transcription of Newspapers->Misc->19.4.jpg From the Hunterdon Gazette, Flemington, New Jersey dated March 21, 1832: BEGIN WOOD LOTS For Sale, at Public Vendue. The subscribers will sell, at PUBLIC VENDUE, on Saturday the 7th day of April next, at 10 o'clock, in the forenoon, on the premises, - a number of Chesnut & Timber Lots, from 4 to 8 acres each, lying in the township of Lebanon, adjoining lands of Conrad Apgar, (blacksmith) being part of Tract of Land called the Linderberry Farm. The lands lie near the road leading from the New Jersey Turnpike at the storehouse of the late William Johnson, dec'd, to Cokesbury, and about two miles from said storehouse. - The Chesnut land will net from two to three thousand Rails to the acre. The Timber lots are covered with thrifty timber of different kinds with a large proportion of Whiteoak and Yellow Poplar. The land is clear of stone, and almost level, and may be driven over the whole with a waggon [sic], and adjoins a public road - any person wishing to view the lands before the day of sale, will call on Conrad Apgar, or Casper Linderberry, on the premises, who will show the same. Conditions will be made known on the day of sale. Aaron Vansyckle, jr. & Charles Bartles. March 21, 1832. 3 END transcription of Newspapers->Marriages->19.4ch-iv.jpg From the Hunterdon Gazette, Flemington, New Jersey dated March 20, 1850: BEGIN Married, On Saturday afternoon the 16th inst., in Clinton, by Rev. E. H. Stokes, Mr. Isaac O. Apgar and Miss Anna Maria Lindaberry, all of this County. END from http://www.njsuttonfamily.org BEGIN Hunterdon County Democrat Flemington, NJ 1838-1888 March 20, 1850, Vol. XII, No. 31, Whole No. 603 Married In Clinton, on Saturday afternoon, 16th inst., by the Rev. E. H. Stokes, Mr. Isaac O. Apgar, and Miss Anna Maria Lindaberry, all of this county. END From "Marriage Index: New Jersey, 1680-1900" (FTM CD #240) by Broderbund Software in 1998: BEGIN Lindeburg, Casper Bun, Elizabeth Aug 10, 1819 Hunterdon Linaberry, Anna Maria Apgar, Isaac O. Mar 16, 1850 Hunterdon END Date: Thu, 26 Jan 2012 12:58:32 -0500 From: Michael Apgar I've got some Lindaberry genes too. Likely we are interwoven through other ancestors. Isaac O. Apgar was the 11th--and last--child of Peter Adam Apgar (aka "Sawyer Pete" (1773-1850) and his Ann Stout (1772-1835), the daughter of Samuel and Ann Stout. "Sawyer Pete" was the son of Johannes Adam Apgar (~1741-1815), the first of the Apgars to be born in America. He was the son--I believe--of Friedrich Epgert (patriarch of the Apgar family) and his second wife, Anna Eva Schaefer. They arrived in Philadelphia in the fall of 1740. "Sawyer Pete"'s wife was Anna Barbara Manning. They ran a tavern--and farmed--in Cokesbury, NJ...and had 11 children--10 of whom survived to adulthood and married. Mike Apgar, Genealogist Apgar Family Association