Rash's Surname Index
Notes for Richard STOCKTON
Richard Stockton, eldest son of John and Abigail (Phillips) Stockton, known as "The Signer" because he was a member of the Continental Congress and one of the 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence, was a graduate of the first class of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in the Class of 1748. He was admitted to the Bar in 1754 and soon acquired a reputation as a great lawyer. He was Judge of the Supreme Court and a member of the King's Council for New Jersey, before the Revolution in 1776. After twelve years of active practice in Princeton, he visited England in 1766-7 where he stayed for sixteen months. While in Scotland, he and his wife, Annis Boudinot Stockton, prevailed upon Dr. John Witherspoon and his wife to accept an offer of the Presidency of Princeton College, for which, and other services to the college, he received the formal thanks of the trustees upon his return. In company with Dr. Franklin, he consulted with the merchants of London on the subject of paper currency and the act of Parliament prohibiting its issue.
The tension between the Colonies and the mother country caused him much concern, as shown in his letters and published writings. When the rupture drew near, he espoused the cause of the Colonies, at considerable sacrifice to himself, and separated himself from the Royal Council, all but two of whom were Loyalists or neutral, and to whom, as individuals, he was warmly attached. In 1774 he sent Lord Dartmouth "an expedient for the Settlement of the American Disputes", in which he proposed a plan of self-government for the Colonies; and exerted a prudent opposition to the British measures, until actual bloodshed began. (Sanderson's "Biographies of the Signers" has much to say about Richard Stockton's struggles with his conscience, and for his country, and should be read by all of his descendants.)
On June 21, 1776 he was chosen by the Provincial Congress of New Jersey one of the delegates of the Colony to the Congress which promulgated the Declaration of Independence. On the 30th of November following, he was again made one of the five delegates from New Jersey. The minutes of the Continental Congress show that he took an active part in the work of the Congress, being frequently appointed on important committees with Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Rush, Robert Treat Paine, Francis "Lightfoot" Lee, and others. On September 26, 1776 the Congress appointed Richard Stockton and George Clymer as a committee to go to Ticonderoga and report upon the state of affairs there. They were away on this mission for two months. They visited the headquarters of the American Army, then proceeded to Albany where they were joined by General Schuyler, who accompanied them to Saratoga. They went to Fort George and inspected the hospital there, and on to Ticonderoga. With General Gates they met the Commissioners from Massachusetts Bay and had an important conference. They wrote two letters to John Hancock reporting on their actions, both in Richard Stockton's handwriting but signed by George Clymer as well.
Upon his return from this mission, Richard Stockton found his family and home in danger, Lord Cornwallis being on the march across the Jerseys and Princeton lying in the direct line of advance of the British Army. He and his family took up their residence temporarily at the house of John Covenhoven, in Monmouth, NJ, and it was there, on November 30th, 1766, that he and Mr. Covenhoven were made prisoners of war by a party of Loyalists. Richard Stockton was taken to New York, thrown into the common jail and treated with severity. Learning of this, the Continental Congress, on January 3rd, 1777, protested this inhumane treatment of a member of that Congress and asked General Washington to protest to General Howe about the matter. Shortly after this, Richard Stockton was exchanged, but his health was much broken and he never regained it.
The family estate "Morven" which he had made one of the most beautiful in the Colonies, suffered severely during the Revolutionary War. His library, one of the best in the country, was burned, the lands laid waste, the furniture burned, and the livestock driven away. The plate and other valuable articles had been packed in boxes and buried in the woods at some distance from the house, but, through treachery, two of the boxes were discovered and fell into the hands of the British soldiers. The family recovered the third one. The depreciation of the Continental currency, in which Richard Stockton invested large sums, further reduced his fortune.
Among the friends of Richard "The Signer" were a number of the most eminent public men of his day. He was a devoted friend of George Washington, who was a frequent visitor at "Morven". He and the Honorable Elias Boudinot each married the other's sister; and the celebrated Dr. Benjamin Rush, of Philadelphia, was his son-in-law. He married Annis Boudinot, sister of Elias, of a French Huguenot family.
After the war, upon the organization of the State governments under the Confederation, Richard Stockton received on the first ballot an equal number of votes with William Livingston for Governor of New Jersey, but Livingston was finally chosen. He was then unanimously selected for Chief Justice, but declined for health reasons. He died soon after, at Morven, on February 28, 1781. An oil portrait of him, by Peale, hangs in Independence Hall, in Philadelphia, and in 1888 the State of New Jersey placed his statue, by Henry Kirke Brown, in the Capitol in Washington, one of the few artistic statues there.
