5.30.2006

CAPTAIN ABRAHAM SPEER


The most striking figure that we can summon from dim colonial times in this farm and woodland region is the young Dutchman Abram Speer.

He was the eldest of five sons of John Speer of Second River, who owned a large estate in the center of that village and who was a descendant of John Hendrick Speer, an original grantee near Hackensak and also one of the Acquackanonck patentees.

Abram (or Abraham) came over Third River seeking a wife. He found her in the daughter of one Wouterse or Wouters who had a blacksmith shop at Povershon.

He was commissioned Captain in the Second Essex Regiment on May 28, 1777, and stationed at Belleville with this company to "guard the river."


It was his father who from the church steeple shot the "refugee" across the Passaic.

There was another flight of soldiery through this region in 1778, after the battle of Monmouth, when the British were running before the Americans to reach the Hudson.

Skirmishes took place at Belleville and at the restored Acquackanonck Bridge, the red coats escaping across it in the darkness.

SOURCE: HISTORY OF NUTLEY, Elizabeth Stow Brown, 1907, The Retreat Across the Jerseys

NOTES: Belleville at the time of the American Revolution was known as Second River. Washington's retreat route is marked along the path his troops took in town.

5.25.2006

MEMORIAL DAY

NJ Vietnam War Memorial - photo by Anthony Buccino

This Memorial Day, let us remember the sacrifices of those who served our country and of the 153 Belleville sons who made the supreme sacrifice and the high cause which they serve.

Make time to thank a Vet.

And remember these Belleville sons who paid with their lives for our freedom:


65 YEARS AGO
1941
Stanley Reynolds

60 YEARS AGO
1946
John Waters
Joseph Curran

55 YEAR AGO
1951
Rene Flory Jr.
John R. Gorman

40 YEARS AGO
1966
Helder DaSilva
John Hoar



Vietnam War Memorial, Washington DC, photo by Anthony Buccino

Copyright © 2006 by Anthony Buccino, all rights reserved.
Photos may not be used for commercial purposes without written permission.

5.21.2006

LT. JOHN J. DALY

Courtesy Belleville Public Libraray & Information Center
(Aug. 10, 1944) -- Lt. John J. Daly Jr., was killed in action in Normandy on July 4.

Lt. Daly commanded a paratroop company.

His late father was the township clerk and Democratic party chairman.

Young Daly was graduated from Belleville High School in 1932. He played football there and at Manhattan College. He played for the Jersey Giants. He was an assistant coach at Belleville High.

In April 1942, he attended Officer's Candidate School at Ft. Benning, Ga.

He has been overseas since last Christmas.

His wife Doris is expecting a child.


Copyright © 2006 by Anthony Buccino, all rights reserved.
Content may not be used for commercial purposes without written permission.

Belleville Sons Honor Roll

5.20.2006

TO THE MEMORY OF THOSE WHO SERVED

Copyright © 2005-2006 by Anthony Buccino, All Rights Reserved.
November 13, 2005, BELLEVILLE, N.J. -- The Belleville Veterans Council today dedicated the Union Avenue memorial which now bears the names of more than 150 Belleville sons who lost their lives for our freedom in World War I, World War II, Korea and Vietnam.

The engraving of the more than 50-year-old monument was sponsored by American Legion - AMVETS - Disabled American Veterans - VFW, and a grant from the Township of Belleville.

Belleville Boy Scout G. Daniel Lukowiak renovated the areas around the monuments, polished the old brass plates and continues to care for the grounds.

Let the people of Belleville forget none of the the 20 sons who died in WWI, the 117 who died in WWII, the 4 who died in Korea, the 12 who died in Vietnam, or those Belleville Sons who died in service during peace time.


Copyright © 2006 by Anthony Buccino

5.01.2006

REMEMBER MEMORIAL DAY

Courtesy: The Memorial Day Foundation

“No one ever dies as long as they are remembered.”
-- Dee Rodrigues

Memorial Day is a day of remembrance and respect. You can make a public acknowledgement of this by wearing a Memorial Day Button, like the one above, to remember those Americans who died serving their country in defense of freedom and liberty.

To make a donation for a button to wear this May please visit the
Memorial Day Foundation, is a 501 (c) (3) tax exempt organization.

Courtesy: The Memorial Day Foundation