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Carty family papers
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Held at: University of Delaware Library Special Collections [Contact Us]181 South College Avenue, Newark, DE 19717-5267
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Delaware Library Special Collections. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
Overview and metadata sections
The Carty family papers, 1815-1912, represent nearly a century of the business activities as well as the personal lives of various members of the Carty family of New Jersey. The collection also includes papers of the Shreve family, which seems to have been related to the primary family in some way.
The family lived in the town of Florence, located in Burlington County, New Jersey. The Township is situated in the northern part of the county, bordered by Mansfield on the east, and the Delaware River on the north. The Carty family had lived in Florence since its creation on March 7, 1872. An Alfred Carty was a township commissioner in 1872, and he was appointed to establish the dividing line between Florence township and the neighboring Mansfield township. Documents in the collection dated before 1872 place the Carty family in Mansfield Township, the township divided to create Florence.
The collection consists mainly of business receipts, bills, and account books of Peter and William Carty. Most of the business transactions occurred within Burlington County, but some display contacts between the Carty family and businessmen in nearby Philadelphia. It seems that the Carty family owned land in Florence and Mansfield Township throughout the nineteenth century.
Bisbee, Henry Harold.Place Names in Burlington County New Jersey. Riverside, NJ: Burlington County Publishing Co., 1955. pp. 42-3. Woodward, E.M.History of Burlington and Mercer Counties: With Biographical Sketches of Their Pioneers and Prominent Men. Salem, Mass: Higginson Book Co., 1992. pp. 327-331.
The Carty Family Papers consist of .3 linear feet of material spanning the dates 1815 to 1912. The material consists mainly of receipts, account ledgers, and personal and business correspondence of the Carty family of Florence, New Jersey. The bulk of this small collection is grouped around three Carty family members: Peter, Shreve, and William. There are two additional folders containing miscellaneous material pertaining to the Carty family and Shreve family (F7) as well as miscellaneous material with no apparent connection to the Carty or Shreve family (F8).
Although many members of the Carty and Shreve families appear in this collection briefly, the majority of the material is associated with Peter and William, although it is unclear how these men are related. From the receipts of Peter Carty, which span the years 1846 to 1896, it seems that Peter was a land owner who rented out some of his land during this period of time. He also incurred the cost of the construction of at least one house. In his personal business records, which were kept in small account books or in the back of a grade school exercise book, he kept track of such activities as paid labor for picking peaches and chopping wood, the duration of masonry work or house construction, as well as how many days of school his children attended. Peter also oversaw the dispersal of the estate of a Joseph Carty in 1858 (F4).
William Carty seems to have been a land owner as well. A portion of this land may have been used as a cemetery, as some of his papers include requests for cemetery plot prices, or reference funerals or the purchase of plots. Many of the receipts and business records associated with William also relate to building materials. William received a letter from a nephew, Harry, who described economic and climatic conditions in Colorado in 1887 (F6).
The remainder of the collection is miscellaneous material associated with the Carty or Shreve family, as well as some pieces that do not clearly relate to either family. The Shreve family may be represented in the name of Shreve Carty, which implies the tradition of naming from the maternal side of the family, but there is no clear explanation of kinship between the two families to be found in the collection. A Mary Newman appears in both Peter Carty's papers, as well as in the miscellaneous documents, although her relation to the Carty family is not clear. The other Carty family members who appear are Shreve Carty, Joseph Carty, Asa Carty, Jonathan Carty, Alfred Carty, Albert Carty, and Elmer Carty.
The Carty family papers would be of use to various types of researchers. The material would enrich any inquiry into the history of Florence township because the material reflects the business and personal life of a family who lived in the area prior to and after the creation of the township. This collection could also supplement any research pertaining to economic history of the area due to the abundance of receipts and other business records that reflect the economic activity within the Burlington County area, as well as the Carty's business interests in nearby Philadelphia. Architectural historians may be interested in the receipts pertaining to the purchase of building materials as well as the construction time of a house found in the papers of Peter, Shreve and William Carty (F1-F6). Peter Carty's exercise books, which include math exercises as well as provide an example of "decorative" page headings (F4) and William Carty's penmanship exercise books (F6), may be of interest to those studying education or penmanship techniques in the nineteenth century. Although the Carty family papers do provide brief glimpses into certain aspects of life in New Jersey in the nineteenth century, the small and fragmented collection lacks a clear and flowing narrative of a family history. The most cohesive aspect of the material is the records pertaining to the construction of housing by Peter, Shreve, and William Carty.
The materials in this collection are separated into five sections, each a different Carty family member: Peter Carty, Shreve Carty, William Carty, miscellaneous Carty, miscellaneous.
- Box 1: Shelved in SPEC MSS manuscript boxes
Gift of Anna D. Moyerman, 1972.
Processed by Emily Holloway, September 2005. Encoded by Natalie Baur, September 2009.
People
Subject
- Businesspeople--United States--History--19th century
- House construction--United States--History--19th century
- Architecture, American--History--19th century
- Architecture--New Jersey--History--19th century
- Funeral rites and ceremonies--United States--History--19th century
- Cemeteries--United States--History--19th century
- Penmanship, American--History--19th century
Place
Occupation
- Publisher
- University of Delaware Library Special Collections
- Finding Aid Author
- University of Delaware Library, Special Collections
- Finding Aid Date
- 2009 September 8
- Access Restrictions
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The collection is open for research.
- Use Restrictions
-
Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections Department, University of Delaware Library, https://library.udel.edu/static/purl.php?askspec
Collection Inventory
Includes mortgage, record of mortgage payments, and a letter.
Physical Description3 items
Includes receipts from daily business transactions, purchase of household goods, rent received, payment of taxes, bill for tuition for four children, bill for manual labor of various types, and funeral preparations pertaining to Mary Newman (see also F9).
Physical Description145 items
Includes receipts for the purchase of a variety of building materials, as well as labor costs for the construction of a house.
Physical Description32 items
Includes account ledgers recording debts owed by tenants and others, running total of house construction expenses, terms and conditions of a sale of wooded lots, and hours spent picking peaches and moving wood piles. Also includes notebooks originally used for arithmetic exercises with "decorative" page headings, later reused for accounts.
Physical Description5 items
Receipts pertaining to the purchase of building materials.
Physical Description9 items
Includes correspondence, wedding invitations, funeral announcements, receipts, and two penmanship exercise books nearly filled.
Physical Description30 items
Includes receipts, letters and documents pertaining to Joseph Carty, Asa Carty, Jonathan Carty, Alfred Carty, Albert Carty, Elmer Carty.
Physical Description7 items
Includes documents pertaining to the Shreve family, Mary Newman (see F9), and two undated lists of candidates of the Democratic party ticket and People's party ticket.