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Jonathan Dunham alias Singletary
©2010-2024 Doug Wilson

Jonathan Dunham alias Singletary and Mary Bloomfield are born just two days shy of two years apart. During their childhood, he lives in Salisbury and Haverhill and she in Newbury, of Essex County, Massachusetts. This is likely where he learns something of construction and milling as there is considerable mill construction and operation along the rivers there. At the age of 19 and 17, respectively, he and Mary start their family in Haverhill with Esther and Mary. They move briefly to Connecticut where they have two more girls, Ruth and Eunice, and where he may have built a house and mill. Upon their move to Woodbridge, New Jersey, he builds the house and mill for which he is known, serves as town clerk, and has some of his more controversial exploits. It is in Woodbridge that their four boys are born - Jonathan, David, Nathaniel, and Benjamin. Mary dies there in 1705 at age 63 and he in 1724 at age 84, survived by just three of their eight children.

To me, he seems the embodiment of the American character. At various times throughout the many decades of his life he demonstrates courage, faith, fortitude, loyalty, industriousness, perseverance, and determined independence. Yet he is but one representative of the ingenious, self-reliant yeomen, women, and their children that made colonial America the birthplace of a great democracy. He is also someone several puritans, researchers, historians, and genealogists have most unfairly characterized. I trust an objective review of the documentation offered helps to set the record straight on the extraordinary and exemplary character of this individual.

For a possible explanation of his name change to Dunham alias Singletary, please see the discussion on the origins of Jonathan's father, Richard Singletary.

Select a title below to explore some of the events and controversial episodes of his full life or open all sections and browse.

1640-1649: Childhood in Salisbury

1650-1659: Adolescence in Haverhill of Puritan New England

1660-1669: Young Adulthood, the Trials of John Godfrey and a Move to Connecticut

1670-1679: Early Woodbridge Years and the Dutch Council of War Episode

1680-1689: Jonathan, the Quaker Preacher, On the Road with Case's Crew

1690-1699: Retirement in Woodbridge

1700s: The Twilight Years and Beyond

On June 25, 1700, John Eaton marries Jonathan's sister, Mary Singletery, in Haverhill. (Torrey, p.241) During the first years of the new century the Woodbridge residents are searching for a permanent minister and organizing regular church services.

On Thursday morning, April 10th, 1701, the Town Meeting passed a resolution directing that Mr. Shepard should be ordained as the Woodbridge minister; and the following influential men were delegated to talk with him on the subject and obtain his consent, viz.: Samuel Dennis, Samuel Hale, John Ilsley, Adam Hude, Wm. Stone, Gawen Lockhart, John Pike, Jonathan Dunham, Jonathan Bishop, Joseph Rolph, and George Brown, These men represented the wealth and intelligence of the town. They waited upon Mr. Shepard and urged him to consent to ordination as the village minister on the ground of mutual benefit. But ordination meant a settlement for life; or, at least, for a longer period of service than Mrs. Shepard, the clergyman's wife, desired. The committee, therefore, reported that ordination could not be thought of, as the lady in question positively obiected to it. (Dally, p. 164)

In 1702, the Woodbridge Anglicans officially became a parish. Prominent resident and town miller Jonathan Dunham and his son Benjamin actively recruited new members. Until c. 1710, the Anglicans attended services at the Meeting House, but left to form their own congregation, the Trinity Protestant Episcopal Church, when the Puritans became Presbyterians. (Troeger, p.25)

The Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds includes a transfer of the Haverhill land on April 18, 1702, from Mary to Jonathan with the agreement of their children at that time. (CoM, p. 202.1-203.1) This would be the same property Jonathan's parents give to his wife Mary in April 1662 during his trying times with John Godfrey.

Woodbridge in East New Jersey, America, April ye sixteenth anno Dom one thousand seven hundred & two know all men by these presents yt we Jonathan David Nathaniel and Benja Dunham alias Singletary & Mary Ellison ye sons & ye daughter of our honored Father and mother Jonathan & Mary Singletary alias Donham, our said Father being ye son of Richard and Susanna Singletary, who some years since Decd at Haverhill in the collony of ye Massachusetts Bay in America and our said mother being ye daughter of Thomas and Mary Bloomfield formerly of Newbury in ye aforesd collony who some years since In this Town of Woodbridge wherein we all are now living Inhabitants Deceased we all of us being of full age & Estate of men & women & we being all the children that our said Father & Mother have now living & ye said Mary ye mother of these aforesd five children I having Buried others five with ye consent of my husband I have Joyntly with my above named five Living Children and they and each one of them with me have Joyntly & severally & hereby do Joyntly & severally nominate Desire Constitue appoint & Impowere ye aforsd Jonathan ye son of ye aforsd Richard ye husband of me ye sd mother & ye father of us ye above named five living children viz Jonathan, David, Nathaniel & Benjamin Donham, alias Singletary & Mary Ellison. To alienate from our heirs & forever & from all & each one of us & ye all & every part & percell of yt upland Low land & meadow land & ye premises withall ye rights appurtenances and privileges thereto belonging and any manner of way appertaining lying & being within ye bonds of ye Town of Haverhill In ye Colony abovesd To us and each one of us Immediately mediately directly or Implicitely given granted & any manner of way to us conveyed by ye aforesd Richard Singletary ye honored Father in Law to me ye said mother and grandfather to us ye above named five children as by his deed of conveyance entered in ye Records for ye County of Norfolk In ye aforesd Collony and on ye Books kept for ye town of Haverhill may more particularly appear and for all ye said Land together or In parts & parcels as he shall se fitt we ye aforesd Constitutes do hereby give unto ye said Jonathan son of ye said Richard & Susannah full power and authority In his own name or In his own & our names as he shall see fitt to sign seal & deliver a deed or deeds of sale gift grant or conveyance for part or ye whole of ye said land & premises & in such manner and form and with such warrantee as he with ye grantees shall agree upon & ye same to enfeoffe In & Confirm upon ye said Grantee or grantees & into their possession to deliver as freely fully amply & absolutely as all of us being present & together with him ye said husband and father could & might do as also if he shall thinke fitt either before in or after ye conveyance of ye said land & premises, either by himself or by any other person or persons by him empowered by letter or letters of attorney to commence & enter & prosecute to ye utmost effect any action or actions, etc.

