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Fosterfields

Fosterfields, also known as Fosterfields Living Historical Farm, is a 213.4-acre (86.4 ha) farm and open-air museum at the junction of Mendham and Kahdena Roads in Morris Township, New Jersey. The oldest structure on the farm, the Ogden House, was built in 1774.[5] Listed as the Joseph W. Revere House, Fosterfields was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 20, 1973, for its significance in art, architecture, literature, and military history.[6] The museum portrays farm life circa 1920.[7][8]

Fosterfields
Joseph W. Revere House
LocationJunction of Mendham and Kahdena Roads, Morris Township, New Jersey
Coordinates40°48′6″N 74°30′16″W / 40.80167°N 74.50444°W / 40.80167; -74.50444 (Fosterfields)
Area213.4 acres (86.4 ha)[2]
Built1854 (1854)
ArchitectJoseph Warren Revere
Architectural styleGothic Revival style
Part ofWashington Valley Historic District (ID92001583)
NRHP reference No.73001127[1] (original)
91000478[3] (increase)
NJRHP No.2175; 2176[4]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPSeptember 20, 1973
Boundary increaseOctober 9, 1991
Designated CPNovember 12, 1992
Designated NJRHPJanuary 29, 1973
March 11, 1991

United States Navy officer, adventurer and author Joseph Warren Revere, a grandson of Paul Revere, was a significant owner of the property.[9] During Revere's ownership he designed and built an 1854 Carpenter-Gothic mansion titled "The Willows."[5][10][11]

In 1881 Charles Grant Foster, a New York commodities broker, purchased the property and developed it into a Jersey cattle farm entitled "Fosterfields." His daughter, Caroline Rose Foster, spent 98 years living and working on the property, enjoying carpentry, fishing, and civic engagement during the Gilded Age of Morristown.[9]

While writing her will in 1974, Caroline Foster arranged to bequeath the land to the Morris County Park Commission following her death, with the intent of making the property an educational farm.[12][13][14][15][8] Upon Foster's death in 1979, the Park Commission received the farm.[16][17] The boundary was increased on October 9, 1991.[18] It was listed as a contributing property of the Washington Valley Historic District on November 12, 1992.[19]

History

Lenape ownership

Around 1000 the land was inhabited by Munsee Lenape people. Circa 1500, Morris County was part of the Lenapehoking.[20] Arrowheads found in Munsee encampments throughout the Washington Valley suggest that they hunted wolf, elk, and wild turkey for game. They likely ate mussels from the Whippany River.[5]

In the 17th century Munsee fishermen made an annual pilgrimage from the Washington Valley to the Minisink Island on the Delaware River, in part to procure shellfish. Caroline Foster has said it is likely that Munsee farmers cultivated corn in the summertime in the fields of the Washington Valley.[5]

In 1757 colonists of the "New Jersey Association for Helping the Indians" forcibly relocated some 200 Lenape from the Washington Valley to Brotherton, New Jersey.[21] In 1801, some members of the tribe voluntarily traveled to join the Oneidas' reservation in Stockbridge, New York after receiving an invitation from the Oneidas.[22][9][23] However, colonists again expelled Lenape families in Stockbridge to Green Bay, Wisconsin in 1822.[9]

Ogden Farm

Circa the 1750s, Samuel Roberts had purchased over 150 acres (61 ha) of land in Washington Valley, including what became Fosterfields and the nearby Ranney farm. Caroline Foster has stated that Roberts enslaved three Black people; no further details are provided.[5]

In 1774, Samuel Roberts's stepson Jonathan Ogden married Abigail Gardiner.[5] That year, Roberts gave him 150 acres, presumably as a wedding gift.[24] Like his stepfather, Ogden enslaved three Black people.[5] A farmhouse was built to house Ogden, likely by carpenters he enslaved.[5]

The farmhouse is situated on the now-defunct Road to Jacob Arnold's. The road was named for Jacob Arnold's Tavern, a historically significant 1740s tavern then located at the Morristown Green.[25][6]

Although the farmhouse burned down in 1915, the original one-story foundation from 1774 still remains.[5]

In 1776, Ogden was listed as a landowner in Morristown. He was a county judge, and from 1802 to 1804, represented Morris County in New Jersey Legislature. He invested in the First Presbyterian Church's purchase of the Morristown Green.[5]

Revolutionary War

During the Revolutionary War winter of 1779–1780, General Washington stationed four regiments of artillery, field pieces, forges, and machine shops in nearby Burnham Park. Washington directed Henry Knox, Continental Brigadier general, to be in the proximity of the artillery park.[9] Knox either used the Ogden farmhouse or the Samuel Roberts house as his home and headquarters.[26]

Samuel Roberts and Jonathan Ogden fought in the American Revolutionary War.[9]

Slavery

Foster claims that Washington Valley households usually enslaved one person per twelve-person family.[5]

Circa 1825, Thomas, Neal, and Ibbe[5] were Black persons on the plantation enslaved by Jonathan Ogden. Ogden died in 1825 at the age of 82.[27] Jonathan Ogden put his wife Abigail and son Charles in charge of enforcing his will. In his will, Ogden stipulated "my wife Abigail have the time and services of my three blacks – Thomas, Neal, and Ibbe[Note 1] – during her life."[28] It is unclear whether Thomas, Neal, and/or Ibbe were freed after the death of Abigail Ogden. Sources do not indicate when the farm discontinued use of enslaved labor.[5]

 
The 1915 Ogden farmhouse. Its 1774 stone foundation (lower left) is still visible.

Fire

On June 10, 1915, the Ogden house burned to the ground (except its 1774 foundation) due to a mattress being placed too close to a stove pipe. Foster recalled:

I woke up in the morning early and heard screams and shouts and I jumped up and you see the thing blazing...It took three days to burn, it was all solid oak ... I had [architect George Mills] draw a plan and I told him as near as I could how the thing looked.[29]

In 1915, the Ogden house was rebuilt based on Caroline Foster's memory of its appearance before the fire.[30][31]

Woods family

The historic Ogden house continued to be used as a residence, even after Revere built The Willows in 1854.[29]

From 1918 to 1927,[32] the historic Ogden house was occupied by the Woods family. Edward Woods (1875-1931) emigrated to the U.S. from Cornwall, England in 1909 and began working at Fosterfields in 1910, eventually being promoted to farm superintendent and moving into the Ogden House. Woods was paid a monthly salary of $95.[29]

His wife Agnes Woods (1879-1957) arrived in 1916 and was paid to provide food for the farmhands,[33] usually Irish immigrants,[34] at 25 cents a meal.[29] The house did not have running water during this time, requiring the Woods family to pump water into buckets and bring it up to the kitchen.[29]

The Woods family used a 1915 wood stove range to prepare family recipes, including biscuits with gravy[29] and pasties.[35][36][37] Due to their portability, Agnes Woods carried pasties to the farmhands working in the fields.[29] As of 2022, farm staff demonstrate the functional wood stove in educational cooking programs.[35][36][37]

The Willows

 
Revere's mansion design was inspired by the Olmstead House, a rural Connecticut home designed by architect Gervase Wheeler.

The Willows refers to a mansion commissioned by Joseph Warren Revere, completed in 1854.

