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The Elm Tree Tavern
of Woodbridge, NJ, 1739-1823
©2010-2024 Doug Wilson

1781 map of Woodbridge VillageColonial Woodbridge had a choice of taverns dotting the thoroughfares, ready to serve civic affairs and wayward travelers, alike. Woodbridge, strategically located near ferry docks across the rivers and bays from New York and on the most direct path to Philadelphia, saw it's share of travelers. The map (right) is an extracted from a 1781 Middlesex County map available at the Library of Congress American Memory collection.

Likely it was the thirsty needs and civic functions of the township inhabitants that welcomed the first ordinary, as they were known. "In 1686, Samuel Moore was by unanimous vote, made choice of, to keep an ordinary, that is, an inn, for the town. ... Between the buildings [in 1946] occupied by Greiner's barber shop and Janni's store on the corner of Green Street and Rahway Avenue, stood this historical tavern." (Breckenridge, p4) According to Dally's 1870 report of the town, the tavern "probably occupied the site upon which Dr. Samuel E. Freeman's drug store now stands, as that is the spot which both the record and tradition assign as the residence." (Dally, p101)

On the southwestern edge of the village was the Cross Keys "situated on the main post and stage road between Philadelphia and New York. It was first maintained as a hostelry by William Manning" and served the Revolutionary cause as described further here. After the war, "the first liberty pole, or flag, erected in Woodbridge, was placed in front of the tavern across the street" by Janet Gage. April 22, 1789, George Washington overnighted there as he travelled to New York for his inaugauration. He was accompanied by Governor William Livingston and welcomed "by the Woodbridge Calvary, Captain Ichabod Potter, commanding." General Lafayette was also entertained there in 1824. It served as "the place of the Town Meeting from 1824 to 1848" when it "ceased to operate as a tavern." (Breckenridge, p4; McElroy, p23)

Around the corner from the Cross Keys Inn was "the famous Pike House, so called because the turnpike roads to Rahway and Blazing Star (Carteret) passed its front door at the southwest corner of the road (now Green Street) to Uniontown." While this description places the tavern on the southwest corner of Rahway Avenue and Green Street, the 1781 map above clearly marks the Pike House across the street, southeast of the intersection. From 1848 the Town Meetings were held at the Pike House "where this annual meeting was to continue to 1874. The Pike House eventually became known as the Woodbridge Hotel until it was demolished in the 1920's. In 1955 the site was occupied by a gas station. (McElroy, p23) By 2011 that corner has become the location of a strip of retail stores.

North on Turnpike Road (Church St.), before you get to the old White Church, and set back from the street behind a great, old elm was "the tavern conducted by Thomas, James, and Charles Jackson on the road to Rahway and Blazing Star (Carteret). This tavern, the Elm Tree, was located on the west side of the road to Rahway, now known as Rahway Avenue, a part of which is still standing at No. 531, a few feet north of Grove Avenue." (McElroy, p23)

Hosted by three generations of Jacksons from about 1739 to 1820, this was the location of town meetings for decades and important Patriot activity during the Revolution and the War of 1812. After 80 years with a host of the same family, the inn must have been synonymous with the family. However, the records are sparce due to a county courthouse fire that engulfed the only copy of US Census and other civil records prior to 1830. I endeavor here to retrieve all relevant records to the tavern and its keepers so as to construct a historical record that may help reveal the family history of the Jacksons of Woodbridge, New Jersey, innkeepers.

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Colonial Years

The Revolution

Early American Period

Thomas, James & Charles, Proprietors from about 1790 to 1820

There is no direct evidence that Charles and Mary or his brothers, John and Benjamin, ever had children. However, it is reported that from 1800-1820 the tavern on "the road to Rahway and Blazing Star (Carteret) ... at the southwest corner of the road (now Green Street) to Uniontown" was "conducted by Thomas, James, and Charles Jackson." (McElroy, p23; Jost & Jost, p216) The records timeline below for Thomas and James indicate they are residents of Woodbridge in 1790 because they signed a petition in 1793. They are found together again on the 1792 roster of the Woodbridge Company of Light Infantry in the New Jersey militia. This suggests that Thomas and James were of age and living in Woodbridge. And I find no other Thomas, James or Charles old enough to be innkeepers around 1787 when records of Mary's proprietorship end. So they could have been keeping the Elm Tree as early as 1790. But who were they that these Jacksons became keepers of the Elm Tree? Sons or nephews of Charles and Mary? Cousins?

Records Timeline for Thomas, James & Charles Jackson of Early American Woodbridge, NJ
Thomas Jackson (b bef1773; d bef1830)       1773                                       1790   1792 1793                   1803 1804     1810               1818 1819                                          
James Jackson (b bef1773; d bef1830) 1773 1790 1792 1793 1810 1813 1819                    
Charles Jackson (b abt1775; d aft1840) 1775 1817 1818 1819 1830                   1840

At the risk of being fanciful, what we see here is a Thomas, James and Charles Jackson that were born about the same time - as the Revolution was just beginning to stew. They appear together later as young adults in the militia, on petitions, and on tax rolls. Once all three appear in a tax roll - the last year the Elm Tree was in the hands of a Jackson proprietorship. Eighteen thirteen is the one year James, alone, is identified as patron of the Elm Tree. And lastly, there are just two more US Census records of Charles still living in Woodbridge.

