
      also other sons, are buried in Knowlton Church Yard except Joshua who is in the Quaker Cemetery nearby. Sally Ann married Simeon Cooke of Marksboro where she was buried after living past 88 years; she was small, weighed only 84 pounds at time
      of her death. (Roscoe Smith notes)



      "Copied from notes of James Edgar Smith" - "Isaac Smith, Sr., a millwright, after marriage to Rachel Wintermute, settled in Blairstown Township, N.J., buying a farm, also erecting a grist mill, the little settlement being named Smith's Mills,
      later Painter's Mills, then Kalarama."

      "Wintermute Family History" by J.B. Wintermute, 1900 - date of birth July 14, 1778.



      "History of Sussex & Warren Counties" pub. 1881, compiled by James P. Snell, p. 640 - "Blairstown....The exact date of its settlement by civilized man will probably never be known, but there can be no doubt about its being among the earlier
      settlements within the limits of Warren County. The original name of the place, so far as we have been able to learn, was "Smith's Mills." Many years before the Revolutionary war a man of that familar name-Smith-had a large grist mill and a
      saw-mill on the grounds now belonging to Hon. John I. Blair." (Not this Isaac Smith) P. 653 - "The next grist-mill in this township was built by Isaac Smith in 1831-32, now owned by the heirs of Martin Painter, and know as 'Painter's Mills,"
      and located south of Walnut Valley Post Office."

      Isaac married Catharine Wintermute. Catharine (daughter of Johannes\John Windemuth and Anna Margaretha Couse) was born on 28 Nov 1782 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey; died on 4 Dec 1856 in Blairstown, Warren, NJ; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


    2. 3.  Catharine Wintermute was born on 28 Nov 1782 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey (daughter of Johannes\John Windemuth and Anna Margaretha Couse); died on 4 Dec 1856 in Blairstown, Warren, NJ; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard.

      Notes:

      Christened: 9 Apr 1783

      Residence: Kalorama farm

      Children:
      1. 1. John W. Smith was born in May 1803 in Knowlton,Warren County, New Jersey; died on 27 Sep 1862; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard.
      2. Enoch T. Smith was born on 27 Oct 1805; died on 31 Aug 1875.
      3. Charles Smith was born on 4 Apr 1808.
      4. Barnet Smith was born on 20 Oct 1810; died on 17 Oct 1817.
      5. Sarah Ann Smith was born on 5 Sep 1813.
      6. Joshua Smith was born on 2 Jul 1816.
      7. Isaac F. Smith was born on 12 May 1819.
      8. N. S. Smith was born on 6 Feb 1825.
      9. Henry K. Smith


    Generation: 3

    1. 4.  Joshua Smith

      Joshua married Keshia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


    2. 5.  Keshia
      Children:
      1. 2. Isaac S. Smith was born on 14 Jul 1778 in Knowlton, Warren, NJ; died on 29 Jun 1854 in Blairstown Township, Warren, NJ; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard.

    3. 6.  Johannes\John Windemuth was born on 8 Jun 1757 in Old stone Stillwater house built by father (son of The Emigrator Johann Georg Windemuth and Johanna Margaretha Elizabetha Bernhardten); died on 28 Jul 1810 in Old stone house where born.

      Notes:



      "Abstracts of Divisions of Warren and Sussex County Estates Filed at Sussex County Courthouse, Newton, NJ from 1789-1918" by Frederick R. Alleman and Virgina A. Brown, 1978: Estate John Wintermute, SB130; Map SB 135, Location: Hardwick Twp., on
      the Paullinskill, adjoining Andrew Robbins, Dildine, Peter Wintermute, Joseph Anderson, et al. Heirs-at-law and relationship to deceased; children. Catherine Smith, nee Wintermute Anna Margaret Wintermute Eve Wintermute Henry B. Wintermute
      Elizabeth Cassidy, nee Wintermute Susannah Wintermute Dated: May 29, 1811 Recorded: August 6, 1835

      Johannes\John married Anna Margaretha Couse about 1781. Anna was born on 17 May 1761 in Frankford, NJ; died on 21 Jul 1854 in Stillwater, Sussex, New Jersey; was buried in Stillwater Cemetery, Stillwater, Sussex Co., NJ. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


    4. 7.  Anna Margaretha Couse was born on 17 May 1761 in Frankford, NJ; died on 21 Jul 1854 in Stillwater, Sussex, New Jersey; was buried in Stillwater Cemetery, Stillwater, Sussex Co., NJ.