Signed by
Mary Donham M[ark] alias Singletary
Jonathan Donham alias Singletary
David Donham alias Singletary
Nathaniel Donham alias Singletary
Benjamin Donham alias Singletary
Mary Ellison

Wit:
John Pike
Elisha Parker

Ack: Apr. 18, 1702, before
Samll. Hale, Justice of the Peace;
Thomas Pike, Town Clerk of Woodbridge

On September 6, 1706, Jonathan's namesake son dies at the young age of 32. He leaves his wife of ten years, Esther [Rolph], with a son and two daughters under nine years of age. (Dally, p. 327) The extract of his will, dated September 1, as follows: "Dunham, Jonathan, of Woodbridge, Middlesex Co., yeoman; will of. Wife Easter, sole executrix. Children -- Samuel (under age), Eunice and Mary. Real and Personal estate (land on the Rariton, bought of Thomas Nois). Witnesses -- Benjamin Crumell, Ezekiel Bloomfield, Joseph Rolph. Proved october 30, 1706. Lib I, p. 160". (NJ Archives, 23:146)

In the spring of 1707, Richard Dunham was born to Jonathan's son Benjamin and Mary (Rolph), his wife, at 11 am on the 28th day of May. (Dally, p. 327) They will have one daughter, Katherine (b. 1708) and and two more sons, Jonathan (b. 1710) and Benjamin (b. 1712). It is this Jonathan (Benjamin2, Jonathan1) and Mary (Smith) Dunham who will have seven boys and three daughters. Their eldset son, Daniel (b. 1730), is a Loyalist in the Revolution and moves his family to Canada after the Revolution. Their fifth son, Samuel (b.1742), and sixth son, Asher (b.1744) are Patriots serving in the Middlesex militia. Generations later, Samuel's 4x great-granddaughter, Stanley Ann Dunham, will give birth in Hawaii to the 44th President of the United States, Barrack Hussein Obama (b. 1961; Stanley10, Stanley9, Ralph8, Jacob7, Jacob6, Jacob5, Samuel4, Jonathan3, Benjamin2, Jonathan1).

A few months after Richard is born to Benjamin and Mary, on August 16th, tragedy strikes the Singletary family again when Jonathan's brother and Richard Singletary's namesake, Richard Jr., dies in a skirmish with Indians in Sterling, Massachusetts. (Hudson, p.107-108)

… the Indians surprised and took two men who were laboring in the field, Jonathan Wilder, a native of Lancaster, and a Mr. Howe of Marlborough, who fortunately made his escape. Mr. Wilder was carried to Lancaster and killed by the Indians, as was their custom, when attacked by the English. On the day after the above tragic scene, Capt. Thomas Howe, of Marlborough, with about twenty men, marched in pursuit of the Indians, and being joined by about the same number from Lancaster, they overtook the enemy in what is now Sterling, where a severe conflict ensued. The affair is thus described in the Boston news-letter, of the 25th of August, 1707.

"On Monday, the 16th current, thirteen Indians on the frontier surprised two men at their labors in the meadows at Marlborough, about four miles distant from the body of the town, and took them both alive; and as they passed out of the town, they took a woman also in their marching off, whom they killed. Howe, one of their prisoners, broke away in a scuffle, and bought home the Indian’s gun and hatchet, and acquainted the garrison and the inhabitants, who speedily followed, and were joined by twenty men from Lancaster, being in all forty, came up with the enemy, who were also increased to thirty-six. and on Tuesday, at ten o’clock, found them, and in two hours exchanged ten shots per man, in which skirmish we lost two men, and two slightly wounded; no doubt we killed several of the enemy, whose track being dragged away we saw, but recovered but one of them, though it is probably conjectured that we killed ten or twelve at least. We took twenty-four of their packs and drove them off the ground, and they are yet pursued by two parties from Lancaster and Groton. At our forces overtaking and attacking them, they barbarously murdered the captives."