Ogden farm purchase

A 1851 issue of The Jerseyman describes the estate, one year prior to its purchase by General Joseph Warren Revere:[38][39]

Very desirable farm known as the 'Ogden Farm,' lying about one mile west of Morristown upon the Morris turnpike and Eastern turnpike is offered for sale. Pleasantly situated with fine southern exposure and contains 88 acres (36 ha) of land. There is upon it an excellent two-storey dwelling house with kitchen attached; good barn, cow house, wagon house, and other outbuildings; never failing spring run of water passing near the house and through lawn; wood land. Title indisputable.

In 1852, Revere purchased the Ogden Farm from then-landowner Platt Rogers for $6,000.[38] Revere was a naval officer. He is the grandson of Paul Revere who was best known for his role in the American Revolutionary War.[38] His other travels (usually related to wars) took him to Mexico, Cuba, Liberia, France, Germany, Greece, Egypt, Portugal, Spain, Algeria, and Italy. Revere chose to settle in New Jersey.[40][41]

Construction

 
Joseph Warren Revere lived in The Willows at the time this picture was taken (1864).

Revere planned to construct a new, customized mansion. It would later be known as The Willows, due to the large grove of willows in the woods surrounding the property.[5]

Revere chose a site about 700 feet (210 m) west of the Ogden house, upon a picturesque slope overlooking the farm. He contracted local master carpenter Ashbel Bruen of Chatham to construct the home.[10][11] It has deeply pitched crossing gabled roofs and its front door faces southeast.[38]

The design of The Willows resembles Gevase Wheeler's 1849 Olmstead House. In his pattern book Rural Homes of 1851, British architect Gervase Wheeler published his pattern for Henry Olmstead's then-$3,000 house "about a mile and a half" from East Hartford, Connecticut.[38][42] Historian Renée Elizabeth Tribert argues that either Revere or Bruen undoubtedly owned a copy of the book and based it on Wheeler's design.[43] The end result reflected Gothic Revival style – specifically, Carpenter Gothic.[6] Revere hoped to retire on the estate.[6]

While Bruen constructed the Willows from 1852 to 1854, the Revere family temporarily lived in the Ogden house. During this time, Thomas Duncan Revere was born, on November 22, 1853.[10]

Written on August 7, 1854, Bruen's construction contract stated:[10]

[Bruen] shall and will on or before the first day of February erect, build, setup, and finish one dwelling house [for $7,125.15].

Bruen's construction of The Willows was completed in 1854, when the Reveres moved in.[6][10] Norway spruces were planted around the mansion.[5]

A self-taught artist, Revere likely painted the elaborate tromp l'oeil murals in the dining room, which were later maintained by the Foster family. The dining room murals include still lives, the Revere family crest, and a bouquet of baguettes. Revere also painted what appear to be wooden Gothic arches onto many of the walls.[6][44]

In 1861, the Civil War prompted Revere to voluntarily join the Union military. Revere became Union Army General; he was commander of the 7th New Jersey Infantry Regiment and 2nd New Jersey Infantry Regiment. In 1872, injuries forced Revere to move to Morristown.[45]

A January 9, 1873 letter from President Grant's secretary is addressed to Revere at "The Rancho," suggesting this was another nickname of The Willows.[46]

 
Author Bret Harte rented The Willows.

Tenants

From 1872 to 1881, the Reveres rented The Willows out to tenants. Among these tenants was fiction author Bret Harte.[18] Harte drew inspiration from his time in Morristown to write 1877 novel Thankful Blossom, a regionalist historical romance that takes place in Morristown.[47]

On April 20, 1880, Revere died of a heart attack[5] while on a ferry to New York.[48]

Fosters' ownership

From 1878 to 1880, Brooklyn Heights-based commodity broker Charles Grant Foster (1843–1927) rented The Willows, possibly to provide his wife with medical care for tuberculosis.[49] In 1881, following Revere's death, Charles Foster purchased the entire property.[33][50]

 
Caroline Foster and her father Charles Foster, who owned Fosterfields during its period of significance in the 1880s-1920s

In 1882, Foster purchased two adjoining farms: the Gribbon Farm on the east and the Nathaniel Wilson Farm on the west.[5] He managed the farm while continuing to work in New York City and Morristown. Foster can be considered a gentleman farmer.[51] His family lived and entertained guests in The Willows, Revere's former estate.[33]

In 1882, to establish his dairy farm, Foster and his brother began imported purebred Jersey cows from the British Isle of Jersey, the largest of the Channel Islands. By 1883, the herd numbered around 70 head of cattle.[29]

Foster invested in progressive farming technologies of his time. In 1883, he build an ensilage pit to feed cows during the winter, which demonstrated his investment in modern ideas. Other technology included kerosene-powered egg incubation, crop rotation, and steam-engine fodder choppers and water pumps (replaced by gasoline engine in 1915).[29]

In 1884, Caroline Foster was brought to the Isle; she later recalled, "We traveled from one village to another in horse and buggy, buying one cow here and one cow there." By 1884, the Fosters' herd had about 100 head.[29]

Circa 1900, Foster affixed a wooden plain-front wall telephone to the hall of The Willows. Presumably, this investment allowed him to keep in contact with his office in New York.[29]

Charles Foster participated in the American Jersey cattle trading industry, as evident by journal advertisements. Foster's herd was registered with The American Jersey Cattle Club; he traded with breeders Jeremiah Roth of Allentown, Pennsylvania; John T. Foote of Springbrook Farm, Morristown; and Louis Gillespie of Tower Hill (now Villa Walsh), Morristown.[29] An August 1900 advertisement in The Country Gentleman reads:[52]

FOSTERFIELD'S HERD JERSEYS.

FOR SALE—COWS and HEIFERS, all my own breeding, and a choice lot in every way. Nearly every one sired by bulls...with butter tests of 14 lb. and upward, and served by bulls of the same standard. Will sell singly or a carload. Also for Sale, Bulls out of Tested Cows. Address

CHARLES G. FOSTER

Post-Office Box 173, Morristown, Morris Co., N.J.

 
Purebred Jersey cows were integral to Charles G. Foster's management of Fosterfields. The farm profited from sales of their butter, bulls, cows, and calves.

A similar September 1919 advertisement was posted in Home and Field Illustrated:[53]

Fosterfield's Herd Registered Jerseys.

FOR SALE—Young Cows. Heifers, due to be fresh this summer and later.

Calves, both sexes, very attractive.