      Notes:



      Residence: From North of Newton, New Jersey

      Children:
      1. 3. Catharine Wintermute was born on 28 Nov 1782 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey; died on 4 Dec 1856 in Blairstown, Warren, NJ; was buried in Knowlton Presbyterian Churchyard.
      2. Anna Margaret Wintermute was born on 18 Jun 1785 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey; died about 1843 in daughters home in Junius.
      3. Evanna Wintermute was born on 2 Jun 1787 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey; died on 8 Feb 1871 in Pultney, New York.
      4. Henry Bernhardt Wintermute was born on 7 Sep 1789 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey; died on 10 Sep 1889 in Pultney, New York; was buried in Buried with wife in Glen View Cemetery.
      5. Anna Elizabeth Wintermute was born on 4 May 1792 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey; died on 23 Nov 1883 in MI.
      6. Anny Marie Wintermute was born on 13 Dec 1794 in The Old Stone House; died on 1 Feb 1876 in Osage Mission, now known as St. Paul, Kansas; was buried in 1869 in Moved to Kansas.
      7. Jacob Sends Wintermute was born on 14 Jun 1797 in Old Stone House, Stillwater, New Jersey; died on 25 Jun 1860 in Columbia Cross Roads, Bradford County, Pennsyvlania.
      8. Susanna Wintermute was born on 13 May 1800 in The Old Stone House.


    Generation: 4

    1. 12.  The Emigrator Johann Georg Windemuth was born on 11 May 1711 in Pfungstadt Kreis Darmstadt Hessen, Europa (son of Johann Christoph Windemuth and Maria Margarethe Kleppinger); died on 19 Dec 1782 in Stillwater, Sussex County, New Jersey.

      Notes:

      On May 11, 1711, Johann George Windemuth was born in the southwest region of the Rhineland-Palatinate just east of the Rhine River in Pfungstadt, Germany. Johann was the youngest son of Johann Christoph Windemuth, a wainwright, and Mary Marguerite Kleppinger, a tailor. It was a challenging time to grow up in the Palatinate region of Germany in those years. The many years of war with their French neighbors really took its toll. Other factors like severe winters crippled the local economy. The economy was directly affected by the weather dependent agricultural industry. It is no wonder why so many ?poor Palatines?, like Johann George Windemuth, decided to leave everything behind to take the treacherous journey to North America.

      Johann?s journey to North America started in May of 1736. He took a small crowded scow up the Rhine River to the port city of Rotterdam, Holland. Confronted with an endless barrage of tolls, depleting all or most of your resources was inevitable. The feverish demand to get to North America fed the economic growth of the bustling Colonial City of Philadelphia. As the existing pool of laborers and craftsmen were running low, the influx of these Palatine Germans really filled that void. This new bond between Palatines and the growth of Philadelphia created a new trade that was no different than indentured servitude. The Palatines were the unintended architects of this new trade, where their debt was sold to the highest bidder. They were mandated to work off their debt, which in many cases lasted 3 or more years. It is debatable who ended up with the better part of this arrangement. Cheap labor or temporarily relinquishing your freedom to live free in a new fertile land. It was only around 30 years later that the bargain was tested as the Colonists were preparing to declare their independence from Great Britain.

      The path to freedom starts in Rotterdam. It is there that brokers traded the freedom of these Germans in exchange for passage to Colonial North America . Fueled by the promise of a fresh start, Johann and thousands of others ended up trading their freedom in exchange for the cost of the trip. He quickly made arrangements with Captain Robert Harle whose ship was named ?Harle?. Harle had a decent reputation, but he, too, could not escape the pressure to maximize profit at the expense of the desperate Palatines. Once all this business was sorted out, it was off to London. While in London, the passengers were immedietaly expected to pledge their allegiance to the King of England in exchange for the right of way to the Colonies. The Crown was desperately hoping to flood the Colonies with presumed loyalists.

      During the summer of 1736, Johann and others flirted with death across the Altantic on the ship Harle. Overcrowding, rancid provisions and sea sickness were only some of the dangers. This was certainly not a deterrent to Johann. After four harrowing months, Johann finally arrived in Philadelphia. Despite coming from a rural community, life in the city of Philadelphia was likely more comfortable and familiar than expected. By 1736, there were thousands of German speaking people residing in Philadelphia. Johann and his family became acquainted with Johan Peter Bernhardt and his family. Most likely Johann George?s father struck up a friendship with Johan Peter Berhardt. There is the possibility they were acquainted back in Germany. This relationship eventually led to Johann George marrying the daughter of Johan Peter Bernhardt, Margaret Elizabeth Bernhardten in 1739. Johann George was 25 and Margaret Elizabeth 18 at the time of their marriage. A few years later in 1741, Johan?s youngest daughter, Maria Catharine, ended up marrying a young Palatine man named Caspar Shaver (later to be known as Caspar Shafer).