A DNA test in December, 2012, of a male Jackson descendent of a Thomas Jackson (b.abt.1765 in Woodbridge, NJ) was a match for the Robert Jackson of Hempstead NY family from which James, Jr., the first tavernkeeper, descends. This feels like we have three brothers (or at least cousins) that took over the family business around 1786 when their mother, Mary, remarries. Did they then stay with it together in adjusting roles of responsibility? Could two of the brothers have passed away before 1830? Or did they move on at age 45 plus?

Only the Elm Tree Tavern and DNA testing demonstrates a familial link between these three and the prior innkeepers. The vital records provide no evidence of the origin of these three named innkeepers. There is only indirect evidence as records of persons named Jackson gradually increase after the Revolution as though Charles, John and/or Benjamin of that rebellious generation married and had children without a record surviving. Either that or at least one other family of Jacksons moved in from another part of New Jersey. See Jackson Family Tree Fractured Branch for more about the various records of Jacksons in New Jersey during this time.

Clearly, the tavern was once again owned and operated by a James Jackson during the war of 1812. A special town meeting was at the Elm Tree Tavern "to take measures." (McElroy/Woodbridge High School, pp17-18)

It was not until 1815 that the subject of the War of 1812 was taken up in Woodbridge. As a matter of fact, no mention was made of war in the annual town meeting held April 12, 1813. It was necessary to call a special town meeting on May 24, 1813, to take measures for the defense "of our national rights pursuant to an extraordinary meeting of the Township Committee on the 13th instant at which the Township Committee was ordered to call this meeting to take into consideration means of defense against the common enemy." This meeting was held at the Inn of James Jackson where it was voted that seven hundred dollars be raised by assessment "for the defense of this town against the enemy."

A 1964 collection of local colonial recipes with anecdotal infomation about the taverns in Woodbridge of the day cites: "A famous tavern, known as the Elm Tree Tavern, conducted by Thomas, James and Charles Jackson was located on the west side of the road to Rahway Avenue. A part of it still stands at 531 Rahway Avenue. This inn was the location for Town meetings from 1800 to 1820 under the Jacksons and from 1821 to 1823 under Henry Potter." (Jost & Jost, p216; McElroy, p23)

After Potter, the property was no longer used for a tavern. "A private high school known as Woodbridge Seminary, Elm Tree Institute, and later as Morris Academy opened in 1826 under the direction of James Stryker on the site of Henry Potter's Inn on Rahway Avenue." (Troeger, p84; McElroy/Woodbridge High School) In 1837, the old elm tree after which the tavern was named was torn down. (Dally, pp199-200)

When the tree was cut down in 1837, its destruction being rendered necessary by its decayed condition, the circumference of it was thirty-two feet. It was averred that fifteen men could stand upright together within its hollow trunk. It was evidently a tree which would have proudly vied with some in the far-famed Yosemite Valley. The memory of it still lingers around the locality; and the writer hereof looks back with pleasure to the hours he passed in the Elm Tree Institute, which was for him truly an alma mater.

While the Institute continued for some time, the loss of the stately old elm fully closed the chapter on the tavern whose identity it inspired. What became of the family Jackson that served the community for three generations as proprietors of the Elm Tree Tavern? That is not at all clear. Comprehensive census records for Middlesex County would shed considerable light on the growing list of Jacksons in the area and their relationship to each other. In New Jersey, the tax and petition records in the 1790s almost serve to replace a complete census for 1790. Unfortunately, the US Census records for the critical years 1800, 1810, and 1820 were destroyed in a county courthouse fire.

Just north of the Elm Tree adjacent to the road to Blazing Star there is a Thomas L. Jackson in a family group of markers in the cemetery of the First Presbyterian Church, or Old White Church, as it is commonly known. A Thomas Jackson is also listed as a subscriber to that church in 1803 and 1804. (Dally, p230) The name Jackson in these early days is found only in this graveyard. References to the names Thomas and Charles are listed on tombstone inscriptions and among church burial records as follows. (Gardner/Devlin; Old White Church) The name James is not found.

I have yet to find evidence to directly associate these graves with the innkeepers, Thomas, James and Charles Jackson. Yet they could be related. For instance, the Charles (#1542) that died in 1867 in his 69th year is the same as the Charles above that married Sarah Ann Cutter and had the four children. Born in 1798, he could have been a third generation Charles and the first generation not to run a tavern.

The Friends Meeting House cemetery has no record of these three either. However, they could be there among the many unmarked graves. Friends were known for simple funerals and unmarked graves. (Plainfield Friends)

So whatever happened to the family that ran the Elm Tree Tavern for 80 years remains a mystery. See Jackson Family Tree Fractured Branch for more about the various records of Jacksons in New Jersey during this time and a possible explanation.

If anyone has any information that could clarify the relationship beyween the three generations of Jacksons that owned the Elm Tree Tavern in Woodbridge, New Jersey, I'd like to see it. Please let me know.

 

 

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References

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