Annis Boudinot Stockton survived her husband, and died February 6, 1801 at White Hill, Burlington County, New Jersey (home of son-in-law, Robert Field). She was a woman of very considerable literary attainments. She wrote a drama called "The Triumph of Mildness," besides odes and poems, and contributed to a number of periodicals. She corresponded freely with Washington, and wrote many poems about his actions. Many of her poems have been published by University Press of Virginia, 1995: "Only for the Eye of a Friend, The Poems of Annis Boudinot Stockton", Edited and with an Introduction by Carla Mulford. In addition, Annis Boudinot Stockton's poem "Forbear Unkind Ungenerous Muse" appears in "Second to None: A Documentary History of American Women, Vol. I: From the 16th Century to 1865", Edited by Ruth Barnes Moynihan, Cynthia Russett, & Laurie Crumpacker, University of Nebraska Press, 1993, Pgs. 150-151. This poem was a contemporaneously published (1759) reply to a published poem insulting to women.
Children of Richard Stockton (The Signer) and Annis Boudinot Stockton
Julia Stockton - b. March 2, 1759, d. at Syndenhain, July 7, 1846, m. January 1776 to Dr. Benjamin Rush, of Philadelphia*. Had two sons.
Mary Stockton - b. April 17, 1761, d. March 18, 1846, m. Rev. Andrew Hunter, October 13, 1794. They had three children: two sons, one daughter. Susan was her twin sister.
Susan Stockton - b. April 17, 1761, d. October 2, 1821, m. after 1793 to Alexander Cuthbert of Lanorie, Canada. No children. Mary was her twin sister.
Richard Stockton - "The Duke". B. April 17, 1764.
Lucius Horatio Stockton - b. at Morven, d. in Trenton, May 26, 1835, m. Sarah Milnor and they had one daughter.
Abigail Stockton - b. September 8, 1773, d. June 13, 1858, m. Robert Field of White Hall, Burlington County, NJ, January 10, 1796. They had six children, two sons and four daughters.
* Dr. Benjamin Rush was also a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Those interested in further facts about this eminent physician can consult almost any library.
Stockton, son of a wealthy landowner and judge, was born in 1730 at Morven, the family estate and his lifelong home, at Princeton, N.J. After a preparatory education at West Nottingham Academy, in Rising Sun, Md., he graduated in 1748 from the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University), then in Newark but relocated 8 years hence at Princeton. In 1754 he completed an apprenticeship with a Newark lawyer and joined the bar. The next year, he wed poetess Annis Boudinot, by whom he had two sons and four daughters. By the mid-1760's he was recognized as one of the ablest lawyers in the Middle Colonies.
Like his father a patron of the College of New Jersey, in 1766 Stockton sailed on its behalf to Scotland to recruit Rev. John Witherspoon for the presidency. Aiding in this endeavor, complicated by the opposition of Witherspoon's wife, was Benjamin Rush, a fellow alumnus then enrolled at the University of Edinburgh. In 1768, the year after Stockton's departure, Witherspoon finally accepted.
Stockton resumed his law practice, spending his spare hours at Morven breeding choice cattle and horses, collecting art objects, and expanding his library. Yet, though he had sometime before expressed disinterest in public life, in 1768 he began a 6-year term on the executive council of New Jersey and then sat on the provincial Supreme Court (1774-76).
Stockton became associated with the Revolutionary movement during its initial stages. In 1764 he advocated American representation in Parliament, but during the Stamp Act crisis the next year questioned its right to control the Colonies at all. By 1774, though dreading the possibility of war, he was espousing colonial self-rule under the Crown. Elected to Congress 2 years later, he voted for independence and signed the Declaration. That same year, he met defeat in a bid for the New Jersey governorship, but rejected the chance to become first chief justice of the State Supreme Court to remain in Congress.
Late in 1776 fate turned against Stockton. In November, while inspecting the northern Continental Army in upper New York State with fellow Congressman George Clymer, Stockton hurried home when he learned of the British invasion of New Jersey and removed his family to a friend's home in Monmouth County. While he was there, Loyalists informed the British, who captured and imprisoned him under harsh conditions at Perth Amboy, N.J., and later in New York. A formal remonstrance from Congress and other efforts to obtain his exchange resulted in his release, in poor physical condition, sometime in 1777. To add to his woes, he found that the British had pillaged and partially burned Morven. Still an invalid, he died at Princeton in 1781 at the age of 50. He is buried at the Stony Brook Quaker Meeting House Cemetery.
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