
Edward Middleton was born in New Jersey, outside Philadelphia, circa 1820 (records differ) at a time when Christianity was beginning to experience a sharp divergency among Christian denominations on the subject of alcohol. Catholics, Episcopalians, and Lutherans were considered “wet;” Methodists, Evangelicals, and Middleton’s family church, Presbyterian, decidedly “dry.”
Living in the village of Blackwood, the Middletons, however, were in the business of serving liquor. Edward’s father owned a tavern in the village center, the oldest building in town. A series of previous owners had failed to make it prosperous but when a relative of the Middletons established a stage coach route from Camden to the small town, the family’s “public house” prospered. Edward Middleton’s early years were spent there. Sometime after receiving an elementary education, he moved the fifteen miles to Philadelphia.
My speculation is that Middleton was employed there in one of the city’s liquor houses. By 1843 when he would have been in his early twenties, he opened a whiskey business of his own. In this endeavor he had the help of a younger brother, George. Likely blenders of whiskeys obtained from the many distilleries that dotted the Pennyslvania landscape, the brothers, as advertised above, also featured imported wines and brandies.




For more than twenty years the Middletons ran a highly profitable liquor establishment in Philadelphia. In 1864, however, Edward and his brother parted ways. The reasons for the split are unclear. The elder brother possibly was dictating the way the liquor house would operate; the younger brother may have had other ideas. The separation was far from amicable. Witnesses later would testify that the brothers not only argued but that George Middleton had threatened Edward with “personal violence” and the two had become permanently estranged. George set up a liquor store of his own in direct competition with his brother and operated it until at least 1886.

Edward had never married and if he had died intestate his fortune would have been divided equally among his surviving three brothers and three sisters, each of whom might have expected a sixth of the fortune. But Middleton had made a will, kept in a safety deposit box at a local bank. In court a bank executive testified that Edward had anticipated that his will would be controversial, telling him that the document would cause “a high old time after my death.” In it Middleton gave substantial but not whopping amounts to five sisters and brothers. George got nary a cent. By far the largest bequest, equivalent today to roughly $10 million, went to a nephew, Charles D. Middleton, a paper hanger by occupation.
George Middleton, backed by other siblings, upon the reading of Edward’s last will and testament immediately hollered fraud. A jury trial ensued in Federal Court that lasted the greater part of five weeks as dozens of witnesses were heard. One testified to Edward Middleton’s special affection for his nephew, pointing out that he had paid for Charles’ support and education after the boy’s mother and father died, had financed his paper hanging business, and considered Charles “the only man in the family who took care of himself.” After a lengthy instruction from the judge, the jury retired but quickly brought its verdict: The will was legitimate.
Made a rich man overnight, Charles exited paper hanging. The 1880 census gave the 42-year old heir’s occupation as “gentleman,” i.e. no longer needing to work for a living. Charles now was living in a large home on Limekiln Pike in Philadelphia. In addition to his wife and two children, his household included his mother, mother-in-law, and four live-in servants, including a chambermaid, cook, gardener and coachman. Charles, as Uncle Edward had anticipated, knew how to take care of himself.

Note: Although the material for this post was gathered from multiple sources, a principal document was a summary of the challenge to Middleton’s will in U.S. Circuit Court— a case called Otterson v. Middleton, decided December 15, 1871.
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