ohnnyb:
Joseph Burr established a sawmill in what then was Northampton Township in
circa 1750. It was certainly there in 1753 when surveyors drafted a return for a road between “Vincent Leeds sawmill to Joseph Burr’s mill, Northampton.” In 1765, armed and disguised men entered a Joseph Burr’s house to rob it. It could have been Joseph the sawmill owner or it could be a Joseph Burr who resided on Route 541 between Burlington and Mount Holly. Here is a notice that appeared in the
Pennsylvania Gazette:
The law captured these men, as reported on 1 August 1765:
And the court meted out harsh penalties to these career criminals, per the 22 August 1765 edition of the
Pennsylvania Gazette:
Burr remained tenured in the mill and adjoining property until his death, which occurred sometime prior to between October 1780 and March 1781. In his Last Will and Testament, he indicates he is the son of John Burr and then enumerates his properties and their final disposal. Joseph owned mills and lands along the Maurice River in Cumberland County in conjunction with Henry Drinker (of Atsion fame); James Verree ( a shipbuilder from Burlington) and Joseph Smith. Burr also held meadow lands along the Mullica within Burlington County. Joseph devised the sawmill—called Oak Mill—an adjacent house, and the mill dam to his daughter, Keziah Burr Howell, wife of Governor Richard Howell, who served New Jersey from 1793 to 1801. The 1849 Otley and Keily map of Burlington County indicates the Howell family still owned the mill seat:
The 1859 county map carries the label of “Burr Tract” and provides an indicator of the mill's location:
Richard and Keziah Burr Howell were the grandparents of Vincentown resident Varina Howell, who married Jefferson Davis of Virginia during 1845. Of course, Davis later became the president of the Confederate States of America.
It is unclear when the sawmill ceased operations, but the Burr family owned large tracts of timber and cedar swamps, so it likely operated into at least the early nineteenth century.
Best regards,
Jerseyman