Come and see them or write

CHARLES G. FOSTER

P. O. Box 173, Morristown, Morris Co., N.J.

Foster maintained a daily farm journal for 40 years.[50] Foster employed farmhands and coachmen to work on the property. An example of Foster's employees were the Woods family, English immigrants from Cornwall; more details are provided above.[33] Andrew Gibbons, the Irish coachman, is another employee of the Foster's; a reenactor portrayed Gibbons in a 2017 Irish history event.[34]

 
In 1916, Caroline Foster manually constructed the Temple of Abiding Peace, a Cape Cod style cottage, as well as its adjoining garden.
Temple of Abiding Peace

In 1916, Caroline Foster began to build a one-room Cape Cod-style cottage outside The Willows.[54] She was skilled in carpentry and hoped to complete the house's construction independently.[55] In 1919, she completed the cottage and named it "The Temple of Abiding Peace." Biographer Becky Hoskins claims it was a "refuge from the daily stresses of her life," which included daily supervision of the farm and her father losing his hearing.[29] Likely named in response to the Great War,[29] the Temple of Abiding Peace was used as a workshop to entertain guests and craft birdhouses with friends.[56] She planted a garden around the house,[57][58] which continues to be maintained.[59]

Historic landscape consultant Marta McDowell claims Foster's garden is significant because "it displays features that span the history of 19th- and 20th-century American gardening: the Romantic era of the early 1800s, the Colonial Revival of 1876 onwards, and the imported English perennial borders of the early 20th century."[29]

In 1925, due to Charles Foster's failing health, most of the herd of Jersey cattle were sold in an auction. In 1927, Charles Foster died, and his 50-year-old daughter Caroline Foster took charge of the farm. She continued to sell milk, eggs, butter, vegetables, and honey to local customers and friends. In 1928, Caroline Foster bought a gasoline-powered tractor; this was a technological advancement replacing Charles Foster's method of draft horses.[29] Despite embracing new farm machinery, Charles Foster was opposed to automobiles, referring to Foster's Model T Ford as a "damn contraption."[29]

In 1999, the Temple of Abiding Peace opened to the public as part of the open-air museum.[29]

In 1937, Caroline Foster electrified The Willows and the Ogden farmhouse.[29] In 1967, at the age of 90 and beyond, Caroline Foster continued to watch farm workers thresh wheat and plant crops.[29]

Museum

 
A farm cat exiting a corn crib at Fosterfields, including Oberhasli goats (left) and chickens (right)

Fosterfields is the first of New Jersey's three living historical farms.[60]

In 1974 farmer and philanthropist Caroline Rose Foster (1877–1979) bequeathed her estate to the Morris County Park Commission to preserve the farm.[18][61][62] In her will, Foster stipulated:[63]

I give, devise and bequeath to the COUNTY OF MORRIS, in fee simple, for the use by the Morris County Park Commission, my farm in Morris Township, Morris County, New Jersey, on both sides of the road leading from Morristown to Mendham, intending to include all of my real estate in Morris Township. It is my desire that the use made of the property and its development by the County be kept as simple as possible, and that the natural condition of the property be maintained to the extent possible so that the wildlife and trees and flowers on the property may be protected and preserved for the education and pleasure of the public. It is my further wish that the use be educational and historical rather than recreational, and that there be no food or amusement concessions. I suggest, if it seems desirable, that this property be maintained as a farm.

Farm open-air museum

The property is an open-air museum demonstrating farm chores in the early 20th century.[17] Pamphlets of the museum state that it specifically focuses on Fosterfields during the 1880s to 1930s. It specifically depicts the Fosters' life in The Willows and the Woods family's life in the Ogden House.[7] Antique machinery is on display and part of demonstrations, including early 20th century steam engines, corn sheller, icebox, wood stove, and barrel butter churns.[64][65]

Visitors can see farm animals, farmers plowing and planting fields, and historical tour guides. Guests may help perform daily farm tasks like collecting eggs, cleaning the horse harness, and grinding feed corn for the chickens.[2]

 
A Shropshire sheep being shorn during a 2022 event

As of 2022, heritage breeds at the farm include:[66]

The farm has hosted sheepdog trials since the late 1980s. In 2005, the trials were discontinued, but returned in 2014.[67][68][69]

Circa 2004, the farm offered a "Share-a-Chore" program, where members of the public would pay admission to do farm chores like cleaning stalls and maintaining equipment. It also ran a program called "Spread It Around" where paying observers watched a team of Belgian workhorses scatter manure on a pasture.[70]

In 2010, Connolly & Hickey Historic Architects conducted a historic structures report, then repaired and restored the barnyard complex at Fosterfields.[71]

In 2011, the farm offered a series of classes called "The Wood Stove Cook" to teach members of the public how to cook on an antique wood stove.[61]

On August 3, 2019, Fosterfields hosted Model T Ford day to celebrate the popular automobile. Festivities included displaying Caroline Foster's Model T Ford, gifted to her by her friends, and celebrating the history of motor vehicles. Historians instructed guests on how to crank and drive antique cars, and car collectors were invited to display their Model Ts.[72]

In 2019, the Fosterfields Farm Harvest festival included wagon rides, butter churning, apple cider pressing, live music, "old-time dancing," and farm animals.[73]

On February 13, 2022, Fosterfields hosted "Winter's Day," wherein guests were invited to experience ice cutting, maple tree tapping, wood sawing, wagon rides, petting cows, and an outdoor cooking demonstration.[74]

In May 2021 and May 2022, Fosterfields hosted an educational sheep-shearing and wool event titled "Born to be Shorn." Throughout the event, guest expert shearer Margaret Quinn[75] demonstrated sheep shearing with blade shears.[76][77]

 
Caroline Rose Foster in her runabout circa 1915
 
The runabout on display in the Carriage House

Transportation exhibit

In her will, Caroline Foster stipulated:[29]

It is contemplated that the Commission will erect a fire resistant building on a part of the farm which I have already deeded to it. This will be a museum for the purpose of housing and displaying a transportation exhibit, including my collection of carriages, wagons, sleighs, harness, antique automobile, farm equipment and other articles.

As requested, her automobiles are displayed in the Fosterfields Visitors Center near the entrance, in a museum exhibit titled "Driving Into the Twentieth Century." Guests can view her 1922 Model T Ford and a 1929 Hupmobile along with two hands-on vehicular activities.[29] However, Foster's horse-drawn carriages are displayed in the Carriage House located beside the barn on the main farm.[29]

Accessibility

In 2022, photography club students at the County College of Morris created a virtual reality exhibit of the Willows' second floor, led by Professor Nicole Schwartz. The students were taught to combine 3D modeling with 360-degree cameras and photo stitching; Schwartz explains, "Every 360 shot is a collage of six individual images that students worked diligently to stitch together." The goal was to provide a second-floor experience for people with mobility disabilities; the upper level of the Willows is not wheelchair accessible due to an 18-step historically narrow staircase and lack of elevator access. This exhibit claims to provide an accessible experience for "history buffs facing mobility issues."[78]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The will was handwritten in a mix of Palmer and Spencerian scripts. The letters appear to spell Ibbe. Unofficial sources suggest this name is of Latin and Biblical origin (Iacobus).

