In 1791, when John Newbold was eighteen, he was located in Philadelphia, and, without capital, began his business career as a produce commission merchant in a small shop on Front street. When the yellow fever visited the city as a scourge, in 1793, he was one of the few who survived a severe attack of the disorder. The following year his brother William was associated with him in business, and shortly afterward a Mr. Montgomery, when the firm became Montgomery & Newbold, which soon acquired a large and remunerative trade. He was married to Elizabeth Lawrie on November 12, 1795.
The Napoleonic war had so stimulated the values of foodstuffs that John Newbold withdrew from the firm in 1806 and purchased a large Plantation in Ridley township. In the neighborhood of the present Crum Lynne, whereon he resided, devoting his attention to farming and grazing cattle, with marked success. The stone house, which he built, still stands on the north side of Chester avenue in Ridley Park borough, at the brow of the hill above the old stone schoolhouse. He soon became a man of distinction in this community. In 1812 he was elected State Senator from Delaware and Chester counties, and August 27, 1814, was elected president of The Bank of Delaware County. In the late fall of that year Mr. Newbold resigned his seat in the Senate.
In 1815 he purchased a large farm near Bristol, Pennsylvania which he named Bloomsdale. On March 21, 1815, John resigned the Presidency of The Bank of Delaware County. He and his brother, Barzillai, believing, as did many shrewd business men of that day, that the completion of the Delaware and Chesapeake canal would result in diverting the shipping business from Philadelphia to the east end of the canal, purchased large tracts of land at what is now Delaware City, and expended considerable capital in founding that town. This dream dissipated with the coming of the railroads and financially embarrassed Mr. Newbold, with the result that his real estate in Delaware county was sold at sheriff's sale to satisfy the judgments of creditors who had advanced money to be used in his speculation at Delaware City. John Newbold died at Bloomsdale, June 6, 1841, aged 68 years. Bloomsdale was sold by his heirs to the Landreth Seed Company in 1847. For a full account of Bloomsdale see the booklet by that name compiled in 1930 by Helen Van Uxem Cubberley, great-grand daughter of John.
In 1791, when John Newbold was eighteen, he was located in Philadelphia, and, without capital, began his business career as a produce commission merchant in a small shop on Front street. When the yellow fever visited the city as a scourge, in 1793, he was one of the few who survived a severe attack of the disorder. The following year his brother William was associated with him in business, and shortly afterward a Mr. Montgomery, when the firm became Montgomery & Newbold, which soon acquired a large and remunerative trade. He was married to Elizabeth Lawrie on November 12, 1795.
The Napoleonic war had so stimulated the values of foodstuffs that John Newbold withdrew from the firm in 1806 and purchased a large Plantation in Ridley township. In the neighborhood of the present Crum Lynne, whereon he resided, devoting his attention to farming and grazing cattle, with marked success. The stone house, which he built, still stands on the north side of Chester avenue in Ridley Park borough, at the brow of the hill above the old stone schoolhouse. He soon became a man of distinction in this community. In 1812 he was elected State Senator from Delaware and Chester counties, and August 27, 1814, was elected president of The Bank of Delaware County. In the late fall of that year Mr. Newbold resigned his seat in the Senate.
In 1815 he purchased a large farm near Bristol, Pennsylvania which he named Bloomsdale. On March 21, 1815, John resigned the Presidency of The Bank of Delaware County. He and his brother, Barzillai, believing, as did many shrewd business men of that day, that the completion of the Delaware and Chesapeake canal would result in diverting the shipping business from Philadelphia to the east end of the canal, purchased large tracts of land at what is now Delaware City, and expended considerable capital in founding that town. This dream dissipated with the coming of the railroads and financially embarrassed Mr. Newbold, with the result that his real estate in Delaware county was sold at sheriff's sale to satisfy the judgments of creditors who had advanced money to be used in his speculation at Delaware City. John Newbold died at Bloomsdale, June 6, 1841, aged 68 years. Bloomsdale was sold by his heirs to the Landreth Seed Company in 1847. For a full account of Bloomsdale see the booklet by that name compiled in 1930 by Helen Van Uxem Cubberley, great-grand daughter of John.
Gravesite Details
Bristol MM... No. 10
Family Members
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William Lawrie Newbold
1798–1857
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Henry Newbold
1800–1849
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Mary Ann Newbold Vanuxem
1801–1871
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Elizabeth N. Newbold Van Uxem
1802–1894
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John Lawrie Newbold
1803–1884
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Achsah Newbold
1806–1806
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Caroline Newbold Hazard
1807–1869
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Susan Lawrie Newbold Cope
1809–1872
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Charles Newbold
1810–1872
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Emily Newbold Perkins
1815–1893
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