Carpenter Family Papers

The Carpenter family papers include Brigadier General Louis Henry Carpenter's military papers and Civil War-era correspondence, as well as more than 200 years of correspondence, genealogical material, and other papers related to the Carpenter family of New Jersey. The Carpenter family was among...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Carpenter, Louis Henry 1839-1916. (Creator)
Collection:Carpenter Family Papers
Collection Number:0115
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects and Genres:
Online Access:Link to finding aid
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LEADER 12562ntc a2200433 u 4500
001 ead-0115
008 180927i16951915xx eng d
040 |e dacs 
041 0 |a eng 
099 |a 0115 
100 1 |a Carpenter, Louis Henry  |d 1839-1916.  |e creator 
245 1 |a Carpenter Family Papers  |f 1695-1915, undated  |g 1780 - 1870 
300 |a 5.3 Linear feet  |f ; 5 boxes, 18 volumes, 1 flat file 
500 |a Processing Information: This collection was formerly titled "Louis H. Carpenter estate papers." The content of the collection has not changed, but the title was changed in 2010. At some point, a 1780 broadside belonging to Thomas Carpenter was moved to the HSP Broadsides Collection (Call number Ab 1780-15). 
506 |a This collection is open for research. 
520 |a The Carpenter family papers include Brigadier General Louis Henry Carpenter's military papers and Civil War-era correspondence, as well as more than 200 years of correspondence, genealogical material, and other papers related to the Carpenter family of New Jersey. The Carpenter family was among the first settlers of the Philadelphia area and established several towns in Salem and Gloucester counties, New Jersey. They also had ties to numerous prominent families in the Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic region during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries. The collection offers insights into a variety of topics, including the Revolutionary War in the Philadelphia region; the early history of Haddon Township, N.J.; medicine in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries; and life as a Union soldier during the Civil War.  
520 |a The Carpenter family papers include Brigadier General Louis Henry Carpenter's military papers and Civil War-era correspondence, family correspondence, miscellaneous family papers, and genealogical materials. The collection offers insights into a variety of disparate topics, including the Revolutionary War in the Philadelphia region; the early history of Haddon Township, N.J.; medicine in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries; and the Civil War. This collection was processed according to the "more product, less processing" model, and is not arranged into series. Folders are arranged alphabetically by folder title, with oversized items grouped in Box 5 and Flat File 1. Louis Henry Carpenter's military papers span his entire thirty-eight-year U.S. Army career. Two bound volumes (vols. 17-18) contain his correspondence home to his mother, father, and occasional other correspondents during the Civil War, and provide a detailed account of his life as a soldier. Five bound volumes (vols. 8-12) preserve his military orders, commissions, and other correspondence. Volume 13 is a scrapbook of newspaper clippings related to the battles and campaigns in which Carpenter was involved. A folder of loose military papers (Box 3, Folder 8) includes a handwritten history of Carpenter's military service. The collection also includes more than 200 years of family correspondence concerning topics as varied as the Revolutionary War, the early history of Haddon Township, N.J., and assorted news of acquaintances, family happenings, and health issues. Correspondents include Samuel Carpenter, John Estaugh, Isaac Norris, Preston Carpenter, Dr. James Stratton, Mary Stratton, Edward Carpenter, Charles C. Stratton (Box 2, Folder 5), and Thomas P. Carpenter, among many others. The collection contains a fair amount of Carpenter family genealogical material. A folder of genealogical research (Box 3, Folder 7) includes correspondence and records related to research conducted in London about the Carpenter family, while other genealogical materials include reminiscences and family notes (Box 3, folders 5-6); an obituary for Thomas P. Carpenter (Box 4, Folder 3); and pamphlets and programs related to family history (Box 4, Folder 4). Volume 14 appears to be a handwritten copy of Edward Carpenter's 1912 book on Samuel Carpenter and his descendants (listed in the bibliography), and includes illuminated initial letters and scroll work done by Edward. Volumes 15-16 contain Thomas P. Carpenter's memoranda on the Carpenter family, including printed ephemera, newsclippings, and some correspondence. The rest of the collection is a highly miscellaneous mix of family papers. Financial and legal papers include bills and receipts (Box 1, Folder 2); various account statements, including the estate settlements of Samuel Carpenter, William Hicks and John Carpenter (Box 1, Folder 1); numerous wills (Box 4, Folder 10; Box 5, Folder 6); a copy of Thomas Carpenter's affidavit concerning his service in the War of the Revolution (Box 1, Folder 3); and legal papers from a case that Thomas P. Carpenter argued in 1843-1844 regarding allegations that a county sheriff assaulted a woman. Property records include deeds (Box 3, folders 1-4); surveys, agreements and transfers (Box 4, folders 7-8); a plan of Carpenter's Landing (Flat File 1); and documents describing the 1807 division of Glassborough, N.J., real estate owned by Thomas Carpenter and Thomas Heston, including maps of the lots (Box 1, Folder 1; Box 5, Folder 3). A small group of family photographs can be found in Box 1, Folder 5, and other miscellaneous photographs, portraits, and prints can be found in Box 5 (folders 2, 4-5), including a single photo of James Edward Carpenter with his Dining Club of the Loyal Legion. Other notable materials in the collection include broadsides regarding the sale of timber near Glassborough, N.J. (Box 5, Folder 1); miscellaneous newsclippings and printed material; Thomas Carpenter's account book circa 1811-1812 (Box 4, Folder 9); and 1759 provision tables for His Majesty's forces in North America (Box 4, Folder 6). A printed biography of Elizabeth Haddon Estaugh (Box 1, Folder 8) describes one of the first residents of what is now known as Haddonfield, N.J. Seven volumes belonging to Dr. James Stratton (vols. 1-7) provide a glimpse into the work of a late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century doctor, recording his patients' payments, medicines, and services received. 
524 8 |a Cite as: [Indicate cited item or series here], Carpenter Family Papers (Collection 115), The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. 
544 |a Historical Society of Pennsylvania Broadsides Collection (Call number Ab 1780-15). The Historical Society also has a large amount of genealogical research collections related to the Carpenter family. Entries for Carpenter, Stratton, and related families can be found in the HSP online catalog. 
545 |a The Carpenter family was among the first settlers of the Philadelphia area, established several towns in Salem and Gloucester counties, New Jersey, and had ties to numerous prominent families in the Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic region. Extensive genealogical and biographical information about the family can be found in Edward Carpenter's book, Samuel Carpenter of Philadelphia and his Descendants, listed in the bibliography. Samuel Carpenter (1649-1714) left England after the death of his father, in part because of the persecution he faced as a Quaker. He spent ten years as a businessman in Barbados before emigrating to Philadelphia in 1683. He married fellow Quaker Hannah Hardiman the next year, and the couple had three children live to adulthood. Already a man of means when he arrived in Philadelphia, Carpenter became one of the richest men of his day and served in various colonial government roles, including as Governor's Provincial Council member, provincial treasurer, and member of the Assembly. He built one of the first wharves in Philadelphia, the mansion known as the "Slate Roof House," a tavern, a bakery, ten storage warehouses, and more. He also owned substantial landholdings in the countryside around Philadelphia and across the Delaware River in New Jersey in Salem and Gloucester counties. Samuel's great-grandson Thomas Carpenter (1752-1847) was born in Salem County, N.J., and during the Revolutionary War served as paymaster of the militia of the counties of Salem and Gloucester and as quartermaster of the first battalion of Salem troops. In the late 1780s, Thomas moved to Carpenter's Landing (now Mantua), N.J. and established a store and lumber business there. He also partnered with Colonel Thomas Heston, a relative by marriage, to create a large glass factory in Glassborough (now Glassboro), N.J. Thomas's son Edward Carpenter (1777-1813) married Sarah Stratton (1781-1852), whose father was Dr. James Stratton (1755-1812) of Swedesboro, N.J. Dr. Stratton served as president of the Medical Society of New Jersey and as a surgeon in the 1st Regiment Gloucester County militia. Circa 1790, he built a large brick mansion in Swedesboro called Stratton Hall. Edward and Sarah Carpenter's son Thomas P. Carpenter (1804-1876) was born at Carpenter's Landing, N.J. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1830, and in 1845, he was appointed as an associate judge on the New Jersey Supreme Court by his uncle, Governor Charles C. Stratton (1796-1859). He retired from the bench in 1852. Thomas's brother Edward Carpenter, 2nd (1813-1889) was born in Glassborough, N.J. He moved to Philadelphia in 1843 and studied law as well, but he focused on real estate for most of his life. He married Anna Maria Howey (1818-1883) in 1837, and they had two children: Louis Henry Carpenter (1839-1916) and James Edward Carpenter (1841-1901). Louis Henry Carpenter was also born in Glassborough, N.J., and left the University of Pennsylvania in 1858 at the end of his junior year to enroll as a private in the Union army. He was promoted many times over his thirty-eight years of military service, eventually retiring as brigadier general U.S. Army. He served in the Civil War campaigns of the Peninsula, Fredericksburg, and Gettysburg, among others, and was among the white officers who oversaw African American troops in the 5th U.S. Colored Cavalry. After the Civil War ended, Louis Henry served thirteen years in the Indian Wars in the West. He was later awarded the Medal of Honor, the highest military decoration, for his gallantry during those campaigns. At the end of his career, as Brigadier-General of Volunteers, Louis Henry was ordered to Cuba during the Spanish-American War and later served as military governor in Cuba's Puerto Principe province. He never married, and retired in 1899. He was a member of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and various other social and intellectual organizations in Philadelphia. After his death in 1916, Louis Henry was buried in the family plot at Trinity Episcopal Church New Cemetery, Swedesboro, N.J. Louis Henry's brother James Edward Carpenter (1841-1901) also served in the Union Army during the Civil War, but did not pursue a military career. He was honorably discharged at the end of his term of service and was admitted to the Philadelphia Bar in 1865. He married Harriet Odin Dorr (1842-1896) in 1867, and they had four children live to adulthood, including Edward Carpenter, 4th (born 1872). James Edward served as treasurer and member of the Executive Committee of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. 
555 |a Finding Aid Available Online:  
561 1 |a Gift of Louis H. Carpenter and Edward Carpenter, 1915-1916. 
600 1 7 |a Carpenter, Edward  |d 1813-1889.  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Carpenter, James Edward  |d 1841-1901.  |2 Local Sources 
600 1 7 |a Carpenter, Samuel  |d 1649-1714.  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Carpenter, Thomas P.  |d fl. 1858.   |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Dickinson, Jonathan  |d 1688-1747.   |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Estaugh, Elizabeth Haddon  |d 1680-1762.  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Norris, Isaac  |d 1671-1735.   |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Preston, Samuel  |d 1665-1743.   |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Stratton, Charles C. (Charles Creighton)  |d 1796-1859.  |2 NACO Authority File 
600 1 7 |a Stratton, James  |d 1755-1812.   |2 NACO Authority File 
650 0 |a Medicine. 
650 0 |a United States--History--Revolution, 1775-1783. 
651 0 |a New Jersey--Politics and government--1775-1865. 
651 0 |a United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865. 
655 7 |a Correspondence.  |2 Genre Terms: A Thesaurus for Use in Rare Book and Special Collections Cataloging 
852 |a The Historical Society of Pennsylvania  |b Carpenter Family Papers  |l 0115 
856 4 2 |y Link to finding aid  |u http://www2.hsp.org/collections/manuscripts/c/Carpenter0115.html