05/18/2026
Somerville 101.9a The Paths of the Sons: Joshua Maddox. As John Wallace continued his construction, the young men of the two Raritan Valley families set out on differing paths that their lives would follow during the Revolution. All three, Joshua Maddox Wallace, John Hardenbegh, and Hardenbergh’s step-son, Frederick Frelinghuysen, were young, educated men starting adult life at a very challenging time. The younger Wallace son, William, aged 14 in 1776, remained with his family. But the others: What did they do before and after Washington arrived at Wallace’s new home?
Joshua Maddox Wallace, is challenging but interesting to trace. Aged 24 in 1776 and college educated, he had been working in Philadelphia and Burlington at Wallace merchant warehouses. He doesn’t figure prominently in the Wallace family saga at this point, because he was already independent of his father. Or, was he?
There is no evidence Joshua ever resided at Hope Farm. It seems likely that he had his own place, since he had married Miss Trace Bradford of a prominent Philadelphia family in August, 1773 and they would soon welcome their first child. The Wallace Family in America genealogy (1914), tells us that Joshua’s home, Ellarslie, was on the Raritan but he relocated to Burlington city only after the Revolution in 1783. This suggests that Joshua lived within traveling distance of Hope Farm, but WHERE? No country house named Ellarslie existed in Somerset County or in Pennsylvania at that time.
Moreover, what did he DO during the Revolution? He doesn’t seem to have been in the army. A Johsua Wallace enlisted in the NJ Militia in 1777,, and again in 1779, but we can’t be sure that it’s him. There’s an 8-year gap between when the war was raging and when Joshua Maddox became prominent and politically active in Burlington and where he had many former patriots as friends including Elias Boudinot and bother-in-law Willaim Bradford, Washington’s second Attorney General. So, what Joshua did during those tumultuous, missing years is a mystery.
A guess needing further research by an aspiring intern or rising historian: Joshua may have continued the family business, in Trenton and Burlington, but engaged in shipping goods as part of the “Secret Trade Committee” authorized by Congress in late 1775 to supply the Continental army. It operated primarily from Burlington, which assumed greater importance as a Delaware River port when Philadelphia shipping was threatened by the British Navy. Burlington and Trenton, further north, became links in the supply chain of the Continental Army. Warehouses and riverboats for shipping cargo in both towns, but especially Burlington, were owned by merchants like the Wallaces and their Maddox relatives, the Smiths. In them, they could conveniently hide and later ship blankets, fabric for tents, hunting shirts, and uniforms, etc.; exactly the textiles the Wallace handled routinely in their mercantile business. Joshua Maddox Wallace just may have been a Patriot undercover.
https://trentonhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/History-of-Trenton-1679-1929-Ch5-Transportation.pdf
https://www.dia.mil/News-Features/Articles/Article-View/Article/566976/secret-committees