Singerline
Genealogy/Family History:
Family Properties
(Deeds and Addresses)
The Zengerling "family farm"
My great-great-great grandfather Joseph
Zengerling owned a farm in Newark, New Jersey,
for the period 1848-1864. He is noted in the
1860 census as a farmer (his oldest son,
Frank, was also a farmer) and the value of
his real estate was given as $4000.
I found him in the schedules for the special
agricultural census taken in 1850 (enumerated
on 10 Aug 1850, to be more exact), where his
name is given as Joseph Zingerlenk. This
record gives the following information:
5 acres of "improved" land
cash value of farm noted as $1300
cash value of farming implements and
machinery given as $30
he had one "milch" cow, 2 "working oxen,"
and one "other cattle"
the livestock was valued at $125
in the previous year he had raised 100
bushels of Indian corn and 100 bushels of
Irish potatoes, and had produced 100 lbs.
of butter
$12 is given as the value of "animals
slaughtered"
Deed, received in the office (Essex County,
New Jersey) 21 Feb 1848, from Philip Kingsley
& wife to Joseph Zengerleng [sic]:
This indenture made the nineteenth day of
February in the year of our Lord one thousand
eight hundred and forty-eight between Philip
Kingsley and Romana A. Kingsley his wife of
the township of Orange in the County of Essex
and State of New Jersey of the first part and
Joseph Zengerleng [sic] of the City of
Newark in the County of Essex and State of
New Jersey of the second part. Witnesseth
that the said party of the first part for and
in consideration of the sum of three hundred
ninety-seven dollars lawful money of the
United States of America to them in hand well
and truly paid by the said party of the
second part at and before the sealing and
delivery of these presents the receipt
whereof is hereby acknowledged...
Beginning ... southeasterly corner of lot
number nine as numbered on a map of the
Orange Parsonage tract, thence running north
fifty-seven degrees west six chains and fifty
links to the middle of a road as laid out on
said map, thence along the middle of the same
south ninety three degrees west nine chains
and forty-eight links to the drift road,
thence along the middle of the said drift
road south sixty-five degrees thirty minutes
east six chains fifty-six ... to land now or
late of one [Alling?], thence with his line
north ninety-three degrees east eight chains
and fifty links to the place of beginning
containing five acres & eighty-four[?]
hundreths of an acre being a part of the same
tract conveyed by the Trustees of the First
Presbyterian Church in Orange to the said
Philip Kingsley...
Some relevant notes of possible
interest:
Philip Kingsley was born in Vermont,
moved to the Newark area, and became the
first lawyer to set up shop in Orange (or
perhaps it was live in Orange). He
is often noted in local histories.
In 1848 Joseph Zengerling payed $397.00
for these almost six acres, or roughly
$66.00 per acre. As can be seen in the
next deed, he sold the same property in
1864 for $5200.00 or about $866 per acre.
The "Orange Parsonage tract" mentioned
in the deed has a very long
history. When the town of Newark was set
up in the later 1600s, common land was
set aside for the sake of the church. As
the area was settled by Puritans, the
church could have been understood as what
became the First Presbyterian Church of
Newark. However two other groups --
Trinity Episcopal and the Mountain
Society (what would become the Orange
Society and later the First Presbyterian
Church of Orange) -- also laid claim to
this land.
Controversy occasionally arose
concerning this land and it wasn't
finally settled until the very early
1800s. In 1826 some 56 acres were
conveyed to the Orange Society, which in
turn sold it in smaller parcels. Philip
Kingsley bought 44 acres of this tract in
1841 for about $50 per acre. It was
probably from these 44 acres that he sold
the almost six acres to Joseph
Zengerling.
Originally, the common land began "west
of High Street." I have finally discovered
exactly where Joseph Zengerling's piece of
it was located. I vaguely recall having
once found his name in an early city
directory at an address on Roseville
Avenue. It would seem that that was the
farm's address, since it can be found on
this 1858
map of Newark.
Check toward the bottom-left corner of
the map. There is a plot of land with the
name "Joseph Singerling" inscribed on it.
The property is sitting on the corner of
Roseville Avenue and what is now Central
Avenue.
To get a "feel" for this location, Fairmount
and Holy Sepulchre Cemeteries are beyond the
top of this map, downtown is off the map
beyond the bottom-right corner, and I believe
that road that intersects Roseville Avenue to
the right of Singerling's property is West
Market Street. All of which is to say, the
farm wasn't all that far from where the
Court House sits.
Deed, received in the office (Essex County,
New Jersey) 9 Dec 1864, from Joseph
Zengerleng [sic] & wife to Henry
Multhaupt:
This indenture[?] made the tenth day of
November in the year one thousand eight
hundred and sixty-four between Joseph
Zengerleng [sic] and Maria his wife of
the City of Newark of the County of Essex and
State of New Jersey of the first part and
Henry Multhaupt of the City of Newark in the
County of Essex and State of New Jersey of
the second part. Witnesseth, that the said
party of the first part for and in
consideration of the sum of five thousand and
two hundred lawful money of the United States
of America to them in hand well and truly
paid by the said party of the second
part...
... being the same premises conveyed to
the said Joseph Zengerleng [sic] by
Phillip [sic] Kingsley & wife by
deed dated February 19th 1848 and recorded in
Book T.6 of Deeds for Essex County on pages
547 & 548.