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System – (#73001127)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Fosterfields Living Historical Farm". Morris County Park Commission. from the original on January 21, 2021. Retrieved January 16, 2021.
  3. ^ "National Register Information System – (#91000478)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  4. ^ "New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places – Morris County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection – Historic Preservation Office. December 28, 2020. p. 14. (PDF) from the original on May 16, 2013. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Barbara, Hoskins; Foster, Caroline; Roberts, Dorothea; Foster, Gladys (1960). Washington Valley, an informal history. Edward Brothers, Inc. OCLC 28817174.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Gamble, Robert S.; Kerschner, Terry (July 19, 1972). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Joseph W. Revere House". National Park Service. With accompanying 2 photos
  7. ^ a b Press, Independent (August 26, 2012). "Tour The Willows in Morristown". nj. from the original on March 25, 2022. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  8. ^ a b "Fosterfields Living Historical Farm | Morris County Parks". www.morrisparks.net. from the original on January 21, 2021. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Barbara, Hoskins; Foster, Caroline; Roberts, Dorothea; Foster, Gladys (1960). Washington Valley, an informal history. Edward Brothers. OCLC 28817174.
  10. ^ a b c d e Chemerka, WIlliam R. General Joseph Warren Revere: The Gothic Saga of Paul Revere's Grandson. BearManor Media. p. 88. from the original on April 18, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2022.
  11. ^ a b Emblen, M. l (June 3, 1990). "NEW JERSEY GUIDE". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on March 31, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
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  13. ^ Barbato, Joan (May 5, 1989). "Restoration of "Willows" complete, B4". Daily Record. Morristown, New Jersey. pp. B4. from the original on April 15, 2022. Retrieved April 15, 2022.
  14. ^ Friends of Fosterfields: The Farm July 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Press, Independent (August 26, 2012). "Tour The Willows in Morristown". nj. from the original on March 25, 2022. Retrieved March 24, 2022.
  16. ^ Nadzeika, Bonnie-Lynn (2012). Morristown. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-9280-0. from the original on May 20, 2022. Retrieved May 18, 2022.
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  18. ^ a b c Strathearn, Nancy (August 16, 1990). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Fosterfields (Boundary Increase)". National Park Service. With accompanying 28 photos
  19. ^ Foster, Janet W. (November 12, 1992). "NRHP Nomination: Washington Valley Historic District". National Park Service.
    • "NRHP Nomination: Washington Valley Historic District (56 photos)". National Park Service. 1991.
  20. ^ Alvin M. Josephy Jr, ed. (1961). The American Heritage Book of Indians. American Heritage. pp. 168–189. LCCN 61-14871.
  21. ^ "Collection: New Jersey Association for helping the Indians records | Archives & Manuscripts". archives.tricolib.brynmawr.edu. from the original on August 8, 2020. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  22. ^ "The Brotherton Indians of New Jersey, 1780 | Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History". www.gilderlehrman.org. from the original on April 21, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  23. ^ "New Stockbridge Tribe". collections.dartmouth.edu. from the original on May 20, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  24. ^ Vermilye, Anna S. (1906). Ogden Family History in the Line of Lieutenant Benjamin Ogden of New York: (born June 22, 1735-died August 16, 1780) of the Prince of Wales' American Regiment, and His Wife Rachel Westervelt, with Some Account of His Ancestry and Descendants. Orange Chronicle Company, printers. from the original on April 21, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2022.
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  28. ^ Last will and testament of Jonathan Ogden, notarized by Jeremiah M. De'Camp, surrogate of the County of Morris, 1848. Document available in Morris County Park Commissions archive.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Hoskins, Rebecca (2010). Caroline Foster and Fosterfields Living Historical Farm : a life and a legacy. Ralph Iacobelli, Morris County Park Commission. Morristown, N.J.: The Friends of Fosterfields Living Historical Farm and Cooper Gristmill. ISBN 978-0-615-39122-9. OCLC 709909049.
  30. ^ "Paranormal Event at Morristown's Fosterfields". TAPinto. from the original on May 16, 2022. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  31. ^ michellelongo (November 15, 2019). "Weekend Family Fun: Service Dogs, Story Times, Dance and More". Baristanet. from the original on November 15, 2019. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
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  34. ^ a b "Celebrate Irish History at Fosterfields Living Historic Farm in Morristown; Saturday April 22". TAPinto. from the original on May 20, 2022. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  35. ^ a b Gorce, Tammy La (March 12, 2011). "Grandma's Recipes, Made With Her Tools". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on January 22, 2021. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
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  39. ^ Hoskins, Barbara (1960). Washington Valley: An Informal History, Morris County, New Jersey. Edwards Brothers. p. 207. from the original on May 20, 2022. Retrieved April 14, 2022.
  40. ^ Revere, Joseph Warren (1872). Keel and Saddle: A Retrospect of Forty Years of Military and Naval Service. J.R. Osgood. from the original on May 16, 2022. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  41. ^ Revere, Joseph Warren (September 2009). Keel and Saddle. Applewood Books. ISBN 978-1-4290-2160-9. from the original on May 16, 2022. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  42. ^ Guter, Robert P. The Willows at Fosterfields Historic Structure Report, "Architectural History Report", 1983. Written by Robert P. Guter of Acroterion Historic Preservation Consultants, available in the archives of the Morris County Park Commission.
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External links

  • "Visit Fosterfields". The Friends of Fosterfields and Cooper Mill.
  • "Fosterfields". Morris Township, NJ – Official Website.
  • "Fosterfields – 1854". Historical Marker Database.
  • "Fosterfields Living Historical Farm". Historical Marker Database.
  • The second-floor experience (hosted on the County College of Morris website)

