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The Founding Fathers: New Jersey
| David Brearly, New Jersey |
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Brearly
(Brearley) was descended from a Yorkshire, England, family, one of whose members
migrated to New Jersey around 1680. Signer Brearly was born in 1745 at Spring
Grove near Trenton, was reared in the area, and attended but did not graduate
from the nearby College of New Jersey (later Princeton). He chose law as a
career and originally practiced at Allentown, NJ. About 1767 he married
Elizabeth Mullen.

| Jonathan Dayton, New Jersey |
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Dayton
was born at Elizabethtown (present Elizabeth), NJ, in 1760. His father was a
storekeeper who was also active in local and state politics. The youth obtained
a good education, graduating from the College of New Jersey (later Princeton) in
1776. He immediately entered the Continental Army and saw extensive action.
Achieving the rank of captain by the age of 19 and serving under his father,
Gen. Elias Dayton, and the Marquis de Lafayette, he was a prisoner of the
British for a time and participated in the Battle of Yorktown, VA.

| William C. Houston, New Jersey |
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William Houston was born about 1746 to Margaret and Archibald Houston. He
attended the College of New Jersey (later Princeton) and graduated in 1768 and
became master of the college grammar school and then its tutor. In 1771 he was
appointed professor of mathematics and natural philosophy.

| William Livingston, New Jersey |
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Livingston
was born in 1723 at Albany, NY. His maternal grandmother reared him until he was
14, and he then spent a year with a missionary among the Mohawk Indians. He
attended Yale and graduated in 1741.
Rejecting his family's hope that he would enter the fur trade at Albany or
mercantile pursuits in New York City, young Livingston chose to pursue a career
in law at the latter place. Before he completed his legal studies, in 1745 he
married Susanna French, daughter of a well-to-do New Jersey landowner. She was
to bear 13 children.

| William Paterson, New Jersey |
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William
Paterson (Patterson) was born in County Antrim, Ireland, in 1745. When he was
almost 2 years of age, his family emigrated to America, disembarking at New
Castle, DE. While the father traveled about the country, apparently selling
tinware, the family lived in New London, other places in Connecticut, and in
Trenton, NJ. In 1750 he settled in Princeton, NJ. There, he became a merchant
and manufacturer of tin goods. His prosperity enabled William to attend local
private schools and the College of New Jersey (later Princeton). He took a B.A.
in 1763 and an M.A. 3 years later.
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