In the packs taken from the Indians, as mentioned above, was found the scalp of Miss Goodnow, which was the first intelligence that had of her melancholy fate. In the encounter mentioned above, John Farren and Richard Singletary were slain.

William Ellison, husband of Mary's namesake daughter, also dies about this time. The extract of his will (below) documents that Mary was living in March of 1707, so probably does not pass until after 1707. (NJ Archives, 23:152)

1707 March 27. Ellison, William, of Woodbridge, Middlesex Co., tanner; will of. Wife Mary. Children--Enoch, under age, Emme. John Kaighen of Gloucester Co. to inherit, if children should die without issue. All the movable part of the estate is given to John Kinsey and Thomas Pike. Homestead with 8 acres of land, next to Capt. Parker, a house, now occupied by Barnard Katherlin, another house with the tann-fatts and 8 a. of salt meadow, other real property. Executors--John Kinsey and Tho: Pike. Witnesses--Elisha Parker, Stephen Tuttle, George Ewbanck. Proved August 18, 1707. Lib. I, p. 185

Son Benjamin dies the last day of 1715. His will, dated 1706, sites that he is an innholder and leaves everything to his wife, Mary. (NJ Archives 23:140)

September 5, 1721, is the day Jonathan and Mary's grandaughter, Eunice Dunham, marries her first cousin once removed, Joseph Bloomfield. Mr. John Pierce, town clerk, performs the ceremony. They have four daughters and three sons over the next 12 years. (Dally, p. 352) One of them is Moses Bloomfield, well known Woodbridge surgeon, active abolitionist, and father of the future Patriot General, abolitionist, New Jersey Governor, and US Congressman, Joseph Bloomfield. (HSB)

Jonathan dies before April 24, 1724, according to a document of that date, in which his son, Jonathan, noted that his father had lately deceased. Reportedly, Jonathan is buried near his house in Woodbridge. (Hancock) November 17th of this year, Jonathan's son, Nathaniel, and Joannah (Thornell), have their seventh child, Ephraim. (Dally, p. 353) They will have yet one more child in 1726.

A 1756 charter for the Presbyterian Church of Woodbridge granted by King George II names Jonathan's grandson, David Donham, among the eleven original trustees. (Dally, p. 304) This David passes away just two years later. A decade later, a 1769 charter for the Trinity (Episcopal) Church of Woodbridge granted by King George III names Joseph Donham as one of four vestrymen. (Dally, p. 307) Both of these men are sons of Jonathan's son, David, and Mary Ilsley. This would seem to represent the point at which the Woodbridge Dunham's split their religious affiliation and establish separate churches.

In the Revolution, many of Jonathan and Mary's descendents are known to be Patriots. Their grandson, Daniel, and two of their gg-grandsons (by Isaac Dunham and Catherine Campbell) are Loyalists. I have reviewed only some of their descendents still living in New Jersey during the Revolution. The Patriots I have identified so far are:

Continental Army

Third Battalion, First and Second Establishment

Joseph Bloomfield, 1st Est: Captain, 2nd Est:Major and Judge Advocate of the Northern Army* (b1753-d1823; son of Moses4, Eunice Dunham3, Jonathan2, Jonathan1)
*Resigned commission in 1778 to take civilian office

State Troops and Militia

Essex Militia

David Dunham, Private (b1751-d1823; son of David3, Nathaniel2, Jonathan1)

Hunterdon Militia

David Dunham, Private (b1763-d1826; son of Benyew4, David3, David2, Jonathan1)

Middlesex Militia

Elisha Dunham, Captain (b1732-d1783; son of Joseph3, David2, Jonathan1)
Josiah Dunham, Private (b1753-d1816; son of Elisha4, Joseph3, David2, Jonathan1)
David Dunham, Private (b1762-1840; son of Elisha4, Joseph3, David2, Jonathan1)
Asher Dunham, Private (b1744-d?; son of Jonathan3, Benjamin2, Jonathan1)
Moses Bloomfield, Surgeon (b1729-d1791; son of Eunice Dunham3, Jonathan2, Jonathan1 )

 

References:

Bloomfield, New Jersey - A Brief History, Historical Society of Bloomfield, 2010.
Documents Relating to the Colonial History of New Jersey, Vol. XXI, 1664-1703, William Nelson, 1899.
Documents Relating to the Colonial History of New Jersey, Vol. XXIII, Wills: 1670-1730, William Nelson, 1901.
History of the Town of Marlborough, Charles Hudson, 1862.
New England Marriages Prior to 1700, Clarence Almon Torrey, 1985.
Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War, William S. Stryker, 1872.
Woodbridge and Vicinity, Rev. Joseph W. Dally, 1873.
Woodbridge: New Jersey's Oldest Township, Virginia B. Troeger, 2002.
Southern Essex County Registry of Deeds, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 2010.

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