  Media related to Fosterfields at Wikimedia Commons

fosterfields, also, known, living, historical, farm, acre, farm, open, museum, junction, mendham, kahdena, roads, morris, township, jersey, oldest, structure, farm, ogden, house, built, 1774, listed, joseph, revere, house, added, national, register, historic, . Fosterfields also known as Fosterfields Living Historical Farm is a 213 4 acre 86 4 ha farm and open air museum at the junction of Mendham and Kahdena Roads in Morris Township New Jersey The oldest structure on the farm the Ogden House was built in 1774 5 Listed as the Joseph W Revere House Fosterfields was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 20 1973 for its significance in art architecture literature and military history 6 The museum portrays farm life circa 1920 7 8 FosterfieldsU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtContributing propertyNew Jersey Register of Historic PlacesJoseph W Revere HouseShow map of Morris County New JerseyShow map of New JerseyShow map of the United StatesLocationJunction of Mendham and Kahdena Roads Morris Township New JerseyCoordinates40 48 6 N 74 30 16 W 40 80167 N 74 50444 W 40 80167 74 50444 Fosterfields Area213 4 acres 86 4 ha 2 Built1854 1854 ArchitectJoseph Warren RevereArchitectural styleGothic Revival stylePart ofWashington Valley Historic District ID92001583 NRHP reference No 73001127 1 original 91000478 3 increase NJRHP No 2175 2176 4 Significant datesAdded to NRHPSeptember 20 1973Boundary increaseOctober 9 1991Designated CPNovember 12 1992Designated NJRHPJanuary 29 1973March 11 1991United States Navy officer adventurer and author Joseph Warren Revere a grandson of Paul Revere was a significant owner of the property 9 During Revere s ownership he designed and built an 1854 Carpenter Gothic mansion titled The Willows 5 10 11 In 1881 Charles Grant Foster a New York commodities broker purchased the property and developed it into a Jersey cattle farm entitled Fosterfields His daughter Caroline Rose Foster spent 98 years living and working on the property enjoying carpentry fishing and civic engagement during the Gilded Age of Morristown 9 While writing her will in 1974 Caroline Foster arranged to bequeath the land to the Morris County Park Commission following her death with the intent of making the property an educational farm 12 13 14 15 8 Upon Foster s death in 1979 the Park Commission received the farm 16 17 The boundary was increased on October 9 1991 18 It was listed as a contributing property of the Washington Valley Historic District on November 12 1992 19 Contents 1 History 1 1 Lenape ownership 1 2 Ogden Farm 1 2 1 Revolutionary War 1 2 2 Slavery 1 2 3 Fire 1 2 4 Woods family 1 3 The Willows 1 3 1 Ogden farm purchase 1 3 2 Construction 1 3 3 Tenants 1 3 4 Fosters ownership 1 3 4 1 Temple of Abiding Peace 2 Museum 2 1 Farm open air museum 2 2 Transportation exhibit 2 3 Accessibility 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditLenape ownership Edit Around 1000 the land was inhabited by Munsee Lenape people Circa 1500 Morris County was part of the Lenapehoking 20 Arrowheads found in Munsee encampments throughout the Washington Valley suggest that they hunted wolf elk and wild turkey for game They likely ate mussels from the Whippany River 5 In the 17th century Munsee fishermen made an annual pilgrimage from the Washington Valley to the Minisink Island on the Delaware River in part to procure shellfish Caroline Foster has said it is likely that Munsee farmers cultivated corn in the summertime in the fields of the Washington Valley 5 In 1757 colonists of the New Jersey Association for Helping the Indians forcibly relocated some 200 Lenape from the Washington Valley to Brotherton New Jersey 21 In 1801 some members of the tribe voluntarily traveled to join the Oneidas reservation in Stockbridge New York after receiving an invitation from the Oneidas 22 9 23 However colonists again expelled Lenape families in Stockbridge to Green Bay Wisconsin in 1822 9 Ogden Farm Edit Circa the 1750s Samuel Roberts had purchased over 150 acres 61 ha of land in Washington Valley including what became Fosterfields and the nearby Ranney farm Caroline Foster has stated that Roberts enslaved three Black people no further details are provided 5 In 1774 Samuel Roberts s stepson Jonathan Ogden married Abigail Gardiner 5 That year Roberts gave him 150 acres presumably as a wedding gift 24 Like his stepfather Ogden enslaved three Black people 5 A farmhouse was built to house Ogden likely by carpenters he enslaved 5 The farmhouse is situated on the now defunct Road to Jacob Arnold s The road was named for Jacob Arnold s Tavern a historically significant 1740s tavern then located at the Morristown Green 25 6 Although the farmhouse burned down in 1915 the original one story foundation from 1774 still remains 5 In 1776 Ogden was listed as a landowner in Morristown He was a county judge and from 1802 to 1804 represented Morris County in New Jersey Legislature He invested in the First Presbyterian Church s purchase of the Morristown Green 5 Revolutionary War Edit During the Revolutionary War winter of 1779 1780 General Washington stationed four regiments of artillery field pieces forges and machine shops in nearby Burnham Park Washington directed Henry Knox Continental Brigadier general to be in the proximity of the artillery park 9 Knox either used the Ogden farmhouse or the Samuel Roberts house as his home and headquarters 26 Samuel Roberts and Jonathan Ogden fought in the American Revolutionary War 9 Slavery Edit Foster claims that Washington Valley households usually enslaved one person per twelve person family 5 Circa 1825 Thomas Neal and Ibbe 5 were Black persons on the plantation enslaved by Jonathan Ogden Ogden died in 1825 at the age of 82 27 Jonathan Ogden put his wife Abigail and son Charles in charge of enforcing his will In his will Ogden stipulated my wife Abigail have the time and services of my three blacks Thomas Neal and Ibbe Note 1 during her life 28 It is unclear whether Thomas Neal and or Ibbe were freed after the death of Abigail Ogden Sources do not indicate when the farm discontinued use of enslaved labor 5 The 1915 Ogden farmhouse Its 1774 stone foundation lower left is still visible Fire EditOn June 10 1915 the Ogden house burned to the ground except its 1774 foundation due to a mattress being placed too close to a stove pipe Foster recalled I woke up in the morning early and heard screams and shouts and I jumped up and you see the thing blazing It took three days to burn it was all solid oak I had architect George Mills draw a plan and I told him as near as I could how the thing looked 29 In 1915 the Ogden house was rebuilt based on Caroline Foster s memory of its appearance before the fire 30 31 Woods family Edit The historic Ogden house continued to be used as a residence even after Revere built The Willows in 1854 29 From 1918 to 1927 32 the historic Ogden house was occupied by the Woods family Edward Woods 1875 1931 emigrated to the U S from Cornwall England in 1909 and began working at Fosterfields in 1910 eventually being promoted to farm superintendent and moving into the Ogden House Woods was paid a monthly salary of 95 29 His wife Agnes Woods 1879 1957 arrived in 1916 and was paid to provide food for the farmhands 33 usually Irish immigrants 34 at 25 cents a meal 29 The house did not have running water during this time requiring the Woods family to pump water into buckets and bring it up to the kitchen 29 The Woods family used a 1915 wood stove range to prepare family recipes including biscuits with gravy 29 and pasties 35 36 37 Due to their portability Agnes Woods carried pasties to the farmhands working in the fields 29 As of 2022 farm staff demonstrate the functional wood stove in educational cooking programs 35 36 37 The Willows Edit Revere s mansion design was inspired by the Olmstead House a rural Connecticut home designed by architect Gervase Wheeler The Willows refers to a mansion commissioned by Joseph Warren Revere completed in 1854 Ogden farm purchase Edit A 1851 issue of The Jerseyman describes the estate one year prior to its purchase by General Joseph Warren Revere 38 39 Very desirable farm known as the Ogden Farm lying about one mile west of Morristown upon the Morris turnpike and Eastern turnpike is offered for sale Pleasantly situated with fine southern exposure and contains 88 acres 36 ha of land There is upon it an excellent two storey dwelling house with kitchen attached good barn cow house wagon house and other outbuildings never failing spring run of water passing near the house and through lawn wood land Title indisputable In 1852 Revere purchased the Ogden Farm from then landowner Platt Rogers for 6 000 38 Revere was a naval officer He is the grandson of Paul Revere who was best known for his role in the American Revolutionary War 38 His other travels usually related to wars took him to Mexico Cuba Liberia France Germany Greece Egypt Portugal Spain Algeria and Italy Revere chose to settle in