From "Marriage Index: New Jersey, 1680-1900" (FTM CD #240) by Broderbund Software in 1998: BEGIN Case, Daniel Clark, Sarah Mar 13, 1800 Hunterdon END transcriptions of Records->Births->84.8.jpg and Records->Births->84.8-2.jpg From Birth Certificates of Children of Slaves, 1804-1835 in the Hunterdon County, New Jersey Clerk's Office: BEGIN To John T. Blackwell Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for the county of Hunterdon do hereby certify that my female slave Peg was on the twenty fifth day of May 1811 delivered of a female child which said child is called Fan. Witness my hand this 4th day of November 1811. Dan'l Case. END BEGIN To the Clerk of the county of Hunterdon I do hereby certify that my negro wench named Peg was on the seventh day of April 1816 delivered of a female child which is called Jin. Witness my hand this 11th day of September 1817. Daniel Case. END transcription of Newspapers->Deaths->84.8.jpg From the Hunterdon Gazette, Flemington, New Jersey dated December 20, 1826: BEGIN Died, In Amwell, on Tuesday the 19th inst. Mr. Daniel Case, son of Mr. Philip Case. END partial transcription of Biographies->84.8.jpg From "History of Hunterdon and Somerset Counties New Jersey" by James P. Snell in 1881: BEGIN Isaac Passam was an Englishman by birth. A bachelor of both means and leisure, he came to this country in the latter part of the last century and resided in Flemington. Liking the country, he wrote for some of his nephews and nieces to come here. But one accepted the offer,--Sarah, daughter of John and Hannah Clark, who was born in Leicestershire, England. March 11, 1776. After arriving here she continued with the Capner family, with whom she had crossed the ocean, until 1799, when she married Daniel, son of Philip Case, more commonly known at that time by the name of Tanner Case; his father was a German. In 1804, Isaac Passam and Daniel Case and family moved on a farm they had purchased of the Cougle family, in Bethlehem, and erected a new stone house and frame barn, still standing and in good condition, and went into farming. The old buildings were of logs and very uncomfortable. Daniel was very fond of blooded stock. He brought the first English sheep into this part of the country, obtaining them from Capt. George Farmer, of Middlesex County; they were part of the stock that William Talbot was accused of smuggling into this country. The country was new, and that kind of farming did not pay well at that time. Others, who came on later, fared better, and even to this day we see and feel what public-spirited individuals did for us in such improvements in domestic animals. Isaac Passam and Daniel Case both died in 1826, and their land is now in the possession of the fourth and fifth generations. Mrs. Sarah Clark Case was a woman of good common sense, and as a nurse in sickness could hardly be equaled. When they moved into this neighborhood medical help was scarce and distant. The nearest was at Pittstown, and Dr. Forman dying very soon after made the want more felt. Her good success in nursing caused her to be called on to prescribe, which she did with such success that she devotes nearly all her time to it; she was also in much request as an accoucheuse. In 1816 the Legislature of New Jersey passed a new law declaring as licensed all persons who were of good standing as physicians. Thus she became perhaps the first female practitioner in the State, certainly in the county. She practiced until age and increased medical facilities compelled her to retire. She always wished to have a physician in the family. She had but one son, John H.; he had no relish for the profession, so she had to wait for another generation. John married Miss Elizabeth Bennett, and when their sons, Isaac and Daniel, were born, there seemed to be reasons why they should not be educated for professional life. But when their third son, Nathan, was born he was immediately dedicated to the profession of medicine. She did not see the fruition of her hopes, as she died in 1859. END from http://www.njsuttonfamily.org BEGIN Hunterdon County Democrat Flemington, NJ 1838-1888 Mar 9, 1859, Vol XXI, No. 30 (1122) Died At her residence in Union township, on the 5th February, Mrs. Sarah Bennet, in the 83rd year of her age. She formerly, and in the lifetime of her first husband, Daniel Case, resided in this vicinity, and was a very useful member of society, particularly in sickness, as many of the aged people in this part of the county well remember. In fact, she was a regularly licensed Physician by the laws of the State of New Jersey, as passed in 1816... END