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With
qualifications such as insure success in business, Mr.
BARTLES holds today a place among the representative
merchants of German Valley, but unlike many of our
successful business men, he is not wholly wedded to the
material things of life. He is broad-minded and of
kindly nature, and his interest in those less fortunate
than himself is deep and sincere. Such a man cannot fail
to win the respect and confidence of the public, and
such esteem Mr. BARTLES enjoys in a large degree.
The
BARTLES family was founded in New Jersey by the
great-grandfather of our subject, who located in
Middlesex county, where he followed farming. He was of
German descent. The grandfather, Andrew BARTLES, was
born in Middlesex county and married Catherine PLUM. His
death occurred in 1840, when he had reached the age of
eighty-five years. His children were Frederick; Charles;
Joseph; Henry; Eliza, who married Joseph CORNISH;
Phoebe, wife of George B. STODERUFF; and Julia.
The
father of our subject, Frederick BARTLES, died in St.
Louis, Missouri, in 1852. He was twice married, and our
subject is one of the six children of the first
marriage. Only two of this family are now living:
Catherine, widow of Cornelius MESSLER, of Whitehouse,
New Jersey; and Elias M. Those who died leaving heirs
were John P., who left a son, Charles BARTLES, of New
Philadelphia, Ohio; Thomas, who died leaving a son, John
BARTLES, of the same place; and Andrew, who left five
children---Henry, John, Alice, wife of Walter A. COER,
Edith and Olive, all living in Flemington, New Jersey,
except Henry, who resides in New Philadelphia, Ohio.
Elias
M. BARTLES, whose name begins this review, is a native
of Tewksberry township, Hunterdon county, October 3,
1826, being the date of his birth. He spent his youth
with his grandfather, Andrew BARTLES, and acquired his
education in the schools of New Germantown. He spent the
greater part of his youth in assisting in the work of
the farm, and on attaining his majority learned the
trade of carriage-trimming in the village of Naughright,
with William and Morris Naughright. For four years he
followed that occupation and then began business on his
own account as a huckster. His first outfit consisted of
a one-horse wagon, which he drove through the valley,
collecting his produce and marketing the same in Newark.
In 1855 he went to Princeton, Illinois, and during his
two-years residence there was engaged in the butchering
business.
On
the expiration of that period he again engaged in the
business which he had abandoned on his removal to the
west, and for seven years devoted his energies to that
enterprise, in which he met with excellent success. The
profits from that business enabled him at length to
engage in merchandising in Middle Valley, and in 1863 he
purchased the stock of goods of J. C. Welsh, of that
place, where he carried on trade in that line for seven
years. He then sold out, removing to German Valley,
where for five years he has been ranked among the
progressive and enterprising merchants. He has a well
appointed store, supplied with a carefully selected
stock of everything found in that line, and his
honorable business methods and uniform courtesy to his
patrons have secured him a liberal trade. Nor have the
efforts of Mr. BARTLES been confined alone to one line
of endeavor. He is a man of broad capability and carries
forward to successful completion whatever he undertakes.
During the building of the railroad through the valley
he executed large contracts for furnishing supplies of
timber to the Central Railroad of the New Jersey
Company, and after the completion of the road he
continued in the business and is one of the largest
dealers in timber in east New Jersey. His chief patrons
are the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad
Company, the Central of the New Jersey Company and the
Western Union Telegraph Company. He is a director in the
Hackettstown National Bank, in which institution he has
been a stockholder for many years, and his associates in
the bank and the business men throughout the valley
regard him as a man of rare business
foresight---capable, accurate and reliable.
Mr.
BARTLES was married August 26, 1848, to Miss Sophia
STRYKER, daughter of Martin STRYKER, and, after a long
and happy married life of forty years, she passed away
July 29, 1888. Their children were: Henry P., deceased;
Annie, wife of James A. CARTWRIGHT, of Newark, by whom
she has four children, Charles, Frank R., James A. and
Anna; and Kate, wife of Floyd WOODHULL, of Plainfield,
New Jersey, their children being Leroy and Edson.
Mr. BARTLES has always declined to become a candidate for public office,
but in a quiet, earnest way has always supported the
principles of the Republican party and is a firm
believer in the measures which it advocates. In
religious belief he is a Lutheran. He is generous and
benevolent and never refuses to extend a helping hand to
a deserving one whom misfortune has treated harshly. He
is thoroughly representative of the best citizenship of
Morris county, which has been made what it is by the
most sterling men that the state has produced. |