New Jersey 40 41 Construction Edit Joseph Warren Revere lived in The Willows at the time this picture was taken 1864 Revere planned to construct a new customized mansion It would later be known as The Willows due to the large grove of willows in the woods surrounding the property 5 Revere chose a site about 700 feet 210 m west of the Ogden house upon a picturesque slope overlooking the farm He contracted local master carpenter Ashbel Bruen of Chatham to construct the home 10 11 It has deeply pitched crossing gabled roofs and its front door faces southeast 38 The design of The Willows resembles Gevase Wheeler s 1849 Olmstead House In his pattern book Rural Homes of 1851 British architect Gervase Wheeler published his pattern for Henry Olmstead s then 3 000 house about a mile and a half from East Hartford Connecticut 38 42 Historian Renee Elizabeth Tribert argues that either Revere or Bruen undoubtedly owned a copy of the book and based it on Wheeler s design 43 The end result reflected Gothic Revival style specifically Carpenter Gothic 6 Revere hoped to retire on the estate 6 While Bruen constructed the Willows from 1852 to 1854 the Revere family temporarily lived in the Ogden house During this time Thomas Duncan Revere was born on November 22 1853 10 Written on August 7 1854 Bruen s construction contract stated 10 Bruen shall and will on or before the first day of February erect build setup and finish one dwelling house for 7 125 15 Bruen s construction of The Willows was completed in 1854 when the Reveres moved in 6 10 Norway spruces were planted around the mansion 5 A self taught artist Revere likely painted the elaborate tromp l oeil murals in the dining room which were later maintained by the Foster family The dining room murals include still lives the Revere family crest and a bouquet of baguettes Revere also painted what appear to be wooden Gothic arches onto many of the walls 6 44 In 1861 the Civil War prompted Revere to voluntarily join the Union military Revere became Union Army General he was commander of the 7th New Jersey Infantry Regiment and 2nd New Jersey Infantry Regiment In 1872 injuries forced Revere to move to Morristown 45 A January 9 1873 letter from President Grant s secretary is addressed to Revere at The Rancho suggesting this was another nickname of The Willows 46 Author Bret Harte rented The Willows Tenants Edit From 1872 to 1881 the Reveres rented The Willows out to tenants Among these tenants was fiction author Bret Harte 18 Harte drew inspiration from his time in Morristown to write 1877 novel Thankful Blossom a regionalist historical romance that takes place in Morristown 47 On April 20 1880 Revere died of a heart attack 5 while on a ferry to New York 48 Fosters ownership Edit Main article Caroline Rose Foster From 1878 to 1880 Brooklyn Heights based commodity broker Charles Grant Foster 1843 1927 rented The Willows possibly to provide his wife with medical care for tuberculosis 49 In 1881 following Revere s death Charles Foster purchased the entire property 33 50 Caroline Foster and her father Charles Foster who owned Fosterfields during its period of significance in the 1880s 1920sIn 1882 Foster purchased two adjoining farms the Gribbon Farm on the east and the Nathaniel Wilson Farm on the west 5 He managed the farm while continuing to work in New York City and Morristown Foster can be considered a gentleman farmer 51 His family lived and entertained guests in The Willows Revere s former estate 33 In 1882 to establish his dairy farm Foster and his brother began imported purebred Jersey cows from the British Isle of Jersey the largest of the Channel Islands By 1883 the herd numbered around 70 head of cattle 29 Foster invested in progressive farming technologies of his time In 1883 he build an ensilage pit to feed cows during the winter which demonstrated his investment in modern ideas Other technology included kerosene powered egg incubation crop rotation and steam engine fodder choppers and water pumps replaced by gasoline engine in 1915 29 In 1884 Caroline Foster was brought to the Isle she later recalled We traveled from one village to another in horse and buggy buying one cow here and one cow there By 1884 the Fosters herd had about 100 head 29 Circa 1900 Foster affixed a wooden plain front wall telephone to the hall of The Willows Presumably this investment allowed him to keep in contact with his office in New York 29 Charles Foster participated in the American Jersey cattle trading industry as evident by journal advertisements Foster s herd was registered with The American Jersey Cattle Club he traded with breeders Jeremiah Roth of Allentown Pennsylvania John T Foote of Springbrook Farm Morristown and Louis Gillespie of Tower Hill now Villa Walsh Morristown 29 An August 1900 advertisement in The Country Gentleman reads 52 FOSTERFIELD S HERD JERSEYS FOR SALE COWS and HEIFERS all my own breeding and a choice lot in every way Nearly every one sired by bulls with butter tests of 14 lb and upward and served by bulls of the same standard Will sell singly or a carload Also for Sale Bulls out of Tested Cows AddressCHARLES G FOSTER Post Office Box 173 Morristown Morris Co N J Purebred Jersey cows were integral to Charles G Foster s management of Fosterfields The farm profited from sales of their butter bulls cows and calves A similar September 1919 advertisement was posted in Home and Field Illustrated 53 Fosterfield s Herd Registered Jerseys FOR SALE Young Cows Heifers due to be fresh this summer and later Calves both sexes very attractive Come and see them or writeCHARLES G FOSTER P O Box 173 Morristown Morris Co N J Foster maintained a daily farm journal for 40 years 50 Foster employed farmhands and coachmen to work on the property An example of Foster s employees were the Woods family English immigrants from Cornwall more details are provided above 33 Andrew Gibbons the Irish coachman is another employee of the Foster s a reenactor portrayed Gibbons in a 2017 Irish history event 34 In 1916 Caroline Foster manually constructed the Temple of Abiding Peace a Cape Cod style cottage as well as its adjoining garden Temple of Abiding Peace Edit In 1916 Caroline Foster began to build a one room Cape Cod style cottage outside The Willows 54 She was skilled in carpentry and hoped to complete the house s construction independently 55 In 1919 she completed the cottage and named it The Temple of Abiding Peace Biographer Becky Hoskins claims it was a refuge from the daily stresses of her life which included daily supervision of the farm and her father losing his hearing 29 Likely named in response to the Great War 29 the Temple of Abiding Peace was used as a workshop to entertain guests and craft birdhouses with friends 56 She planted a garden around the house 57 58 which continues to be maintained 59 Historic landscape consultant Marta McDowell claims Foster s garden is significant because it displays features that span the history of 19th and 20th century American gardening the Romantic era of the early 1800s the Colonial Revival of 1876 onwards and the imported English perennial borders of the early 20th century 29 In 1925 due to Charles Foster s failing health most of the herd of Jersey cattle were sold in an auction In 1927 Charles Foster died and his 50 year old daughter Caroline Foster took charge of the farm She continued to sell milk eggs butter vegetables and honey to local customers and friends In 1928 Caroline Foster bought a gasoline powered tractor this was a technological advancement replacing Charles Foster s method of draft horses 29 Despite embracing new farm machinery Charles Foster was opposed to automobiles referring to Foster s Model T Ford as a damn contraption 29 In 1999 the Temple of Abiding Peace opened to the public as part of the open air museum 29 In 1937 Caroline Foster electrified The Willows and the Ogden farmhouse 29 In 1967 at the age of 90 and beyond Caroline Foster continued to watch farm workers thresh wheat and plant crops 29 Museum Edit A farm cat exiting a corn crib at Fosterfields including Oberhasli goats left and chickens right Fosterfields is the first of New Jersey s three living historical farms 60 In 1974 farmer and philanthropist Caroline Rose Foster 1877 1979 bequeathed her estate to the Morris County Park Commission to preserve the farm 18 61 62 In her will Foster stipulated 63 I give devise and bequeath to the COUNTY OF MORRIS in fee simple for the use by the Morris County Park Commission my farm in Morris Township Morris County New Jersey on both sides of the road leading from Morristown to Mendham intending to include all of my real estate in Morris Township It is my desire that the use made of the property and its development by the County be kept as simple as possible and that the natural condition of the property be maintained to the extent possible so that the wildlife and trees and flowers on the property may be protected and preserved for the education and pleasure of the public It is my further wish that the use be educational and