      This new alliance, the Wintermute-Shafer family, was now ready to build a new future together. They unleashed themselves from the shackles of debt and raised enough money to lease some land. While many German immigrants looked to settle in Pennsylvania. They decided to settle in the ?wilderness? of New Jersey. They made a deal with the London Company who were trading properties that were part of the William Penn tract. One of the members of the London Company was Dr. John Fothergill, a very close friend of Benjamin Franklin. Some of that unsold land ended up in Western New Jersey, in what is now called Sussex County. They chose to settle in a small village called Stillwater that was part of the town of Hardwick, New Jersey. The alluvial and limestone rich land they chose was along the Paulinskill River and across from a powerful spring called The Big Spring. Their risk was certainly paying off, but all they had to do was get there.

      The not so easy path to Stillwater was following a trail north east along the ?Blue Mountain? ridge (now known as Kitattinny). This was a risky journey that required tenacity and the basic knowledge of survival. They would have had to negotiate with rough terrain and their new cohabitants, the Lenape Indians. They ended up in Stillwater sometime in 1742. They did not waste any time settling in. They quickly built a rudimentary log cabin and began clear cutting fields for farming. The Shafers and the Wintermutes evolved into a productive and successful family business enterprise. By 1755, Johann had four children - his oldest was Elizabeth Snook, the 2nd child was Margaret Kreter, his first son was George and the youngest was Peter. It was at that time he decided to build a stone house along the Paulinskill river. A few years later he built a fulling mill along the river, which is said to be the first or one of the first in Sussex county. Eventually, his son Peter operated the mill and was able to build his own stone house (now known as Bonnie Brook Farm) on the road with an eye shot of his father?s house. While history paints a picture that Johann was in his brother-in-law?s (Caspar Shafer?s) shadow, there is an untold story about how great this man really was. A man whose dreams came true and died free in a country that was built on courage, hope and the promise of prosperity. He remained in Stillwater the rest of his life and was buried in the Stillwater Cemetery on December 19, 1782. He was survived by his wife, 5 children and 15 grandchildren. Three of his grandchildren were born within just a few months prior to his passing. The Windemuth aka Wintermute family is alive and well today. They are very proud of their heritage and the Windemuth family organization has come to visit the home many times over the years. Stillwater would not be the community it is today without Johann George Wintermute.



      You can find this article here:
      https://thebonniebrookfarm.com/f/remembering-johann-george-wintermute

      Johann married Johanna Margaretha Elizabetha Bernhardten in 1739 in Sussex County, New Jersey. Johanna (daughter of John Peter Bernhardt) was born on 5 Aug 1721 in Kezenheim, Grafschaft Bolander, Europa; died on 15 Feb 1800 in Stillwater, New Jersey; was buried in 1800 in Buried in Stillwater, N.J. Cemetery. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


    2. 13.  Johanna Margaretha Elizabetha Bernhardten was born on 5 Aug 1721 in Kezenheim, Grafschaft Bolander, Europa (daughter of John Peter Bernhardt); died on 15 Feb 1800 in Stillwater, New Jersey; was buried in 1800 in Buried in Stillwater, N.J. Cemetery.

      Notes:

      From her toombstone:



      Here Rests in God

      Margaret Elizabeth Windemuth, born 1721, (Aug. 5) in the Kezenheim in the Grafschaft Bolander Europa, Came to America with father, mother and two sisters in the year 1731. Died Febry 15 1800 aged 78 years 6 months and 10 days.

      Children:
      1. Maria Catharina Windemuth was born on 11 Nov 1740; died on 29 Jan 1747/1748.
      2. Elizabetha Wintermute was born in 1742; died in 1800.
      3. Maria Juliana Windemuth was born on 27 May 1744; died on 31 Jan 1747/1748.
      4. Maria Margareta Wintermute was born on 9 Jul 1746 in Stillwater, New Jersey; died on 19 Feb 1800 in Fairmount, New Jersey.
      5. George Wintermute was born on 8 Jul 1748; died on 8 Jan 1837; was buried in 1837 in Buried in Redstone Baptist Church cemetery.
      6. Catharina Juliana Wintermute was born about 1750; died after 4 May 1800.
      7. Peter Windamute was born on 20 Mar 1751/1752 in Stillwater, Sussex County, New Jersey; died on 18 Mar 1830 in Stillwater, Sussex County, New Jersey; was buried in 1791 in Built large stone house at Big Spring..
      8. 6. Johannes\John Windemuth was born on 8 Jun 1757 in Old stone Stillwater house built by father; died on 28 Jul 1810 in Old stone house where born.