Under Johnson’s guidance, Chandler converted to Anglicanism and was quickly identified as a rising star in the king’s American church. Within two years of leaving Yale, he watched the offers for his services pour in. In 1747, two churches asked him to serve as a catechist; instead, he accepted the advances of St. Peter’s Church in Westchester, New York. He did not remain there long. St. John’s Church in Elizabeth Town, New Jersey, was so impressed with Chandler that it persuaded him to join it in December of that year, despite the fact that he remained too young to be ordained as a minister. Thus, as the winter days shortened and the afternoon shadows lengthened, Thomas Bradbury Chandler packed his bags and headed to East Jersey—dissenter country, bastion of Presbyterianism and Whig radicalism, and the home of that detested “zealot” Jonathan Dickinson and his protégé Jacob Green.52
The center of Jacob Green’s domestic universe was a handsome one-and-a-half-story parsonage on Hanover Neck (fig. 5). It was an unpretentious house befitting the domicile of a Presbyterian pastor ministering to a country church—a residence that was approximately half the size of the mission house that Jonathan Edwards resided at in Stockbridge, Massachusetts—but the parsonage, with its symmetrical windows and centered doorway, did offer up a touch of rustic Georgian elegance. Inside was a mix of the practical and the pious, the simple and the elegant. Green’s growing family attended to their household chores while the patriarch retreated to his book-lined study to write his sermons and peruse his diverse library of theology, philosophy, history, and literature. Jacob may have preached simplicity in his sermons, but his domestic space demonstrated he had a taste for the refined. His family dined on queensware and pewter plates—luxuries few could afford in early America—and for amusement members could play a forte piano.1
Outside the parsonage was a complex landscape that reflected the myriad interests of a financially struggling country parson. The house sat on ten acres surrounded by cornfields and cleared swampland; within shouting distance were a barn and a tenant’s farmhouse. Across the street was Jacob’s Latin academy, where for a time he taught school to approximately eight boys from throughout Morris County. A little farther on, about a quarter of a mile from the parsonage, was the new meetinghouse, which finally replaced the dilapidated structure that greeted Jacob in 1745. And farther still was the gristmill that Green partially owned on land he used to farm.2
In important ways, the completion of the parsonage in spring 1758 represented another step toward stability for the thirty-six-year-old parson, with the house helping to anchor Jacob in this Presbyterian world as he pondered the larger questions concerning God and society that so consumed him in the two decades before the American Revolution. Before the congregation agreed to build the parsonage in 1754 (construction began in 1757), Jacob and his family lived in a small house in lower Whippany that he had built largely at his own expense after his arrival in Hanover Township in 1745.3
Between 1745 and 1756, Green experienced the highs of seeing four children born and the lows of his wife’s death—his beloved Anna. Although such setbacks were not unusual for the times (one of his deacons endured the deaths of five wives), they tested Green’s faith and darkened his mood as he struggled to establish himself in a new colony. Jacob had arrived in Hanover in 1745 as a bachelor and remained one for two years, an eternity in the harried life of a country parson with a demanding flock to tend and a large territory to oversee. In 1747, things changed for the better when he married Anna Strong. How the young couple met is unclear—Jacob was loath to discuss such intimate details in his autobiography, and two sons from a later marriage who wrote about their upbringing never knew her. Anna hailed from the fishing and farming community of Brookhaven, New York, on the western end of Long Island, within hailing distance of New York City. The paths of Jacob and Anna likely crossed during one of Jacob’s trips to synodical meetings in Newark or New York.4
Despite his silence about their courtship, Jacob loved her. The marriage produced four children in eight years—three daughters and a son. The first child, who was born in the fall of 1748, only a year after the wedding, was named in honor of her mother. When Anna died of “a consumption” in November 1756, according to Jacob, her death left her husband badly shaken. Describing Anna as a “tender amiable Wife,” her gravestone reflected the grief that her passing produced: “A Blessing to her Relatives in Life / Her Death their Loss beyond expression grate.” For Jacob, a strict Calvinist who viewed the powers of God as absolute and magisterial, Anna’s early death at age thirty-one was portentous. It sent him into mourning and caused him to become even more reflective about the questions that had occupied him for years—the tenuousness and brevity of life, the power and mystery of God. To work through his grief, Jacob began preaching more intently, which led to his first “revival” in Hanover—in addition to more emotional preaching, he divided the congregation into four sections for catechizing and “conversed with the youth every week.” This quickened activity led to a revival of religion and a “special outpouring of the Holy Spirit” among congregants, according to his son Ashbel. Jacob thus strove to turn his personal tragedy into something positive. He would use his revival as an opportunity to strengthen the congregation and spark a resurgence of piety among Hanover’s populace. The loss of his wife also strengthened Green’s Calvinistic faith. “I prayed and preached with an increased sense of divine things,” Jacob wrote years later. “I would thank God; for I would give him the glory of exciting and quickening me.” It was a marked contrast to his feelings in 1745, when he struggled to understand the paradoxes posed by Calvinism.5
In October 1757, as carpenters readied the parsonage for their minister and his children, Green remarried. The marriage was both a bow to the practical needs of family and a signal that Green was moving on in the wake of his wife’s death. Jacob had several young children to raise and a household to run. He needed a helpmate. The woman who filled this void and took Anna’s place at the hearth was Elizabeth Pierson, and there is little doubt about how the two met. She was the daughter of a Presbyterian pastor named John Pierson, who ministered to a congregation in nearby Mendham, after having served earlier in Woodbridge, New Jersey, and was well-known and respected in church circles. He was born in 1689, was a Yale graduate, and was a Puritan descendant who gained a reputation as a Presbyterian moderate. As a close friend of Jonathan Dickinson’s, Pierson possibly got to know Jacob in Elizabeth Town. Pierson was also a founder of the College of New Jersey, and they may well have connected through that association. Regardless, John came to live with his daughter and new son-in-law after he retired from the pulpit, and he spent his remaining years in the Hanover parsonage.6
The second marriage, like the first one, produced a bushel of children—seven in twelve years, beginning in 1758 with the birth of Elizabeth and ending in 1769 with the arrival of John Wickliffe (only six survived; the biblically named Benoni was born in 1760 and did not live to see his first birthday). The match between Jacob and his bride was excellent. Besides a strong physical attraction, the couple shared a commitment to the Presbyterian Church and a love of books. “Both my parents were eminently pious,” noted Ashbel, the talented third child of Jacob and Elizabeth who was born in 1762. “My mother [was] always praying with the family, when my father was from home.” Together Jacob and Elizabeth introduced their children to Calvinistic religion and to the disciplined ways of Presbyterianism. Ashbel, a brilliant scholar who became a Presbyterian minister,