
Isaac Brokaw (9 March 1746 – 16 September 1826)[1] was aclockmaker[2] fromNew Jersey.
Brokaw was born inRaritan inSomerset County, but would leave forElizabethtown where he would work as an apprentice under Aaron Miller, a renowned clockmaker. He would later marry Miller's daughter, Elizabeth Miller. In 1770, Brokaw was living inBridgewater when a local judge ordered that his property be sold off in order to pay off his outstanding debts. However, he was allowed to keep 30 lb oflead in order to continue his trade. Shortly thereafter he would again leave for Elizabeth, where he would produce some of his first significant works. Aaron Miller died in 1778, and left part of his clockmaking tools to him as his son-in-law. In 1790 Isaac and Elizabeth relocated to Bridge Town (today known asRahway). The style practiced by Miller and Brokaw is of a decidedlyDutch tradition, asCentral Jersey, particularly around Somerset County, was known as an early Dutch settlement.
They had three sons, Aaron, Cornelius, and John. Aaron, the eldest of them, took up the trade of clockmaking, having been taught by his father.
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