historical rather than recreational and that there be no food or amusement concessions I suggest if it seems desirable that this property be maintained as a farm Farm open air museum Edit The property is an open air museum demonstrating farm chores in the early 20th century 17 Pamphlets of the museum state that it specifically focuses on Fosterfields during the 1880s to 1930s It specifically depicts the Fosters life in The Willows and the Woods family s life in the Ogden House 7 Antique machinery is on display and part of demonstrations including early 20th century steam engines corn sheller icebox wood stove and barrel butter churns 64 65 Visitors can see farm animals farmers plowing and planting fields and historical tour guides Guests may help perform daily farm tasks like collecting eggs cleaning the horse harness and grinding feed corn for the chickens 2 A Shropshire sheep being shorn during a 2022 eventAs of 2022 heritage breeds at the farm include 66 Jersey cattle Buff Orpington Rhode Island Red Plymouth Barredrock and White Leghorn chickens Oberhasli goats Cayuga ducks African goose Shropshire rams and mixed Leicester Romney ewes The farm has hosted sheepdog trials since the late 1980s In 2005 the trials were discontinued but returned in 2014 67 68 69 Circa 2004 the farm offered a Share a Chore program where members of the public would pay admission to do farm chores like cleaning stalls and maintaining equipment It also ran a program called Spread It Around where paying observers watched a team of Belgian workhorses scatter manure on a pasture 70 In 2010 Connolly amp Hickey Historic Architects conducted a historic structures report then repaired and restored the barnyard complex at Fosterfields 71 In 2011 the farm offered a series of classes called The Wood Stove Cook to teach members of the public how to cook on an antique wood stove 61 On August 3 2019 Fosterfields hosted Model T Ford day to celebrate the popular automobile Festivities included displaying Caroline Foster s Model T Ford gifted to her by her friends and celebrating the history of motor vehicles Historians instructed guests on how to crank and drive antique cars and car collectors were invited to display their Model Ts 72 In 2019 the Fosterfields Farm Harvest festival included wagon rides butter churning apple cider pressing live music old time dancing and farm animals 73 On February 13 2022 Fosterfields hosted Winter s Day wherein guests were invited to experience ice cutting maple tree tapping wood sawing wagon rides petting cows and an outdoor cooking demonstration 74 In May 2021 and May 2022 Fosterfields hosted an educational sheep shearing and wool event titled Born to be Shorn Throughout the event guest expert shearer Margaret Quinn 75 demonstrated sheep shearing with blade shears 76 77 Caroline Rose Foster in her runabout circa 1915 The runabout on display in the Carriage House Transportation exhibit Edit In her will Caroline Foster stipulated 29 It is contemplated that the Commission will erect a fire resistant building on a part of the farm which I have already deeded to it This will be a museum for the purpose of housing and displaying a transportation exhibit including my collection of carriages wagons sleighs harness antique automobile farm equipment and other articles As requested her automobiles are displayed in the Fosterfields Visitors Center near the entrance in a museum exhibit titled Driving Into the Twentieth Century Guests can view her 1922 Model T Ford and a 1929 Hupmobile along with two hands on vehicular activities 29 However Foster s horse drawn carriages are displayed in the Carriage House located beside the barn on the main farm 29 Accessibility Edit In 2022 photography club students at the County College of Morris created a virtual reality exhibit of the Willows second floor led by Professor Nicole Schwartz The students were taught to combine 3D modeling with 360 degree cameras and photo stitching Schwartz explains Every 360 shot is a collage of six individual images that students worked diligently to stitch together The goal was to provide a second floor experience for people with mobility disabilities the upper level of the Willows is not wheelchair accessible due to an 18 step historically narrow staircase and lack of elevator access This exhibit claims to provide an accessible experience for history buffs facing mobility issues 78 Gallery Edit Information sign The barn at FosterfieldsSee also EditAcorn Hall a nearby Morristown historic house museum donated by Mary Crane Hone in 1971 Washington Valley Historic District Indian Mills New Jersey National Register of Historic Places listings in Morris County New Jersey Howell Living History Farm Longstreet Farm History of slavery in New JerseyNotes Edit The will was handwritten in a mix of Palmer and Spencerian scripts The letters appear to spell Ibbe Unofficial sources suggest this name is of Latin and Biblical origin Iacobus References Edit National Register Information System 73001127 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 2 2013 a b Fosterfields Living Historical Farm Morris County Park Commission Archived from the original on January 21 2021 Retrieved January 16 2021 National Register Information System 91000478 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service November 2 2013 New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places Morris County PDF New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Historic Preservation Office December 28 2020 p 14 Archived PDF from the original on May 16 2013 Retrieved February 3 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Barbara Hoskins Foster Caroline Roberts Dorothea Foster Gladys 1960 Washington Valley an informal history Edward Brothers Inc OCLC 28817174 a b c d e f Gamble Robert S Kerschner Terry July 19 1972 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Joseph W Revere House National Park Service With accompanying 2 photos a b Press Independent August 26 2012 Tour The Willows in Morristown nj Archived from the original on March 25 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b Fosterfields Living Historical Farm Morris County Parks www morrisparks net Archived from the original on January 21 2021 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b c d e f Barbara Hoskins Foster Caroline Roberts Dorothea Foster Gladys 1960 Washington Valley an informal history Edward Brothers OCLC 28817174 a b c d e Chemerka WIlliam R General Joseph Warren Revere The Gothic Saga of Paul Revere s Grandson BearManor Media p 88 Archived from the original on April 18 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 a b Emblen M l June 3 1990 NEW JERSEY GUIDE The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 31 2022 Retrieved March 30 2022 Barbato Joan May 5 1989 Restoration of Willows completed B1 Daily Record Morristown New Jersey pp B1 Archived from the original on April 15 2022 Retrieved April 15 2022 Barbato Joan May 5 1989 Restoration of Willows complete B4 Daily Record Morristown New Jersey pp B4 Archived from the original on April 15 2022 Retrieved April 15 2022 Friends of Fosterfields The Farm Archived July 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine Press Independent August 26 2012 Tour The Willows in Morristown nj Archived from the original on March 25 2022 Retrieved March 24 2022 Nadzeika Bonnie Lynn 2012 Morristown Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 9280 0 Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 18 2022 a b Fosterfields www usgenwebsites org Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b c Strathearn Nancy August 16 1990 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Fosterfields Boundary Increase National Park Service With accompanying 28 photos Foster Janet W November 12 1992 NRHP Nomination Washington Valley Historic District National Park Service NRHP Nomination Washington Valley Historic District 56 photos National Park Service 1991 Alvin M Josephy Jr ed 1961 The American Heritage Book of Indians American Heritage pp 168 189 LCCN 61 14871 Collection New Jersey Association for helping the Indians records Archives amp Manuscripts archives tricolib brynmawr edu Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Retrieved April 21 2022 The Brotherton Indians of New Jersey 1780 Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History www gilderlehrman org Archived from the original on April 21 2022 Retrieved April 21 2022 New Stockbridge Tribe collections dartmouth edu Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 21 2022 Vermilye Anna S 1906 Ogden Family History in the Line of Lieutenant Benjamin Ogden of New York born June 22 1735 died August 16 1780 of the Prince of Wales American Regiment and His Wife Rachel Westervelt with Some Account of His Ancestry and Descendants Orange Chronicle Company printers Archived from the original on April 21 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Road past Farmhouse Print Photographic Morris County Park Commission morrisparks