Montgomery County PA Archives Biographies.....Boorse, John Cassel June 27, 1831 - 
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Joe Patterson jpatter@epix.net November 14, 2025, 4:55 pm

Source: Biographical Annals of Montgomery County Pennsylvania, T. S. Benham & Company and the Lewis Publishing Company, 1904
Author: Ellwood Roberts, Editor

  JOHN CASSEL BOORSE, surveyor, conveyancer and justice of 
the peace of
Towamensing township, was born June 27, 1831, 
in the township of which he is
still a resident. He is the 
son of Henry C. and Susanna (Cassel) Boorse.


 Harman Boors (great-great-grandfather) emigrated from 
Holland and settled in
what is now Towamensing township, 
Montgomery county, about 1750. He lived near
the present 
village of Kulpsville, and was a man of wealth and a leader 
in the
community. He returned to his native land on business 
several times, and while
returning to America for the last 
time, he died. His children: John and Henry,
died unmarried; 
Peter, married, and died May 1, 1797; Arnold, and Harman 

(great-grandfather).

  Harman Boors (great-grandfather) was also a farmer. He 

married and his children were John (grandfather); Margaret, 
born September 8,
1765, left no children; Peter, born August 
28, 1767, married and left four
children; Henry, born 
December 25, 1769, died November 27, 1777; Anna, born 

September 22, 1772, married, October 22, 1793, Abraham 
Hendricks; Catharine,
born March 28, 1775, married, November 
10, 1796, Samuel Metz; Sybilla, born
April 2, 1777, married 
Jacob Hendricks; Susanna, born February 25, 1779,
married, 
February 19, 1799, Jesse Lewis; Elizabeth, born February 17, 
1782,
married Samuel Kriebel.

  John Boorse (grandfather) was born October 17, 1763,
and 
died January 26, 1847. He married, June 8, 1797, Elizabeth 
Cassel, who
died July 26, 1830. Their children: Abraham; 
Henry C.; Magdalena, married Jacob
Boyer; Peter, Daniel, 
Joseph, Harman, Jacob; Catharine, married James Lloyd;
Mary, 
married Elias Cassel; and Hubert.

  Henry C. Boorse (father) was born
October 14, 1799, in 
Towanmensing township. He married, March 5, 1822,
Susanna 
Cassel. He died April 26, 1869, and his wife, April 6, 1856. 
He was a
farmer and held several township offices. Their 
children: Barbara, born
December 8, 1822, married Henry K. 
Zeigler, of Skippack, and died in March,
1866; Ephraim, born 
January 24, 1825, married, March 16, 1845, Elizabeth K. 

Ziegler, daughter of Abraham K. and Rachel (Krause) Ziegler, 
and they have six
children; he is a retired coal and lumber 
dealer of Norristown; John C., the
subject of this sketch; 
Catharine, born December 6, 1836, married William
Bechtel, 
of Collegeville, Montgomery county, and died May 7, 1877; 
Susan, born
September 9, 1839, died December 18, 1856.

  John C. Boorse was educated in the
public schools in the 
neighborhood of his home, and in the Washington Hall
School, 
at Trappe. After leaving school he worked on the farm until 
his
marriage.

  On January 21, 1855, John C. Boorse married Mary, daughter 
of
Samuel and Mary Rittenhouse, of Towamensing, and a 
descendant of the celebrated
David Rittenhouse, the 
astronomer. Their children: Alinda, born May 29, 1856,
died 
January 31, 1857; Mary Ann, born December 18, 1857, married 
Humphrey W.
Edwards, of Kulpsville; Malinda, born January 3, 
1860, died August 31, 1860;
Ella, born March 21, 1862, 
married Dr. D. K. Bechtel, of Kulpsville; Lizzie,
born March 
25, 1864, married Allen H. Tyson, of Lansdale; Henry R., 
born
September 21, 1866, editor and publisher of the 
Towamensing Rein, which was
established in 1885; Alma, born 
December 9, 1868, married Henry C. Hunsicker,
of Norristown; 
Nora, born June 7, 1871; Edith, born October 21, 1879.

  In
1855 Mr. Boorse bought the old homestead of the Boorse 
family from his father
and lived there until 1868, when he 
removed to his present home. In 1855 he was
elected township 
assessor, a position which he held for eight years. He has 

also filled the office of school director for six years, 
that of judge of
election for two terms, has been a member 
of the election board since 1869, and
was a leading member 
of the Republican county committee for many years. In
1862 
he was elected to the office of justice of the peace and has 
served ever
since. He has always endeavored to settle cases 
so that they should not be
referred to the court, and has 
received the highest praise both from the judges
and from 
the people in general.

  In 1870 he received the appointment to take
the census of 
Towamensing and Lower Salford townships and acquitted 
himself
with credit. In 1865 he was nominated for county 
commissioner, but failed of
election by a small majority.

  He was a delegate to the state convention at
Lancaster in 
1875 and voted for John F. Hartranft for governor. He is a 
member
of the Montgomery County Historical Society.

  Mr. Boorse made the original
survey for the borough of 
Lansdale, and was official surveyor of that borough
from 
1872 to 1881. He was one of the original directors of the 
Lansdale Water
Works Company, a director and secretary of 
the Lansdale Cemetery Association;
one. of the original 
members and secretary of the Towamensing Creamery 

Association: a director in the Perkiomen Fire and Storm 
Insurance Company of
Montgomery county, and one of the 
originators of the Kulpsville Literary and
Library 
Association. He was one of the leaders in the movement which 

established a telephone line from Norristown to Kulpsville, 
by way of North
Wales and Lansdale. Mr. Boorse has, in fact, 
been prominent in every
progressive movement of his 
community.

  He belongs to the I. O. O. F.,
Providence Lodge No. 345, 
having become a member in 1867. He has been its
trustee, 
treasurer, and the representative to the grand lodge, and a 
director
in the Odd Fellows Endowment Association, of 
Pennsylvania. He became a member
of Charity Lodge No. 190, 
Free and Accepted Masons, Norristown, on October 10,
1872. 

  On January 25, 1875, he was knighted in the Knights 
Templar,
Hutchinson Commandery No. 32, Norristown, and also 
belongs to Norristown
Chapter No. 190, Royal Arch Masons.

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