Posted by: gheagy@netflash.net gheagy@netflash.net Date: Fri Nov 17, 2017 4:52 am ((PST)) Charles death record says he died Feb. 17, 1870, aged 94, father Thomas. He's buried at Sandyston, Sussex County. - I haven't seen this death record, it's from the LDS church. - I originally placed Charles as a possible son of Thomas Robbins of Monmouth County, NJ, but this Thomas would be more logical. From New Jersey Marriage Records: Apr. 18, 1809 Charles Robbins Hannah Bartlow both of Frankford - from the information below, I'm guessing Hannah's maiden name was Spangenberg and she was married 1st to a Bartlow. From Northwestern New Jersey, A History: Somerset, Morris, Hunterdon, Warren and Sussex Counties by A. Van Doren Honeyman | Vol. IV ( 1927) ALFRED ROBBINS – Few of the citizens of Middleville, Sussex County, New Jersey, are better known than is Alfred Robbins, proprietor of the general store in Middleville, which is conducted under the name of A. Robbins and Son. Previous to the time of his purchase of the general store Mr. Robbins was for some fifty years a first class carpenter, and was known for his excellent work and for his sound business methods. The Robbins family has been resident in Sussex County since pre-Revolutionary days, and the great-grandfather of Mr. Robbins served in that conflict. Charles Robbins, the grandfather, was a resident of Frankford Township, Sussex County, where he was employed at various kinds of work by the day. He died in Sandyston at the age of ninety-four years, having survived his wife Hannah (Spangenberg) Robbins. They were the parents of children: Stephen; Dillie Ryker; Jane Transue; Sarah Kays; John; Joseph; and Patrick. Patrick Robbins, son of Charles and Hannah (Spangenberg) Robbins, was born in Frankford Township and received his education in the public schools of his native district. He was engaged in farming in Hampton Township throughout his active career and spent his last years with his son, Alfred, in Stillwater Township, where he died at the age of eighty-seven years. He married Nancy Staley, a daughter of Philip Staley, and they were the parents of one child, Alfred Robbins, of whom further. Alfred Robbins, son of Patrick and Nancy (Staley) Robbins, was born in Hampton Township, Sussex... - there's a conflict here between Charles being born in Sussex County and his father being Thomas of Alexandria Twp, Hunterdon County, but ??? - Charles' first son was named Stephen, not Thomas, but that happened.