pastperfectonline com Retrieved November 2 2022 Smith Samuel Stelle 1979 Winter at Morristown 1779 1780 The Darkest Hour Philip Freneau Press ISBN 978 0 912480 15 2 Archived from the original on April 22 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Chemerka WIlliam R General Joseph Warren Revere The Gothic Saga of Paul Revere s Grandson BearManor Media p 18 Archived from the original on April 18 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Last will and testament of Jonathan Ogden notarized by Jeremiah M De Camp surrogate of the County of Morris 1848 Document available in Morris County Park Commissions archive a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Hoskins Rebecca 2010 Caroline Foster and Fosterfields Living Historical Farm a life and a legacy Ralph Iacobelli Morris County Park Commission Morristown N J The Friends of Fosterfields Living Historical Farm and Cooper Gristmill ISBN 978 0 615 39122 9 OCLC 709909049 Paranormal Event at Morristown s Fosterfields TAPinto Archived from the original on May 16 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 michellelongo November 15 2019 Weekend Family Fun Service Dogs Story Times Dance and More Baristanet Archived from the original on November 15 2019 Retrieved May 16 2022 Edward Woods farmer at Fosterfields 1981 1927 Negative Morris County Park Commission morrisparks pastperfectonline com Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b c d Ash Lorraine Fosterfields teaches kids about old school farming Daily Record Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b Celebrate Irish History at Fosterfields Living Historic Farm in Morristown Saturday April 22 TAPinto Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b Gorce Tammy La March 12 2011 Grandma s Recipes Made With Her Tools The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b Enjoy a country Christmas at Fosterfields in Morris Township in December New Jersey Hills Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b Enjoy a wagon Ride at Historic Holidays Morristown NJ www americantowns com Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b c d e Chemerka WIlliam R General Joseph Warren Revere The Gothic Saga of Paul Revere s Grandson BearManor Media p 87 Archived from the original on April 17 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Hoskins Barbara 1960 Washington Valley An Informal History Morris County New Jersey Edwards Brothers p 207 Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Revere Joseph Warren 1872 Keel and Saddle A Retrospect of Forty Years of Military and Naval Service J R Osgood Archived from the original on May 16 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 Revere Joseph Warren September 2009 Keel and Saddle Applewood Books ISBN 978 1 4290 2160 9 Archived from the original on May 16 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 Guter Robert P The Willows at Fosterfields Historic Structure Report Architectural History Report 1983 Written by Robert P Guter of Acroterion Historic Preservation Consultants available in the archives of the Morris County Park Commission Tribert Renee Elizabeth 1988 Gervase Wheeler Mid Nineteenth Century British Architect in America p 13 iii Archived from the original on April 17 2022 Retrieved March 30 2022 Chemerka WIlliam R General Joseph Warren Revere The Gothic Saga of Paul Revere s Grandson BearManor Media Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Map of Fosterfields The Friends of Fosterfields and Cooper Mill Archived from the original on February 25 2021 Retrieved February 3 2021 Letter from the Executive Mansion FOSTERFIELDS ARCHIVES Revere Archives Revere Box 1 Letter January 9th 1873 January ninth 1873 via Fosterfields Collections Morris County Park Commission The Project Gutenberg E text of Thankful Blossom by Bret Harte www gutenberg org Archived from the original on March 30 2022 Retrieved March 30 2022 Chemerka WIlliam R General Joseph Warren Revere The Gothic Saga of Paul Revere s Grandson BearManor Media Archived from the original on April 21 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Morris County Park Commission Foster Family Papers PastPerfectOnline Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 19 2022 a b Farm History Fosterfields Living Historical Farm The Willows Are We There Yet www fieldtrip com Archived from the original on May 16 2021 Retrieved May 16 2022 Fosterfields Living Historical Farm Your Next Destination Awaits Morris County NJ Your Next Destination Awaits Morris County NJ Archived from the original on April 15 2021 Retrieved May 16 2022 The Country Gentleman Luther Tucker amp Son 1900 p 637 Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 23 2022 Home and Field Illustrated Field Publications Incorporated September 1919 p 745 Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 23 2022 New Jersey Women s Heritage Trail New Jersey Historic Preservation Office 2004 Caroline Foster The Legacy of Women of Morris County North Jersey History Center Online Exhibits womc omeka net Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved March 27 2022 Learn About Cara s Cottage Saturday Morris Township Morris Plains NJ Patch September 2 2011 Archived from the original on March 27 2022 Retrieved March 27 2022 Kitchen Table Kibitzing 5 12 2015 The Temple of Abiding Peace Daily Kos Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved March 27 2022 Fosterfields Cottage Watercolor by Hattie Evans Painting Morris County Park Commission morrisparks pastperfectonline com Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 6 2022 LOOSE RUSE ON THE Friends help Fosterfields celebrate anniversary Daily Record Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 Jacobs Muriel September 14 1986 Antiques Learning About Victorian Houses The New York Times Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved January 16 2021 a b La Gorce Tammy March 12 2011 Grandma s Recipes Made With Her Tools The New York Times Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved January 16 2021 La Gorce Tammy June 5 2010 Plenty of Reasons to Leave the House The New York Times Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved January 16 2021 Will of Caroline R Foster provided by the Morris County Park Commission documents Fosterfields Living Historical Farm Festhund Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 Sovelove Jeff A balmy winter day on the farm in Morris Township Morristown Green Archived from the original on February 5 2019 Retrieved May 16 2022 Denville Community News and Events DenvilleCommunity A Virtual Downtown Page 15 Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 22 2022 Sheep Dog Trials in Morristown Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 BY THE WAY the Bark of the Players The New York Times August 27 2000 Archived from the original on April 14 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Sheep herding dogs back at Fosterfields in June Archived from the original on April 14 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Gorce Tammy La August 8 2004 BY THE WAY What I Shoveled Last Summer The New York Times Archived from the original on April 14 2022 Retrieved April 14 2022 Fosterfields Living Historical Farm Restoration of the Barnyard Complex in Morris Township NJ Retrieved August 6 2022 Model T Ford Day at Fosterfields Living Historical Farm on Saturday August 3 www morriscountynj gov Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 NJ com Amy Kuperinsky NJ Advance Media for September 11 2019 New Jersey fall festivals 2019 See our huge statewide events guide nj Archived from the original on May 16 2022 Retrieved May 16 2022 Don t Miss the Winter Fun amp Events at Morris County Parks www morriscountynj gov Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 19 2022 Sovelove Jeff Born to be Shorn Sheepish haircuts at Fosterfields in Morris Township Morristown Green Archived from the original on May 12 2021 Retrieved May 19 2022 michellelongo May 13 2022 Weekend Family Fun Mayfair Celebration Anderson Park Olmsted Party Hula and More Baristanet Archived from the original on May 15 2022 Retrieved May 19 2022 Morristown Happenings Things to Do in and Around Morristown This Weekend May 13 May 15 TAPinto Archived from the original on May 19 2022 Retrieved May 19 2022 Myers Gene Virtual reality unlocks historic North Jersey mansion for people with disabilities North Jersey Media Group Archived from the original on March 14 2022 Retrieved March 30 2022 External links Edit Visit Fosterfields The Friends of Fosterfields and Cooper Mill Fosterfields Morris Township NJ Official Website Fosterfields 1854 Historical Marker Database Fosterfields Living Historical Farm Historical Marker Database The second floor experience hosted on the County College of Morris website Media related to Fosterfields at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fosterfields amp oldid 1164007728, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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